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Art Bell bizzare radio phone call
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Click here to watch video - 03:39s

A hysterical man claiming to be an Area 51 worker phones in to Coast to Coast AM.
Pavot
It is definitely very interesting to say the least, the only thing I can say in speculation is that the date parallels Phil Schneider coming out about the same issues and Phil’s following assignation doesn’t it. Pavot
XITSALLGOODX
QUOTE (Pavot @ May 13 2008, 08:50 AM) *
the date parallels Phil Schneider coming out about the same issues

i belive that the goverment are smart enough to release this phil guys info, into the mainstream to sort of make the theory look a lot more outlandish and face

e.g, the global conspiracy and the nwo - the dolla bill anomilies, 9/11, and things like that are clearly happening / so the goverment puts out a 'theory' into conspiracy circles thru means of david icke and tht, to make the people who see the light, look like nut jobs to the blind publc
if you think about it, as we all kno how brain washing and deciteful the gov is, it makes more secence,

also i belive that when he is talking about wiping out the population, i belive a neculear war will happen, they will use 2012 as a bliblic phropscey saying that it has been writtian down for eons ( how would they kno this there must b a god) and they would use this, to keep the reminalts of humans religious and under their control,

please reply if u read this i wanna kno wht u guys fink
SeEtHeR
Very interesting. The government is sneaky.
Anytime soon they could come out with something
its obvious there are people who sighted "ufos" and
strange things. I think they just like the feeling of
being the ones with all the information. And if we did
get attacked by extraterrestrials then they would be the
first to go hide under a rock.
wolfknight
That is real spookie man. Sounded very real to me. I don;t think the guy was acting the breathing and the cracking of the voice was real.
openmind1963
There have been a bunch of weird calls into CTC am,that's the nature of the beast.anybody remember a few years back when the time traveler phoned into the show???
i believe this guy because if we are ever gonna know anything the government does'nt want us to know,the little people like most of us are are gonna be the ones to spill the beans!
some government fatcat ai'nt gonna tell you squat!!!
chrisfreak
Don't you guys know, that later on this man called the radio back to tell them that it was a joke? It's old news anyway
ShaunZero
QUOTE (chrisfreak @ May 13 2008, 04:55 PM) *
Don't you guys know, that later on this man called the radio back to tell them that it was a joke? It's old news anyway


Agreed, I heard it as well. The guy was a very good actor, though.
world_of_my_own
Thats freaky... ohmy.gif Dont know what 2 believe.
ASOP
Why does everything have to be a hoax? All that is strange,scary,bizzare always comes back as a "hoax" I dont buy it there is some crazy stuff going on in this world and I beleive it to be true...of corse some say hoax that's because your not to know the truth.
wolfknight
I am sorry but this guy sounded to real to me to be a hoax. Then why did the station go dead air during this? There was fear in the man voice. I have heard fear before on 911 tapes and this person was very afraid.
supervike
He called in 11 years ago?





666XZ
He was only warning us that planet was going to cause cause dissaters in 2012
lucasin
Yes! Nice information that you have shared with us.

Thank you very much!
Spooky Shagswell
Shouldn't that read 'an eerie'?

Grammar aside, that was weird. Kinda scary. He sounded extremely distraught. I don't want to give my final judgement, however, until I see some proof that this man called back in to say it was a joke, as chrisfreak claims. I googled the incident for a while and found nothing about the man calling back to say he was fooling around. Help?
iSeeDeadPpl!
sounds real. disturbing to say the least
guitarjosh
I remember that show! What was wierd is that some of his affiliates called in and said that during this call the satallite got pushed out of orbit. Do you hear where it says," discharged" at 2:36? That wasn't Art! Within 10 seconds the show is off the air.
AkamaruFoxHound
that was wierd, I mean he's really stuttering and sounds like he's about to cry, it doesn't sound fake, but then again you know, all planned out, also one more note he kept cutting off on sentences. the strange thing is that when he was getting to the main part of the situation he was immidiately cut off :S
AllP0werToSlaves
Yeah this was pretty creepy; I've never heard of this incident before.
Aanica
QUOTE (wolfknight @ May 13 2008, 11:23 AM) *
That is real spookie man. Sounded very real to me. I don;t think the guy was acting the breathing and the cracking of the voice was real.
Man I am with you on this one I listened close 2 times and thats seems very real and very frightening that guy seem to know he was as good as dead...
Alex01
QUOTE (chrisfreak @ May 13 2008, 11:55 PM) *
Don't you guys know, that later on this man called the radio back to tell them that it was a joke? It's old news anyway



You sure it was the same guy? ph34r.gif The goverment isn't going to be quiet while their information is going out. That would also the explain when they get off the air.



But there are actually two posibilities:

- A radio show prank (this has been done before, *cough* war of the worlds *cough*)

- It's genuine.

Want to know about the War of the Worlds radio prank? Read:


QUOTE
October 30, 1938: The 'War of the Worlds' radio show is broadcast

Before his ascendancy to icon of all things cinema, Orson Welles was a fledgling director in New Deal America. In 1938, the man who later brought the world "Citizen Kane" had an idea for a radio production that he believed would strike fear in homes nationwide. Welles, the director of a New York City-based program called "Mercury Theatre on the Air," adapted H.G. Wells' novel "War of the Worlds" for the show's Halloween episode. The adaptation of Wells' 1898 work, which chronicled an alien invasion of England, updated the story to take place in Grovers Mill, N.J., in 1938. By the middle of the hour-long program, hundreds of thousands of Americans had bought the hoax, believing that martians had actually landed on Earth. Welles wanted panic, and that's exactly what he got. But, how did he succeed in creating mass hysteria via the airwaves? Why did a radio play intended for Halloween spook leave its listeners fleeing for their lives?

Orson Welles

The broadcast's effects were attributed to two primary factors: format and timing. Welles wanted an authentic sound for the program, and achieved it by creating a series of new bulletins describing the alien invasion as it was supposedly happening. The bulletins interrupted a seemingly ordinary music show to inform listeners of the invasion. Bulletins first began from a Princeton observatory, where a fictional reporter broke the news that astronomers were monitoring strange activity on Mars. Next came reports that a "huge, flaming object" had slammed into a Grovers Mill farm. When citizens gathered at the crash site to view the commotion, they were zapped by the object's heat ray, prompting New Jersey officials to seize control of the radio station and declare martial law. More bulletins rushed in from around the country reporting martian sightings. The Secretary of the Interior in Washington, D.C., urged people to stay calm, even as the martians were allegedly destroying cities. In the final stage of the invasion, tripods descended upon New York City, "wading the Hudson like a man through a brook." Thick, poisonous gas suffocated New Yorkers, and the signals cut in and out to indicate destruction.

After the broadcast supposedly cut out from CBS headquarters, an announcement finally came that the plot was the stuff of fiction. Welles intentionally withheld this reminder from the middle section of the show, so that anyone tuning in after the introduction had no idea of the hoax. For nearly 30 minutes, from the initial reports of explosions on Mars to the lost signals from Manhattan, there were no disclaimers. Because "Mercury Theatre" shared a time slot with the more popular "Chase and Sanborn Hour" on NBC, Welles knew that many dial-tuners would not hear the introduction to his show. He also knew when the first sketch on "Chase and Sanborn" ended, many viewers would flip to his program in favor of the musical interlude. Just as NBC listeners turned the dial, they heard the reports from Grovers Mill on CBS, and had no idea that the story was fake. In an era when Americans believed everything they heard on the radio, many were livid upon hearing of the trickery. While the broadcast received harsh criticism for sending many into a frenzy, the event took its infamous place in popular culture almost instantly. To this day, there are allusions, in both film and literature, to the night when Orson Welles pulled the greatest prank in the history of radio.



http://entertainment.howstuffworks.com/war-of-the-worlds.htm
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