All Episodes

September 19, 2025 • 120 mins
Tonight it's our once-a-month AMA/AJA... Ask Jimmy Anything!!!
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
This Hope Radio for the Nassis headline of July eighth,
nineteen forty seven. The Audi Air Force has an outstart
applying this turfy found and there's now in the possession
of the ad Air with the game and really changed
the game. Game Changer. I occasionally think how quickly our
difference is worldwide would vanish if we were facing an

(00:51):
alien threat from outside this work. This is Day to Black.
It's your host, Jimmy Church on the Game Changer Radio Network.
All right, here we go, fade to black. How you're doing.

(01:12):
How you doing? Yeah, Today's Thursday, September eighteenth, twenty twenty five.
Get my crystals all set up. I just sat down
in the studio, all right, okay, Yeah, I gotta have
these just right, and they have to line up, and
I put a guitar pick right in the middle on
this line on the thing, and I'm good to go. Yeah,

(01:38):
all right, How you doing. Today's Thursday, September eighteenth, twenty
twenty five. I'm your host, Jimmy Church. Let's do this man, Yeah,
all right? This weekend fade to black. Monday Night we
had Katie Page Snippy the Horse. Tuesday Night was a
no show. Wednesday Night, Mark Christopher Lee, he was here.

(02:00):
That was last night the rentalshim UFO Great conversation. Tonight
is our once a month amaa ja where you get
to ask me anything. It's very simple. Post your questions
in all caps on our YouTube app. I realize you
may be watching on another platform. I don't have fifteen

(02:23):
platforms up in front of me and chat rooms and
things and questions. And I used to do that. Man,
I'm too old, too old chasing that stuff down. Now,
just one source, all caps in the YouTube chat. I
can't even get all those questions answered in one show,
all right, So no sense in spreading it around. And

(02:45):
I used to think, man, you know, it is the
fair fresh, prudent thing to do is to stay up
on Facebook and on Twitter, and on your email, and
on Twitch and over an iHeartRadio and over on spreaker
and things. Wait wait blah no, no no no yeah,

(03:08):
the fade, the black chat room, yeah yeah, all those
on our website. No no no, no no, all right,
all caps in the YouTube chat, all right, post your
questions there. I will get to as many as I
can once in a while. It depends on what kind
of flow I'm in once in a while, I'll get

(03:30):
to the end and I'll get all the questions answered,
and that's when I give these honest answers, but fast,
fast answers. One sentence, two sentence, and there's two sentences.
And then there's other nights where I'm just I'm in
the wrapping mood and I'll give a ten minute answer

(03:54):
to a question like you know, uh, do you like
Custerfield or Jilly Field Donuts? Twenty minutes man twenty minutes
I'll do on that. Yeah, yeah, all right, let's go,

(04:16):
let's get cracking. I have six events coming up. I've
got the Conscious lifex BO February twenty through the twenty
third at the Lax Hilton. I've got the Contact Modalities
Expo May first through the third, twenty six, Delavan Lake
at the Delavan Resort, Contacting the Desert May twenty eight
through June first, twenty twenty six. Tickets available this Thanksgiving Day.

(04:38):
Then Peru for the Inca Celebration of the Sun with
Brian Forrester June twenty third through July first, and then
the Monty Python Tour of Scotland August first through the ninth,
and then Peru and Easter Island November of twenty twenty six.
The links for everything that I'm doing are below. You
know what to do? All right? I had an opening

(05:04):
statement tonight, but that part doesn't matter. Let's just get
straight to it and let's have some fun. I really,
I really enjoy the AMAS. I do? I really enjoy
the AMAS? Should I go with the alternative camera? Man?
Why does this move? This moves on its own. I
swear to God, I swear that moves on its own.

(05:27):
And it's on lockdown. It's it's hard for me to move.
But see if I do this, then you can't tell
where I'm reading from. Yeah, smarter to do it this way,
smarter to I can I'll start the show here. I'll
start the show here, but we'll end up here and
then I'll come back here and then yeah, yeah, we'll

(05:50):
do it like that. All right, So post your questions
in all caps. I just told you in the YouTube chat,
and let's get this cracking, all right? Man? What was
I just saying? Oh? Yeah, I just this is a
great hangout. I'm going to be on today. I was

(06:14):
on with Christina Gomez earlier and we were talking about
the rain. It's raining right now, rained all day, rain
all night and Sunday tomorrow though, And it's like anything else,
you know, when it's raining outside and you're stuck indoors.
There's a certain thing about that that's really cool. And
it's really cool when it lands on a Thursday, because

(06:38):
I have so many shows that I do on a Thursday.
I have three, and I have other stuff that I need,
and it just allows me to just sit inside with
the rain and work and it's a different it's a
different vibe. It's so cool. Well, all day today and work.
I'm just thinking tonight, it's me today. Tonight is an

(06:58):
Ama Tonight, it is an agaa, just happy, just do
to do, do do, just getting ready. So all right
with that, let's just get straight to it. And uh,
let's see up first. Jessica, Jessica, Oh see now see
ah yeah, like that, okay, Ola, Jimmy, did you learn

(07:21):
any Spanish while you were in Panama. That's a great question,
that's a real question. Uh. And the short answer is yes,
of course. The long answer is no. I'll stay on
the short answer, yes, of course. You get back to
the United States after that and nobody's speaking Spanish. I

(07:43):
was in Indianapolis. There was zero Spanish spoken in Indianapolis.
There was and it just went away by the time
I and even then I was, you know, very basic
in my Spanish, but I could certainly understand and nearly anything,

(08:03):
and speaking it was I was pretty smooth when I
By the time I made it out to California, which
was like three or four years later.

Speaker 2 (08:13):
I.

Speaker 1 (08:15):
Could still hear it, but I started to get I
didn't like speaking it because I just didn't do the
language justice, and it just slowly faded away. Yeah. Yeah,
I'm going to stay on this for a second. When

(08:36):
we first moved down there, my father and my stepmother
were in the army band. Okay, my dad was band
leader of the army band, the conductor, right, okay, So
they would leave and go on tour. They did this
a lot, and thinking about this now, what they did

(08:58):
was like totally ill eagle. I'm fourteen years old and
they just split left money, gone for a week, two
weeks they would both go. You know, the Army band
is playing all over South America, well wherever Man probably
Mexico and Costa Rica, but you know, Venezuela, Peru, Chile, Argentina, Brazil, Ecuador, Paraguay, Uruguay, everywhere, Argentina,

(09:31):
and so they would just disappear and I would be
home alone. I was a good kid. I never no
parties were thrown or anything like that. But let me
get to the point with all of this. In the beginning,
I'm fourteen in a foreign country like that, and everybody
down there, every American family, well, Panamanian families too, but

(09:57):
every American family had a Panamanian housekeeper, all right, yes,
and gardener not but a housekeeper, and in a lot
of cases full time, like live in housekeeping. And the
quarters that were built for the families down there had

(10:20):
a maid's room. And if you were lucky, if you
were one of my friends whose parents were cool, you
got the maids room downstairs on the first floor, which
had its own bathroom. Right, those were the cool kids

(10:41):
in school, all right. So fast forward back to my point.
Our housekeeper, the first moment we had, her name was Mary.
We had two over the time I was there, but
the first one. Both of them did not speak English,

(11:02):
any English. I didn't speak any Spanish, not a word.
So how do you get that done? Right? Okay? So

(11:22):
I'm taking Spanish in school had to is required taking
Spanish in school, and so that helped. And I had
a Spanish book that I had all my friends. I'm
gonna call him up on the phone and now, man,
ask my housekeeper if she could not cook, if she

(11:43):
could make this tonight, or have her not do my laundry,
tell her not to make my bed, whatever it was, right,
They would get on the phone. They would tell her
in Spanish. But I slowly, you know, trying to break
down this communication. And we got pretty good at it
over the years. But that's that's the true. Imagine. Just imagine,

(12:05):
I'm fourteen years old. Can you cook? Speaking English slowly?
Doesn't mean anything? Oh man? So yeah, all right, So
there's the answer to that. This is why I like

(12:27):
Ama night and Aja and night. I've never told that story. No,
why what no? Comes out tonight? Love that? Okay? Coming
up next? Who's this from? Dewey Hargus? Thank you man,

(12:48):
thank you for that. Always strive to ask a good question. Okay, Well, Dewey,
let me find you in here. Where's your thing? And
I will come back to that. Dewey, where are you?
Oh my god, there's this many questions so far Dewey,
you're way down there. Oh man, I've got okay, now
see now I've got to speed it up due, he says.

(13:09):
I always tried to ask a good question. My question
to you is why is the powers that be not
point the James Webb space telescope at three I Atlas
to see what could possibly be besides the comment Okay, now, Dewey,
that is a great question. That's a great question, and

(13:29):
I'm going to answer that. Let me explain. Here's the Sun. Oh,
let me go like this. Here's the Sun, here's Earth,
here's the James Web. Three I Atlas is over here
where the James Web is. If you turn it around,
and James Webb is set up to go this way,

(13:52):
but if you turn it around, it's gonna you know,
Earth is in the way. Other things are in the way.
Plus the Sun is in the way and it maybe
they might be able to focus it. But also maybe
too close, yeah, too close to the James James Webb
is set up to look, you know, fifty one hundred

(14:13):
one thousand light years a billion light years into the universe.
It's not set up to do imaging like that. But
also if it turns around the Sun is in between,
so possible Hubble has been in a position to make
some images because of its its position. So but as

(14:38):
soon as it comes around the Sun, which is going
to be October twenty ninth, twenty eight, twenty ninth, thirtieth Halloween,
we have a ton of stuff. Every every imaging system,
every telescope that we have out there, every piece of
censored data that we have to look at and is

(14:59):
going to be pointed at three I ats for sure.
And it turns out it's not the only interstellar object
we have right now, looks like we have two, and
probably by the time this is all done, we'll have three.
But that's why I know. It's a great it's a
great honest, you know quite you know, we have the
James Webb. Why can't we Yeah, yeah, it's just the

(15:24):
way it is. It's just the way it is, and
where James web is sitting out there. All right, let's
see next, let's go Carl Olsen, Jimmy, have you read
the book The Liberty Code? Oh? I've heard it's good though.
If so, what is your thoughts the Liberty Code is

(15:49):
if it's the book that I'm thinking about? Is a
book about conspiracies and a certain government running the world
and you know, trying to overthrow the power and in
the brotherhood that is behind the want I say brotherhood,
they gang the good, the white hats trying to throw

(16:09):
and so that's what it's about. Uh, it's nonfiction. It's
probably based on real facts. But I've heard that the
book is really good. I haven't read it. It's probably
a good audible book. But no, I haven't read it. Carl.
Let me know if it's good. I've heard I've heard

(16:29):
good stuff about the Liberty Code over the years. Let's see,
Jonasie questions in all caps, are are coming in? Renee Newman?
Are intrepid? Do you know what intrepid means? Our intrepid
producer of the news, Jimmy. How many total episodes of

(16:53):
Beyond Belief? Oh okay, I'm gonna start it over, Jimmy.
How many total episodes of Beyond Belief? Will we see
you hosting this season? Oh? Okay? An easier question than
probably because of when I started thirty thirty fifty two

(17:19):
episodes in the year I came in about halfway through. Yeah,
about thirty twenty twenty four, thirty somewhere in there. Yeah, yeh, yep,
somewhere in there, somewhere in there. Next year as a
whole another situation. I love doing that show. Though, I

(17:42):
love doing that show, and Into the Vortex was great too.
What I like about Beyond Belief, Into the Vortext was
my show, and so there were certain aspects with that,
the guests, the artistic side, the format, all of that

(18:04):
that was all on me and my decisions as a team.
But you know, it was my show. So but there
was a lot of responsibility too, and it was a
bit much where Beyond Belief the team takes care of everything,

(18:25):
and it's really wonderful to have those kinds of editors
and producers and writers, directors and everybody else that's involved
with the show because you have you have you have makeup,
you have wardrobe, you have lighting, you have camera, and

(18:46):
everybody is really really good. And then off and that's
you know, but off in the other room where the
producers and the directors are sitting in all the production
assistants they're over there cranking stuff out, you know, running
running scripts and teleprompters and and editing. It's just insane.
But I don't see any of that. I don't have

(19:08):
to worry about any of that. I just focus on
the guest and and stay on top of my game.
And it's great when you don't have anything else to
worry about, you know. And that's that's that's the great
part about Beyond Belief. You know. We shot five episodes
on Friday, and that's a long day for for anybody. Uh,

(19:32):
that is a long day. That's a day that most No,
you can't do it. You can't. It's just too much,
it's too overwhelming. But for me, where I've got, you know,
a few thousand shows under my belt, I know what
I'm doing. You know, I'm not great or fantastic or no,

(19:53):
I'm just rehearsed, you know. You know, I'm just if
I haven't gotten it anything down by now, I need
to hang up my hat. But so for somebody like
me that has the experience in the background in this,
I can go in with Beyond Belief and just sit
down and focus and doing something like five shows, six

(20:15):
shows if I had to, Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
all right, moving on, great question, Renee, thirty episodes this
year are right, let's see up up, It's just all
caps I'm clicking on whatever is coming up with all

(20:39):
caps Jhona side Jimmy, I have to ask three I
atlas as it seems really interesting. Thoughts on what you
have heard behind the scenes. Well, I mean, okay, well
I didn't kind of answer that. It was a different question.
It was about the James Web. I'm I'm going I'm

(21:03):
leaning more on the AVV lobe data set side of
things and putting all that aside, because there's a lot
of stuff to look at with av But the basic,
the two or three basic things that all tie together
at the same time with it is that, a it

(21:26):
just popped up behind Jupiter. It was hauling balls at
you know, one hundred and fifty thousand miles per hour.
It comes in. It's interstellar. It's never been here before,
so we weren't expecting it. It just pops up behind Jupiter.
What there? It is? All right, So there's that. But

(21:49):
with the size and the vastness of space, how is
it that an interstellar object had straight for Earth, straight
for Earth. Watch the movie Contact after the show tonight.
Watch the movie Contact. The opening minute or two minutes

(22:12):
or three minutes of the film is a pullback of Earth,
all right, pull back from Earth, and so it backs up,
backs up, backs up, comes off of Earth, backs up.
You see Mars go by, you see Jupiter and Saturn right,
and it's pulling back, pulling back. Heads out in the
Sun is getting smaller, Earth is getting smaller. Keeps pulling back,

(22:33):
pulling back, pulling back, pulling back. And then our star
system shrinks and it turns into a dot, keeps pulling
back the Milky Way. Galaxy shrinks down, turns into a dot,
keeps pulling back. All these galaxies are zooming by galaxies,
not so galaxies, galaxy. It keeps pulling back a little bit.
It just disappears, all right. Now reverse that you are

(22:57):
three I at lis. Reverse that and here comes Earth.
That's crazy nuts, huh. And so you have to ask

(23:21):
yourself at some point that this object, out of everything
in the universe, trillions and trillions and trillions of things,
trillions of galaxies, trillions and trillions and trillions times a
trillion planets and everything that is out there Earth, So

(23:44):
what are the odds of that? You know? Avi says, oh,
it's one in five hundred. It is not. I'm gonna
argue with Avi it's one in one trillion to the
tenth power. That's the odds, and then taking it to

(24:06):
the next level on our elliptic, the same plant five
degrees off, five degrees off of our solar system, and
our planets orbiting the Sun five degrees off identical, identical.

(24:26):
So yeah, just based on that, I'm very curious. Just
based on that, that alone seems very intentional. Seems very intentional. Okay,
hh is up? Hh you guys remember h h H

(24:51):
says Hey, Jimmy, thanks again for taking the selfie with
me in Charlottesville. Was that Charlottesville? That was Charlottesville? I
was thinking it was. Yeah, it was Charlottesville. Yeah, it
was really cool. I was real nervous going on stage. No,
you weren't. You were fine, and I hope I wasn't
too goofy. You weren't goofy at all. My man, that
was so awesome. All right, what's the story of how

(25:14):
you know Tom? Tom? Oh? Oh oh oh, all right,
So let me clarify. So everybody knows who Tom is.
Tom is Tom zoo taut, Tom's Zo taught and our guy,
and I've known Tom. I'm not sure exactly when we

(25:38):
first met but if I was gonna guess, I would
say eighty five eighty six. Tom Zoo taught signed Guns
N' Roses and in my circle of friends back then,
and it was a very very tight circle. Tom's you

(26:02):
Taughtles was part of that. And and here's the other thing.
And I've known Tom jeez Man forty years a long time.
And uh, Tom was one of the most one of
the biggest, uh and powerful people in the music business

(26:24):
back then. And his name was so intimidating it was.
And then he meet him, and he's just a person.
He had savvy he signed so many bands, big bands,
and had such an amazing track record and an ear

(26:46):
for music. He was able to do that. But he
was just cool. And uh and and here we are,
you know, so many years later. Uh, you know, we're friends.
And he's a he's a really cool cat. So like,
how do I know that's I'm not sure when we met.

(27:07):
That's that's impossible for me to say, impossible, it's all fog.
Oh my goodness. He's a great guy. Though he's out
there doing his thing right now. I think he's uh,
you know, living the good life for sure. But I

(27:27):
think he's doing like a podcast now video series. Yeah, yeah,
hanging out with bands and and just having fun. He's
just doing his thing, all right, All right, here we go.
Do you think the Alien and Panama is the real deal?
Or could it be a fungus called definitely? Oh I

(27:53):
saw that. Yeah, that's pretty crazy. Yeah, he ah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
You know, I'm gonna admit, you know what, it looks alien.

(28:13):
A lot of things look alien. I had to look away,
I mean after, you know, you're just kind of like,
uh yeah, yeah, it was Uh, I have to turn
on my air conditioning. Hang on, I've had it off
all day and for some reason, all of a sudden,
it's You gotta love a smart home. You just gotta

(28:35):
love it. In the old days, you know what it
was like your dad get up in the middle of
the night going to the thermist. Dad in the hallway, and
you're just waiting for him to because he's gonna do it.
He's gonna go who touched the thermost Dad? That was
the big No. No, well I don't have to do

(28:56):
that anymore, man, do it from your smartphone. Yeah, that
was a pretty crazy video. As a pretty crazy video.
I'm with you on that. Okay, follow up to mwl's question,
do you think that mediaite rock or okay, hold on,
let's go back to the do you think that meteorite
rock whatever with the fungus is reel or a hoax?

(29:17):
It's dude, I'm it looks real to me. I don't
know if it's alien. Could be. It's crazy. Man. That's
a fun bit. That is something that I wish I film.
That's really cool. You know what you do? Imagine getting

(29:39):
that in like the sixth grade or the fifth grade,
and you put that thing in a little fish tank,
take it to class science class, pop that thing down,
you know, eighth grade biology class. Aha, mister Jenkins, what
do you think of this? What? Yeah? Man? Look at that?

(30:02):
Yeah right man, you would be the cool kid in school.
Everybody would be coming over to the house. Yeah yeah, yeah,
that's pretty cool. It's pretty cool. Let's see. And this
is why this is why I like hanging out with
you guys. Right now, Jimmy, what are your this is

(30:23):
Nemo's Odyssey. What are your top five favorite foods? And
what is your last meal before Mars attacks? Question of
the night Man, Nemo, that's awesome. Five favorite foods I

(30:46):
think that I can name five, but I'm going to
say this, They're not in any particular order because it
depends on the mood. It depends on the mood. All right,
So straight up, Number one, an American barbecue. It could
be Memphis, it could be Texas, it could be Kansas City.
It just could be Korean. It just has to be

(31:09):
good love barbecue, shredded beef, shredded pork, ribs, chicken, it
just it just doesn't matter, right, just really good barbecue American.
And then what do you tie into that, Well, you
got everything that goes with it. You've got the corn, right,
gotta have corn, man, some kind of crazy ice cold

(31:32):
watermelon to go with that. Maybe some macaroni or potato salad, right,
macaroni and cheese. Yeah, that's all star, just man. Okay,
So there's that pizza. Pizza slash Italian Pizza is almost
its own food group. But Pizza slash Italian will will

(31:57):
go there, all right. Breakfast breakfast, and it could be anything,
could be pancakes, could be waffles, could be omelets, hash browns, sausage,
gravy and biscuits, you know, orange juice, eggs, benedict. How
many times. Do you have to see me post pictures

(32:18):
of eggs Benedict? Do you know where my heart lies?
I just I love breakfast food, really really really good Chinese.
Japanese food is different, and then you've got to throw
sushi into that. But Chinese it just it's just so good.

(32:39):
Mexican food, all of it, all of it. And so
what day? What did you have for dinner the night before?
Is going to dictate what you're gonna have for dinner tonight? Right?
And yeah, yeah, I mean I could go on and
on that down. What is better? All right? You ready?

(33:04):
You ready? What is better? I ask you? Oh? Yeah,
my best my David Hatcher Childers ask you what is
better then meat loaf? I ask you, what is better
than meat loaf? Prime rib? Sometimes not? No, I don't know.

(33:31):
Oh Thanksgiving that's a food group. I mean, what is
better than meat loaf? Okay, A really really good Italian
meatball with sauce on it, no pasta, just the meatball. Yeah,
it's the same thing, isn't it. It's that good? What
is better than that? Uh? You know? I left off hamburgers? Man?

(33:55):
What is better than the hamburger? What is better than
Philly cheese, steak, a French dip are really good at these. Yeah,
but then again a good salad before I move on.
I have, uh, I have two things that I use

(34:15):
a lot. I don't talk about it because it's healthy
and I don't want to project health. I don't want
to do it. But I think about it a lot.
Is I have a juicer and I have a heavy
duty VitaminX industrial blender, so and I do basically well,

(34:40):
the juicer is a juicer, all right. But the smoothie,
the Vitamix smoothie thing, so yogurt whatever, the fruit is
my ice maker's right here. Ice goes in boom, and
that thing is so powerful that I can make a smoothie.

(35:03):
I'm not kidding either. This is if you have a
Vita mix, you know, twenty seconds, fifteen seconds, twenty seconds,
twenty three seconds. If I want to liquefy it, it's
so fast, it's just what rot it's you know, it's
like three thousand watts. It's crazy and all those blades.

(35:26):
But anyway, instant poor drink, and that is a big
part of my life. I know, I talk a big game,
deep dish pieces, you know, I talk a big game
with with I real like Kebab's, I really, I know,
I know grilling, I realize that. But man, a good

(35:49):
smoothie and I need to branch out a bit more.
But Kiwi strawberries, blueberries, tangerines, apples, bananas, yogurt. I used
Greek yogurt sometimes flavored too as well. I use plain,
but flavored, and I sometimes I just don't branch out peaches.

(36:14):
I love peaches, and I just I don't know have
a recipe. Just it's all in there, Zach twenty seconds,
love it all right. So that's another food group for me.
That's one of my five favorite foods is the Vita mix.
Let's see so many questions. It was fun chatting on

(36:38):
your on your last chat three years ago, I called
you about Long John Neville. Okay, we're both fans, the
one the McDonald Keho and Kenneth Arnold. Yeah. Yeah, this
classic about Armstrong Circle Theater event. Man, that is you know,

(36:58):
so many questions. That's amazing that particular show by Long
John Nevill with Donald Keyhoe coming on, because I think
it was I think it was the night before the
Armstrong Theater presents. So what they did they were doing

(37:19):
this big disclosure thing on UFOs and with the Air Force,
and Donald Keyhoe was there to debate and and they
censored him, and so he decided to go off script.
At the end, everything was set and agreed to, and
he goes off script. And so what did they do?

(37:39):
They faded him out, faded him out, roll credit, got
him off the air, just cut the broadcast. And he
was pissed. So he turns around Keyho and he's got
a great voice, man, you know, you know, so they
rolled credits at the end, you know, and he was
so pissed off, and uh and he comes on along

(38:02):
John Neville the next night. That's right, George van Tassel,
was it Van Tassel, h Kenneth Arnold? Kenneth maybe Van
Tassel was on the show too, but Kenneth Arnold for sure.
And they spent that was probably four hours. That show
was a six hour show live out in New York.
But that show, you're absolutely right, that was classic, classic,

(38:25):
classic uh moment And key Hoe was right and key
Hoo was wrong. He went off script, censors and the
way you know, it's that was a different world back then.
And but here's the thing. The air force got to

(38:49):
present their view and without any scrutiny, you know, So
why wasn't he able to present his view without any scrutiny?
But they wouldn't allow it. If he would have written
it out and presented it, he might have gotten away
with it. They might have led him. But yeah, so
many questions bringing up long John Nebel so cool, All right,

(39:12):
I'll cast Jeff, what's your views on the hearing? I
think this was the best hearing yet. The Grush hearing
was just amazing. But what I thought, it's an evolutionary
process and getting these hearings down, and I think that
the comfort zone and the level of comfort from everybody

(39:35):
in Congress and dealing with this subject is they are
more relaxed because if you go back, like the first
one with Andre Carson, and Andre was like, this is
a UFO hearing. UFO UFO means this, you know, and
it was just it was stressful and Andre Carson was amazing,

(39:57):
but the way that he had to start off the
first hearing in fifty years like that, and he needed
to do it that way, but there was too much
tension and things just needed to simmer now. And we
had those two guys from the Department of Defense. God,
I can't remember their names. Who frickin' frack who were

(40:24):
just pumping out misinformation and disinformation and weren't answering what
you know about that? What's the Wilson memo? What have
you heard about Roswell? What's a UFO? Oh? Okay, all right?
Not sure if you know? It was like that and so,

(40:45):
but when you go from that to what we had
last week, that was very straightforward and presented well my
only well only I didn't want to say this beforehand
because I didn't want to mess anything up. But I
was gonna say, no, I'm not going should I say it?

(41:07):
Should I say it? Should I piss everybody off? I
thought to myself, it's going to be awesome. If George
Nap does not bring up Bob Lazar, he doesn't bring
up Lazar, we've got a clean shot at this and
it's going to be amazing because Nap is too good.
He's gonna knock it out of the park. And then

(41:29):
what happens. It wasn't Nap. It was one of the
Congress one of those elected officials I believe, brought up Lazarre.
Maybe it was somebody one of the other witnesses. I thought,
here we go. But I was glad that I don't
want to muddy the waters right now with with Lazarre
controversy and people arguing about this, I don't think it's

(41:51):
really good. We need to make progress here, we need
to keep moving forward. And well, we'll save Lazarre for
another day. But I'm just happy that it was short lived.
It was just a few Oh man. I was like,
here we go, but it was short all right, best

(42:16):
hearing yet though, I'm looking forward to the next one.
All right, here we go. Jimmy, do you ever get
together with friends and have jam sessions? I do. What
is the go to song your friends enjoy playing? In
a hoot? There's always some go to things. So yeah,

(42:39):
I've got a I've got a music room around the
corner down on the other side of the house. I've
got drums, bass amp, a couple of guitar amps and
there I got a PA system, drum set, microphones, lights.
You know, it's all set up. It's ready to go,
and everything's plugged in. Everything weeks and you just walk
in and and and boom. So what's a go to song?

(43:12):
Most of my friends know every Sabbath tune and so
do I. We've got a pretty good Van Halen catalog,
you know, we can always do that. Judas Priest always
a go to thing. And then there's some offbeat stuff,
uh Lynyrd, Skinnyard thirty eight special. I'm just mean, I'm

(43:33):
just like off the top of my Michael Shanker, big time,
lots of and so just crank through. I mean, we
were back there a couple of weeks ago. I had
some friends over. And here's the other thing. Because the
drums are electronic. We I mean it plays through the

(43:54):
PA system, but you don't have you're not drums, right,
So it's like Kentuck Attack. I have a band that's door.
It's like four houses down and it's a big mansion too,
big big house, like four car garage in the back
and nice house. Nice nice house. But they've got a

(44:16):
Mexican Mexican band and they're amazing and they're they're down.
They practice at least one or two nights a week
and then one night a month they'll throw a party
back there. But they're rehearsing all the time and all

(44:36):
you hear, well, you hear everything. If you listen for.
But if the drums that drummer's kada kadak kada, you
don't have that in my house. So I have literally
jammed all day like I did two weeks ago, all day,
all night back there, and I went over to my neighbors.
Both sides said, hey, man, were we bothering yesterday with

(45:01):
what we were jamming? You were? I didn't hear anything.
How could you not hear anything, dude? I mean I
can so yeah. Yeah. Anyway, so we were back there
and and the drummer goes, hey man, Panama like really

(45:21):
out of everything of Van Halen. But yeah, yeah, yeah,
you know, we just play whatever anybody shouts out. Anybody
shouts out. I'm a big I like anything off of
Symptom in the Universe or Sabotage. I like anything off
of Technical Ecstasy. I like anything off of Never Say Die.

(45:43):
Those three albums are my favorite. I just know them
front to back. I know all Black Sabbath songs everyone.
So there's there's that part, and I like the old
fairies wear boots, you know, and things. I like jumping
into that. And in fact, I think we played that
the other day, So there you go. Yeah, there's other

(46:04):
songs too, But that's a that's a great question. It's
a great question. Uh do I have Native American ancestry?
I think we all do. I I don't know. I
don't know. I have never I have never done the

(46:32):
DNA ancestry thing. And you know why. I don't want
my DNA to be given to the three letter agencies
or used or manipulated or done. No. No, my DNA
is my own. I don't care. But once you let

(46:52):
that go, it can be bought and sold no matter
what they tell you. You do a DNA testing and
that company goes bankrupt or bought by somebody else, and
it's a venture capital firm and with with seed money
from DARPA and the CIA, you know which, which has happened.

(47:19):
I'm not making it up. It's a true story. I'm
not going to be part of that. So I'll never know.
I will never know. Okay, Jimmy, what's your favorite Bob
Marley song? And have you been to Jamaica. I have
not been to Jamaica. I have not, God Man been

(47:41):
by there. No, I haven't been to Jamaica. Favorite Bob
Marley song, No Woman, No Cry? Maybe maybe a better
question would be what's your favorite Burning Spear song? Oh?

(48:06):
That's right, this guy just dropped Burning Spear. Such a
hard music to play if you have been raised and
taught music from another school. It could be anything, classical, country, rock, whatever,

(48:34):
you know. Four on the floor, you know, and then
you go into even salsa is easier to learn if
you come from a generic musical background. You know two
four four four and uh, salsa, you know, like santana,

(48:58):
you know, adapting that well, you can kind of kind
of understand and and and get into what salsa is. Raga, reggae,
that's a whole No, No, it's it's hard. It's it's hard.
But because uh, the Jamaican musicians, that's your rate. That

(49:20):
that's it. That's all second nature, you know. Now, try
to get them to play some four on the floor.
It's it's tough. It's tough. It's tough. Man. I love
Bob Marley, I love all all reggae. Uh uh do

(49:40):
you ever have people on your program with their experience ufo.
I'm not sure what that is. That's from bau Hall.
It's not in all caps. I just happened to see
it both put that in all caps and clarify the
question and I'll get back to it. Uh, have I
been too? This is from su No, I have not.

(50:00):
Have you been to Moab? Colorado River? Yes? And no,
I haven't been to Moab specifically, I haven't Colorado River. Yes.
I I saw pictures recently of the wave up in
northern Nevada. Holy, I had no idea I'm taking my

(50:28):
Harley up there soon. But anyway, I've got the jeep
and there's the Moab run and I plan on doing
that for like three years in a row now and
I haven't pulled it off, but I would love to
go to Moab for sure. Jimmy and I want to

(50:49):
just tend scale. How do you rate yourself? I'm a five,
I'm a five, I'm a five. Let's see, Jimmy, can
you show us your night vision goggles and how they work?

(51:13):
They're right there in the cabinets. I hear in my
studio they're over there, but I would have to get
up during Well, I couldn't show you how they work
on the air, but I can show them to you.
We're gonna take a break and i'll grab them. I
have like three pair. I'll see. I have a bunch
of night vision gear right there. I'm pointing at the

(51:35):
cabinet door. I'm pretty sure it's right there. If it's
not there, I'm not gonna go. Look, I've only got
a minute, but yeah, I'll grab those. That's high tech, redneck.
That's a picture of a tractor. That was very cool,
Lamborghini tractor. All right. Look who it is? My favorite

(52:01):
terror reader in the world. Esperanza. Man, she is wondering. Man,
you guys need to hang out with Esperanza. And I'm
going to see her again next year on pitch Jimmy.
We never had dinner or reading. She took the words
right out of my mouth. Took the words right out

(52:22):
of my mouth. But can we I'll even speak Spanish, Esperanza.
You can do. We can do whatever you want. All right,
why don't we go to dinner a whole night to ourselves.
We'll go to dinner and do readings at dinner, and
we'll close the restaurant and we'll rock this thing. That's

(52:45):
what we'll do. And you don't have to worry about
driving home because you live a block away, right, So
there's none of that. There's no excuses. There isn't any
of that, and I don't have an excuse because I
can't go home, So there you go. All right, So
it's a date. I'm excited about this already. I've got
something to look forward to at you know what, everybody

(53:09):
needs to come out to the Expo of the Modalities
Expo in Wisconsin at Delavan Lake. It's a beautiful resort,
beautiful lake resort, ginormous resort with everything there that it's
it's it's it's world class with an amazing staff. You know,

(53:32):
great food, great people, just cool, great atmosphere. So come
on and uh hang out with all of us. Yeah,
it's gonna be really cool this year. Very excited, so esperanza. Yeah,
it's all you. Whatever. You you make the plan. I'll
make the plan. Well, just one night, you and I
good food and a deck of cards. Okay, all right,

(53:54):
and you can do it in Spanish too, that'd be cool.
All right. Let's see, I can barely speak English and
I am American. See, Dewey, I just got to your question,
so I've got to speed this up, okay, Jose Sanchez, Uh,

(54:14):
what do you think about persistent rumors about a time
machine that our military had been toying with for some
time and then abruptly canceled their secret program. Uh. I
don't think that would have been canceled. We have to

(54:42):
god such a complex subject, are well. When we talk
about time machines and time travel, what are we actually
referring to? Are we going with the HG. Wells time machine?
You sit in it, you set the date boom, and
it takes you physically there. You step out of the

(55:03):
time machine and you're hanging out right. Okay, there's that?
Or is it something where you're jumping into a new
timeline in an alternate dimension and up and down from there,

(55:24):
and it's operating in that capacity. If somebody comes at
us from the far far, far far future, all right
and comes here, are they coming back to the same

(55:46):
timeline that their ancestors from a billion years in the
future originated from. Here's the problem with that. That's why
I think that time travel is is is it achieved
in different ways? The amount of particles is finite. So

(56:13):
if you in the universe, all right, So if you
suddenly have a body, a person moving around forwards and
backwards in time, you are adding and subtracting atoms and
particles from the universe, and I don't think the universe

(56:36):
will like that. I'm talking about implosion, like black hole,
end of everything, madness. All right, So this is all theoretical,
and this is the way that my mind works, but
it's how I've come to understand things and how science works.

(56:57):
So I'm not sure, but I think that time travel
is real. I've seen too many examples of it, not
only that I've read, but my own experience. So but
what is it? So I think that the only way
to not upset things is that you experience or you

(57:19):
see the other timeline or the other dimension without physically
doing it. Because it's the atom count, it's the particle count.
You know, Suddenly the universe is and you know, and
if every I think it would only happen once, and

(57:42):
then this timeline disappears because we blow it up because
we implode one one shot at the experiment, and we
don't know that it failed or not because we're vaporized
where d molecliarized. Yeah, yeah, but time travel is real. Yeah,

(58:06):
time travels real. Uh, Jimmy, which cryptid interest you the most?
Which cryptied? Ah, it's a bigfoot. I gotta go bigfoot mofman,
choop of cabra. You know pterodactyls, mmmm, thunderbirds. I'm going bigfoot.

(58:36):
I'm going bigfoot. Yeah, I'm going Bigfoot. Great question, Julie,
and that's an honest answer. I am your host, Jimmy Church.
Tonight is our a M A A JA where you
get to ask me anything. I'm gonna take a quick break.
I'm gonna go get those night vision goggles and I'll
be right back after the shortbreak. Stay with us. Subscribe

(59:30):
to our YouTube channel to get your alerts and access
to over two thousand videos. Click that subscribe button right now.
Go to Jimmy Churchradio dot com and get the Fade
the Black Official podcast two thousand episodes, all of them
commercial free for just two dollars a month. Watch Into

(01:00:10):
the Vortex on guy A TV. It's Fade to Black.
For the screen. Simple to do. Go to guya dot
com search Jimmy Church or click on the link below.
Follow Fade to Black on Twitter at JA Church Radio.
Get all of the show updates every single day. It's

(01:00:33):
now called expert Who Cares? How You doing? Jimmy Church
Here special announcement. Get your Fade the Black t shirts
that's right. Help support the show, help support everything that
we do. Over here, We've got two T shirts. We've
got two ways to get them. Get your Fade the
Black T shirt today. Go Beckley Teppi. Go to Jimmy

(01:00:58):
Churchradio dot com. Become a fade or not. Get a membership.
That's right. Everything is commercial free. You have access to
downloads and you get to call yourself a Fade or not.
Jimmy Church Guy TV. Fade to Black here at Machu
Pichu with Brian Forrester and Hidden INCA tours. Amazing tour

(01:01:22):
so far, Brian, but we're here to announce what we're
gonna do next year in twenty twenty six. What's going on?

Speaker 2 (01:01:27):
Okay, November twenty twenty six, we're going to have our
major tour of Peru and Bolivia, either a pre or
post tour of Parakas and Nasca on the coast, and
then after that six days in.

Speaker 1 (01:01:41):
Easter Island bucket list Easter Island. Come join Brian and
Ian his amazing team here at Hidden Koturs four, Peru,
Bolivia and Easter Island. Signing out, Say goodbye Brian, bye
gang Yeah. Rivermoon Coffee makers of The Fade to Black

(01:02:06):
Blend truly the best coffee on planet Earth. Just visit
Rivermoonwellness dot com or their Amazon story. It's all simple
to do. You can check out the Fade to Black Blend,
the Game Changer Blend, or any of their Black Moon
Wellness products. It's the only coffee I drink. It is
the best, and it's doc again Rivermoonwellness dot Com. All right,

(01:02:52):
welcome back, Fade to Black. I am your host sum Church.
Tonight is our a M A A j A where
you get to ask me anything and this once a
month post your questions in the YouTube live chat in
all caps. Before the break, somebody asked me about night
vision goggles. These are These are my night vision and

(01:03:16):
I can't show you how they work on camera, but
so these are my night vision. These are called Gen
three plus. Very simple to operate. Uh focus once you
know it's a lens cap on there, but anyway, so
focus just one eye once. Once you do that, it's

(01:03:37):
just point and shoot and you look up. Uh one
switch on off. That's it. And these are obviously military gray.
They've got a helmet mount and all of that. If
you want to, you know, swing them up and swing
them down. So these are these are what I use.

(01:03:57):
These run about can be pricey, depends on which gen
you get, but these can be anywhere from fifteen hundred
to about three thousand dollars. These are Gen three pluses,
you know, you know, a few grand twenty five hundred
to three thousand dollars depend on where you get them.

(01:04:19):
Totally worth it though, because one of the things that
I love to do with people that have never used
these before, it's the first time I tell them, look
at the sky, look at the stars. What do you see? Okay,
take a good look. Now look through these and watching
their reaction, Oh my what? Because it's it's insane. You

(01:04:42):
go from if you look up with the naked eye,
you could see, don't you know, three, four or five
thousand stars. There's numbers out there about this, but you
put those on and now you're hundreds of thousands. It's
it's it which you end up seeing. So there's that part.

(01:05:04):
But then there's all the movement out there. But here's
the here's the thing about this technology and what I'm
gonna go deeply philosophical for a second. A fish will
never know what a butterfly is its entire life, will

(01:05:34):
never know or see a butterfly. Butterfly will never see
a fish or know what it's about. And that goes
with so many species here on this planet. Right, humans

(01:05:55):
are the only thing on planet Earth that can experience
everything and wonder about it and ask about it, consider it,
ponder it. What it's like to be a fish, what
it's like to be a butterfly, what it's like to
be a hummingbird, or an eagle, or a rhinoceros or
a jaguar, right, or even another human being, and then

(01:06:22):
turn around and take that into deep space. We are
able to consider an experience everything. It's tremendous. And so

(01:06:46):
I back up and think about something that that deep, right,
that's a deep, deep, deep thought. And so when you go,
how I'm kind of bummed for fish, right, to not

(01:07:07):
be able to experience watching a hummingbird or a bee.
And but the flip side, bees, you know, the that
that hold this planet together, have no idea you know,
what a dolphin is or an octopus and the world

(01:07:29):
that they're in. But we as humans can, and we
can wonder what it's like to be an octopus with
eight nine brains and or what it's like to be
you know, the world of a dolphin or the world
of an eagle. You know we uh you know, a lion,
a tiger. We have that ability to think about it,

(01:07:53):
talk about it, tell stories about it, experiences it's it's
insane and we do it so much that we build
gear like this so we can turn around and experience
and wonder what it's like out there, what is going on?

(01:08:15):
That's what That's what these do. So when I'm when
I'm saying to you, I have somebody look at at
the sky and then put those on and watch their reaction. WHOA, well, yeah,
it would be like taking a fish and pulling them
out of the water and introducing them to a butterfly. Whoa, whoa.

(01:08:41):
It's like that. But we as humans, we just take
it so for granted that, you know, to the point
where this is what we do for sport, tourism, going
to concerts, going to other countries, food cruises, concerts, things

(01:09:04):
where we can go out and experience culture, you know,
and it's experience art and languages and go to a
zoo or go to other countries and see I had
I had read a fact the other day about Panama,

(01:09:24):
And I didn't know that Panama's got over one thousand
species of birds personally, I've heard five hundred of them loudly.
But yeah, and so you are able to go and
do this and experience it. But animals can't. You know,

(01:09:45):
if you give a monkey, a chimpanzee a set of
of night vision goggles and have them look at the sky,
do they understand what they're looking at? I don't know.
Maybe they do, maybe they do, I don't know. All right,
all right, I just ripped philosophy as far as I
want to take it. Gizmo, says Jimmy. What is the

(01:10:10):
one thing you want to let go of in twenty
twenty five? Okay, I can tell you one thing. I
don't that that. I don't want to let go of that.
I've let go of carbs, I've let go of potatoes
and breads. As painful as it is, I've done that,

(01:10:32):
and I don't I enjoy all of that so much.
I don't want to get back on the bandwagon. I
have limited myself to something like pizza wants every couple
of months, once a slice, but that's it. But no potato,
no French rice, no, no, nothing, nothing, No mashed potatoes. Nothing.

(01:10:56):
I haven't. Man, I used to. I used to keep
a loaf of sour dough bread on the countertop, French bread,
cooking with it all the time. And oh man, grilled
ham and cheese sandwich. You know, No, I just don't
do it anymore. So that's I'm gonna stick to that.

(01:11:18):
I'm pretty happy where I am, though. Uh yeah, I
don't know if there's anything I need to let go
of right now. I've been working pretty hard at being
balanced and good. Let's see, have you ever had any

(01:11:38):
dealings with drummer James Kotech in Hollywood? Everybody has It's
cool dude, Yeah, James Kotech? Man, that just came out
of nowhere. Yeah. Wow, okay, great guy, uber talented, uber talented.

(01:12:06):
What do you think life will be like in ten years? Okay,
let's see here. Hold on, Oh, in the year twenty
thirty five. It's the year twenty five, twenty five. You
remember that song? Wow, who's sang that song? It's the
year and I never thought that we would get here,
and here we are in twenty twenty five. Oh, that's

(01:12:28):
twenty five twenty five, not twenty In the year twenty
twenty fives in the year twenty five, twenty five, All right,
what do you think life will be like in ten
years the year twenty thirty five? Just like I said
during COVID, I hope that all of the madness that

(01:12:49):
is happening in the world right now is a lesson
that we take heed and learn from, you know, and
you go back to the eineteen sixties and what was
going on then, including the seventies and everything that we
have done, where it seemed like we made progress, but

(01:13:13):
tensions were always there. They were always simmering in the
background and evidence of it. You know, things ignited quickly
around the country for different reasons. So it's always simmering.
It's always there. But I'm just hoping. I mean, I
look at my daughter daughters and their generation and how
cool they are and how they appreciate the planet and

(01:13:36):
how compassionate they are and so apolitical and non political,
and I really did and man, they just need to
grow up and take hold of everything. The world would
be a better place. And I think that we're getting there. Yeah,
So in ten years, I hope that we really mature.

(01:13:59):
You know how it was for you when you were
twenty you were crazy. When you were twenty one, you
were crazy, you doing crazy stuff, and then suddenly twenty two,
twenty three, twenty four rolls around, and it's insane how
quickly you grow up. The brain doesn't stop its development

(01:14:24):
until around the age of twenty five, so your brain
is still growing and developing and connecting through that whole period.
And that's why you know, the age of twenty four
twenty five you started to take life a little more serious.
And that's where we are as a human race. I
think we're still We're still around. We're stuck at twenty

(01:14:46):
one twenty two. Let's hope we blast through it and
grow up and twenty thirty five be a whole different time. Yeah,
I really do. I think that we're going to grow
up eventually. The madness. Yeah, Jimmy, would you choose to
live forever if you had the opportunity. I had this

(01:15:10):
conversation with Linda Malton Howe over the weekend and I
asked Linda that question. I said, Linda, if you could
take a pill that would reverse your aging, would you
take it? She goes, Yep, sure, would I would take it.

(01:15:35):
I would take it, And she didn't even hesitate. And
then she turned me and she goes, would you I said, well,
now that you've pointed out the positive, yeah, I guess
I would. I guess I would. She's eighty three years old,
you know, and you have to eventually face some serious

(01:15:57):
things at that age, right, You're considering all kinds of
things that creep up on you slowly. But once do
you get to eighty three, and you probably have those
thoughts every day. I'm sixty one. I'm going to be
sixty two next month, that's right, And so yeah, what
have I done? What have I accomplished? What would I

(01:16:18):
still like to do? What is it that makes me happy?
And what is life all about? And you really start
to get at that point because I need to get
to the end of some questions. I need some stuff answered.
You know, who are we? What happens after we die?

(01:16:41):
Why are we here? Are we alone in the universe?
These three four fundamental questions still largely remain unanswered. We've
got lots of experiences and people that talk about this stuff,
and it's all been written about and speculated over and
over and over and over again. Do we have the

(01:17:01):
definitive answer on any of that? No, no, we don't.
And I think that once one question gets answered, then
we could probably answer the next one and the next
one in the next one, because I think that they're
all related. But I would like to in my lifetime
get to and see these answers. Yeah, and that's where

(01:17:22):
I'm at. Considering you were very skeptical of the telepathy
tapes initially, how has your perception changed after the sy Games?
And that's from Android Paranormal. What it wasn't that I
was skeptical of the telepathy tapes. The way that they

(01:17:50):
presented it forced me to ask some difficult questions. Okay,
the telepathy tapes by themselves are fine. When you combine
it with the way that you build it up in
your mind, and then you combine it with the video
stuff that they have, you are able to step back

(01:18:10):
and go, oh, okay, that's not quite how I was
picturing this stuff going down. That's it, and it's good.
It's a good, healthy place to be with something like that.
You've got to remain skeptical, you have to, right, all right,
But we all have the gift. We all do, and

(01:18:36):
I've mentioned it so many times, the thing that the
connectedness that I have with my daughter is insane. It's
so much fun. It's crazy. We're reading each other's minds
all the time. So I realize it's there to practice it.
You know, when you see Dahlia and her daughter and

(01:18:58):
you see them in action and you see that's astounding.
It's crazy. So it's not that I've doubted or didn't believe.
It's that the way that I think they made mistakes
in the way that they presented it on the tapes

(01:19:20):
and then turn around and supported it with the video side.
And for me, this is me personally, it didn't match up.
And it was only because I listened to the telepathy
tapes like two or three times and had a visual
of how all of this stuff was going down. And
then you turn around and you watch the video stuff
and you know every scene, you know what people are saying,

(01:19:42):
you're familiar with. You can see the video and you
know exactly where it is in the telepathy tapes, and
it's for me, it wasn't what I had pictured in
my mind, and that was a mistake on their part.
I would have handled it differently, But you know what,
you don't know until you go through it. Diane Hennessy
is amazing. I look forward to their next round. They're

(01:20:06):
going to do a part two coming up, and it's
it's gonna be good. Dewey says, I didn't realize it
was on the opposite side of the sun. Yeah, I know,
I know. So that's I totally get that. That's why
I'm here, brother, it's talking about James Webb Space telescope

(01:20:26):
and shooting three I Atlas. That's why I'm here, man,
Now you know, now you know? Okay, Jimmy, what are okay, Jimmy,
what are your beliefs about the moon landing and aliens there? Wow,
it's one of those questions, right. It's tough. It's tough.

(01:20:52):
It's tough. It's hard to imagine that they could pull
off faking the moon landings. It's also equally as daunting
to think that they actually did do the moon landings
with the technology, because we're struggling with it today. Here
we are twenty twenty five, fifty years later, man, fifty
years later, and we're still wondering how we're going to

(01:21:12):
get to the Moon. So it makes you wonder how
we did it back then. So there's that, But then
faking it is crazier still, I don't know, you know,
I don't know. Now, then you have the aliens aspect
of it, and some of the some of the data
that has been presented about the moon being artificial. Right,

(01:21:34):
it's a satellite, it was brought here, it was told here.
It's not you know, it's a There's that that's there's
some compelling evidence for that, there really is. It's it's
too perfect. It's too perfect. You know, what are the
odds of that? So there's there's that part. Now when

(01:21:56):
you go back and listen to the communication between Houston
and UH and NASA and the astronauts there there are
some really weird things. Yeah, yeah, they're there. They're they're
watching us who you know, I don't know. And if

(01:22:19):
you if we were e T and we were going
to another planet that had a moon like ours, uh,
we would build a moon base first. Absolutely absolutely. It's
just convenient, you know, stay out there, go and visit,

(01:22:42):
go back stah you know, and and uh, you know
right now, these these aliens on this planet don't have
a way of they don't have rockets yet, they don't
have electricity yet of anything. It's you know, there's still
bows and arrows and fire. So let's build a a
base out here on the moon and we just go

(01:23:02):
and visit and come back, go and visit and come back,
and you do that for a million years or so.
But then one day they're launching a rocket to the
moon and you've got to run and hide, you know,
And it's kind of the way it went down. So
I don't know, I don't know, I don't know. That's Jennifer.

(01:23:26):
That's a great question. Nick B comes in with, have
you ever seen a Rival with Charlie Sheen? I have.
I've seen that movie many times and it's excellent. Excellent movie, excellent,
not to be confused with Arrival Amy what's her name?
I just brain freezed, But yeah, Arrival with Charlie Sheen,

(01:23:51):
excellent movie, a great screenwriting, great idea. Yeah, yeah, it's
really cool. Let's see what did you do before Fade
to Black? I did sportscasting before this, that started in
two thousand and eight. Before that, I was in the

(01:24:14):
music industry and played guitar, produced bands and was in
sales music sales, so yeah, yeah, and then went back
to school for broadcast and here I am so and
I did that and went back to school twenty years ago.

(01:24:36):
So there you go. And that was from Supremus, Supremu Saximus.
That's a great name. Actually, really cool. All right, let's
see man, so much fun, so much fun? Unknown? Is

(01:25:02):
that user? Unknown user? If you were the first two
spot a meteor? What would you name it? Church? Yeah? Church?
What would you name it? Name it church? Would Jimmy work? Now?

(01:25:24):
It could be Jimmy anything? So yeah? Yeah? Uh? What's
the movie? I don't look up? God, I'm trying to
think of Jennifer's screen name. She had that polish name.
Comment comment, I see, don't look up. Don't look up, Jenna,

(01:25:52):
don't look up Jennifer warn her character's name? What is man?
I literally DBSK comment DBSK, Jennifer Lawrence, Kate dbski. Yeah,

(01:26:18):
Kate Blatchet was amazing, she was Meryl Streep, so good, Leonardo,
but comment DBSK. That's what you do. You name it
after yourself? Yeah? I think that's a that's protocol, isn't it?
Is there another way to do it? Can you name
it spot? I don't know. I think that's what we

(01:26:39):
would do. Okay, this is long han so Jimmy, have
you ever heard the expression or notion of guided entanglement
drive as it means of propulsion as opposed to entanglement
as randomly occurring phenomena universe from any guests? Okay, this

(01:27:02):
is strong. That's a strong question and something that I
have looked into and I have research here is entanglement
is an is a misunderstood thing by most people and

(01:27:24):
physicists in explaining it, don't get to the basics and
explain to people, actually what is going on? All right?
How do you this is a very basic principle. How

(01:27:48):
do you entangle two particles? How do you do it?
Do they have to touch each other? This is where
it gets strange. So how is it that particles on
the other opposite sides of the universe remain connected and

(01:28:09):
affect each other's state? Were they once connected? Did they
touch at some point in time? Is there something else
that is entangling them over those distances? Well, let's take
it a step further. All right, When you shake somebody's hand,

(01:28:34):
when you give somebody a hug, when you headbut somebody,
are you now permanently entangled? Think about that? So guided
entanglement the ideas behind that are strong and powerful. But

(01:29:03):
in the theoretical state, we have to address all of
the things that I just in the very basic fundamental forms,
ask these questions, how do things get entangled? How does
this happen? And I don't to suggest that. Well, okay,

(01:29:29):
so you know the particles, they touch each other, they
come in close proximity of each other. When you shake
somebody's hand. Holy crap, trillions of particles just entangled. Then right,
you head butt somebody, think about that. You hug somebody,

(01:29:50):
all right, your family, your co workers, the people that
you are around all day long, you brush up against
some is suddenly everything entangled. Which I have mentioned this
on the show before, is the entire universe. Is every
particle in the entire universe entangled with another particle already?

(01:30:12):
And how do you figure out that mess? So with
guided entanglement drives, the fundamental things need to be addressed,
not in a theoretical sense, in a tested and observed way,
in in a measured way, because random entanglement is another

(01:30:34):
consideration that is right there in front of everybody. Entanglement.
I get it. I understand that it's been tested, it's there,
it's been proven. One particle changes its spin. Other particle
changes its spin at the exact same time. All right,

(01:30:55):
how did it become entangled? And if that's the case,
like I said, right, you brush against a stranger on
a sidewalk in New York, bump into each other, spill coffee. Oh,

(01:31:16):
I'm sorry, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. It's cool. It's cool.
Maybe fist bump and you wipe somebody down. Are you
guys entangled for the rest of your life? Having weird thoughts? Man?
Why did I think that? Oh? Man? Yeah? Yeah, it's

(01:31:38):
how do you measure? How do you do it? Thoughts? On?
Jimmy Kimmel, Yeah, I talked about this earlier today. I
knew it was probably going to come up to as well.
We're all thinking about it, uh I. I've watched what

(01:32:01):
he said, like we all have, and I was like,
how's this different than anything else from any side of
the fence, from anything? How is it? I don't know,
I don't know. I didn't. I didn't find it offensive.

(01:32:23):
If you go back and you look at the satire
and you look at the political comics and stuff that
have been around, and posters and whatever, cartoons, movies, and
you look at any of that that has been out

(01:32:45):
there forever completely offensive to somebody. I mean, wow, go
watch Blazing Saddles. Okay, go watch Blazing Saddles and it
just but any of that, this is just something that

(01:33:07):
has been it's kind of weird. I didn't I didn't
feel it. I didn't see it. And I honestly, if
this controversy hadn't have arisen around it, I would have
never paid attention. Because I haven't watched Jimmy Kimmel or
any Late night or any regular TV man twenty twenty

(01:33:33):
five years. I don't pay attention to it. I would
have never known about it. And if I would have
seen that live, I would it would have just blown
right past me. It just it didn't seem that, you know,
it wasn't that funny, it wasn't that special. I don't

(01:33:54):
get it. But you know, it's it's a different world
that we live in today. Yeah. So, and I'm not
so sure that what happened what Jimmy said was offensive.
It's that people are saying that it's offensive, and the

(01:34:14):
media is saying it's offensive, and suddenly you've got Russian
and Chinese bots coming in and telling us what we
should think and not think and invading our bubbles and
creating thought processes that probably would have never been there
if Yeah. So, I don't know. Maybe Jimmy just wanted

(01:34:37):
to retire. Maybe he was making those comments back in
twenty twenty two. It's like, man, I'm done, you know,
I'm trying to figure my way out of here. I
think his contract was up this year. It's up, you know,
you know it's coming up. And he's been at this
for twenty years. At what point do you Some people

(01:34:58):
choose not to, but at what point do you just
take your money and go on vacation and enjoy yourself
and go do some other stuff maybe producer, direct some movies,
or do a TV series, get it, just get out
and just go enjoy life. After you put in twenty
years of that show. That's a long time, So you know,

(01:35:19):
maybe it was his out. I don't know. I don't know.
I don't know. It just seems to me that, let's see,
I was just reading them to me, like see Aama
so much because it's a subject he's been studying for
almost sixty two years. Yeah, since birth. Pastrami Pistrami Pistrami

(01:35:43):
Pi pistrami. That's esperanza? Is that what you want? Our
date night is going to be pastrami and pie? Could
it be? And you it? Could it? And tear a
cart a deck? Could it be any more perfect? A
pastrami in Wisconsin? And I bet that's good. A pie
in Wisconsin?

Speaker 2 (01:36:04):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:36:06):
Yeah, pizza, beer, pasta, tacos, barbecue. Yeah. See right, we're
all on the same page. Is that that? Oh wow? Okay,
I'm gonna speed up, Jimmy, what do you think the
timing for all these celestial events? I know, I know,
I know. Yeah, yeah, no, I'm I mentioned this earlier today.
Feeling a little targeted, I mean, what's next? You know,

(01:36:30):
I have the feeling if we have a third pop up?
You know, then you know what I mean? Two one
can't count ohm, but so three? I at lists now
s two and that they're okay, all right, So now
we're getting beyond a little bit beyond crazy. But if

(01:36:53):
the third comes in, yeah, yeah, that's a Yeah. I'm
feeling little targeted too. I'm gonna I'm gonna blast through these.
Let me see how quick I can I can get
to everybody. Jeez, many guys are crazy. Look at all
this stuff I'm scrolling past. Now, that's not really cool.

(01:37:14):
There's probably some gems in here, or probably some gems.
This is where I should have somebody do this in
front of me and just go through and just tag
the best stuff. Uh. Is there anyone special in your life? Interesting? Interesting?

(01:37:55):
I'm in a supposed machine. Yeah, I know, I know,
Jose talking about time travel. Is there anyone special in
your life? No? No, No, I got friends that I
hang out with and stuff. But no, I'm married to
my work and my job in this community and all

(01:38:15):
of you. You know. That keeps me busy. And that's it.
Without getting crazy deep in this, like I've got to
lay down on the couch and and talk through this.
It's just that I have motion into going with the flow,
into this lifestyle that I have, which is constant travel,

(01:38:40):
constant taping of TV shows fade to black, and just
trying to squeeze in my Harley and a little downtime
which I have very little of. And so is there
space for anything else? There isn't. There isn't any space.

(01:39:01):
You know. I don't go out. I don't get you know,
a club. No, I don't do any of that. Stuff.
I have people come over, we go out. I have
a certain very small group of friends. There's probably ten

(01:39:23):
of us, fifteen of us, and they all know who
they are, and we hang out. We hang out, and
I usually ask to keep all of that stuff private.
I need my private time where no you know, I
just enjoy it so much having the ability. All right,

(01:39:48):
let me wax some more philosophical here. One of the
things that I enjoy is being able to go somewhere
and talk about anything but this show or the community,

(01:40:12):
or what's going on, or my experiences or your experience.
Just no, just going out and not be It's a
hard thing to explain, or I can I just talk
to somebody that some stranger that doesn't know anything about

(01:40:35):
what I do, and we can just start from ground
zero and just talk about stuff. I love that. I
love that. I love meeting people new. I get introduced
to somebody that has no idea about this community, and
we can go off and talk about anything else. Talk

(01:40:56):
about animals, talk about food, talk about motorcycles, remote control car,
I don't care, golf balls, I don't care. Y'all, just
have a conversation. What did you do today? What do
you do for a living. Oh, that's amazing. Tell me
about it. What's that like? And I can just do that?

(01:41:18):
So yeah, Uh, do you have any update on Damon T. Berry?
I do not. I haven't heard from Damon T. Berry
in years, in years, uh, esperanza, All right, let's see.
Let's see. I'm just looking for all caps, everybody, it's

(01:41:40):
got to be all caps. Put it in all caps
and these old eyes will see it before we run
out time. I've got an atomic clock right here. It's ginormous.
I wish you could see it. It's big, it's red.
Let mean, it's probably I can't even get both hands in.

(01:42:01):
I'm scoot over. It's probably that wide, what three feet
big red, and it's staring at me. It's telling me
to get busy. Hagar and Evans sang the song twenty
five twenty five, Thank you, Louis Bill Charlie. Let's see,

(01:42:25):
that was a good song man. When I was a kid,
that was that was a toe tapper. That was a
toe tapper man. I like that whole era of that
type of music. Just so they were so those bands

(01:42:49):
were so into the future and singing about the future.
You know, Age of Aquarius, the fifth dimension. Uh dude,
do what was that? That? Uh? Classical gas man, I

(01:43:10):
mean it was stuff. It's just so good back then,
all right, Uh classical gas. I can't believe that just
came out of my mouth. I haven't remembered that for years.
Do do do Do Do Do do do do do
do man, you guys are just chatting away. Jimmy. Have

(01:43:36):
you seen gene Ward's YouTube channels showing all the artifacts
on Mars? I have not. Okay, hold on for a second.
What is it gene Ward Jean Ward YouTube Mars? Okay,
this better work? One shot at this Jack the Lad

(01:43:58):
gene war satellite and crash just shape. Oh wow, okay,
here we go. Oh he's Jemp. I think it's Chump Chump.
So he's French. Okay, Oh I have seen this recently, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes,

(01:44:25):
I have seen it. I have seen it. I've seen
the Yeah yeah here and thank you for that, Jack
the Lad. I have seen it. For everybody wants to know. Jemp.
Is it Jemp Jean? Maybe his name's Jeane? Is he Jean? Uh?
He's only got Oh is it eight hundred and seventy

(01:44:47):
four thousand subscribers nine hundred and eight videos. Is that
right or is it eight point? Said man, I don't
have my glasses on. I've said it so many times.
You look at Perseverance, you look at the high res
images of Mars, of the surface of Mars. If you
don't see something that is strange, that sticks out in

(01:45:08):
those videos, you're blind. It's everywhere. So and there's just
a million images on the NASA website high res, and
it takes a lot to scan and look at those.
I've done it. I have spent days, weekends. The image
is just eyes are blood red, blood shot, and I'm

(01:45:29):
scrolling and zooming in and looking image after image and
I'm only looking at fifty or one hundred images and
there's so much. So it's out there. Have you ever
seen the home video of Bruce Lee winning ping pong
with dunchucks? Yes, I have seen that. Even more this
is from ice fhere. I'll tell you what's even more

(01:45:49):
impressive than that. I think it's in San Jose, California.
Bruce Lee is at like the first his first international
karate exhibition in San Jose. It's like the World Amateur
Championships or something. And you watch it's black and white
and you and you know, everybody's out there doing the

(01:46:13):
thing right. And Bruce gets up that he is so
fast that you can't see him. Now we know that today.
But I'm saying in this home video and you're watching this,
and Bruce Lee's like this is that those people, those
contestants that were going up against me, they had never
seen hands like that. They've never seen feet like that.

(01:46:36):
It reminds me of ever it's coming at you. I
when I was a kid, I was like fifteen years old,
and a neighbor of bars who is a friend of
mine since grade school, Nate Golden Gloves, boxer, same age

(01:46:57):
as me. All Right, we put on the gloves. I
might have been sixteen, put on the gloves in my driveway.
My dad had boxing gloves in the garage. I don't
know why he had them. I didn't even know anyway.
So and Nate was, you know, I was talking smack.

(01:47:20):
He was talking smack and whatever. And we put on
the gloves and we stand out in the driveway. I
think my dad was grilling burgers. My mom was sitting
there on the steps with my brother David. Our neighbors
are there Randy Smiley's there, Mark Pratt is there. I

(01:47:41):
remember that there was probably a half dozen of us
kids in the front yard, and I put on lace
up man, I put on the gloves, and I looked
right at Nate right just like this is how it happened.
I look right at Nate like this, just like that.
The next thing I remember was looking up at everybody

(01:48:05):
from the ground that was on my back, and I
was like, why is everybody standing like that? And they
were all looking at me like this, And that's when
I realized that I was on my back. I was
on the ground. I didn't see the punch, Nope, didn't
see it. Didn't see it coming. And that's what Bruce

(01:48:26):
Lee did in San Jose. He didn't see that stuff coming.
Let's see. Do you believe it's a soul container thing?
I do? Well, No, I'm ah, John b that's a
great question. I think that it's possible. Yeah. Yeah, the

(01:48:47):
whole soul container idea is strong. You know, when you
sit down with Linda William Henry, these other thought you know,
even Richard Dolan has discussed this. I'd sat and talked
with Richard about this, and Whitley streever. You know, you

(01:49:10):
get a group together like that and you start discussing
soul containers and the possibilities of this, you get three,
four five different takes on it because everybody has thought
about it. Linda, I think first threw it out there,
and it's an amazing concept. Yeah, Jimmy, thank you, it's

(01:49:31):
an amazing concept. I would like to do a whole
show on that. Thank you for all you do. Appreciate you.
I appreciate you. Roger, thank you so much for that.
Le ser Rita files reptiles. What do you think, man,
I don't know. I'm supposed to know all of this.

(01:49:52):
What is this lass or Lacerta files reptiles? I can't.
I just don't remember everything. Uh oh oh oh oh
oh oh oh oh. Yeah, I've read these. I forget

(01:50:18):
that they were called asserted. That is totally right what
I I when when I first read this. There were
a few there. They're not around anymore. There were a
few researchers that talked about their knowledge of deep ancient

(01:50:47):
history of the universe, our star system, our galaxy, Who
lived here, who ruled what? Who was in battle here? That?
And I would listen to these presentations and just go
where where is this coming from? And how do they
remember this? It's it's it's very and the the Certophiles

(01:51:09):
were right there amongst this, and I had reached out
to a few of the people that I listened to
back in the early days about coming on to Fade
to Black and there, how do I say that they stopped.
They stopped, all of them, you know, stopped talking about

(01:51:33):
it and just kind of disappeared out of the community.
And then I started to lose interest in it because
I was racking it up, in my opinion, to just
really good science fiction, and that people were feeding off
of others each other's ideas. But it's found it fascinating.

(01:51:58):
You know. There is another book out similar to the
Losertiphiles that was a secretary, an assistant at right Pat
I forget her name, and she assisted with the interviewing
of an alien Gray and an Hi and only because

(01:52:24):
she somehow developed a friendship with this Gray and this
Gray and her communicator and the whole book, she transcribed everything,
all of the interviews and everything that was said between
was published into a book. I can't remember what somebody
should throw it up here, and it's very similar to
the Losertiphiles. It's very interesting and so yeah, I've always

(01:52:49):
I've always been drawn to that part of the subject
and have enjoyed it. You know, what is the deep
history of it where they're really you know, when you
look at look at Foundation, look at Star Wars, look
at Star Trek, you know, these ideas of these civilizations

(01:53:15):
that the movie Doom write the books. When you look
at those concepts have to even though it's fiction, have
to be true. And what do I mean by that?
The universe is too big of a place, It's too old,

(01:53:37):
that civilizations have risen to the infinite and probably have
fought each other galactic empires and then faded away, maybe
went to another universe, used up all the resources locally,
and went to another galaxy and another side of the

(01:54:00):
and you know, but it just seems that that has
to be the way that it is. When you look
at Benu, you look at RNA, you look at DNA,
you look at proteins, and you look at these amino
acids and these basic sugars that are floating around in
the vacuum of space on the backs of meteorites and
meteors and asteroids and smacking into different planets and creating

(01:54:26):
life all over the universe. The universe is full of stuff,
just like Earth, full of it to the brim. It's everywhere.
So why wouldn't there be a situation like the descertophiles
of deep galactic empires rising and falling? Yeah, makes sense,

(01:54:55):
you know. And and here's the trippy part. All right,
I'll leave you with this. Why would we know? Why? How? Well,

(01:55:19):
let me explain. We Earth humans have had history for
five thousand years that we know of written history. You
go back to the normal Palate in Egypt, the first

(01:55:42):
example of a written language, and the first you know,
the king that unified these but you know before that
were their countries. Well, okay, we can speculate their theory.
That's not one I let's just go with the basics.
Humans here for five thousand years, five thousand years? What
is that in the time and distance of space. It's nothing.

(01:56:07):
It's smaller than nothing. So why why how would we
know this stuff is coming gone around us? And we're
right here with this little five thousand year window, this
spec this little insignificant nano, nothing of our existence? How

(01:56:35):
how how minor is it? How minor is it Voyager
one and Voyager two, the farthest objects man made from Earth. Right,
here's the fact that I want you to chew on

(01:57:02):
the universe. The observable universe is ninety five billion light
years across. It takes light ninety five billion years to
cross from one side of the universe to the other. Okay,
ninety five billion light years. Okay, are you ready? Voyager

(01:57:26):
two has traveled one light day. That's it. One light day.

(01:57:49):
That's how insignificant. It's crazy. But yet we have developed
things like this, the James Webspace Telescope. We are not
the fish or the butterfly. We are able to discuss
these subjects on this show, very deep, profound, heavy questions

(01:58:13):
and thoughts. And that's where we are today. We're getting
very very very close to understanding what is out there
and how it's out there. We're very close, very close.
And I think that when the damn breaks, fingers in
the dike, right you pull that when that damn breaks,

(01:58:34):
a lot of information is going to come flooding in.
And I think now we are at the point of
being able to understand it. We're very very close. So
there you go. All right, Today is my Friday. It
is your Thursday. Everybody. Just have a great, fun, safe

(01:58:55):
and amazing weekend. It's always so much fun to sit
here doing AMA with all of you. I've blasted through
all of the questions. I think there's probably some extras
now here at the end, but thank you so much.
I'll see everybody right back here on Monday. Just have
a great time, be safe, don't get arrested, do everything
that I would do right, take it to the next level.

(01:59:17):
Just stay out of jail, all right, So until Monday,
I want you to know that all I've got is
go Beckley Tappy. Bada Black is produced by Hilton J. Palm,
Renee Newman, and Michelle Free. Special thanks to Bill John Dex,

(01:59:39):
Jessica Dennis and Kevin Webmaster is Drew the Geek. Music
by Doug Albridge. Intro Spaceboy. Ada Black is produced by
kjc R for the Game Changer Network. This broadcast is
owned and copyrighted twenty twenty four by Badea Black and

(01:59:59):
the Game Changer Network, Inc. It cannot be rebroadcast, downloaded, copied,
or used anywhere in the known universe without written permission
from Faye to Black or the Game Changer Network. I'm
your host, Jimmy church Go, Beckley, Teppy,
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

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

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.