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From the High Desert book cover

From the High Desert

A Cultural History of Art Bell

Thumbnail for February 1, 1998: UPN's Lake County Abduction Show - Stanton Friedman

February 1, 1998: UPN's Lake County Abduction Show - Stanton Friedman

Feb 1, 1998
3h 29m
0:00 / 0:00
Art Bell is joined by nuclear physicist Stanton Friedman to discuss the controversial UPN television special about the McPherson family abduction, a program that blurred the line between documentary and fiction. Friedman explains he was interviewed for over an hour about abduction research but never saw the alleged home video at the center of the show. His comments were then edited alongside scripted footage featuring 22 listed cast members, creating the false impression that he was endorsing the dramatization as authentic.

Friedman describes his efforts to hold UPN and Dick Clark Productions accountable, having contacted both organizations and the FCC about the deceptive presentation. He notes that the show listed actors for every role, including the aliens, yet half of viewers polled believed the footage was genuine. On a positive note, he announces plans to produce his own television documentary with full creative control, promising to present verified evidence and expose fraudulent claims in ufology.

The conversation broadens into Roswell, where Friedman challenges the Air Force crash test dummy explanation and discusses his classified meetings with federal officials who acknowledged the UFO phenomenon as real. Open lines bring calls ranging from Tom Clancy buying the Minnesota Vikings to animal attacks and daylight saving time debates.

Key Moments

  1. Friedman never saw the McPherson video before being interviewed: Friedman explains he was flown in on January 2nd by Dick Clark Productions, interviewed for an hour, and was never shown the 'infamous' 8mm McPherson abduction video - and was not asked about it. His general abduction commentary was edited in alongside the staged footage.

  2. Friedman's 'good guys go on or bad guys will' rationale: Friedman defends accepting the gig despite internet warnings, arguing television is about money and deadlines, not truth - and that respectable researchers ceding the field to the bad actors only worsens the problem.

  3. Calls to UPN, Dick Clark Productions, and the FCC: After watching the program on tape, Friedman called UPN, Dick Clark Productions, and the FCC seeking a disclaimer or correction before the rebroadcast. Dick Clark Productions was 'very defensive'; UPN tossed responsibility back to Dick Clark.