Mike Sauve has written non fiction for The National Post. His fiction has appeared in McSweeney’s. His novels The Wraith of Skrellman and The Apocalypse of Lloyd are available from Montag Press.
His latest work is: Who Authored the John Titor Legend?
In 2001, a man calling himself John Titor introduced himself to the Internet as a time traveler from the year 2036. He weaved a rich tale of being sent back to 1975 to retrieve an IBM 5100 computer. Those who interacted with John were impressed by the depth and apparent realism of his story. In the years that followed select details would emerge to help further legitimize John Titor.
The question of whether or not John Titor was a real time traveler remains a subject of contentious debate. This book sets that question aside to examine several figures who may be responsible for the posts. Among the principle suspects are entertainment lawyer Larry Haber and alternate reality gaming pioneer Joseph Matheny. Key players involved in the John Titor phenomenon who are not suspected of authoring the story are also profiled. These include a PhD who filed a patent based on John Titor’s time machine schematics, an Internet sleuth called The Hoax Hunter who has worked to debunk the story, and even Art Bell, the legendary late night radio host who received several faxes from John Titor.
Laird Scranton is an independent software designer from Albany, New York who writes about ancient mysteries, cosmology and language.
His work includes articles published in the University of Chicago's Anthropology News academic journal, in Temple University's Encyclopedia of African Religion, and in the Vassar Quarterly Magazine.
Laird has been interviewed on a variety of radio programs around the world including Coast-to-Coast AM and FADE to BLACK and is a featured speaker on ancient mysteries.
Tonight, Jimmy is going to pay tribute to William 'Bill' Cooper...on this day, Nov. 22nd, the anniversary of the assassination of John F. Kennedy.
Cooper was an American conspiracy theorist, radio broadcaster, and author best known for his 1991 book Behold a Pale Horse, in which he warned of multiple global conspiracies, some involving extraterrestrial aliens...In Behold a Pale Horse, Cooper asserted that Kennedy was assassinated because he was about to reveal that extraterrestrials were in the process of taking over the Earth.
Tonight we'll break down Cooper's famous presentation that was first delivered at the MUFON Symposium on July 2, 1989, in Las Vegas, Nevada. The speech has been viewed millions of times on the web...and it is full of facts, names, dates and presidential executive orders...and almost 30 years later it's effect on Ufology has been profound.
Jon Rappoport has been writing and speaking on Living in the Matrix...and tonight, on Thanksgiving Eve he will once again give us his view of Living in the Matrix for his No More Fake News Room segment...and then he is going to co-host with Jimmy and take your calls all night long for the FADERNIGHT Special.
In 1621 the Pilgrims celebrated their first harvest in the New World. According to Edward Winslow, an attendee, it was a three day feast with 53 Pilgrims and 90 Indians. This first Harvest Festival would later be known in the United States as Thanksgiving. It has been a holiday since 1789, after a proclamation by George Washington. It was later declared a National Holiday by Abraham Lincoln during the Civil War in 1863. Today Thanksgiving is celebrated by most; remembering that first Harvest Festival and as a time to give thanks. So to all the Fadernauts, have a fantastic Thanksgiving. --Drew The Geek--
Website: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thanksgiving_(United_States)
Bryan Lunduke is a technology journalist covering digital security, online privacy, and Open Source for Network World. He is a sought after public speaker on these topics and has written multiple books released under the Creative Commons license (including a children's book about Linux and Open Source). A Free Software and Free Culture advocate, he is also a Board Member for the one of the oldest Linux systems on the planet, openSUSE.