Chilluminati Podcast - Episode 261 - The Gulf Breeze Sightings - Part 1
Episode Date: August 18, 2024Jesse, Alex and Mike begin a small series into the UFO sightings happening in the late 80's in Gulf Breeze Florida! MERCH - http://www.theyetee.com/collections/chilluminati Special thanks to our spons...ors this episode - Zocdoc - http://www.zocdoc.com/chill All you lovely people at Patreon! HTTP://PATREON.COM/CHILLUMINATIPOD Jesse Cox - http://www.youtube.com/jessecox Alex Faciane - http://www.youtube.com/user/superbeardbros Editor - DeanCutty http://www.twitter.com/deancutty Art Commissioned by - http://www.mollyheadycarroll.com
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Beads of sweat trickle down your forehead.
As you reach to wipe the fearful drips, you notice your hands trembling.
You try to steady yourself as you confront...
the mailbox?
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Farber Debt Solutions, licensed insolvency trustees. Get the truth about debt. Hello everybody and welcome back to the Chiluminati Podcast, episode 261.
As always, I'm one of your hosts, Mike Martin.
Today joined by the Betty and Barney Rubble of LA. Oh, what?
I thought you're going to say Betty and Barney Hill of LA.
Same. No, I think I've done that one. I think I did Betty
and Barney Hill. So, who's who's we all know like Betty's in
charge. I'm Betty just because I'm the sexier of the two of
us. I'm also literally the guy who's like, hey, Fred, like, that's my whole
like, I won't talk on this show for like eight minutes and then I'll be like,
what do you think that guy's favorite McDonald's food is?
You know, like I feel like that's very true to like my spirit
in the way that I am the Deadpool of the show.
Unfortunately, I think, unfortunately, I'm
why, unfortunately, because you like black agar bolt again
So your tastes are off because because Deadpool is obnoxious. That's what's like we like him
You know we can like him but we can all admit he's obnoxious and like, you know, like it's the same thing with this
It's like
Look, Jesse's hotter than me. He's got his he's got the bod and what do I fit well in a dress?
What can I say?
Yeah, are you gonna wear one at Alex's wedding in a couple weeks? Um, no because I don't want to upstage the bride fair fair enough and I'm very grateful that you're not gonna do that
I know I thanks buddy. Yeah, I'm very grateful. So
That's gonna be great patreon.com slash children. I mean pod is a website that you can go to
Patreon.com slash. Sillimanati Pod is a website that you can go to.
And I don't even know how we got from Betty and Barney
rubble to here, but we did it.
Here's the thing.
Albert Fish hollowed my soul out.
Oh, my God.
I have something to say about that.
I have so much stress.
I'm so glad we've moved on from torture porn to just torture
because it's really,
I was not a fan of any of that.
The Alex Fish series showed me who in our audience
grew up with unrestricted access to the internet
when they were younger and who did not.
Just to be clear, his name is Albert Fish,
not Alex Fish, that's my name.
I am not this
guy. That's not what's going on
here. But you do love that
sweet, sweet nutter butter.
Like, it's a really great type
of cookie. And I like them. And
they taste good on vanilla ice
cream. And that's all I'm gonna
say about it. It's just a good
cookie. That's it. That's it. But, you know.
At the risk of saying a pun, I'm still reeling.
Yeah, I was Albert Fish episodes. Something I didn't say, and I kind of want to fill in now is before Albert Fish was killed.
One of his quotes was when he learned why.
Whoa, whoa, whoa. Time out.
We were free of this and you're like, hold on, Let me say some actually wacky shit that Albert Fish said.
He had it in my head for two days. He just simply said, Oh, what a thrill it would be
to be killed by the electric chair. So he was very excited.
That was his, that was his, that's his famous quote. That's like his like, yeah, that's
like his end.
That's his Tumblr quote.
Who would have thought it would be to be killed by the electric chair? All right. Now I'm done with that.
We're fish. There's a couple of tears on this Patreon and the one.
Is this the first? Are we? This is the first.
This is the first. This is the official. We're alive. You can see me now.
The trolls have finally won the not worth it. To be honest,
the lunatics are running the asylum now. I, you can see now,
all my sick outfits. Yeah. Now you can see now all my sick outfits
And I can see our rooms. Yeah now you can see
How serious my comic book addiction is and if that doesn't get you going?
I think they can and if that doesn't get you going head on over to patreon.com
Slash Chiluminati pod to find out just how psycho I have gone.
Has it gotten bigger since I've been there?
Probably not much.
I can't imagine.
No, yes, definitely it has.
Well, that's true.
Cause like every time I go,
especially when I end up staying with you,
we go to the comic shop and there's like,
you walk out with like a six inch tall stack
of just comics every time.
I had to like stop.
Okay, I no longer collect magazines. a tall stack of just comics every time. I had to like stop, like okay,
I no longer collect magazines.
May or may not be because I'm not allowed
to subscribe to them at my own local comic book store
anymore because of how many I've left there before.
But I wanna be clear, I've paid for all of them.
I'm not some kind of fuckin' loser.
I did, I just, you know, I sometimes don't go in
for several months and so as
Per store policy. I now only purchase trade paperbacks, which is in general a healthier way to fly
You know what I'm saying? Yeah. Yeah, but I need to tell yourself
Look, it helps. Look, I'm I'm just trying to be positive trying to make my life better. You know what I mean?
I'm just trying to be as as as'm trying to make my life better. You know what I mean? I'm just trying to be as as as actualized as I can be.
Patreon.com slash Chiluminati Pods.
Fantastic. Appreciate it.
No. Yes.
Albert Fish is officially done, gentlemen, and we're going to have a nice little
palate cleanser of a two parter.
We're going to the eight world of space and aliens once again, but not doing any
like Project Pegasus or Montauk project.
Instead, we're actually doing one of the most
famous alien sightings to have happened within the United
States. This happened in the 80s over the course of a few
months. It is known well as the Gulf Breeze sightings, which
obviously happened in Gulf Breeze, Florida. Let me ask you
a question real quick for podcasting purposes. Yes, Sir.
Great vaude. You're doing great. You got a cat. That's awesome.
I guess I'm not going to change any of the way we do our podcast for video,
homie, I don't know.
Like this happening with your cat.
Yeah. With the fur.
Yeah. It's not like a thing right now.
Yeah. But now it is.
I think that now is being pet.
That's part of the twenty dollar.
Yeah, it's part of a trend.
I don't think it's really part.
Look at hey, even look at that cat.
If you want to be in on this joke 100% head on over to patreon.com slash Chilumetipod.
Okay, the Gulf Breeze sightings. Before we jump in my sources, obviously.
I've never heard of this shit before.
That's crazy to me too. I figured you would. This is like a Phoenix Lights kind of situation.
In terms of that, it was like a couple of just normal folks saw some stuff, but it wasn't as widespread
as the Phoenix lights. It was just as popular. I would say. So when you say Phoenix lights,
that's just lights. And this is, this is a two parter. So what happened to make it two
parts? Well, the first part is going to be the entire sighting on it's on its own.
And then part two is going to be the immense amount of investigation and like debunking
that went into it. And there's a story in its own when it comes to the debunking, because
there's some stuff that came out that showed the bunkers like it's like those paleontologists
that were like racing to name all the dinosaurs and just like, yeah, fuck each other over and shit.
It's not to say that this isn't a hoax either.
It's just to say that the debunkers were so convinced that it was a hoax, but they didn't have the evidence that they needed, that they maybe created some of their own.
And all hinges off of five Polaroid photos that were taken during these encounters that we will talk about.
Yes, Polaroids.
So interesting.
Yeah, maybe I have seen these.
I don't know.
Well, you probably I would imagine you have.
I truly think you've probably seen the photos if you're remotely into the UFO world at all.
These these sightings took place from 19 late 1987 into early 1988 to a man by the name of Ed Walters.
And we're going to talk a little bit about him as we always do.
Again, top of the episode of the sources.
I forgot I got tangentially pulled away.
The Gulf Bree sightings by Ed Walters and Francis Walters from 1990 is the main
source like book source.
But there are also a ton of articles that were written at the time.
There was a 30 year article that I use that was written in
2017 and a bunch of news like interviews and stuff from the
Times as well.
There's like a bajillion things you can go watch about this
stuff. Ed Walters.
Just the guy this happened to was born in the early 1940s
and by the time of the Gulf Bree sightings, he was in his
mid 40s. He spent much of his early life in South in the early 1940s. And by the time of the Gulf Bree sightings, he was in his mid 40s. He spent much of his early life in South
in the southeastern United States growing up in a small modest
family, nothing like 12 kids or anything to be clear on time
tables. You're saying he's born in the 40s. Now he's 40s.
We're talking the 80s. Yes, sir. Talking the 80s 1987, particularly
is when the sightings take place. He was just kind of a hardworking enter enterprising individual even from a
young age.
His background wasn't particularly remarkable in any way with no no no
involvement in any unusual weird activities like a lot of these sightings
tend to have we usually have somebody who's already into the UFOs or radio
signals somebody who's like I've been like super depressed and everybody's
I feel like somebody's targeting me. Yeah. Yeah. Like those kinds of people.
This guy was just live in his life.
He just live in a normal middle class like life.
And after completing high school, Walter's pursued a career in construction
and building, contracting in a field that he had until the sightings happened.
He had and really seemed to have a natural aptitude for the work.
Everybody who worked with him said he was just a hard worker and good at what he did.
And he had his own little successful business
in Gulf Breeze, Florida, in an early age.
And by the mid 1980s, Walters was a well-established figure
within his own local community known for his-
Is Gulf Breeze-
In Florida, it's a place.
Where else could you-
No, I'm aware.
I'm trying to figure out, Jesus Christ. I'm trying to figure out. Is it panhandle?
Is it down south? Is it in the I feel like it's got to be on
the left side. Yeah, it seems like golf breeze would be kind
of like a Gulf of Mexico. Yeah, it looks like it's near. Oh,
it's like off. It's at the very, very panhandle way off to the left at the very corner before it meets Alabama.
Oh, so we're we're Texas.
Bama, we're like in right next to Pensacola.
It's a Gulf Breeze is like you have to take a bridge over the ocean
to get to Gulf Breeze. Interesting. OK.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Best as some somebody may call it paradise.
Floribama. I want that on the tip on the Florida Panhandle right where it meets
Alabama.
Yeah, the place all people visiting Florida want to go to
that in Jacksonville, like the real two great places to go
to.
Do you think it's like super, super dank over there?
Is that like the vibe?
You think it's like dank?
If you mean just like gross and like it feels like you're swimming through the air and bugs are everywhere. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's humid all the time and uncomfortable. Not like that. Stanky cranky. Bing bang bong jazz grass. I'm talking about dank like a cave. Yeah. Right. Yeah. Yeah. That's like that's how Houston is. Basically it's just like dank like a cave all the time out here. And by the so back to the story at hand and by the by the mid 1980s, Walters was really
well known in his community.
He was known as reliable.
He had a lot of high quality work.
He was the guy people went to and they needed something fixed up at their place or their
house.
He often took on residential projects, including home constructions, renovations, other contracting
jobs and just had a solid reputation amongst all of his clients.
And he was a bit of a solid reputation amongst all of his clients.
And he was a bit of a family man himself when he grew up.
Ed Walters ended up marrying Francis Walters, a partnership that was central to his life forever since he met her.
And together they had a family and were deeply involved in the Gulf Breeze community.
The couple lived in a comfortable middle class home in a quiet little neighborhood and added to help design that edit specifically helped design and
build like he helped design the neighborhood and he you know
was living in it. Their home was like a pen and paper. Yeah,
because in the 1980s man, this is when the economy is like
booming still. Yeah, but it's still Florida. So there's only
two options here. One him being involved in the community means
like golf carts. They all golf carted around their little like perfect town or they all dress like pirates and did a lot of drugs. Like there's only two options for
I think it's the first one, unfortunately, but God, I wish it was the second one. Like the further you go south in Florida, the more pirates there are, the more drugs there are. It's just the way it is. Yeah. And this is pretty as north in Florida as you can be 80s is like the glory days though of the cocaine
No, I mean like the like golf cart. I don't know like oh, yeah tree the little communities and stuff
Yeah, that's like the 80s, Florida and the only reference I have is Vice City
So like that's what I think of so but like the part where but like where the old people are that yeah like yeah
Yeah, so definitely more golf car driving around that kind of style.
And the Walters family was not particularly known for being involved in.
The whole family itself wasn't nobody and it was involved in like the weird shit.
Nobody was looking into like UFOs.
They were just living their life.
Sure. Yeah, yeah, sure.
He's also known as a devoted husband, a good father, actively participated
in his kids lives in the local school and community events.
So like he was around and before the sightings and Walters had a
solid reputation as a dependable honest man.
He was viewed as hardworking successful businessman who was well-liked
by his neighbors his clients no known incidents or controversies
in his past that would suggest a tendency towards fabrication either
or seeking attention.
He didn't really have a criminal past.
He wasn't like a ne'er do well.
In fact, many of the people who knew him
described Walters as somewhat private and reserved,
not the type of person who saw out the limelight.
In his professional life, Ed Walters was considered
meticulous and detail-oriented.
His work as a contractor required precision and reliability
and qualities that were also reflected in his personal life. He was seen as a man of just integrity.
How does a contractor end up designing an entire neighborhood? That's blowing my mind.
Dude, I'm telling you, this is one of those like towns that they built when we're talking
87. This is the rise of suburbs. This is going to be little tiny bullshit towns where now
we look at it and we're like, why do we
build it this way? What the hell are we thinking?
Uh, I'm going to send you a picture of where golf breezes so you can like see it. Like
this is the very tip. Like golf breeze is small as hell. Oh shit. Okay. So this is like,
this is like that part of like vice city where you like unlock it, like later in the game
where you can go, that's like a little bit less city buildings a little bit more big backyards kind of vibes.
I mean just looking at it the whole thing looks like one of those planned communities
that is designed to be destroyed in a hurricane.
You want to know how I know it?
Here's Pensacola Dog Beach.
Pensacola Dog Beach West. That's how I know.
That's how you know it's a small ass area. And across the fucking Pensacola Bay, Bayview Dog Beach.
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I can see the tiny dog.
Do you like I've never been to obviously Gulf Breeze or this other place.
But from what I've heard, it reminds me of Staten Island.
Aren't they similar?
Like kind of detached from the state.
You have to like go out and over like water to get there and it's kind of pre-planned.
Geologically, sure.
Yeah, but pre-planning and everything.
I've never been to Staten Island, so I have no idea if it's like the same vibe at all.
But I don't think it's like visually or texturally the same vibe, but like philosophically, I
think it's the same vibe, but like philosophically, I think it's the same vibe.
Also, I don't want to harp on this picture that no one can see forever,
but what in the hell is fast Eddie's fun center in Pensacola, Florida?
Good question. What in the hell is that?
Sounds like it's a fast Eddie's fun center.
It sounds like some place I would go to get like my kidney removed without my
knowledge. Oh man. It's like, okay, here. They've got an actual fucking website.
But Fast Eddie's on center dot com.
Here you go, boys.
This is worth me stopping this episode just to talk about this.
They got go cards. They got mini golf.
They got arcades. They got batting cages.
Guys, this is how we save America right here.
No, this is trash.
So here's the thing I realized now.
That's rude. This is like a website from 1999 and it's like preserved. Well, I'm looking at the
current modern day and I got to let you know, this is everything's wrong with America. So half of the
area is poorly planned housing with like a bunch of weird roads and people with huge backyards and shit and the other half
It's like yo, I live in Gulf Breeze, man
I can't wait to go take my car my go my golf cart out and go to
Some of the amazing restaurants located on my little tiny island Chick-fil-a Dunkin Donuts
Baskin and Robbins they have if you live on's. If you're a listener from Gulf Breeze, I apologize for Jesse's rant.
No, this is trash. You got trash food.
The town's going to rise up against him.
The town of the one person in town that might.
They're going to probably fucking do in Pensacola, Florida, fucking ban it from
fucking schools. Firehouse subs.
Walmart. This is the most like this.
And again, this is peak 1987 America. They were like, yeah. Yeah, it's everything people want there's I see
Nothing of like mom and pop Wendy's
crumble
Pete Panera bread. There's nothing here that screams like I want to live on an island and like be in paradise
No culture. Yeah, there was never culture. That's exactly what it is. That's what I'm saying. Zero. There's no like shanty town that built up around, you know, where like people came long ago.
It was just some fucking guys in the eighties who were like here, uh, by the dog beach and the other
dog beach. Yeah, no. And that's exactly what it is. And like, he's some visionary. He probably is
like a, like a dude with money who was like, yeah, let's all build like shitty houses in the hurricane zone
I'm just trying to we're just trying to set the scene. You see what I'm saying?
He's okay climate change was only just kind of getting let me just tell you the 80s ruined a lot of shit for a lot
Of people so 80s was a pretty
Pretty rough one for the US of a I must know
So I guess shit all I guess shitty get shitting on Gulf Breeze is what our stance here at Shaluma Nadi is.
I'm looking look I am looking at modern day Gulf Breeze
and there is no reason to visit or go there at all.
I'm like sure I say over portion.
You're one of my best ones.
I got to just I got to stand by you.
I have lots.
There's lots of people there that I'm sure are great.
I'm sure they agree with us.
Meanwhile, Pensacola has Peg leg Pete's oyster bar. I have lots. There's lots of people there that I'm sure are great. I'm sure they agree with us.
Meanwhile, Pensacola has Peg Leg Pete's oyster bar.
OK, that's a last Eddie and Peg Leg Pete are both in Pensacola, Florida.
Yeah, Pensacola is where I feel like I'm going to say,
I feel like Gulf Breeze was probably Swamp Land.
They threw dirt into it.
You know what? There's a size of city where being in the big city
is better than being in the suburbs.
I just didn't look into the foundation of Gulf Breeze for the
episode. So I just don't have answers as to how it was.
Pensacola has a place called crabs and everything. There's red Pensacola slaps. Pensacola is
one bridge away. How are you gonna Gulf Breeze? You suck Gulf Breeze. I'm gonna say you want
to go get some, you want to go get some crabs boys? They have the sneaky Tiki bar and Pensacola
slaps. Pensacola's got everything. We like it. Are we
going to live show in Pensacola and shit on Gulf Breeze the
whole time? They got a land shark bar and grill is settled by
the British in the 18th century. Town point live Oaks from the
Gulf were used for shipbuilding. There was a dry dock, large
road development in thirts, a wooden swing bridge
in the 30s. It's all just building shit. And then in the 60s, it was incorporated because
of a bridge. And then obviously this map, this thing we're about to talk about is the
thing that put them on the map, according to their own Wikipedia page.
I mean, it really is. There wasn't much going on there at the time, so it is for sure.
You could say this is the definitive history of Gulf Breeze, Florida, right?
It might be. It might be the definitive history of Gulf Breeze.
Now, to be clear, before we continue, just looking at the map,
before Mathis tells us all these, like, amazing things about UFOs and shit,
I must stress, directly across is a giant airfield.
Like don't cross the water.
Like, you know, Hey, hey, don't worry about it.
Maybe next episode with the giant airfield like, Oh, that's interesting.
But I got it now.
Um, and the other part about like him is like, he had no's interesting. But I got it now. And the other part about him is I can't know books on UFOs.
He didn't like any VHS movies on UFOs or that stuff.
In fact, his hobbies are what you expect a contractor to do.
He like to fish.
He like to work with his hands, woodworking, that kind of shit.
That's like time out.
Time out.
Time out.
I'm wrong.
There isn't guys.
There isn't an airfield across
from it. There are two massive airfields. One to the north, one to the west. I'm scared
to look to the east because I feel like there's just gonna be another one there. And there
is there actually. Don't worry about it right now. We're not worried about the airfields.
All right. I won't. I won't. I'm not worried about the airfields. All right.
I won't.
I won't.
I'm not worried about them at all.
I'm excited that they're there and it makes me happy to know that they're there.
Other part about Walter's personality is that people used to say that he was just a very
determined individual.
And once he set his mind to something, he pursued it with a focus and an intensity that
he was just going to double down.
He was going to get it done.
Whatever it was, whatever project it was, the man always set his foot down
and made sure he followed through all this to say that one of the reasons
the sightings are so even today kind of fought over is because the individual
who saw them has this rep had a reputation as community to not be a
bullshitter for the sake of the spotlight.
He had a successful business.
He built the neighborhood.
He was involved everywhere.
He didn't. You know, there was no immediate like a motive
for for faking these things.
This guy's quote for me right now, he's going to say in my mind, he's like,
how much how much you want to make a bet I could build 40 houses.
In the years leading up to 1987 and the encounter that happened, Ed Walters life was stable
and predictable.
His business was doing well.
His family was like his family life was settled and he was just generally content with his
place in the world, at least it seemed.
And there were no signs of dramatic upheaval that was that that ended up occurring.
There was no like tumult or any combativeness
within his family that seemed to be like leaking out anywhere. The Gulf Bree sightings would
not only disrupt his personal life, but also thrust him into the national spotlight. And
it challenged everything and everyone around him and what they thought of the they believed
to know of the world. Really looking like rocked his beliefs. It rocked his entire life.
His entire life fucking changed.
That's why I always think about more than anything
with these types of shit.
Like ghosts, monsters, aliens,
anything that is like inexplicable,
you the person, reasonable, rational person,
you see it in controversial evidence, what do you do? How do you like go back to
work? You know what I mean? Yeah. And so I've done this mental game in my head so many times
as well. Like, well, if happen, how would I tell people without them thinking that I'm
just doing it for for money and whatnot? Because the best way you can get your voice out there
is by going to places that will take you and like talk to people. But those people already believe you
anyway. And the people who won't believe you are never going to
believe you for the most part. Um, yeah, it's just weird, like,
which is why I was gonna say I think it's important when we do
these kinds of episodes, we talk about the history of who these
people are, up to the point where we this stuff happens to
just have context. Some of their hometown is aren't a weird shit
like from day one or Megan UFOs from from day one
So the the night that it happened is November 11th
1987 and it was just a regular autumn evening in Gulf Breeze, Florida
Which I imagine means humid and uncomfortable and the town located in its little peninsula between Pensacola and the Gulf of Mexico
Was a quiet suburban community with a tiny little population
between Pensacola and the Gulf of Mexico was a quiet suburban community with a tiny little population.
The weather that night was clear, maybe a slight chill in
the air as the sun set and Ed Walters was at home with his
wife, Francis and their kids.
The evening was uneventful and the family was just going about
their usual routine.
Their home was a comfortable single story home in a suburban
neighborhood and was surrounded by similar, you know, been to
a suburb where all the homes are kind of just like one of three variations. That's kind of what we're talking about here.
It was well lit with streetlights casting a soft glow on the quiet streets and the Walters property
also included a backyard that extended towards a wooded area, giving the home a sense of kind of
seclusion. And sometime after dinner, as the family settled in for the evening, Ed Walters
noticed something kind of weird. Through one of the windows facing the backyard, he saw a bright, bluish white light
shining from outside. At first, he assumed it might be a car's headlight or a reflection,
but the light seemed too intense and steady for that. So, curious, and with a growing sense of
unease, Walters decided to step outside to investigate. As he walked out through the back
door and into the yard, where the strange light seemed to intens. As he walked out through the back door and
into the yard, where the strange light seemed to intensify, he moved closer to the edge of the
yard where the trees bordered the property and the light became almost blinding. It was then that he
looked up and saw the source of the illumination, a large disc-shaped object hovering silently above
the trees. Walters would later describe the UFO in much greater detail.
He would say the craft was disc shaped, approximately 30 feet in diameter
with a smooth metallic surface that reflected light it emitted.
And the edges of the disk were adorned with a series of lights
that pulsed rhythmically, casting a bluish white glow over the area.
That's what he's like standing in under and looking at this point
is just like this undulating true flying saucer
scenario. And yeah, yeah, in a lot of ways, there are some
differences. We'll see when we get to the photos. This
encounter wasn't the one he immediately took the pictures
of. Can I ask? Can I ask one other thing is like you said
he later he described it like. Yeah, I mean, I'm not interviewed like not much that we.
Within that. Oh, God, I think it would be a couple.
My point is not after a press tour where he's had to tell the story 100 times.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
This is not like we're not getting this detail years later.
This is something much, much earlier in his experience.
He also goes when it would eventually go on to say
that the underside of the craft was flat
with a small dome or protrusion in the center
from which the light seemed to emanate.
The object, he said, was hovering about 100 to 200 feet
above the ground, completely silent,
except for a faint humming noise
that Walters said he could barely even hear.
And the air around him felt charged,
like statically charged with electricity, as if the craft was generating some kind of energy field. And despite the
brightness of the lights, the craft with itself was still clearly visible to him with distinct
features that Walters would later try to capture in sketches that he would draw. And then the
Polaroids later on the Polaroids later. Yeah. So there was a he had a group of sightings over the course of about four months and then they stopped.
I see. Like it wasn't something that went on for years.
It was something that happened very like in a batch and then it ended.
As Walters was standing under the giant light before him, something happened that would change his life.
A beam of light different from the ambient glow of the craft suddenly shot out from the underside of the UFO.
The beam was focused and intense and it struck Walters directly in the chest.
And this is going to sound kind of familiar to the Travis Walton moment where he gets hit with the beam in the movie that we witnessed in the movie that we
witnessed. But that's that.
That part was like pretty like one to one to the description,
the abduction itself. You were when you were very movie.
Oh, when we when he was like floating around in the floating
and zero grab and burst through skin or whatever.
I don't know what that was about. Yeah.
Yeah. And honestly, you were even at the moment
were like freaking out about how accurate that the like actual encounter was.
Yeah, they did a great job capturing that first encounter
of the way everybody freaked out.
Did this guy get lifted up too?
Not lifted and thrown, no. What ended up happening is the beam of light hit him and it struck him directly in the chest. And what he said is he described the sensation that was both overwhelming
and terrifying. The moment the light hit him, Walters felt a sudden paralysis take hold of his
body. That's the part that's similar to the Walton abduction. He was unable to move, speak,
or even think clearly,
but that might be because he was terrified.
His mind, he said he was flooded with a sense of disorientation
as if time itself had slowed down, and he later recalled feelings
as though he was being scrutinized, as if the light was probing his thoughts and his memories.
This paralysis lasted for what felt like forever for him,
but in reality, it was only a few seconds.
Walters described the experience as unsettling with a sense of vulnerability and helplessness,
unlike anything he said he had felt before, which is a man that like prided himself on his control
and his staunch nature of like getting things done. This was like scared the ever living shit out of
him. Now, as the craft returned, there was a point where he was
able to break free from the paralysis.
Or some say maybe the beam was deactivated instead of him
actually breaking free.
But he instinctively did he say he was like fighting it?
Yeah, he was like, yeah, yeah, he was trying, but he couldn't
do anything about it.
He was stuck.
But the moment he got free from this beam,
he ran back into the house, grabbed his Polaroid camera,
and rushed back outside.
The craft was still there, hovering in the same spot,
its lights continuing to pulse in the sky.
That's a true G right there, to be honest.
Trembling hands, he took a few photographs.
The camera's flash cut through the darkness,
and each time, the Polaroid ejected a new photo.
He snapped several pictures trying to capture the object
from different angles and the craft seemed to be
almost waiting as if allowing him to document its presence.
These photographs would later become
some of the most iconic images associated with this
as they showed a glowing disc shaped object
with the lights clearly visible around the edges.
The photos were grainy and imperfect
as one might expect from a Polaroid
and he was also shaking.
And I'm gonna link you some of these photos
unless you've already Googled them.
I did not.
No, no, no.
Okay, so there's like a few we can get to.
I'm gonna actually link you to the 30 year article
that actually has the photos in it as well.
It's the Pensacola Times.
Pensacola News Journal. Oh, what the fuck is that? A story drag.
Fuck. Is this one of them? Oh, wow.
Oh, oh, here we go. Here we go. Here. This is better.
This is just a Reddit. This is the Reddit post I was using for the photos.
So these are the photos, four photos.
Oh, this is just a fabricated.
This first one on the article is like they made a hoax of it. Oh, wow. But it looks fucking really similar to
the real. Those are the four. I do recognize this second photo.
Yes, you would probably recognize a few of them.
Yeah, that's like straight up X Files vibes like little bit.
Yeah, the way they show the the flying saucer at the beginning
of the X-Files
TV show.
That's kind of a third kind kind of as well.
This is very similar.
The actual look of the ship very much like Close Encounters.
Those are the photographs that he got.
It's kind of occluded.
You can't see all the way around it just in case you can't see these pictures.
What are your thoughts, Jesse?
You can just see where the light's reflecting and that's it.
You can't see any of the rest of the metal shape anywhere.
Boy, they, I mean, they're Polaroids. So like, okay, but they scream fake.
What about it is like the screams fake to you. I'm not saying you're wrong. We're going to talk
about that for sure. So the thing that the thing that really screams fake to me is every photo,
despite the first photos, just give people an example of what the photos are. The first photo is angled up above power lines, and there is the UFO in the distance.
Second photo is angled up above a tree line. UFO closer, potentially, but based on where it is,
either it is a massive UFO far away, or it's a little baby UFO very close. The next one is a massive UFO far away or it's a little baby UFO very close.
Um, the next one is a street, uh, kind of, excuse me, shot where the UFO is now in the middle of the street and it looks to be as wide as a two lane road.
And then the last one is the UFO kind of up and above stuff with like a
light shining down. Maybe the
same light they got in. Who
knows? Low res though. This one
is very hard to see. But the
thing about all of these is
every single one has the same
weird, I don't know the best way
to describe it is like if you
take, so actually I do know how
to describe it. I was over the
last couple of days I was in
New York and I needed to make a video for this trip that I went on for this, you know, other thing I'm doing.
And while I was there, I was thinking, oh, maybe I'll make a video of like me doing the spoof because I had to drive in from Newark.
I was like, maybe I'll make a video of me spoofing Sopranos and I'll do like a shot out of the side of the car.
And it's driving
by all like the factories and **** you know, but I couldn't use the footage because in
the shot was the half of the driver's hands on the front wheel of the car because the
window was reflecting the driver and that is what all these shots look like. They look
like reflections of something like it's shot through a window and
it's reflecting a light from behind where he's at. The one that kind of weirds me, and this is just
me trying to apply physics to this. The third picture where it's hovering over the street and
it seems big. If this thing is this close to the ground and we're looking at it straight on now, and then you look at some of these other pictures where you can see
the sort of like light disc underneath it, especially the last picture in this set.
Like the one where it's near the road, you shouldn't be able to see that that well, first
of all, because of the angle, unless it's literally just tilted towards you at the same
angle that it would be if it was much higher up. Like, if like you wouldn't be able to see under a car that's on the road because it,
you know, you have to get like down in your hands and knees and get really close to the car to see
that. And then the way that the light is coming out and illuminating the road, it looks like
a little bit too localized below the craft for it to like,
be as big of a light source as it seems to be based on the
picture. I know that's like super specific, but like, that's
really the only thing like, I agree with Jesse about the like
kind of blurry quality of the images. But like, I'm like any
of these other ones, if a scientist showed this to me and
told me it was real, I would be like, that seems like possible.
But this third one to me is the one that feels like a bad composition.
You boys have good eyes and I appreciate both of your insights
because one of the and we'll talk about it too.
Again, we have two parts to go over this kind of thing.
But what you Jesse you describing the reflection is probably the is pretty much dead on.
And so what debunkers believe this to be and we'll talk again we'll talk about it in that for clarity sake the second photo is the least reflective looking photo, but they all have the same quality of like.
it has kind of the filter of I'm taking a photo through a window. So similar to when I said the debunkers almost like so fully
believed that it was fake that they planted evidence to just
say it was debunked in similar fashion.
I did and we'll talk about it.
But these photos he could be taking these because something
like this did happen and he freaked out, but then it never
came back.
So he's trying to come up with evidence in some kind.
So what you might be looking at here is a reflection of a ceiling fan without the blades
visible because they're either moving or couldn't look at.
Now, with that in mind, does that click a little bit more to you when you look at these photos?
Like, do you see what I mean?
It's this might be the reflection of a ceiling fan from the glass that he's taking the photo does that click a little bit more to you when you look at these photos to the like do you see what I mean like it's a
This might be the reflection of a ceiling fan from the glass that he's taking the photo through like photos again photos
One two and four sure but photo is weird three is like a weird angle for unless
Yeah, and that's that's where again people are like well
Maybe one of them is real and the other ones he just tried to replicate.
It looks like a piece of dishware.
It looks like something, because the way it's shiny,
that one, I think it's the second photo, the really blue one, right?
That's how things catch light that are made of chrome metal
when they're pretty close because
they're all going to be hit by one light source, right? So,
like the fact that that thing's like up in the sky and
illuminated by like a blue light, it doesn't look like the
light is emanating from the object. It looks like the
ocean. You know what I mean? How it's like one solid color.
So, I I think personally like rather than a ceiling fan,
almost like a model fan, almost like a
model or like a like a little like, like literally like a if
you took like a drill and like drilled into like a colander a
little more, or something like that.
And that's a frustrating thing is like they could never find a
model. And the people who will talk is why I want that that
that model let's let's shelve that hold that for next week.
That model theory and all that stuff is is crucial to the whole reason
why the debunkers are dubious in the first place.
So, I mean, it bears it bears.
I love it. It bears mentioning that the other option, of course,
is that these are pictures of flying saucers.
Right. Yeah. Like he was shaking.
And we talked about it before.
If these things are somehow personal, like they almost like
a work on a level of like through how you perceive reality,
they show themselves.
It's almost impossible to catch them on camera.
I don't know.
If you see there was more we got to maybe many.
So, I mean, like, there's also just looking at them.
If the window theory isn't correct, it has the exact same.
Just trying to describe it to people listening at home. It is the exact same ethereal nature as these photos. You'll
find them when people, um, used to take photos with, with the dead as like a goof. Yes. You
know? Oh yeah. And they would like double or superimpose them. They take one photo,
double as they take another photo of the exact same thing of film. It is that same ethereal vibe to it where it's like it is both present but not present
in the photo. You can like see through. Do you know what peppers goes? You can't, you
can't do double exposure with a Polaroid shot, but do you know pepper's ghost? I don't. I
know the name. I feel like I will know that pepper's ghost is like a classic. It's pretty much exactly what you're saying.
It's just done really skillfully in the haunted mansion.
They do it. Oh, sure. Sure. Sure. The effect. Got it. Yeah.
So it really produces a very, very reliable,
like tangible, visible effect.
And if you didn't know what that was and you took a picture
of that out of context, like, God damn, like it looks like
a fucking ghost, right?
Like, yeah, sure.
So I don't know.
There's something there.
I feel like it's something like that.
Yeah.
Well, he ended up taking those shots regardless.
And after taking those photographs, he ended up just standing
there, frozen his backyard, not by a beam, but just by
all staring at this thing.
Just like it's done, oh shit.
Then as suddenly as it had appeared,
the UFO began to move.
It ascended slowly at first, then accelerated rapidly,
shooting off into the night sky with an incredible speed.
Within moments, it was gone,
leaving behind only the faint hum
that quickly faded into the silence.
And Walters was just left standing alone in his yard,
his heart racing and his mind reeling.
He felt a mixture of fear and confusion, but awe what just what did he just witness?
He didn't know if it was real was his mind playing tricks on him, but he knew one thing for certain something extraordinary just happened and he had photographs to prove it.
He walked back inside after finally getting the like he said his legs felt really weak and like he couldn't move for a minute and it just like he had to just kind of get his composure
before he was able to walk back into his house.
And he said he threw all of that he went to his wife Francis who was waiting for him having
heard him out go out run outside and Walters tried to explain what just happened but the
words came out in a rush it was jumbled and incoherent. He just showed her the photographs and then together,
they kind of just stared at the images,
trying to make sense of what he said he saw.
And that night, Ed said he just didn't sleep.
He stayed up all night.
His mind was racing with thoughts of the encounter.
He replayed the events over and over,
trying to recall every detail.
The encounter had clearly shaken this man to his fucking core.
It really threw the way he saw the world into skew.
He was all really messed up in the days that followed the encounter.
Walters was just consumed by the experience.
He found himself constantly looking up at the sky, half expecting the craft to return,
half hoping it would return.
This I completely empathize with.
This this is human. This is true.
Yeah, this happened to me. I would be to the I would be like, you wouldn't hear from me for days.
I'd probably just be outside all day, all night.
Well, me and Jesse personally would probably hear from you quite a bit.
Yes, yes.
True.
The only people who would hear from you would be the two of you.
The world as a whole.
We get like 800 text messages in a row.
He'd be like, oh my god, oh my god.
And we'd be like, what the?
Am I seeing this?
Am I high?
Is this real?
What is this?
Look at this.
Zoom in, what do you think is this?
I need to cross reference.
I can't trust my own high brain.
Tweet this.
He also said he began to feel a growing sense
of responsibility, like he'd captured something extraordinary
and he needed to share it with the world
to let everybody know, which I can also get.
Like if you truly saw this, you would want to share this.
You'd be like, look, look, look, somebody else.
You need to understand what I just saw.
And that's when you sound the craziest.
So after a bunch of deliberation,
Walters decided to go public with the story.
He contacted the Gulf Breeze Sentinel, the local newspaper,
and arranged to meet with a local reporter.
And when he showed the photographs and recounted his experience,
this the reporter was initially skeptical, but the images were compelling enough to warrant further investigation.
So like this is just a couple, like a week or two after, like it happened very quickly
after to get the, you know, as an interview.
That's one of the benefits of Polaroids.
Yeah.
And on November 17th, 1987, literally six days later, the Gulf Breeze Sentinel published
Walter's story along with several of the photographs.
The article quickly gained attention,
not just in Gulf Breeze, but it kind of spread quickly
across the entire fucking country,
which was, you know, I imagine surprising.
UFOs was-
There's a lot more to it, right?
There's a little bit more, like,
there was something about this story
that made it a little bit more remarkable, right?
Like that it spread.
Yeah, and this is obviously before any debunking has happened.
So just like, all you're getting is the story and the photographs with the story as context.
So yeah, of course, and there's corroboration skeptically.
It's literally like, oh, wow, yes, he must be telling the truth.
But there's also corroboration, right?
Yeah, his wife, his wife also will have seen because he again, that was just the first encounter.
He had a few encounters that we'll get to a few months.
So they all weren't just right away.
This is just after the first one.
This is just after the first one.
I see.
OK, this is just after all of them broke.
If we take the point for this episode is to take it from his
point of view, to just assume what he's telling is telling the
truth.
And if you're if this is true, you don't know that they're
going to come back.
So, of course, you're going to go like after a few days like
fucking I'm going to the local newspaper.
They know me. I'm probably built his like, you know, son's house or whatever.
Yeah. Yeah. You go to who you know.
He really saw aliens.
This is exactly what he would like.
That's why 1987 as well, like when there's no Internet, none of that shit.
So, yeah. So but again, this thing went crazy across the country very quickly.
UFO enthusiasts and investigators descended on the town,
eager to learn more about the sighting
and to see the photographs for themselves,
which, you know, you think about this time
and even in the past when it came to ghosts
or even Jeff the Mongoose, anytime this shit gets out,
people fucking flood.
They show up because they wanna see this shit.
Walter's decision to go public marked the beginning
of a media frenzy that would have followed him for years.
His life was once quiet and predictable,
was now thrust into the national spotlight,
and he became a central figure
in one of the most controversial UFO cases in history.
The initial reaction to Walter's story was a mix of awe,
skepticism, and curiosity.
A lot of the locals were intrigued,
and some even claimed to have seen strange lights
in the sky around the same time as Walter's encounter,
which is similar to the Phoenix lights.
The photographs, while not definitive proof,
were compelling enough to spark at least some sort of debate.
However, skepticism quickly emerged as well.
Some doubted the authenticity of the photographs,
suggesting they could have been staged or manipulated.
Others questioned his motives,
wondering if he might be seeking attention
or financial gain.
And despite the mixed reactions,
the story still spread rapidly.
UFO investigators, both amateur and professional,
started arriving in Gulf Breeze,
eager to interview Walters and examine his evidence.
Mothman.
Yeah.
And the town, once a quiet and peaceful community was now a focal point
for UFO enthusiasts, researchers in the media.
Can you imagine you're in your quiet little 80s community suburbs and all of a sudden
all the UFO enthusiasts just fucking show up.
A bunch of sweaty knees just arrived.
It's like all uninvited.
Yeah. bunch of sweaty knees just arrive. It's like all uninvited.
Yeah. Like is like I all I can imagine is like a soundtrack.
Bim bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam I would be probably so mad if I was living there, but if it was me, I'd be excited.
In the days that followed, November 11th, 1997, Ed Walters found himself in a,
he says, a heightened state of awareness.
The experience had left him shaken, but curious,
and he began to notice every small detail around him,
almost paranoid-like.
Particularly in the night sky,
he got very familiar with the positions of the stars
for how often he was just staring at them,
waiting for another one or hoping something would happen
with a mix of anticipation and dread.
Isn't it crazy how that happens though?
Like, you can just go outside for like a month
and then you're like, I know this place.
I know this sky.
It's, yeah, I know it very well.
I like, I am very, very aware of like all the planets out there and shit like that and that even like little you start
Getting used to like used a little of phenomenons. Remember I sent you a video of that flickering light
That was blue red white blue red white
So I did some research when I got back inside and that's the atmosphere actually fucking with the star
Like the light coming through and even though it looks clear in the night sky
Because of I guess just like I don't know what the specifics are,
but it makes it flicker red, blue, white, red, blue, white.
And I was like, oh, okay, well,
I fucking know that now at least,
because it wasn't moving.
And that was what was making, I was like,
but something's not right, it's just not moving.
Anyway, the day is following, after he went to the news,
he just went about his daily life as best as he could.
He began carrying his Polaroid camera with him everywhere.
He went determined not to miss another opportunity to
document anything unusual.
And he also kept a notebook where he recorded his thoughts
observations and any strange occurrences.
He noticed around his home or in the sky.
The man just became paranoid and obsessed with it, which
I is such a real feeling.
The second encounter came pretty much a week and a half later
on November 17th, 1987.
The second significant encounter was oh, sorry, six days, six
days at the initial sighting on the evening of November 17th,
1987.
And by this time the story of his first encounter had already
been published in the Gulf Breeze Sentinel and the media
attention already was beginning to grow that evening as he
was returning home from a job site.
Walters once again noticed a bright light in the sky.
This time he was driving through a wooded area not far from
his home. The light appeared suddenly hovering over the
trees to his right.
It was the same bluish white color that he had seen before
and it was moving in a manner that immediately caught his
attention.
Walters pulled his truck over to the side of the road and
watched the light for a moment. It seemed to be following the contour of the road, moving parallel to his vehicle,
but at a higher altitude. The light was steady without any of the flickering or blinking that
might be associated with an airplane or helicopter. And as the light drew closer, Walters felt a
familiar sense of fear and fascination. He quickly grabbed his Polaroid camera from the
passenger seat and stepped out the truck.
The craft was now clearly visible,
a disc shaped object similar to the one
that he had seen on November 11th,
and it hovered silently,
its lights casting eerie shadows on the trees below.
Walters managed to take several photographs of the craft
as it hovered above the road,
and he described the object as being slightly smaller
than the one that he had seen previously,
but with the same metallic appearance and pulsating lights.
After a few minutes, the craft began to ascend again,
moving slowly at first,
and then similarly to the first craft,
accelerating rapidly into the night sky
before disappearing from view entirely.
That was the second encounter.
The third encounter happened even less,
in less time than the last one,
only three days later, on November 20th, 1987.
This time the encounter was more intense and personal.
It occurred late at night, he said around 1030 p.m. and Walters was preparing for bed.
The house was quiet, his wife was already asleep, and the children were in their rooms.
Walters was in the living room reviewing the photographs they had taken during the previous encounters
when he suddenly felt a strange sensation, a tingling in the
back of his neck, followed by a feeling of being watched. He
turned towards the window and saw a bright light shining
through the curtains. The light was so intense that it
illuminated the entire room. Wait, so he was literally
re like looking at the pictures. The man became obsessed.
Yeah. Okay. So he's like, wait, but then the alien stopped by to be like, help.
You got a good shot.
They were like, really upset.
They're like, he better got my good side.
Glork knock.
What's interesting?
Like if we're talking about maybe there is some sort of like way that the alien can
monitor his thoughts, right?
The fact that he was looking at the actual pictures of the ship when the ship showed
up is kind of interesting.
I don't know.
Yeah, I agree. It is weird.
So without thinking, he grabbed his camera and rushed to the window.
Hell yeah.
As he pulled back the curtains, he saw the now familiar disc-shaped craft hovering just above his backyard, even closer than before.
The craft was nearly the same size as the one in the earlier encounters with the same pulsating lights around its perimeter. However, this time the craft was emitting emitting rather
a low humming noise that reverberated through the entire house, which I've never experienced
an earthquake, but I live near an airport. And if it's a low flying plane, you can definitely
feel a little bit of a vibration. I imagine it's kind of like that.
But there's been so many happening lately over here that like while you're here, you
might just get one.
I don't know what's going on.
There's been a lot of earthquakes.
I will die in an earthquake.
I'm convinced of this.
We had one that shook my entire apartment for like a full minute.
I just sat there watching TV like, cable better not go out.
You're so Californian.
Oh my God.
I'm convinced that Earth will open, I'll get sucked in and be like, what's happening?
Oh no.
Meanwhile your phone's just blowing up with texts from me about aliens that are not actually
there, but I'm like waiting for them to arrive.
So yeah, he took some photos and Walters described the humming noise as unsettling but almost
hypnotic.
It seemed to vibrate through his entire body, making it difficult for him to focus.
Despite the noise, he managed to take several more photographs through the window, capturing
the craft as it hovered just above the ground.
He then rushed outside, hoping to get a clearer view and more photographs.
But as Walters stepped into the backyard, he was struck by just the sheer size of this
one. It was larger than it appeared from the inside of the house, he was struck by just the sheer size of this one.
It was larger than it had appeared from the inside of the house,
filling much of the space above the backyard.
The light from the craft bathed the area in an otherworldly glow,
casting long shadows and creating an almost dreamlike atmosphere. What are we talking about in size here?
He doesn't really describe like so the first one was, what do you say,
like 200 feet in like diameter or whatever.
So I don't know maybe something like that.
I don't know.
I'm he doesn't really describe the size because that's not
this one if it's the same ship, right?
It was just back.
It's just weird that that one shot of it over the road, you
know roads like 25 25 feet wide claims the second one he saw
was smaller than the first one.
So it's not a guarantee. But it's second vote, is that a different ship? They're supposed to
be. And so they all look identical. They're just a little smaller, a little bigger. That's
literally the only difference he ever points out is that they're just slightly seemingly
different shaped in size. No, they're all, they all look the goddamn same noted. So like
noted my guy, they're all, so it's not some sort of prefab alien ship.
They're all bespoke alien vessel noted. Noted Gulf Breeze.
No noted gulf. Same exact same exact craft.
Just bigger and smaller, depending. Yeah.
That's what it is. So he describes it as.
And yeah, I mean, I could, bro, I couldn't.
Yeah, I wish I could tell you. I wish I knew.
Look, I'm here. I got it.
I accept this man's story for now. It's true
So then you know he steps outside then without warning the craft emitted the same beam of light that a paralyzed him during the first encounter
This time however the beam was not directed at Walters
But at the ground in front of him the beam created a circle of light on the grass which began to smolder and burn slightly
The beam created a circle of light on the grass, which began to smolder and burn slightly.
Walters later described this as one of the most terrifying moments of his life,
as he realized the beam could potentially cause harm. What if it wasn't a spaceship and it was just a big ass magnifying glass?
Oh, we're just by who?
Yeah, like exactly, bro.
That's why you got to open that third eye, bro.
Yeah. Fuck Galactus's magnifying glass, bro.
Get with it. Despite how afraid he was, he says, he still tried taking pictures
of the craft. And after a few minutes, the beam retracted and the craft began
to ascend just as it had before.
Walters watched as it rose into the sky, disappearing into the night as the
previous two had in the entire encounter lasted less than 10 minutes,
but it left him shaken and once again, just deeply disturbed.
Ten minutes is a long fucking time.
It is a long time.
I mean, most encounters that I know about take like
unless you're like driving on the freeway and you barely see it for most of it.
I'm talking two, three minutes max on most things that people experience. Right.
Yeah. Yeah. They're usually pretty quick.
Either that or it's being abducted, which is either that or they're like,
they took me up and they told me the history of the entire galaxy
and they told me why humans are the way they are.
And then one of them, like, kissed my butt for some reason.
And I don't know why, but I like forgot about that until three years later.
So now I'm back home.
Yes, I got that kind of vibe.
The the fourth encounter would actually not happen as quickly.
The actual one, the fourth one wouldn't happen
until December 2nd, 1987.
This was the fourth major encounter
and perhaps the most dramatic one of all of them.
How is the coverage going for him at this point?
Like is he in the news and stuff every time?
Yeah, so it's spreading crazy.
So we're looking at, we're now three weeks into his after his first encounter,
a little more, three and a half weeks
after his first encounter.
So we're still in the, it's still like spreading
and like it's still very popular.
And yeah, so it's not like years later or anything.
On this night, Walters had an experience
that would solidify his belief that the UFOs
were not only real, but potentially dangerous.
He says it was a cold night, cold clear night, and Walters was driving home from a late meeting
with a client.
The roads were empty and the town was quiet as he made his way through the familiar streets
of Gulf Breeze.
As he approached the outskirts of town near a large open field, he once again noticed
a bright light in the sky.
This time, the light was directed ahead of him, hovering
above the field. It was stationary at first, but as he got closer, it began to move slowly,
descending towards the ground. Walters felt a sense of dread wash over him as he realized
that the craft was about to land. He pulled his truck to the side of the road and watched
as the disc-shaped craft settled onto the ground in the middle of the field. The lights on the craft dimmed slightly, but it remained clearly visible,
its metallic surface reflecting the moonlight in the clear sky. Walters described the craft
as being slightly larger than the ones he'd seen before, with a more pronounced dome on
top. Despite his fear, Walters felt compelled to approach the craft. He grabbed his camera and began walking towards the field, keeping his distance but trying to get as close as possible.
As he got nearer, he noticed movement around the base of the craft.
There were small figures, humanoid in shape, moving around the perimeter of the object.
Walters described these figures as being about four to five feet tall with large heads, slender bodies,
who moved quickly and fluidly, almost as though they were gliding rather than walking.
Their skin appeared to be grayish in color, and they had large, dark eyes that seemed to glow slightly in the dim light.
Walters immediately recognized them as resembling the classic gray alien that had been reported in other UFO encounters at this point.
He watched him stunned to silence as the beings moved around the craft, seemingly inspecting it,
or perhaps performing like some kind of task on it.
Are they naked, did you say?
He assumed they're naked, yeah, like they're not wearing any...
They look like South Park, they're just like fucking...
They literally look like your typical grays, yep, that's exactly what they look like.
At one point, one of the figures turned towards him and for a brief moment their eyes met
Walters felt a sudden wave of emotion
fear curiosity and then something he couldn't quite identify perhaps a sense of connection or recognition and
Realizing the danger he might be in Walters quickly took several photographs before retreating back to his truck.
As he did, the beings re-entered the craft, the lights on the object began to brighten,
the craft lifted off the ground, rising slowly at first, then accelerated rapidly as a shot
into the sky, and Walters sat in his truck, shaking, his heart pounding in his chest.
He had just witnessed something even more extraordinary than any other things he had
seen so far. Seeing those beings, seeing the creatures fucking like rocked him.
It changes.
It makes it even more like the mystery deepens if you see the people.
Because I imagine there's a point, again, taking it as true, if you are seeing these,
maybe you're rationalizing it that maybe it's military stuff, maybe it's secret tech, maybe
it's something that they're just like trying or whatever then you see this thing land and like it
Here come the fucking gray aliens out the fucking sound like that. What do they what do they sound like to you to me? They're like
Jesse we're in your brain
Hope you're doing good homie. Hey, man. Oh, they're uplifting good. Hey, oh man
Hey, so man. So good
Tacos yeah, I I heard that Earth's fried chicken is really good. That's not the feeling he got no That's not he felt like he would he said he said it fucking fucking terrified him for some reason
But the feeling was connection the feeling was alien mysterious connection. He said yeah
It was like a weed they locked eyes and if would like
It's a weird vibe to me that the so as we go through this and we talk about
aliens, we've been doing it for I'm going to say honestly, far too long. So many
aliens wait six years. Um a thing that occurs frequently is someone will either
lock eyes or experience a moment of connection or whatever. And depending on the storyteller, it's either the most terrifying moment of
their life, or they've been transcended to a place of peace.
And then I feel like just cause you know, I'm not over here believing in all the
different types of aliens, but I feel like different types of aliens were
created to make it make sense.
You know what I mean? Like rather than be like some of these people might be lying. It's like, no, actually there's, there's
different types. There's some grays or good grays and some grays or bad grays, but then there's the
whites, but then there's tall whites, but there's also the bird people and there's also the reptile
people. And there's also the bug people, right? I feel like it was all done just to like, so everyone
can be at the table. We all have our D&D characters. We're all here.
It's multiverse. It's the it's the it's the UFO.
See you. You see you. It's phenomenal.
And the other end of things, you want to go in the more wacky
do areas like if these things are shaping themselves in the way
that our kind of public consciousness understands them at the time.
That's why they seem to shift is like their graze because that's popular.
But before that was flying wooden boats in the sky.
And people see weird green men.
Yeah, some people.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, or mantises, which is still seen every once
in a while.
Yeah, exactly.
It's hard to know.
But after the December 2nd encounter, Walters became even
more meticulous in documenting his experiences.
He continued to carry his camera with him.
But then he started making sure he had his notebook on him
at all times as well.
And he also began to reach out to others in the community who
had also started reporting similar sightings.
Remember, he said other people seem to see lights in the sky
the nights that they were happening as well.
He wanted to compare notes, gather more evidence, build a
case that would convince even the most skeptical observers.
And this is where I get the idea that if these photos are
faked, part of me believes he did fucking
something happened to him that fucked him up. And he was so desperate for people to
believe him. He started just maybe making evidence. You know what I mean?
Didn't he say that he showed Polaroids immediately? Yes, he says he did. He says he did. Yes.
Now are any of the photos you showed us those Polaroids?
The one on the get to the fucking photo again.
The one, the second photo is supposedly
from the very first night happening above his house,
right above the tree lines in his home.
I believe the third photo is the one
where he pulled his truck over
and like he saw that the thing was hovering around
and he took a shot, this is not the field one.
I don't know what the fourth one's from that we were looking at is not the field one. I don't know what the fourth ones from that we were looking at
or the first one.
The first one might be when he was driving and he took a shot
like member at night when he's driving in the quiet area.
The second one.
Yeah.
So if you look up, you can find his drawings online.
There's like you can find everything on there.
My question is, what about the other picks?
They're out there.
You can go look at them. Those are just like the award that I grabbed is like a great example of like what they look like.
Yeah. Hang on. I can like there's other ones if I can grab to the right website.
But, uh, I got I got to keep moving.
We're already. Yeah, I got to keep moving.
Go look up. There's oh, here's another one.
All right. No, see, that's no, that's like a 3D rendering.
I don't know what. See, now there's also like AI pictures
mixed into this shit. Yeah.
So this one right here so clearly like not.
You. Anyway, go look.
You can go look it up. I mean, they're there.
I'll try to get links to them for for the show as well.
I'll keep looking. I find one. I'll drop it.
Yeah. Keep looking.
You find his drawings and stuff out there, too.
So, yeah, he started carrying his notebook with him
all the damn time.
And he wanted to, like I said,
if he's looking for other people to compare notes,
Walters really began to experience
an even bigger growing sense of paranoia.
He felt as though he was being watched,
not just by UFOs, but by other entities,
talking about like governmental entities,
organizations instead interested in his encounters
and just kind of spying on him. He installed extra locks on all of his doors, kept a close eye on his surroundings,
and became increasingly cautious in his interactions with other becoming more and more withdrawn.
Despite these fears, Walters remained determined to share his story.
He continued to work on a book that would be released in night.
No, he continued to work with the Gulf Breeze Sentinel.
And then in 1989, he began working on a book that would be released in 1989. No, he continued to work with the Gulf Breeze Sentinel. And then in 1989, he began working on a book that would be released
in 1990 documentaries experience.
The media coverage only intensified, and soon his story was being picked up
by national news outlets, UFO investigators and researchers across the country.
These subsequent encounters, each more intense and dramatic than the last one,
reinforced Walter's belief that he was dealing with something
far beyond human understanding.
He was no longer just an ordinary man living in a small town.
He was now at the center of a phenomenon that was capturing the attention
of people around the world.
And by mid December of 1987, Ed Walters had already deeply immersed himself
in the phenomenon that had overtaken his life.
Within a month, the man's life went from normal construction
worker to obsessed UFO person.
The media attention continued.
Was he like beloved by this across like media and stuff?
It was heavily divisive.
He was it was skeptic.
There were skeptics right away.
Like it wasn't like fully embraces.
He's telling the truth or anything.
And the media attention was still growing, and he was in frequent contact with UFO
investigators, researchers, all of who were eager to document and analyze all of
his experiences. And despite the increasing scrutiny,
Walters continued to try to live his day to day life,
albeit with a heightened sense of paranoia.
On a chilly evening in mid December,
Walters reported yet another encounter with the mysterious
craft that had been haunting him.
This sighting occurred in his own backyard again, not far from where the initial encounters
had taken place.
Walters was outside, checking on some household chores when he noticed a familiar bluish-white
light in the sky.
His heart raced as he realized that the object was back.
Yeah, seriously, his heart sank.
It literally just came into view in the camera, like in the movie.
Like, yeah, yeah.
You were like we got over the shoulder shot as he's like watering his garden
and yet just out of focus, we could just see it over the tree line.
Unlike his earlier encounters, this sighting was relatively brief.
Walters observed the craft hovering at a higher altitude than before,
making it more difficult to discern specific details.
And the disc shaped object with its characteristic lights
pulsating over the edge, along the edges,
remained stationary in the sky for only a couple minutes.
Walters quickly retrieved his camera
and managed to snap several photographs.
However, these images were way less clear
than those taken during previous encounters
due to the distance and the lighting condition.
They were essentially like, there's no way,
there's nothing in them, You just don't see anything.
During this encounter,
Walters did not experience the intense physical effects
such as paralysis or the disorienting beam of light
that marked their earlier experiences
and the craft remained at a considerable distance
the entire time.
And there was no apparent interaction between this one
and Walters himself.
And after a few minutes, the UFO began to ascend
and as always clicked off and then it was gone.
Walters was left standing in his yard,
once again feeling, this time feeling,
he said feeling frustrated,
but relief that the encounter had not escalated
or gone any longer and that they fucking seemed
to leave him alone this time.
Then late December, as December drew to a close,
Walters had another sighting,
this time while he was driving
through the Gulf Breeze at night. The encounter occurred on a quiet deserted road on the outskirts of town.
Walters had been visiting a friend and was driving home alone when he noticed a bright
light in the distance. His first thought was that it might be an airplane or a helicopter,
but as he continued driving the light grew brighter and more intense. The light was positioned
ahead of him, seemingly hovering above the road in the direction that he was heading. Walters felt a familiar sense of anxiety,
but as he continued driving cautiously toward the light, as he approached, he could see
that it was not a conventional aircraft. The object was disc shaped, similar to the ones
that he had seen before, with a metallic surface that reflected the moonlight, and the lights
around the edges of the craft were, as they always had been, pulsating slowly, casting that weird eerie
glow over the landscape.
He pulled his truck over to the side of the road and watched as the craft hovered silently
above the treetops.
He estimated this one was about 200 feet off the ground, slightly higher than the craft
that he had seen in some of the other encounters, and the object seemed to be observing the
area moving slowly from side to side
as if scanning his surroundings.
Despite the relative calm of the encounter,
Walters was really on edge.
He reached for his camera,
which he now kept in his truck at all times,
and quickly took more photographs.
The craft remained in place for a few more minutes
before suddenly accelerating and shooting off in the sky
just so that it had every other previous sighting,
and he was left alone in the dark, his trucks engine idling as he tried to process once
again what he'd seen and why it kept happening.
This encounter, while less intense than some of the earlier ones, still reinforced the
belief in him that something extraordinary was happening in Gulf Breeze and that the
craft's behavior was consistent with the previous sightings and it made him feel increasingly
certain that these objects were just not human in origin.
Then we move into 1988.
As the year began, as the new year began, the intensity of the sightings began to diminish,
but Walters continued to experience sporadic encounters and explained unexplained phenomena.
These incidents were often brief, way less dramatic than early encounters, but they contributed to his overall atmosphere and unease that had settled within to his
life. One such sighting occurred in early January of 1988. Walters was at home with
his family when he noticed a strange light in the sky outside. The light was not as bright
or as distinct as the ones that he had seen before, but it caught his attention nonetheless,
because he's fucking paranoid and hypervigilant.
He just thinks everything's a alien at this point everything. Yeah that he's at the point where everything
He stepped outside and saw a small glowing object moving slowly across the horizon
The object was much smaller than the previous crafts and its movements were less deliberate almost erratic
Walters watched the light for several minutes trying to determine if it was related to the UFOs that he encountered earlier
And the object did not exhibit the same behavior as a previous craft. In a lot of ways, this thing
is exhibiting like a lot of more common UFO encounters even today happen where they see a
light that almost looks like a star and it just starts moving zigzag in ways that it shouldn't
make breaking the laws of physics. We see a lot of Air Force people.
So that's the grush.
Yes. The object didn't, like I said, it just didn't exhibit any of that previous behavior.
It didn't hover.
It didn't emit beams of light or produce any noticeable sound.
Instead, it just kind of moved across the sky before it just randomly disappeared behind some clouds.
This this site left Walters more confused than anything.
It was unclear whether the object to him was related to the earlier encounters.
If it was something just different, he didn't manage to capture
any photographs of this one as the light was way too distant
and faint.
Despite its ambiguity, the incident added to the growing sense
of mystery surrounding his life at this point.
He also began to notice around this time other strange occurrences
around his home electrical appliances will malfunction without
explanation lights would flicker and there were strange noises in the middle of the night. These phenomena, while not
directly linked to the UFO sightings, also contributed to his growing paranoia. And this
is where I go, I'm of two minds. One, we hear about the UFO flap and like paranormal events
that tend to occur. If we talk, if we go way back to Skinwalker Ranch, fucking Bigfoot coming out of the dimensional door
in the sky, like weird shit like that.
But at the same time, if he's truly as paranoid
and he's losing sleep and he's not doing well mentally,
you can start hallucinating and shit.
I mean, even being overtired driving,
I have hallucinated a couple of things like before.
If I just tell you, hey, be careful where you're sleeping,
that hotel that you're staying in
Tonight you know there was a murder in your room right? Yeah, that's gonna affect you this guy
Yeah, that's gonna fuck this guy like is is reckoning with the fact that he's seen
The unknown the unexplainable yeah, so everything else is that everything is like possibly related to him
So like even if it is normal his brain and so these weird paranormal things might just be a concoction of that
Or could just be related to a weird UFO flap happening over the Gulf Breeze. It's just fucking who knows
So the last major encounter that Walters reported
Occurred in the in early 1988 and it was one of the most understated of them all.
This time the sighting took place while
Walters was on a late night walk near his home.
He had taken to walking at night as a way to kind of clear his mind, cope with the stress that the sightings had.
But also, like it also let him stare at the night sky at night.
So he'd go out there and just look on this particular night.
The sky was clear in the air, he said, was crisp.
And as Walters walked through his neighborhood, he noticed a bright light in the sky far in the distance.
Initially thought again, it might be it was a star or a planet, but the light seemed to be moving slowly and deliberately.
As he continued to watch, he realized that the object was gradually descending, though it was still really far away.
Walters stood in the middle of the quiet street, watching as the light moved across the sky. The object was small and
distant, making it difficult to discern any specific details.
But the movement was consistent with the behavior of the UFOs
that he had seen before. The light moved steadily across the
horizon, eventually disappearing behind a line of trees. This
final encounter was brief, uneventful compared to all of
us other sightings. But it marked the end of a period of weird and mysterious experiences
for Walters. After the sighting, the encounters seemed to stop.
Walters continue to watch the skies, but the craft and the strange
lights never returned.
In this last sighting, I don't know how calm it was in the 80s,
but this sounds like a satellite to me where you see this Martin
the sky and it kind of moves in a deliberate fashion.
The fact that he said it was descending is kind of weird. It could be a flare
Could be a flare could be a aircraft of like, you know, right?
like if it's windy, right the flare will move and it will also sink like
at this point like
Even if he's even in the world where he's believed like he saw something. I'm almost inclined to say like
Even in that world this these last couple are iffy.
I agree. You know what I mean? They very much are. They're more, way more iffy for sure.
It sounds like a scared man now more than it is.
Yeah. Which almost again, adds the credence to like his story a little bit that he's
like horrified. But again, sorry, Jesse.
I mean, you're buying into him being scared.
Of course.
The timetable is that he is also starting to write a book. Yeah. But I'm buying into him being scared. Of course. The time table is that he is also starting to write a book.
Yeah, but I'm buying into him.
I'm buying into him being true, being real at all.
You know what I mean?
Like, right.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So this ended this sightings and in the months following these final sightings, Walters found
himself reflecting on the experiences he had gone through.
The encounters had left him both fascinated and troubled.
He had been drawn into a world of weird unexplained phenomena, but it had come at a cost.
The stress of dealing with the sightings, the media attention, the skepticism from others
had taken a toll on his emotional well-being and his mental health.
Walter's continued to document his experiences and worked closely with investigators to try
and make sense of what had happened.
He remained convinced that the objects he had seen were not of this world, and he believed
that his encounters were part of something much larger, a phenomenon that was still that
was not fully understood.
After the initial sightings were talking like just the impact we're looking at his own mental
health.
After all these sightings, Walters found himself increasingly anxious, in a more agitated state, according to others.
The close encounters with the UFOs had shaken him, leaving him with a deep sense of unease and paranoia that just lasted.
Memories of the encounters, especially the paralyzing beam of light in the sight of the strange craft hovering near his home, haunted him day and night.
Walters experienced infrequent nightmares, often reliving the encounters in his sleep.
These dreams were intense and vivid, leaving him feeling
drained and exhausted about upon waking up.
And he would dream of the UFOs returning of the beams of
light paralyzing him again and of being taken aboard the
craft that we had no conscious memory of that event ever
happening, which, you know, he's not saying that these
dreams are what happened.
It's just that his mind is making it worse.
And there are stories of abductions at this point in pop culture and media.
These dreams contributed to his sense of uncertainty.
He wasn't well rested.
It contributed his agitation.
During the day, he found it difficult to focus on his work, on his daily activities.
It started to wear away at his day to day.
His mind was constantly preoccupied with the thoughts of what had happened,
and he became increasingly obsessed with just watching the skies,
looking for any signs of the craft all the time.
He began to suffer from bouts of anxiety,
particularly at night when he was alone with his thoughts and the fear of the
UFOs might return at any moment and the uncertainty about what they might do
weighed on him constantly.
And it must be wild to like gaslight yourself back to having not seen anything.
Right. You know what I mean? Yeah. Yeah. Like, you know, you saw something and then eventually
you just decide like because nothing ever came of it like.
Eh. Yeah.
And which leads to actually what I wrote here is like, I think a lot of his paranoia,
the meticulous note taking the photos of everything, like looking at every light, again, looking
at through his lens is almost like him trying to take control over situation that is utterly
out of his control. These things appear when they want to they fucking feel like scare him
on a primal level. He has no ability to predict it.
So like taking these photos, writing these notes at least gives him some form of
like outlet, some way to wrap a harness around this and try and understand it.
Or at least honestly, that's like advice my therapist has given me before, too,
just to like fucking write some shit like your thoughts.
It helps. Yeah, it feels good.
The intense emotional and psychological toll of the sightings
also began to strain Walters personal relationships,
especially with his family.
His wife, Francis, was initially supportive and concerned.
But as the sighting continued and the media attention grew,
the stress began to take its toll on their marriage.
Francis, like Ed, was deeply affected by these events,
but she also had to deal with the practical implications of the situation
The constant media presence the influx of UFO investigators and curious onlookers the growing skepticism from the community put immense
Precious pressure on her she became increasingly worried about the impact of these events on their on their kids and their family life as a whole
And then Ebb's obsession on top of it with these sightings and his determination to document every fucking detail
of his life began to create a rift between the two of them.
She felt that the sightings were consuming him,
leaving little room for anything else in his life.
Ed, on the other hand, felt that he had no fucking choice
but to continue his efforts to capture this shit
and share what he was experiencing.
This difference in perspective led to attention
and then arguments
as Francis struggled to understand why Ed was so determined to
pursue something that seemed to be tearing his entire life apart.
Their children were also affected by the situation.
Of course, the media attention and the strange events happening
around their home created a sense of fear and confusion.
Again, like before we're talking cars parked outside their houses,
you know, reporters
like everywhere trying to figure like get every little detail.
They overheard their parents conversations and could sense the tension in the home.
The kids could recall talking about this, even if they didn't fully understand what
was going on at the time.
The kids became more withdrawn as well.
And I would freak me out, too, if my kids started to be affected by shit because their
families falling apart in front of their eyes exactly
They were like we're fine over what you know what I mean?
Exactly like their dad is seemingly going nuts over something that like he can't really prove
Like before the sightings Ed had a successful career building contractor a nice solid reputation amongst his
neighborhood known for all the good shit,
and now only a month and a half,
it only took a month and a half,
and it all fucking has fallen apart.
Everything has just fallen apart.
The negative impact on his business was huge.
He began missing deadlines,
delaying projects, turning down new work.
His clients, who had once trusted and respected him,
started to question his reliability.
Some were sympathetic, understanding to like,
something weird may have happened to him,
while others just were skeptical
and even dismissive completely.
The negative impact on his business was compounded
by the growing skepticism in the community as time went on.
As the story of the Gulf Breeze sighting spread,
some people began to view Walters with suspicion
and they questioned whether he was fabricating the story for attention
or financial gain, then the skepticism extended to his professional reputation.
Potential clients became wary of hiring someone who was at the center
of a nationwide giant like fucking debate about UFOs and Walter's
business suffered as a result.
The steady stream of work that had once kept him busy began to dry
up and he found himself struggling to maintain
the level of income instability that he enjoyed before the sightings
happened. The financial strain added to the stress that he was
already experiencing further exacerbating the difficulties
in his personal life.
As Walter story continued to kind of grow, he found himself
thrust into the spotlight in a way that he had never anticipated
when he told his little local newspaper about what had happened
Reporters from across the country be not like descended like vultures
It's like crazy to think about that things just like went out on the line and people just like go check them out
Yeah, I mean think about even today like we go back to 2017 when those those videos leaked it took it caught fire
You're like spread. And it spread.
It's always happened with UFOs because people are curious.
And there's never been a solid enough explanation for every single sighting.
So people are eager for something.
So the reporters just like vultures descended into Gulf Breeze, eager to interview Walter,
see his photographs, go into his backyard, check out his house, every little bit of the
detail they could possibly get they wanted.
The once quiet town became a hub of activity with news vans
parked on the streets, journalists knocking on the Walters
door at all hours.
The constant media presence became overwhelming, adding
to the already high levels of stress and anxiety the Walters
were experiencing.
The media coverage was a double-edged sword for Walters.
On one hand, they provided him with a platform
to share this story, present the evidence
that he'd gathered.
But on the other hand, it opened him up
to intense scrutiny and criticism,
and skeptics and debunkers began to challenge
the authenticity of the photographs,
questioned his motives, suggesting that he was fabricating
all of this for just fame or financial gain.
And the public scrutiny that took a toll on Walters,
he was not used to being in the spotlight and found the constant attention exhausting.
The pressure to prove the authenticity of experiences
was immense and he felt a growing sense of isolation
as he struggled to maintain his credibility
amongst his decaying family
that was happening in his own home.
The Gulf Breeze community was initially supportive
of Walters in the beginning,
with many locals that were intrigued by the story
and eager to learn more.
However, as the sightings continued and the media attention grew, the community's reaction began to shift because their fucking town has been overtaken by the news.
While some residents remain supportive, others grew increasingly frustrated, angry and skeptical, uncomfortable with the attention that the sightings were bringing to town.
Gulf Breeze was a small, close-knit community before all of this,
and the sudden influx of media, weird UFO nerds like me, and curious onlookers disrupted the town's quiet, suburban atmosphere,
and subreddits began to resent the intrusion and the way it was changing their town's reputation.
The skepticism that was growing in the media began to seep into the community.
And Walters found himself facing criticism and doubt from the people that he had
known and were friends with for years.
As a result, Walters began to feel socially isolated.
He was no longer just Ed Walters, the building contractor.
He was now the man at the center of this controversial UFO sighting.
Old Maurice is crazy.
All Ed, his new identity came with a social cost. of this controversial UFO sighting. The old Maurice. Yeah, he's crazy old Ed.
His new identity came with a social cost.
Neighbors who had once been friendly and welcoming
began to distance themselves,
unsure of how even to interact with someone
whose life had taken such a weird, unexpected public turn.
His social life suffered as a result.
He found himself withdrawing from the community activities
that he was so involved with,
uncomfortable with the way people were treating him,
and the sense of isolation compounded by the strain
in his personal relationships at home,
and the difficulties in professional life
just made things worse.
This ruined his life.
From the top down, his life fell apart
all within about a month and a half.
Regardless of whether he was in on it or not,
it fucked up his life at this point.
So, yeah, and so with his old social life falling apart, he began increasingly becoming
involved with the UFO community, the people who would talk to him like MUFON and other
UFO researchers that would reach out to him, that were eager to study his photographs and
gather information about his experiences.
And he welcomed it, seeing it as an opportunity to validate his experiences and find answers
to the questions that were consuming him.
He began working closely with several prominent UFO
investigators, providing them with access to his photographs,
notebooks, and personal accounts of sightings.
These investigators conducted interviews,
analyzed the evidence, and even visited Gulf Breeze
to see the location of the sightings for themselves.
Walter's hooked.
That's the other thing that's fucked up.
Huh? That's the other thing that's fucked up. That's the other thing that's fucked up is like at some point,
even if he did see something and he's not trying to make money
as his life falls apart and he becomes more and more desperate.
Of course, he's going to just go along with anybody who's offering him
any sort of attention or money for his story at this point.
Like, it doesn't matter if it's if it's true or not. He has to be this way because he doesn't have a lot of other
options because he's crazy. It becomes crazy. Yeah. Yeah. And the the but even the UFO community
itself was divided on him. Like a ton of the researchers thought he was just fucking faking
it, thought it was a hoax. Well, others thought there was something here with some members
embracing Walters as a credible witness while others just
question the authenticity of any of his claim.
We have a list of the people that embraced him.
I could get you a list, I'm sure, but it's like different
people within different organizations.
I'm just willing to make like a wild wager.
The people who embraced him are also the same people that love attention.
Very possible. It's very possible. Well, we're going to talk.
We'll talk about more about that in next episode when we talk about the other side.
The more you talk about this, the more I'm like a hundred percent out.
I think this is super fake. The more you say the more like bullshit,
this is more as life fell apart. The more you don't think it's real. I think this man gave up his
family and his community for ego is what I think. I think this dude straight up like saw that he
could be famous because it was around the country and he literally wanted fame more than he wanted attention more than he wanted.
So everything else fell apart.
Initially, he sent in his photographs under a fake name, but yeah, he did eventually put his name to the photographs and it did take off.
I mean, if he was if he was concerned, he would have kept it under fake name.
Maybe I mean, maybe it's hard. What do you think? I just don't buy. Do you feel similar? Like, like I say, basically at the end
of the episode, my point is, my point is like, it's the same
point that I just made. It's like, at this point, it doesn't
matter whether it's true or fake, because like what's
happened has happened. Like, it doesn't make me think he's
faking it more or less now because I'm thinking of what I'm
thinking about, which is like, once his life is fucked,
what is his option?
Like, let's say he completely hoaxed it, right?
Surely he didn't mean to fuck his life up
when he had the idea to make a hoax, right?
Like surely he thought it was gonna bring him something,
right, like fame or money or, you know,
whatever he wanted.
But but once it didn't happen, once once that didn't occur for
him, now he's just fucked. So everything after that point,
whenever that point is, like whenever if the book comes out
and it doesn't hit or whatever, and he's just, I mean, it didn't
blow up. It didn't get a move is like, it didn't mean he's
still just like a destitute guy whose family hates him now or
whatever. Right. But but you are the the inherent like fault here is that he's still human.
And yes, saying I lied is like a massive like people do not do that.
Double down like people who create continent spanning mysteries do not say, guys. I lied to you all. I just wanted attention.
Like they don't do that. It just does not happen. It's very possible. The initial plan was just to
maybe be a little bit more famous within Gulf Breeze or smaller. And then when it went national,
he had he panicked and he had to start making shit up. It's very fun. I mean, it could have been
he thought he saw something and then he just, who knows?
But I fundamentally believe that like his, his whole family ditching and leaving and
all that stuff. To me, it sounds like when people get a little culty and the family just
over it, they're like, look, dude, just give it up. Stop. He's like, I've crafted a UFO.
I'm taking UFO photos, you know, like, and they're like, oh my God. Stop. He's like, I'm crafted a UFO. I'm taking UFO photos. You know, like,
they're like, oh my God. Yeah. And then they have to be like, oh, we didn't know anything
about this or they're going to like go down as like accomplices in the story for right.
So it's better to walk away. Yeah. And be like, we're out. It's like the truth of like,
you know, what's the potato mashed potatoes movie?
Close encounters, right? Oh, yeah, it's family. Yeah.
The truth is that doing it when there's no aliens
is going to be the thing that fucks your family up.
You know what I mean? I mean, yeah, because immediately when you do that,
you're like it's like
functionally, it's probably like not much better than being on like the sex
offender registry, for somebody to like Google you and find out
that you like are like a, like, 10 year 15 year UFO witness and
that you have like a book and multiple like news stories about
you. And nobody believes you. Like, that's probably instant,
instant kryptonite for like any job, right?
Yeah, yeah.
It's, I think, I think you guys are gonna like that
because we'll get there next episode,
but the story is like, it gets weirder
and like the bunker side thing, like it's weird.
Regardless of what was the hoax or not,
like the longterm effects of this event,
fuck, like it changed his life one way or another, whether he
meant it to change the way he did or not, it fucked up his
whole life.
It transformed him from just this ordinary family man to
just this UFO crazy dude from his little town.
It should be a Coen Brothers movie is what it should be.
It should be like a fucking Fargo movie.
Yeah.
Over time, the intense media attention began to fade, but the impact on his life remained.
He continued to be involved in the UFO community, attending conferences, giving
interviews, sharing his experiences with others who would report similar encounters.
You know, the typical thing people do after, you know, they everything goes wrong
and they have only these people to turn to.
He also published the book, The Gulf Bree Sightings in 1990, where he documented
his experiences in detail and offered his perspective
on the events that changed his life.
However, the legacy of the Gulf Breeze Sightings is like a really
mixed one.
Obviously, even to this day, people debate each other over whether
it was real or not.
Some people believe that he was telling a story entirely completely
true. Others believe he was entirely lying.
And then there are people like me who are might sit in the middle
somewhere.
Regardless, though, this is where the majority and the major sightings
within Ed Walters ends and where the story of how his life at this point ends.
He did get a divorce from his wife in 1992,
and we're going to talk more about that next week, however,
when we go into more details on the other side of things,
the debunking side of things, the skepticism side of things.
So with that, gentlemen, Gulf Breeze part one is all done.
Minisodes at patreon.com slash SWO CBC.
Just kidding.
No, no, no. See you next week, we appreciate you, we love you, goodbye! I look up too and there's a perfect line of dozen lights traveling across the sky. So Thanks for watching! you