Area 51
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Summary
Now I know what's actually in it. Here's your Episode 2 description:
Tony believed in aliens until the government said they were real. That's when things got suspicious. This episode tears apart everything you think you know about UFOs — starting with the stuff that's actually credible and ending somewhere nobody saw coming.
Commander David Fravor is flying a routine mission off the coast of San Diego when his radar picks up something dropping from 80,000 feet. No wings. No exhaust. No flight plan. The Tic Tac footage is real. The congressional hearings happened. David Grusch raised his right hand and testified under oath. Some of this is legitimate. The question is how much.
Then the shredding begins. Giorgio — harmless, in on the joke. Childress — delivers everything like a fact, has zero documentation. Wilcock — the IQ touchdown dance. Goode — trademarked his alien story, sued for fraud, runs a Secret Space Program with age regression technology. And all of them platform on a show produced by Disney. Disney doesn't platform people who threaten the establishment. If these guys were real threats, they'd be shadow-banned. Tony was shadow-banned. They weren't. Do the math.
Then Tony walks the floor at AlienCon like a car dealer inspecting trade-ins. App stores selling alien communication devices. VIP packages at $2,500 for a weekend in the desert with night vision goggles. He's seen this before. Different product, same pitch. And thirty years across a car dealer's desk taught him one thing — when someone's selling too hard, they don't have the car.
But some of them are quiet. Some of them didn't write books. Didn't build apps. Didn't charge for desert retreats. Fravor reported what he saw and went back to work. The radar operators filed their reports and said nothing else. Bob Lazar might be real — but element 115 is just counting. Charles Hall might be a storyteller, not a con man. The ones worth listening to are the ones who stopped talking.
Then the ending nobody sees coming. Lola gets quiet. "Haven't you had glaucoma since you were thirty-five?" "The average onset is sixty-five." "And your prostate?" "And didn't you work for the Department of the Navy?" Long silence. "Say goodnight Lola." "Goodnight Lola."
The man who spent an hour proving everyone else is a fraud won't talk about himself. Ask yourself why.
(00:00) Roswell 1947 — the rancher, the press release, the cover-up (06:00) The Tic Tac — Commander Fravor sees something impossible (12:00) The shredding begins — Giorgio, Childress, Wilcock, Goode (18:00) AlienCon — a car dealer walks the floor (24:00) The quiet ones — Fravor, the radar operators, the pilots who didn't write books (30:00) Birds of a feather — any alien that wants to deal with us is one you don't want to know (36:00) The glaucoma question — Lola turns it on Tony
This is a SceneCast™ production — fully produced audio drama with voice actors, original music, and cinematic sound design. Not a podcast. Theater that streams. Based on true events.
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