All Episodes

February 20, 2025 63 mins
As the clock strikes 9pm, the airwaves crackle to life with the sinister hum of Strange Talk. This week, Alyx and Creature dive into the latest weird news from around the globe. We’re stepping into the mind-bending halls of the Paradox Museum in Miami, where reality twists and perception deceives. Then, we journey to Germany for a stag bellowing competition, because nothing says “strange” like a chorus of competitive deer impersonators.
But the bizarre doesn’t stop there—Alaska’s answer to the Bermuda Triangle, the Alaska Triangle, has struck again, claiming more victims in its eerie, unexplained disappearances. Meanwhile, a new Nahuelito sighting at Varadero de Parques has cryptid hunters buzzing—could South America’s own lake monster finally be making waves?
And finally, SETI researchers are flipping the script, posing as aliens searching for Earth to refine their methods of making first contact. Are we closer than ever to getting a message from the stars?

Tune in, stay weird, and remember—sometimes, the strangest things are the ones lurking just beyond the static. Music for this episode includes the Strange Talk Intro by Star Silk, We Are Drifting by RELIC, and backing tracks by Panda Beats
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:13):
In in.

Speaker 2 (01:27):
Good evening and welcome to the hour dedicated stop talking
about all things strange, weird, and paranormal. You listen to
Strange Talk broadcasting on sixteen sixty AM, the North Side,
ninety one point seven FMHG two WVX You and Cincinnati.
We're also streaming at Radio artifact dot com around the
entire planet Earth. The intro track to this episode and
most of our episodes, is the Strangehock Intro by Star

(01:49):
Soak and I'm your host, Alex.

Speaker 3 (01:53):
And I'm your host Creature.

Speaker 4 (01:55):
Yeah. We fair we do a little bit more uh
weird news this week, you know, getting back into the
groove of things.

Speaker 3 (02:03):
Yeah, there's one thing they say, it's that we're too groovy. Yeah,
I apologize for everybody that recorded that joke.

Speaker 4 (02:19):
All I'm thinking about is Scooby Doo. Now that's all
I got, groovy, jinkies, jeepers. I don't know, I can't
remember all of them right now.

Speaker 3 (02:31):
No, no, both of those are no.

Speaker 4 (02:33):
No, So sh Shaky's got zinks, Scooby's got rot row,
Daphne's got jeepers, Velma's got jinkies, and then Fred's is
just let's split up gang. He doesn't have like an exclamation.

Speaker 3 (02:46):
That's the thing he does. He has hold the phone,
I believe is what the official hold the phone. Yes,
because if you watch it, he says that in a
lot of episodes. But it's such a like.

Speaker 4 (02:56):
But like when he's like being startled by like something,
what is it?

Speaker 3 (03:00):
What does he He's not startled, He's he's the he's
the uber Minshaw Scooby Dude.

Speaker 4 (03:07):
It's always like, well, gang, it looks like we've got
another mystery on our hands, or let's slit up gang.
Oh actually I do see here in this forum it
says his new catchphrase was hold the phone.

Speaker 3 (03:25):
It's you know what I love. So so we've talked before.
We're both pretty big Scooby Doo fans.

Speaker 4 (03:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (03:31):
Frank Welker the voice actor for Fred since the sixties.
By the way, if you ever wonder how Fred always
sounds the same, it's because it's all he's been the same, dude.

Speaker 2 (03:42):
He never he will never leave, he will never die.

Speaker 3 (03:46):
He's also he does.

Speaker 4 (03:47):
That's why he doesn't have a like exclamation, is because
he's never surprised by anything because he's been around forever,
like since the dawn of time he has existed, and
he has been voice sing Fred Jones from Scooby Doo.
Fred Jones predates us. All Fred Jones might be God.
We have no way to know for sure.

Speaker 3 (04:09):
I'll say two of my favorite fun facts about Frank
Welker is if there is an animal noise in a
movie in Hollywood, there's a good chance that Frank Welker it's.

Speaker 4 (04:18):
Either him or d Bradley Baker, or occasionally it's Alan Tudic.

Speaker 3 (04:24):
Yeah, I forgot I love alent. But my favorite other
fun fact is before the Marvel franchise came out, Samuel L.
Jackson surpassed him, but Frank Welker at one point was
the richest actor in Hollywood because he never said no
to anything.

Speaker 4 (04:44):
Like Nicholas Cage.

Speaker 3 (04:45):
Okay, yeah, it's like so so actual, like financially, he
finally got surpassed by Samuel L. Jackson because of Marvel.

Speaker 4 (04:57):
Oh my gosh. But I was like that is Oh
this forum made a really good point. He back in
the day, his exclamation when they would like see something,
he would be the one who would always yell, run
I can't do it. How he would like do it?
But where he was like run.

Speaker 3 (05:14):
Oh, that's that's what I was gonna say. So, Frank
Walker has a weird way of speaking, and I've always
loved this. He doesn't say treasure. If you listen to Fred,
he always says treasure.

Speaker 4 (05:25):
And I don't think I've ever noticed Fred's say treasure
or treasure.

Speaker 3 (05:29):
Watch it. Watch it when you watch it next time,
listen for him to say treasure. He will never unhear treasure.
Now trasure.

Speaker 4 (05:36):
It's like I'm gonna go and have to watch like
a pirate episode of Scooby Doo, not a pirated a
pirate episode of Scooby Doo to hear him say treasure.

Speaker 3 (05:45):
Oh oh it is. It is hysterical to the point
now that, like I I've whenever I say treasure, now
I have to say trasure because it's just too fun
to not say it.

Speaker 1 (05:58):
Good.

Speaker 3 (05:58):
I love it. I apologize to you at home listening
that you tuned in for Strange Talk and we can
just been talking to us.

Speaker 4 (06:06):
Hey, peek behind the curtain here. Our Strange Talk group
chat is actually called I don't remember exactly, it's something Scooby.

Speaker 3 (06:13):
Gang, the Dog, Scooby Gang. I believe.

Speaker 4 (06:16):
Yeah, I'm Strange Talk Scooby Squad. Yeah, I'm sure it'll
change at some point where it will just keep becoming
different iterations of the Scooby Gang. It just it felt correct.
There's four of us, we're just missing the dog.

Speaker 3 (06:33):
So I think we know who the dog is?

Speaker 4 (06:38):
Who who? I mean? You might be from space like
Scooby Doo. We don't know you are a creature from
mm hmm.

Speaker 3 (06:49):
That's true. That's true. I uh, well, leave, We'll leave.
We'll leave it to the audience voted.

Speaker 4 (06:57):
Vote at home. Who's the Scooby Doo of the Strange
Talk group? Which is fun because you haven't even met
all of us yet. There's some of us lurking in
the shadows and you have no idea what we're up to.
Which is also funny because I think, by default I
would end up being Fred and I'm so not Fred.

Speaker 5 (07:14):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (07:15):
I think.

Speaker 4 (07:16):
I don't think I could pull off the ascot.

Speaker 3 (07:21):
I'm a personally. I've always thought I was either a
flim flam or a no.

Speaker 4 (07:29):
Creature. I have a worse question. Let's hear it, which
of us is scrappy do Oh? We have to find
the scrappy dour show.

Speaker 3 (07:41):
Wait, that's easy, Jason. He'll appreciate that, Jason.

Speaker 4 (07:48):
If you're listening, that's for you. All right, all right,
let's get cracking with weird news. We've we've talked about
Scooby Doo for a solid seven minutes, and we can
talk talk about a lot more. All Right, We're just
gonna get right into our weird news. Here. Our first
headline comes from AP News. This is by David Fisher. No,

(08:10):
not David Fisher from six Feet Under. David Fisher. Fis
c h Er. This was last updated on February fourth,
and it is titled Paradox Museum, Miami takes guests through
a twenty first century funhouse of mind boggling illusions, art gallery,
science exhibition, and twenty first century funhouse. Paradox Museum, Miami

(08:34):
takes guests on a tour through optical illusions and other enigmas.
Geared for the age of Instagram. The eleven thousand square
foot museum, housed in Miami's trendy Winwood Arts and Entertainment District,
features more than seventy exhibits that challenge the imagination. Executive
director Samantha Impellasiri said, Wow, that's a lot of letters

(08:55):
at once. It ebbs and flows between periods of highly
tactile in interactive exhibit pieces and fully immersive photo opportunities
where you yourself become the paradox and walk away with
some really fun and unique social media content. I think
that this is like a really cool looking museum. It
is definitely built for social media. I just thought it

(09:18):
was cool to mention because I'm really excited that like
immersive art experiences are becoming like more of a thing.
There's meal Wolf, which I got to see when I
went out to Denver last year, the one out there.
There's a bunch of different different meal Wolf's one. There's
Other World up in Columbus that I got to see
in the last year as well. Super super fun. Anything

(09:40):
that you can kind of, like, I don't know, interact
with and be a part of uh is really fun.
I would say the Other World and Meowolf for more
on the artistic side. And then you have what I've
always really loved is the Have you ever been to
the City Museum in Saint Louis. I have not, so
I I love the City Museum because it's a museum

(10:05):
and there's like art in it, but also like there's
no rules, so like, if you find a hole in
the wall, you're allowed to climb in that hole in
the wall. So I love it because it's basically like
an adult jungle gym. So like, there's an aquarium in there.
There's literally a hole in the wall in the aquarium,
and I climbed up into it because I went, I
need to know where this goes. And then I was

(10:27):
like up inside looking down on the aquarium and I
was like, I don't even know if I'm supposed to
be here, but it's open, so I guess I'm allowed to.
And they have you sign a waiver when you go in,
basically saying that if you get fault, like hurt, it's
your own fault, which is fair because you could definitely
get hurt there. But it's a lot of fun there
is among the things that are in there, there is

(10:49):
a ferris wheel on the roof, as well as a
bus that just like overhangs the city that like you
can go into the front of. It is really freaky there.
So it's built in an old shit factory, so there's
like a I think it's like a twenty twenty foot
doesn't sound right, twenty story. Maybe let me let me

(11:09):
double check the height of this.

Speaker 3 (11:12):
I think each story is like ten feet.

Speaker 4 (11:15):
Yeah, that's why I have to double check that. So
it's a ten story tall slide that used to be
the shoe that they would like put the shoes down
because it used to be a shoe factory. One of
my favorite things. Oh, there's a no skate skate park,
so you just run around on a skate park with
no skateboards that has a gigantic pencil on it. And yes,

(11:36):
the tip of it does work. There is at one
point there's a hole in the ground and if you
climb in it, it is a it's a maze that
gets smaller and smaller and smaller as you go. And yes,
it does hurt your knees, so I highly recommen knee
pads if you go there. But anyway, it's super fun
and I really love just museums like that where it's like, oh,

(11:56):
do you want to climb that? Go for it? You
want to interact with that, go for it? A lot
of fun.

Speaker 3 (12:03):
Can I make a social observation real quick that that uh,
because you were talking about this and it's uh. They
mentioned Instagram and all the all the Bill maher S
curmudgeons out there would be like oh Instagram.

Speaker 4 (12:21):
Oh no, people enjoying themselves your selves.

Speaker 3 (12:25):
That's what I was gonna say, is you and I
both have been into photography. Yeah, and I think we
can both attest to photo ops are nothing new?

Speaker 4 (12:34):
No, not at all, not at all. I mean literally, Okay,
think of like prom back in the day, like they
always had when you walked in there was a little
photo drop first thing, so you could make sure you
got your prom prom photos. Like, is nothing new. People
have been doing this forever.

Speaker 3 (12:51):
Yeah, Like think about like all the silly cutouts where
you insert your head into.

Speaker 4 (12:55):
Oh yeah they have those in in in flatwoods. Uh
you can be yeah yeah.

Speaker 3 (13:04):
And it's like it's one of those things Like it's
so it's so old man Bill maher esque stuff.

Speaker 4 (13:11):
When I hear people kids these days taking their photos
at the dang Museum of Paradox, Like, listen.

Speaker 3 (13:21):
If there's one thing I know about gen Z according
to gen Xers and boomers, it's that they both simultaneously
never go outside and then go to all these locations
where you're supposed to go socialized and that photo it's both.
It's it's Schrodinger's gen Z, Like yeah, but I just

(13:42):
felt the need.

Speaker 4 (13:43):
And then a lot of that's also because gen Z
is like actually adults now and they're actually thinking about
jen Alpha and yeah.

Speaker 3 (13:51):
Well it's like two, we're both we're both millennials. I'm
pretty sure you're millennial, aren't you, Like, yeah, how long
did they how long did they complain about us?

Speaker 4 (14:00):
Oh no, we're no, we're still to blame. We're still
children and we're only fourteen years old and we're to
blame for everything.

Speaker 3 (14:05):
And it's one of those things like I vowed that
I would never crap on gen Z like everyone craft
on us for thirty plus.

Speaker 4 (14:14):
I will only crap on them for funny things like
having a middle part. If you want to bring back
the Leo DiCaprio haircut, that's on you. But I am
going to laugh at you about it.

Speaker 3 (14:27):
Hey, hey, you know what, that fair enough? Fair enough.

Speaker 4 (14:30):
That's the only thing I'll crap on them for where
I'm like, that's not even like a bad thing, because like, yeah,
you're gonna do the same as us, where like after
a few years you'll be like, oh, that was really
why I have that hairstyle? And then give it another
ten years and you're gonna be like, oh, actually, like
I'm really into that hairstyle. Again, none of it matters.
Trends come and go.

Speaker 3 (14:47):
Yeah, yes, like when the mullet came back, like.

Speaker 4 (14:50):
Oh, it's still back.

Speaker 3 (14:52):
We're both from the South. I remember what mullets were
when I.

Speaker 4 (14:56):
Was a kid, and I definitely don't have a mullet
right now. Oh oh no, I wasna say.

Speaker 3 (15:02):
There are people like, like, the mullet's hot. I like
a good mullet, and.

Speaker 4 (15:06):
It's like, well, the thing is that in modern times,
we took the mullet and we like kind of like
fancied up a little bit, and that's why it's hot again.

Speaker 3 (15:15):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (15:16):
Also, because the mullet has always kind of looked like
anime here, people have just finally accepted that.

Speaker 3 (15:23):
Now I kind of want to see that uh dukes
of hazard anime that we've been asking for a decade.
Uh uh but yeah.

Speaker 1 (15:35):
No.

Speaker 3 (15:35):
Also, next time you're in creature Land, we should go
to the They've got the Baseball Museum for the Louisville
Sucker Bats, because you know, the best bats are made.
I love. Yeah, the official bat of Major League Baseball
and bookies getting their money back. But there is a

(15:59):
riplease believe it or not, baseball museum inside of the
museum so interesting, it's it's fun, it's fun. It's one
of those things like if you like weird stuff, it's
worth checking out. I enjoy it fair enough.

Speaker 4 (16:15):
Speaking of weird stuff, do you want to take us
to Germany?

Speaker 3 (16:18):
Here? Yeah? I was gonna say German for yes, but
we'll just say see.

Speaker 4 (16:25):
Good enough. Uh?

Speaker 3 (16:27):
Uh do you think you can bellow like a stag German?
Hunters compete in a national deer calling championship, and apparently
stag calling is uh not funny looking at all in
the least.

Speaker 4 (16:46):
No, it looks very serious and it does not look
inappropriate at all.

Speaker 3 (16:51):
It is not suggestive in any way.

Speaker 4 (16:53):
No, I genuinely don't know what that instrument is that
this person's using.

Speaker 3 (16:58):
I want to call it like like one third of
a diggerie doo.

Speaker 4 (17:05):
Oh. Apparently hunters will use specially made oxhorns, tritons, snailshells,
glass cylinders, the hollow stems of the giant hogweed, a
number of artificially produced instruments to amplify the sound and resonance.
So it's literally just a tube to make it resonate.

Speaker 3 (17:26):
Well, we need a good tube, but.

Speaker 4 (17:28):
Yeah, tell us about this National stag calling Championship.

Speaker 3 (17:33):
Yes, German hunters tried to convince the jury at a
National stag Calling Championship that they can imitate a bellowing
red deer more realistically because it wasn't realistic enough before.

Speaker 4 (17:46):
Mm hm.

Speaker 3 (17:47):
The unique tradition goes back hundreds of years and was
initially aimed at feigning a stag's rival during the running season,
so the deer comes out, so they literally troll these deers.

Speaker 4 (17:59):
INTI like, okay, you're gonna say they troll these deers,
but like, tell me that this is not exactly what
people who go squatching do. It's literally exactly the same
where they're like, I'm gonna make you know, bigfoot noises
to try to lure out, you know, mating bigfoot. And
I'm like, so you're gonna lure them out when they're
at their most angry that that seems like really smart?

(18:23):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 3 (18:26):
Ever accused them of.

Speaker 4 (18:29):
But at least this is just competition.

Speaker 3 (18:32):
I'm curious, can you give us your squatch call?

Speaker 4 (18:37):
No, I've actually never tried to uh it is. Unfortunately
I work right now, but I do have a remote
control that makes squatch noises for me.

Speaker 3 (18:48):
What why is that at work and not an e DC.

Speaker 4 (18:52):
It's at work because you never know when you need to,
you know, walk up behind someone and hit the noise
to make bigfoot sounds at them. It was a goat
remote before I got a big foot remote. So it's important.
We'll see if any of my coworker's happening to be
listening to this, they understand.

Speaker 3 (19:14):
Well, well, for those of you that hunt, believe it
or not, like trying to get the deer come out
into the open. Good for hunting. Uh yeah. The competition
took place Friday at jog and Hunt.

Speaker 4 (19:31):
I said that good hunting and Dog. Okay, you dogs.

Speaker 3 (19:38):
My favorite show from the eighties, Hunting and Dog. That's
a trade fair apparently in Western City and Dortmund.

Speaker 4 (19:45):
I like that there's no animals, only.

Speaker 3 (19:51):
Men, do you know. I gotta say the fact that
they're trying to convince me that there's no animals makes
me not believe them.

Speaker 4 (20:00):
No animals were harmed in this competition, except for maybe
the pride of some of the people doing the calls.

Speaker 3 (20:08):
I like to imagine that since they said there were
no animals, that there was just in like a deer
in a trench coat that took home first plan.

Speaker 4 (20:16):
I also like that they specify that they were asked
to compete in three disciplines. The call of the old
searching stag and the call of the dominant mail in
a pack of does, and the calling duel between two.
That's four.

Speaker 3 (20:35):
That's why German engineering self, oh oh.

Speaker 4 (20:37):
Oh, okay, sorry, they put a comma in the wrong place.
The call of the old searching stag, that's one thing.
The call of the dominant mail and a pack of dos,
and the calling duel between two equally strong stags at
the height of the rut. This is why you have
to be very careful when you add into many adjectives,
because if you're talking about multiple things, it makes it
very confusing. We love an Oxford comma.

Speaker 3 (20:59):
Here, I gotta I gotta say the call of the
old sounds really cool.

Speaker 4 (21:05):
The call of the old searching stag. I don't know
what that means.

Speaker 3 (21:09):
But you know, I think it means he's lonely. It's
what I was that what I'd put together, I would guess.

Speaker 4 (21:16):
So yes, moving to another part of the world. This
one's coming from New York post. Uh, Argentina canal mysteriously
turns bright red, looks like it's covered in blood. This
is from Angela Barbouti and uh, Yeah, a canal and

(21:37):
Argentina mysteriously turned bright red on Thursday, alarming residents who
were woken up by its strong odor. Okay, I love
that that randomly started playing and that was not at
all the article that I was reading. I love when
news articles do that.

Speaker 3 (21:53):
Yeah, anyway, I was convinced for a second you were
gonna say that the canal disappeared Argentina, and I was
willing to accept that.

Speaker 4 (22:05):
Basically, residents woke up. They're freaking out because it smelled
horrible and it was blood red. So water samples have
been taken from the surroundi canal, located in a suburb
of Buenos Aires, to determine the cause of the color change,
which could be an organic dye according to the province's
Ministry of the Environment. So not entirely sure why it's

(22:26):
like that yet, but it is rather spooky looking. And
also there is a local leather and textile factory nearby,
which are apparently known to dump dye and chemical waste
into the waterway which flows into the Rio de la
Plata between Argentina and Uruguay. So I guess at times
it's been like yellow with an acidic smell as well.

(22:47):
That makes people sick as well. So my first thought
when I saw this was that is one hundred percent algae.
But that's not algae. That's too red to be algae.
And also it would not smell like that, So hopefully
they can get that fixed.

Speaker 3 (23:05):
Yeah, hopefully they're hopefully that's not the main water supply
because that means a lot of people be going without water.

Speaker 4 (23:11):
So it most likely is you know.

Speaker 3 (23:17):
Yeah, well let's move over to some good news. Uh
man slapped with two hundred dollars fine for using speakerphone
and train station.

Speaker 4 (23:25):
Hey, this was also written by Angela Barbooti Angela, Thank
you Angela, also from New York Posts.

Speaker 3 (23:34):
Yeah, like in the pictures, he was just okay, he
was just a phone call away from a massive fine.
That's a good one. A man was slapped with over
a with over two hundred dollars fine for using a
speakerphone functioning on his cell phone in a train station

(23:57):
in western French the French city of No.

Speaker 4 (24:02):
I don't know. I can't do French.

Speaker 3 (24:05):
Some French word.

Speaker 4 (24:07):
I can't pronounce any French, Spanish. I can do a
little bit German. I can do a little bit French.
I'm like, I'm lost, you know, I'm.

Speaker 3 (24:14):
From the South. We don't speak no French here.

Speaker 4 (24:17):
I'm gonna guess, because like they don't like pronouncing valels,
so I'm gonna guess they're not pronouncing that at the end.

Speaker 3 (24:24):
Oh, yeah, yeah, you're not.

Speaker 4 (24:25):
Probably I'm gonna go with that. I guess I could
look it up.

Speaker 3 (24:32):
Oh, French France doesn't.

Speaker 4 (24:33):
Exist city in France. Okay, No, no, I don't want
to practice. Just let me listen to it. Not not okay,
So yeah, don't even try to pronounce that at the end.
It's not not. Thank you.

Speaker 3 (24:47):
That's very French of them that they the t.

Speaker 4 (24:51):
Yeah, they went not. You don't even need the e
s at the end, just not anyway.

Speaker 3 (24:56):
The man only identified as David David was David was
chatting with his sister on speakerphone when he approached by
an official from the French state owned rail company snickif.

Speaker 4 (25:12):
SNCF, I believe that's Snick if no, no, no, no,
it's French, so you just don't pronounce it at all.
That's sorry. That was a bad joke. I enjoyed it genuinely.
One day I will learn to pronounce anything in French.
Until then, I'm trying my best.

Speaker 3 (25:34):
That's fine as snack. If it's probably shouldn't call that
as SNCF security person told me that if I didn't
turn off my loud speaker, I was going to be
fined one hundred and fifty euros. He told MPM TV.
I'm sorry, boyfriend MTV.

Speaker 4 (25:54):
Wait, b f MTV, so something France French MTV.

Speaker 3 (25:59):
Maybe it's because French music television.

Speaker 4 (26:03):
B yf bf MTV, it might be well, oh no,
it is not that at all. It is a French
broadcast television, so it's probably like broadcast France. It doesn't
say what it stands for. It's actually b FM TV,

(26:25):
so them and TV are not together, so it uh, well,
this really is not telling me what it stands for television.
It's an offshoot of BFM business so oh BFM is
an abbreviation of business FM. Oh that's way less fun.

(26:45):
And the F doesn't even stand for French.

Speaker 3 (26:49):
For me, for me, it's boyfriend music television.

Speaker 4 (26:53):
That was what I was hearing it first.

Speaker 3 (26:57):
But David, who originally thought the intervention was just a joke,
wasn't laughing when the official issued him at the hefty fine,
and of course when he was laughing, he went home. Sorry,
I bathed.

Speaker 4 (27:14):
Myself for My favorite thing is that the next sentence is,
I think the person was offended. She took out her
notebook and find me. He continued, Oh.

Speaker 3 (27:25):
That's so great because I could totally see myself doing that.
I could totally see myself like thinking it was a
joke and laughing in her face and then getting a
two hundred dollars fine.

Speaker 4 (27:38):
Well, originally it was only going to be one hundred
and fifty four dollars, but it was hiked to two
hundred and seven because he didn't pay it right away.

Speaker 3 (27:46):
Oh yeah, that's tom foolery.

Speaker 4 (27:50):
To be fair, though, I feel like this guy kind
of deserved it. He was, Yeah, I mean rude.

Speaker 3 (27:57):
Yeah, he's only I mean, bro, it's.

Speaker 4 (28:00):
He also hired a lawyer for this, and I'm like,
my dude, just just take the l just pay the fine.
You were being really rude in public.

Speaker 3 (28:12):
Of course, he's one of those guys.

Speaker 4 (28:13):
He was talking, you'll hear from my lawyer.

Speaker 3 (28:16):
You'll hear from my lawyer.

Speaker 4 (28:17):
Yeah, genuinely, Like, people please stop having conversations on speakerphone,
like in public. If you're in your car, that's fine.
If you're like in your own office, that's fine. But
if you are in like on a train or waiting
for a train, or like you know, waiting room at
a doctor's office, or the worst is people who go

(28:41):
in the bathroom and sit on speakerphone, where it's like,
not only can the person that you're on speakerphone with
hear you going to the bathroom, they can now hear
everybody who's in the bathroom going to the bathroom. And
that makes people uncomfortable. It's rude. Don't do it.

Speaker 3 (28:57):
Yeah, he should definitely shouldn't. I was I was thinking
of a bunch of jokes, but you kind of made
me real, Like that is that is awful.

Speaker 4 (29:08):
As much as like finding them two hundred is like intense,
I'm also like, people, please please stop doing this.

Speaker 3 (29:17):
So well, it's the American way.

Speaker 4 (29:22):
French people, this is the French way. This happened in France.
So I just like I just really, it was just
like headphones exist, my dude, Come on, David.

Speaker 3 (29:36):
David, David, they don't make him and they don't make
headphones in French though he tries using it and they
just come out in English when he speaks to people.
So all the tech company is located here already, hear.

Speaker 4 (29:50):
First, folks, Yeah, there's definitely no tech companies. And you
know anywhere else in the world Japan or nowhere.

Speaker 3 (29:56):
No, no, nowhere none.

Speaker 4 (29:59):
In fact, why you can.

Speaker 3 (30:01):
Only what I was gonna say, because bigfoots make all
the tech with their nimble finger.

Speaker 4 (30:10):
You know, they got big feet, but they got little hands.

Speaker 3 (30:14):
Well you know why as their nepheld.

Speaker 4 (30:24):
All right, we're gonna get depressing. We gotta, we gotta
just bring this down. A note, So, this one's from
Unexplained Mysteries dot com by our you know, one of
our favorite authors here, T K. Randall. Oh, by the way,
I say that about any author that I see their

(30:45):
name multiple times is like our new favorite author. This
title of this one is Alaska Triangle, as in like
the Bermuda Triangle, but the Alaska version. The Alaska Triangle
claims ten more victims after a miss plane was found
The bearing air flight had recently been reported missing in
a region notorious for unexplained disappearances. The alarm was raised

(31:09):
when the small commuter plane, which had departed from oh
Unilaly hold on, We're going to look up how to
pronounce that one?

Speaker 3 (31:24):
Utica?

Speaker 4 (31:26):
Okay, hold on, here we go Unalaklet, Alaska hold Ona
cl Euna La Criska, Alaska from Una La Clite to
Gnome at two thirty eight pm on Thursday, failed to

(31:47):
make it to its destination, sparking an extensive search and
rescue operation lasting several days. Sadly, though, the search ended
in tragedy when the wreckage of the plane was discovered
earlier today. This was posted on February eighth. By the way,
so earlier today, on February eighth, approximately thirty five thirty
four miles southeast of Nome, is believed that all nine

(32:10):
passengers and the pilot were killed in the crash. This, however,
is by no means the first such disaster to strike
the region since nineteen seventy two. The area there is
sort of between Anchorage Juno and let me look that
one up as well, because that's a lot of letters
strung together in a way that does not make sense

(32:31):
to me. We're gonna listen to this one. Ukiyagvik utkiyagvik
utkyagvic Yeah, Anchorage, you know, and Utyadvik, often referred to
as the Alaska Triangle, has allegedly seen the disappearances of
over twenty thousand people, which is way higher than I

(32:52):
was expecting. In many ways, this echoes the more famous
Bermuda Triangle, a region in which plans are said to
disappear without a trace and where crashes and disasters are
disproportionately commonplace. One of the most notable disappearances to occur
within the Alaskan Triangle was that of House Majority Leader
Hail Bogs and Congressman Nick Burdick, who had been flying

(33:14):
from Anchorage to Juno in nineteen seventy two when they're
plane vanished was never seen or heard from again. Other
disappearances include that of twenty five year old Gary Frank Southerden,
who went missing during a hunting trip, Joseph Balderis, who
vanished in twenty sixteen, and Florence uk Piacluc who disappeared

(33:35):
in twenty twenty. According to reports, over two thousand people
go missing in the region every year. In all likelihood,
the remote nature of the area, coupled with challenging weather
and terrain, are likely to be the primary suspects and
this ongoing phenomenon.

Speaker 6 (33:50):
So I uh, I kind of appreciate the fact that
unexplained mysteries didn't immediately try and tell us that it
was aliens that people go missing.

Speaker 3 (34:01):
Yeah, I'm not against say, I'm not against that theories
like that. I'm just saying that I'm glad that's not
a place is like first jump to, you know what
I mean.

Speaker 4 (34:13):
Yeah, No, I super appreciate that.

Speaker 3 (34:17):
I was gonna say, I'm assuming most of these names
are probably Inuite is why we correct.

Speaker 4 (34:24):
I would that would be my guess as well.

Speaker 3 (34:27):
Because yeah, I've never seen like letter clusters quite like this,
and it doesn't look like there's any like Russian stuff,
which would also be like Alaskan.

Speaker 4 (34:40):
So have I told you my like kind of like
crackpot theory about the Bermuda Triangle.

Speaker 3 (34:50):
I don't know, but I'd like to hear it even
if you have. Okay, So we've talked about a lot
of weird stuff together.

Speaker 4 (34:59):
To be so this one is one that I'm like,
this might be plausible or it might be like totally
out there. I am not enough of an expert to know,
but so you know eels, Yeah, they for so so
long could not figure out like eels just appeared, And

(35:20):
for so long, like decades, they were trying to figure
out where eels breed because they would just kind of
disappear and then more eels would appear. So they finally
managed to track eels and all the eels in Europe
and America are actually born in the Sargasso Sea, which
is right in the Bermuda triangle.

Speaker 3 (35:40):
Is that where they get their electric powers?

Speaker 4 (35:42):
So that's my theory. Yeah, so some of them are
electric eels, And so I went, what if that is
why people have weird electronic malfunctions over the bringing to triangle?
Is maybe it's like some electromagnetic interference from the eel
breeding ground. So this is my weird crackpot theory that
maybe is means nothing at all, but I think that
it's interesting of all the places they could have found

(36:06):
that eels breed forer me to triangle.

Speaker 3 (36:11):
I don't know the scientific stands behind.

Speaker 4 (36:14):
That, but scientifically I have no idea how accurate that is.
But just you know from a way that I want
things to make sense. I think that that's fascinating. And also,
there you go. If you didn't know where Eel's breed,
I got you. So actually I'm sending you the link
to that article right now, Alex.

Speaker 3 (36:35):
That might be one of the best things you've said
to me.

Speaker 4 (36:38):
So I'm here for all kinds of weird theories, especially
when they relate to Eels.

Speaker 3 (36:45):
I guess it's like it's like, obviously the planes go down,
it's beautiful. I am so glad with your friends.

Speaker 4 (36:57):
I'm here for all your crackpot theories. You want to
take us somewhere else in the world here.

Speaker 3 (37:05):
Uh yes, how about we go to uh not Barcelona,
which I almost said, which is not correct.

Speaker 4 (37:17):
It's near Varadero.

Speaker 3 (37:21):
Ah. They saw, they saw and filmed something strange in
the lake around the I am, out of respect not
going to attempt to say that word. Yeah. I think
you're right. I think there's Nahaldo. They came to say

(37:41):
goodbye to the uh Flica del Plata Fernando, a resident
of Barlicho. So, for those of you at home, this
is BArch This has been translated automatically from Spain yeah.

Speaker 4 (38:01):
So that's part of why this is difficult is some
of it is auto translated and not very well like,
for instance, it's talking about how he talked to Radio six,
except for it still says radio sis. Well, I'm like
you could have translated that. Okay.

Speaker 3 (38:18):
So Fernando resident of Barceloche, told Radio set say it.
He just said it, told Radio six about the strange
fightings yah Thursday in na Hula Hapala near Valadero, where
the Flica del Plata ship is sunk in and it's
said to be removed and scrapped. Watch the video here.

Speaker 4 (38:41):
Which that is just a picture. Where's the video? Oh,
it's down here. Do you want to watch the video
real quick?

Speaker 3 (38:48):
I'm down to watch the video all right.

Speaker 4 (38:53):
I'm going to mute this because I don't think the
audio has anything. Yeah, that's definitely something moving on the water.

Speaker 3 (39:00):
Yeah that's huh.

Speaker 4 (39:07):
I think it's still playing audio even though I muted it.

Speaker 3 (39:12):
Oh yeah, say that's uh huh.

Speaker 4 (39:18):
That's kind of like vaguely Nesty sighting looking. I mean,
obviously it's not messy, but nessy esqueque. That is definitely
very Nesty s It's not it's not quite like rising
out of the water like messy, but like that's something
big moving interesting.

Speaker 3 (39:40):
Yeah, that's very Uh that that that would spook me.
That would definitely spook me a little bit. Yeah, especially
if that's if that's where a supposed salvaged vessel was.
Like it'd be one thing if the boat was still there,
because I could just you know, write that off. It's like, oh,
water curns hitting the boat whatever. Right, But the fact

(40:01):
that there's nothing there.

Speaker 4 (40:02):
Now, you know, it says is sunken and is to
be removed in scraps. So I don't know if that
means that if it's already been removed, or if it's
going to be removed, because I think that's a translation issue.

Speaker 3 (40:14):
That's not it said it had been removed.

Speaker 4 (40:16):
Yeah, that wording is unclear. I guess this happened at
like four o'clock too.

Speaker 3 (40:25):
Yeah, just before the wind picked up. The lake was
a mirror, as if a huge rock had been thrown.
There was no wake. It was twenty meters from Sorry,
I'm sorry reading this so weirdly, but I know that
this is translated yeah or not poorly, but not great either.

Speaker 4 (40:40):
Yeah, I mean Google auto translate. Thanks Google. Yeah, it's
like or actually, you actually might be looking at different
translation than I am, because I don't know what browser.
Are you saying?

Speaker 3 (40:50):
Oh? Chrome?

Speaker 4 (40:51):
Oh yeah, same? Okay, yeah, thanks Google.

Speaker 3 (40:55):
It's uh had gone to say goodbye to the flecka
flet fleck as a horse fletcher imagine if it would
know it. Yeah, okay, this is very broken.

Speaker 4 (41:06):
Yeah, it's trying.

Speaker 3 (41:10):
Spooky stuff happened in a lake where a boat saying.

Speaker 4 (41:14):
Is the oh oh okay, so okay, this is Argentina's
lackness monster looks beneath a Patagonia lake, so that's what. Okay,
So this is a frequent sighting. I guess there's a Najulito,

(41:34):
So that's that what that name is. So they think
this is just a sighting of their their nessy. So yeah,
of course it looks like NeSSI it's their version of
NeSSI okay. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (41:45):
Also, if it's if it's underneath a Patagonia lake, shouldn't
we call it patty in English?

Speaker 4 (41:52):
Don't we already have a patty?

Speaker 3 (41:54):
Do we have a petty?

Speaker 4 (41:55):
I think we do some kind of patty reading this.
By the way, this article that I just pulled up
is from Atlas Obscura deep in the mountains of Patagonia
is a glistening, crystal clear lake. People come here from

(42:15):
all over the world to bask in the cool waters
while gazing out at the stunning Argentinian landscape. But humans
aren't the only ones who swim in nahuel Huapi Lake.
Legend has it that a long necked plesiosaur like monster
roams these waters. Its name is Nahuelito. It's been spouted
countless times from the banks of San Carlos de Barreloche,

(42:38):
often shortened to Barloce, a major point of entry for
taurists to Patagonia. The small city, which is about the
size of Topeka, Kansas, has embraced the loch Ness monster
look alike. Oh wow. Miguel Angel Rossi, director of Bajo Superficie,

(43:00):
documentary about the cryptid, says, Nahualito is our most emblematic symbol.
For many Argentinians. Just the mention of na Jualito conjures
images of Patagonias on Andy's mountains towering above the regions,
listening rivers and lakes.

Speaker 3 (43:17):
So that sounds absolutely gorgeous.

Speaker 4 (43:20):
Yeah, so we we should watch that documentary. I actually
hadn't heard about it before this. Before this modern sighting
of it. So that's really cool. There's so many different
nessis all over the world that I feel like it's
hard to know about all of them. But I'm really
stoked that I now know about another one.

Speaker 3 (43:37):
I think there's one in Indiana too, if I believe
they've got their also here. Huh.

Speaker 4 (43:49):
Which Indiana has a NeSSI?

Speaker 3 (43:54):
A a water monster, there's a there's a there's a
whole article on that was obscure about various water.

Speaker 4 (44:02):
Oh, the lake mintau serpent. Yeah, Minetou. I was thinking
champion at first, and I'm like, that's not Indiana. What
are you talking about?

Speaker 3 (44:11):
No, No, yeah, that's it's That's what I was like.
That's what I always laugh is like, because well, because
you know, obviously we've talked about the eel pig before too.
M h. I adore the eel pig. But it says
here that, uh, Prince William is going to be going
out there to find NeSSI or find uh.

Speaker 4 (44:32):
Oh, yeah, we talked about that last weird news.

Speaker 3 (44:34):
Yeah, I'm just joking. He's just going to find all
the nessis before he's kid. It's one of his herculean trials.

Speaker 4 (44:44):
It's something like Uh. It's basically like the ring, smaller
of the ring. If he can bring all the nesties
together and bind them, he will have the ultimate NeSSI
and he can rule over all the other nessies. Yes,
something like.

Speaker 3 (44:57):
That's uh, yeah, the one see to rule them off.

Speaker 4 (45:04):
We are running out of times, so we'll kind of
speed run these last few articles. This one is from
zd net. The article title is chat GPT's deep research
just identified twenty jobs. It will replace is yours on
the list, which is such a clickbait article and they
want you to be scared. After researching twenty four sources

(45:26):
in seven minutes, chat gpt came up with the top
jobs that might be on the chopping block. We're just
gonna go through it real quick. I just thought this
might be interesting for people. Number one on there is
tax preparer because you could near certainly automate that. Number
two is data entry clerk. Number three is telemarketer on surprising,

(45:47):
Number four is bookkeeper. Number five is paralegal. Number six
is appointment scheduler, and then it cuts off. But yeah,
it's basically just going through things that can be automated, which,
as it turns out, a lot of those are boring
stuff that nobody really wants to be doing. So I'm

(46:08):
a little unsurprised that it is jobs that nobody wants
to really be doing, because I don't think anybody enjoys
being a telemarketer. Oh no, no, I got the rest
of it to load. Number seven is a virtual assistant. Honestly,
I didn't even know there was such a thing as
a virtual assistant. Number eight transcriptionist. Fascinating. You will never

(46:33):
be able to get only a robot to do that.
Number nine proof reader. Once again, you still need a
human to look over it at the end. Number ten copywriter. Again,
still need a person to look over it at the end.
Number eleven Customer service representative. Number twelve, Email marketer, number thirteen,
Content marketer. Number fourteen, Social media manager. Number fifteen translator. Yeah,

(46:58):
that's going to go well. Number sixteen Technical support analyst. Yeah,
good luck with that. Yeah, good luck with that. You
might be able to do based stuff, but good luck
with that. Number seventeen recruiter, number eighteen, market research analysts,
number nineteen travel agent, and number twenty tutor. Wait wait, recruiter, yeah,

(47:22):
recruiters on there.

Speaker 3 (47:24):
That's a very personable thing. You have like no matter
what you're recruiting for, that's a person.

Speaker 4 (47:28):
I think I think they mean recruiter more is like
the middleman. Yeah, because that's basically just like, does your
skill set match what this company's looking for that a
robot can do that part. I think they just mean
as the middleman kind of thing.

Speaker 3 (47:43):
See, I'm hearing jobs that would be made a lot
easier by AI as.

Speaker 5 (47:47):
This, right.

Speaker 4 (47:47):
I don't think it would replace any of these. I
think that it would assist some of these, like tutor
for school that's going to go so badly. Yeah, but uh, yeah,
I just thought we'd talk about that one real quick.

Speaker 3 (48:01):
Well, you know, they left out the top one though,
I believe because I don't see uh CEO on the
list at all, weirdly not.

Speaker 4 (48:11):
And that one would be the one that would be
the easiest to replace.

Speaker 3 (48:15):
Yeah. Oh and uh and film executive. I believe executive
decision made. I'm not seeing any of these jobs. That's weird.

Speaker 4 (48:24):
Yeah, because well maybe we shouldn't get into that. Tell
us about space before I start saying things that we
probably shouldn't get into because we don't have enough time
to talk about it.

Speaker 3 (48:40):
Uh, this one's pretty sick Bullseye Galaxy captured and spellbinding
Hubble image.

Speaker 4 (48:47):
Honestly gorgeous.

Speaker 3 (48:50):
Yeah, like I thought that was like generated at first.
That is breathtakingly beautiful.

Speaker 4 (48:55):
I don't even need to The pictures they get are
so gorgeous they don't even got to generate them.

Speaker 3 (49:00):
Let's say, for those of you at home listening to this,
it's real, pert.

Speaker 4 (49:03):
I'll post it. You gotta go look at it anyway.

Speaker 3 (49:06):
Continue hins of millions of years ago, a humble blue
dwarf galaxy plunged through space, leaving hoops of gas and
dust in its wake. Now those hoops around a new galaxy.
Thanks to the Hubble telescope, Researchers at Yale University have
discovered the freshly named Bullseye galaxy, which features nine sparkling

(49:27):
rings and more than more than doubles the size of
our Milky Way. So it's twice as big as here too.

Speaker 4 (49:34):
So uh I just noticed this article is from Extreme Tech.
The author of this article is Audriana or Adriana nine,
And I'm like, is this like a seven of nine
reference from Star Trek? Like what, yeah, that's awesome?

Speaker 3 (49:58):
Oh man, but yeah, it's real pretty.

Speaker 4 (50:00):
It's really really pretty. I love. I love whenever NASA's like,
hey we got a new picture.

Speaker 3 (50:06):
That's a fun fact. My old high school. Uh Hubble
taught there before he uh went to do telescope stuff.
Really yeah, yeah, like over and over and redacted. Yeah,
he uh he went to uh he taught there. It
was actually pretty cool. Uh, I'm not. I mean, if

(50:27):
you want to know where I went to high school,
you can just look up for Hubble Todd. It's not
really gonna tell you much about.

Speaker 4 (50:31):
I mean, creature. You went to high school probably in
like the fourteen hundreds.

Speaker 3 (50:35):
So which which what's that stamp of hot Hubble? That's terrifying.

Speaker 4 (50:44):
I mean it could have been any one of his clones.
I mean, what.

Speaker 3 (50:50):
The The Eldridge entity that is Hubble observes space.

Speaker 4 (50:55):
The Hubble has always existed, The Hubble will always exist.
Hubble is more of a title than the name. They
must always be here to observe the galaxy.

Speaker 3 (51:06):
What do you mean named after?

Speaker 4 (51:10):
Anyway? Anyway, we got two more articles we're gonna quickly
get through because we are running out of time. This
one's from Gizmoto. The title this one is Britain Orders
Apple to build a back door into your iPhone. Under
the UK law, it's illegal for the company to even
talk about the existence of the order. This is from
Matthew Galt, published on February seventh, twenty five. The United

(51:33):
Kingdom has issued a secret order to Apple and wants
the corporation to build a back door for Britain's security
services that could that it could use to access the
cloud accounts of any iPhone user across the planet. At
first reported by The Washington Post, Britain issued the order
in secret last month. The UK isn't looking to root
around in a specific account for a specific security reason. No,

(51:58):
it wants free access to all users encrypti material full stop.
The UK is making the demand under a twenty sixteen
law called the Investigatory Powers Act, derisively known as the
Snooper's Charter. There's a fight over into encryption happening across
the planet right now. Most normal people and corporations like
Apple want stronger privacy around devices and personal data, and

(52:21):
seek technological solutions for it. Some, but not all, governments,
like the UK, want backdoors and the ability to break
into a user's digital data. France is another country with
its own snooper's charter, while Germany has gone the other
way and passed laws to strengthen encryption and privacy protections.
Apple has long been on the front lines of the
battle against snooping. In twenty twenty two, it began to

(52:41):
offer opt in encryption for data stores on a user's
cloud Advanced Data Protection. It attempted to offer the service earlier,
but stopped because of objections from the FBI during the
first Trump administration. Apple previously fought the FBI over its
investigation into the San Bernardino shooters in twenty sixteen. Investigators

(53:02):
wanted into the phone Tim Cook said no, and the
FBI had to pay a third party contractor a lot
of cash to break into the device. Now Apple is
fighting the UK. It didn't publicly talk about the request
because under the terms of the British Snooper's Charter it's
illegal for the company to disclose it received one, but
it's issued public statements about the act before and even

(53:22):
filed official complaints about the broad powers of the law
in Parliament. Yeah, this is really messed up and we
need to really fight to get laws on the books
that protect people's privacy. And also I have no idea
how they're like trying to passing this stuff with GDPR
in effect there, Like, good god.

Speaker 3 (53:46):
They just just for you to get those of you
at home. Like I'm not a big fan of Apple
or any tech company.

Speaker 4 (53:52):
But yeah, well Apple's doing better than some of the
other tech companies right now.

Speaker 3 (53:56):
That's amazingly two Apples credited. As much as I don't
like them, they've always been very hardcore against the whole
backdoor thing.

Speaker 4 (54:06):
Yeah, even this mentions. The Washington Post reported that Apple
may remove encryption on store data from devices sold in
the UK rather than build a back door. But that
may not satisfy the order, we'll see. But also, how
can they try to do that and legislate that for
other countries that they don't have any jurisdiction in.

Speaker 3 (54:30):
Yeah, it's it's it's times like these where I'm kind
of sad I can't say what I'm thinking on the
radio because boy, howdy is it colorful.

Speaker 4 (54:38):
I'm sure it's coming across in the disdain with which
I read that article, because yeah, that's not going to
help anybody except for you know, people who want to
get into your stuff. And I don't just mean the
government I mean like backdoor hackers.

Speaker 3 (54:55):
Yes, well, you know I was going to say, if
it makes her, if it makes our list, there's at home.
Feel any better? If you thought America was the only
country being fascy, don't worry.

Speaker 4 (55:06):
No, no, no, there's issues in the UK as well.
All right, take us off this planet creature.

Speaker 3 (55:13):
All right, we're gonna talk about SETI baby. Yeah, SETI
researchers pretend to be Aliens searching for Earth.

Speaker 4 (55:25):
Anyone's also from Adriana nine yay? Also, thank you Adriana. Genuinely,
the more these articles you read, the more you're like, oh,
I know that author, my favorite author.

Speaker 3 (55:36):
You need to invite Adriana on to talk about bulls Eye.

Speaker 4 (55:39):
And SETI anyway, Yeah, go ahead.

Speaker 3 (55:43):
Their research reveals which earthly tech you know, signatures would
be easiest to detect from a planet across the galaxy.
Scientists are pouring their resources into searching for signs of
life on our planets, plant planets.

Speaker 4 (55:59):
Why did it pluralize that on other planets?

Speaker 3 (56:01):
Oh, oh my god, on other planets, not our planets.

Speaker 4 (56:08):
Hey, there's going to fund life on our planet too?
Why not?

Speaker 3 (56:12):
Hey? You know what, to be fair, I mean, we
can claim most of the stuff in the Solar System,
but how might extraterrestrial life find us? An experiment spearheaded
by the Seti Institute studies how aliens societies might theoretically
use Earth's techno signatures to locate human life. The project

(56:33):
reveals not only the diverse ways in which we humans
make our existence known, but also which signatures might lead
intelligent life to our celestial doorstep more most effectively, the
experiment Yeah see the String, led by Ceti Technological Research
scientists Sophia seeks with assistance from Penn State's Extraterrestrial Intelligence

(56:58):
Center That's Sick, begins with a few key assumptions. First,
extraterustrial life in question would come from a mirror Earth,
a planet just like ours, but halfway across the galaxy. Second,
experiment assumes that the intelligent life on this mirror Earth
possesses the same technology we do and has used it

(57:18):
for the same amount of time as humans.

Speaker 4 (57:19):
Have a lot of assumptions.

Speaker 3 (57:22):
Yeah, rocket satellites, radios, telescopes and front observatories and so
on are all fair game. They just can't be more advanced.

Speaker 4 (57:29):
Okay, so they're just assuming there on the same level
as us, rather than like being more advanced than us.

Speaker 3 (57:35):
Yeah, okay, so it's it's.

Speaker 4 (57:37):
Not like I was like, those are some assumptions to
be making.

Speaker 3 (57:41):
Yeah, I assume. I assume that maybe there is a
lot of life out there, but all of our technologies
are just so different.

Speaker 4 (57:51):
Yeah, I mean, like who knows we'd even be able
to recognize it, So like who knows what their tech
looks like? Because this kind of even mentions the way
that we are looking for signs of life right now
within and beyond our galaxy are always that we would
be looking for it, so you know, like it's our
same techno signatures or sign of technology that would indicate
that which it may or may not look like that.

Speaker 3 (58:14):
And the thing that's always gotten me is like you know,
I'm I'm I know, you know this, Alex. But for
the audiences, we use like all of our communications based
off radiation, whether it's radio waves, all that stuff, and
the thing is is we use specific frequencies. And the
thing that's always made me kind of laugh is like

(58:35):
we got to cut through all this background radiation defined
intelligent life, when maybe that background radiation is the sign
of intelligent life and we just don't know how.

Speaker 4 (58:46):
The other thing is, we're looking for organic life forms.
Who's to say that they're going to be organic. I
mean it could be any number of things that could
be plastic life forms. We don't know.

Speaker 3 (58:56):
I mean, we have found life on other planets. It's
just microbial.

Speaker 4 (59:00):
Yeah, nobody, Yeah, I mean, it's not trying to communicate
with us yet.

Speaker 3 (59:06):
We got aliens at home at home. But the mic.

Speaker 4 (59:13):
On that note, we are out of time for the day,
so we're gonna take this broadcast, toss it to the
void and you know, help some extra trustrial life picks
it up and use that to phone home to Earth.
I guess not phoning home, but you know, dial back
to Earth come find us. Yes, but uh yeah, out there.
The truth is out there. And on that note, we're

(59:34):
gonna go ahead and sign off for the night. Good night, Low.

Speaker 5 (59:48):
You are listening to Strange Talk Kong radio effect on
sixteen sixty AM in north Side, n ninety one point.
Set the FMHD to w EXU in Cincinnatti. U U

(01:02:08):
U U U
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Ding dong! Join your culture consultants, Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang, on an unforgettable journey into the beating heart of CULTURE. Alongside sizzling special guests, they GET INTO the hottest pop-culture moments of the day and the formative cultural experiences that turned them into Culturistas. Produced by the Big Money Players Network and iHeartRadio.

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.