Wednesday on FADE to BLACK: Trey Hudson is here with the honors of being our third first time guest this week and we are covering "The Meadow"... which has been compared to Skinwalker Ranch itself with its own reports of UFOs, cryptid beasts, portals, missing time, crop circle like formations, (wo)men in black, orbs, strange beams of light, mysterious beings and many other oddities.
Trey is the Director of the Oxford Paranormal Society and its Anomalous Studies and Observation Group (ASOG). He is an Eagle Scout and former Army Intelligence Officer. He has a psychology degree from the University of West Georgia where he studied under the likes of Dr. Bill Roll and other luminaries. He has a 30 plus year career as a US government Security Specialist specializing in security of sensitive assets, anti-terrorism, security of WMD, emergency management and other specialties. He also served a tour in Afghanistan in this capacity.
Trey is the author of "The Meadow Project: Explorations into the South's Skinwalker Ranch".
Thursday on FADE to BLACK: Yes, it's Thursday... and it's another Fadernight with open-lines all night long. Your calls, your conversation. Un-censored, Un-filtered, and Un-screened.
Fadernight is the greatest night in all of talk radio in all of the world... covering UFOs, Time Travel, Conspiracy, Lost History, the Paranormal and the Supernatural.
Monday on FADE to BLACK: Billy Cox joins us to discuss his life as a UFO journalist and all of the recent headlines and mass-media coverage of the subject.
Billy has spent 45 years in the newspaper biz, 30 at Florida Today in the back yard of Kennedy Space Center and 15 years at the Sarasota Herald Tribune, which he just quit last month in April, 2021.
Billy isn't quite retired (yet), He's just had his fill of Gannett. He spent most of his time writing features, from gourd collectors to covering executions at Florida State Prison. Billy wrote his first UFO story in 1980, shortly after his initial sighting the year before in Cocoa Beach, Florida. Billy has been the fringe trail -- sort of, more or less -- ever since.
Tuesday on FADE to BLACK: Lisa O'Hara is here to talk about her new book: "Abducted and Furious".
Lisa O'Hara has a B.S. Degree in Business Administration from San Jose State University in California where she lived until 2011. She worked for many years in law firms, starting as a floater legal secretary and ending up in Information Technology and went on to work for engineering companies in Silicon Valley and also in a Department of Defense company that had ties to SRI. She is now enjoying retirement. Since retiring, she discovered she was a psychic medium and that knowledge was the catalyst for many discoveries about herself, one of which was that she was an ET abductee. After reading Terry Lovelace's book, Incident at Devil's Den, she wrote to Terry and he encouraged her to write her own book, detailing her ET experiences as an abductee. She now lives in Chandler, Arizona with her husband and two Maine Coon cats.
Wednesday on FADE to BLACK: Lue Elizondo is back with us to discuss the latest DOD drama, his 'deleted' emails, 60 Minutes and the upcoming UAPTF Special Report.
Luis “Lue” Elizondo is the former director of the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program (ATTIP). As a senior counterintelligence officer for the Department of Defense, he operated throughout Afghanistan, the Middle East and Latin America. He’s a trained Special Agent who has led countless tactical and strategic missions both during wartime and times of peace.
Lue's academic background includes microbiology, immunology and parasitology, with research experience in tropical diseases. Luis is also an inventor who holds several patents.
Thursday on FADE to BLACK: Ralph Blumenthal is here for the first time to discuss his latest book: "The Believer: Alien Encounters, Hard Science, and the Passion of John Mack".
Ralph Blumenthal, a Distinguished Lecturer at Baruch College of the City University of New York, was an award-winning reporter for The New York Times from 1964 to 2009, and has written and co-authored seven books on organized crime and cultural history. He co-authored the recent series of groundbreaking Times articles on the secret Pentagon program to investigate UFOs. He led the Times metro team that won the Pulitzer Prize for breaking news coverage of the 1993 truck-bombing of the World Trade Center. In 2001, Blumenthal was named a Fellow of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation to research the progressive career and penal reforms of Warden Lewis E. Lawes, “the man who made Sing Sing sing.” The book on Warden Lawes, “Miracle at Sing Sing,” was published by St. Martin’s in June, 2004. His most recent book is “The Believer: Alien Encounters, Hard Science, and the Passion of John Mack,” published by High Road Books of the University of New Mexico Press.
For more than 45 years, Blumenthal reported for The Times as Texas correspondent and Southwest Bureau Chief; arts and culture news reporter; investigative and crime reporter; foreign correspondent in West Germany, South Vietnam, and Cambodia; and metro and Westchester correspondent. He began his journalism career as reporter/columnist for The Grand Prairie Daily News Texan in 1963.
Blumenthal earned a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism Alumni Award, and the Nieman Foundation’s Worth Bingham Prize for distinguished investigative reporting on USAir crashes. Since 2010 he has taught journalism in the summer program of Phillips Exeter Academy in Exeter, N.H., and was named a Distinguished Lecturer at Baruch College where he taught journalism and currently oversees historic collections in the Newman Library Archives. He lives in New York City with his wife, Deborah, a children’s book writer and novelist.