
Dilettoso joins the program live from his Village Labs facility in Tempe to discuss his analysis of the March 13th Phoenix Lights footage. He explains that frame-by-frame optical testing of the unknown objects reveals light signatures fundamentally different from military flares, comparing the distinction to the difference between a violin and an oboe. He notes the objects vanished not like dimming artificial lights but as though an iris closed over them.
Callers share stories of a glowing UFO hovering over the aircraft carrier USS Kennedy, a blue flash accompanied by missing time during a camping trip, and pets that appear to speak. Art fields calls from listeners whose dogs say ''mama'' and whose cats demand milk, turning the first-time caller line into a dedicated talking animals hotline for the evening.
Key Moments
Dilettoso: the Phoenix Lights cannot be flares: Village Labs president Jim Dilettoso explains his optical analysis of the March 13th Phoenix Lights footage - comparing red/green/blue components, sigma corona, and burn signatures - and concludes the unknown lights differ from flares as drastically as a human thumb differs from an ape's.
Three men walk into Village Labs: Dilettoso describes a trio of men he didn't know walking past his receptionist directly into the computer room at Village Labs, dressed like government-facility workers on lunch break, asking for him by name and saying it would be to his advantage to listen - the visit his colleague Jim Schneebelt later labeled 'men in black.'
The zero-point energy paper and the Intergalactic Scenario: The leader hands Dilettoso a paper on zero-point energy by 'HP' that he already knew, then a second paper titled 'Intergalactic Scenario' filled with diagrams of the Phoenix Lights - every page referencing the lights - by the same author, telling Dilettoso to continue his work in specific directions.
Under whose authority? Yours.: When Dilettoso asks under whose authority he should pursue this work, the lead visitor answers 'under yours,' and when he asks where they should discuss it, the third silent man finally speaks: 'You'll know.' Dilettoso says they knew things he was surprised they knew.
Highest levels of NASA and the 106-minute problem: Dilettoso says he believes the person who sent the three to him is at the very highest levels of NASA, and underscores that the official five-minute flare-drop explanation cannot cover the 106-minute Phoenix Lights event with a minimum of four - and as many as ten - separate sightings by multiple witnesses including pilots.
