Somewhere in the Skies - Calling All Earthlings: The Incredible True Story of George Van Tassel
Episode Date: June 9, 2025Ryan speaks with documentary filmmaker, Jonathan Berman, about his film, Calling All Earthlings, based on the life and work of George Van Tassel. In 1947, George Van Tassel, a Howard Hughes employee a...nd confidante, suddenly quits working for his mentor and ditches the straight life, moving deep into the Mojave Desert where he and his family sleep under a rock. He leaves behind a tattered Los Angeles in the grips of postwar paranoia, opting for the quietude of the Joshua Tree area. It is during an August 1953 full moon that Van Tassel has an encounter with extraterrestrials, who give him the information to build a rejuvenation machine he dubs “The Integratron.” Is Van Tassel crazy or could the Integratron really work? FBI agents try to halt the army of eccentrics who gather in the desert to create a collective, possibly threatening reality on the edge of the American Dream. A gentle inquiry into alternative culture, the story is told by the current residents of the Joshua Tree area, who must defend against rampant militarism and commercialization, all while still waiting for their spaceship. Watch Calling All Earthlings: https://tubitv.com/movies/514481/calling-all-earthlings Please take a moment to rate and review us on Spotify and Apple. Book Ryan on CAMEO at: https://bit.ly/3kwz3DO Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/somewhereskies ByMeACoffee: http://www.buymeacoffee.com/UFxzyzHOaQ PayPal: Sprague51@hotmail.com Discord: https://discord.gg/NTkmuwyB4F Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/ryansprague.bsky.social Twitter: https://twitter.com/SomewhereSkies Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/somewhereskiespod/ Tik Tok: https://www.tiktok.com/@ryansprague51 Order Ryan’s new book: https://a.co/d/4KNQnM4 Order Ryan’s older book: https://amzn.to/3PmydYC Store: http://tee.pub/lic/ULZAy7IY12U Read Ryan’s articles at: https://medium.com/@ryan-sprague51 Opening Theme Song by Septembryo Copyright © 2025 Ryan Sprague. All rights reserved Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/somewhere-in-the-skies. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Today, I'm speaking with filmmaker Jonathan Berman about his latest documentary, Calling All Earthlings.
flying saucers and people from outer space
George Van Tassel
let's talk about this time machine
you're building down in California
The Integratron was built by George Van Tassel
He worked for Howard Hughes on advanced aircraft
He was a UFO contactee
I was sound asleep
When he awakened
The man got off of the ship
And approached me before I even knew there was a ship down
Oh come off at John
He said he had contact with those aliens
She came to them and gave them to them to design about Integatron.
The Integratron was to engineer a type of genetic reprogramming, leading to longevity.
Return it.
The Integratron is an electrostatic generator.
It's meticulously built.
And the science behind this machine is Tesla science.
If anybody tried to turn it on without being phased, they said it'd be like 100 nuclear weapons going on.
They did not want people to know that there were other sources.
energy. He started getting more and more paranoid about the government watching what he was doing.
I can see why he was a marked person. They tried to kill George.
It's smells of conspiracy. It's almost like there's some sort of experiment around here that we're
all inside of. The suppression of this information is the highest type of treason. There's a lot of mystery
about George Van Tassel. Let's look at the evidence. It's there. Something was working.
We've got friends and neighbors out there. And they want to talk to us.
Calling all earthlings explores a mid-century UFO cult, led by one-time Howard Hughes Confidant, George Fantasso.
Fantasso claimed to have combined alien guidance with the writings of inventor and physicist Nikola Tesla and other controversial science to build an electromagnetic time machine.
He dubbed the Integritron.
Was he insane?
Or could the dome really break through the boundaries of space?
time and energy.
FBI agents worked against Fantasel
and the alternative community that formed out of his work.
Would he finish the Integrachon
before the government finished him?
Tune in right now to find out.
You are now somewhere in the skies
with your host, Ryan Spray.
Jonathan, thank you so much for joining me today
on Somewhere in the Skies.
I'm excited and I'm really glad we can make this happen.
Ryan. Today we're going to talk all about calling all earthlings, but before we dive in, man,
you're fresh off the heels of a screening, am I correct? Could you tell us a little about how that
all went down? Well, you know, you make these films and it's a very long lead trajectory,
although I convinced myself that it was only going to take a year, because that's what you do.
And seven years later, we just came off of some wonderful festivals and theatrical screenings
of the Calling All Earthlings film.
And then this week, which is about, as we're going to talk about, George Van Tassel and his
activities out in the deserts of California and Joshua Tree area.
So we filmed in Joshua Tree, and that was like seven years ago.
And I returned Friday night to show the film, and it was just a wonderful feeling of
returning and people being into it.
and, you know, it's always sensitive about how a community is portrayed and whether they accept it or not, and that was a process that I could tell you about.
So it's a really fun, really great scene out there still.
You know, it's just nice, good people.
Absolutely.
Yeah, we'll definitely get into that community.
That's a big aspect of all of this that I'd love to discuss.
But, again, before we get to that, I always like to hear the origin story of, you know, how filmmakers became who they are, you know, the classic origin.
comic book thing. So before we get into that, what made you want to become a filmmaker in the first place?
Oh, you know, Ryan, I grew up watching a lot of TV and reading books. I was a little, you know,
voracious reader as a kid. And when I watched a ton of TV, the Brady Bunch and the Partridge family
and get smart and all these shows, and eventually I felt like I had so much input that I wanted to put
something back out. So, and you know, growing up, I guess what we thought.
thought of was middle class.
I don't know if that exists anymore.
I had the luxury in my mind, certainly, of, or maybe the luxury of pursuing art,
but I think it was just more like an intuitive thing.
I just started playing music when I was a kid and being in band.
And we shot little super eight movies, you know, like in what was that film with the Spielberg film?
He always has super eight in his stuff.
So shooting movies when we were 13, little like karate movies and mafia movies, putting
talcum powder in our hair and all that stuff.
So between the music and the filmmaking, I got into making art or whatever you call it.
Media.
Yeah, exactly.
I know.
It's a very amorphous term for sure.
Well, one of your films really caught my attention when I saw the trailer for it.
So if you don't mind, I'd love to ask you about my friend Paul.
This really stuck out to me.
Could you tell us a little bit about this film and what it meant to you?
Well, that was definitely the most personal of my films.
Growing up in Long Island on the South Shore, one of my best closest friends, like Paul and my friend Adam is also in the film.
Paul was a total character.
He was always one step ahead of us, and he became a bank robber.
And I became a filmmaker.
And my friend Paul is the story of our reunion.
So it's really a film about living on the edge and friends and family of people with mental illness, really, because he was bipolar.
That's what you find out as the film goes on.
You know, when the euphoria, we ride the euphoria of Paul's journey as a deadhead and just getting more and more into drugs and all that.
And then becoming a bank robber.
And then we kind of move back and say, wow, what is this?
What is this?
Right.
Yeah.
And I'm sure everyone can relate.
Some friend or family member who just takes a trajectory you never really expected.
You know, when I screen that film, which we did with public television, ITVS,
which is this great branch of American public TV.
When we did that, I found that there were two different types.
If I can break it down and go binary here.
the people who had had experiences with people off the charts in their life and understood what I was talking about in the film and those who didn't.
Some people were like, oh, why wouldn't you let Paul stay at your house?
I was like, oh, okay, you've never experienced just going with the lunar, getting drawn into somebody's world and drama and not being able to or wanting to.
Right.
Yeah.
I can only imagine, man.
I'm sure it is a very powerful film.
I hope to take a look at that soon.
One of the other things on your resume that really caught my attention, the last little question here off topic, but was Toxic Avenger 2.
How the hell did this happen?
I love trauma.
Yeah, thanks for asking.
You know, after I went up to McGill and I played in R&B bands, played like a big show band up there, and it was still, you know, learning about making movies.
I came back to New York and worked in edit rooms.
And one of the edit rooms I worked in was at the legendary trauma.
And I was an apprentice, assistant editor, and we just did it all.
And for Toxic Avenger Part 2, I did some of the voices in the film.
So I did some of the ADR, you know, the off-screen voices as well as the karate sounds.
And we were doing sound editing.
We would get calls.
You know, you work crazy hours in film.
And it was like 2 a.m.
And we're sound editing the film.
And somebody would call up.
and be like, you guys stole my script and we're going to blow up, I'm going to blow up the building, you know.
And we'd be like, oh, well, call back on, call back on office hours, you know, Lloyd and Michael aren't here.
We're just working here.
So it was fun.
And working with Lloyd Kaufman is a hoot.
He's a great guy.
And he really understands audiences, too, you know.
Absolutely.
I believe I met him at a Comic-Con one year.
And, my God, if you've ever seen passion in someone, you know, an executive.
of like a film company. That's the example right there for sure. Yeah, Lloyd was more the creative
and Michael was the business side. So he always wanted to make sure that people were getting it.
And I feel the same way. I don't want, I don't want myself to be too esoteric, you know.
I love, you know, out there avant-garde stuff sometimes. I like to balance it out.
And I'm kind of try to be, make films that are understood by El Hente, you know, the people.
And I mean, that's very prevalent in your, your, you're,
recent film Calling All Earthlings. So before we get to the actual story, Jonathan, of George
Van Tassau, how did you come to discover this man? And what sort of prompted you to want to make a
film about him and his work?
You know, I'd finished my last film, Commune, which is about the Black Bear Ranch Commune,
kind of a legendary group of people getting together to change the world. Nothing too audacious
there. And I was walking around L.A., as much as one can walk around L.A., and I walked into
the Bodie Tree Bookstore and it's this bookstore that deals with the supernatural and
yeah all your coast-to-coast kind of stuff somewhere in the skies and beyond you know
spirituality and personal growth and I spied this book and it was about the California being a spiritual
state and it was photographs and one of the photographs was of the Integritron dome and I just saw
this white kind of gothic dome with a sign perched on it in the middle of the
the desert and the sign said for basic experimentation in life extension and i was hooked so i knew i
had to go out there you know right right and you know that the integratron itself which we'll get
into is so iconic now i mean my friends send me picture messages all the time of them going there
and going out in the desert and just just to see it this like relic that just sort of stands there
again we'll get into that but like you just said you went out there and when you decided to make the
film, you embedded yourself into this community to make the film. So what was that like? I can't even
imagine. That's an interesting question because when I made commune, I went up to Siskiyuk County.
And I was like, well, that's going to be pretty exotic. And I'd get there. I'm like,
God. And first, when we made commune, first, the first thing that happened was we kind of got like
interrogated by all the people in the commune. It was like a big reunion. So from ages 8 to 80, they were
like, who are you? You're the media. What brings you here? You know? And then after kind of getting,
passing through the trial by fire with them and them on the Black Bear Ranch commune,
understanding that we weren't there to get them because the media often gets stuff wrong, right?
The media. So with this project, there was, there's like a state that you go through where
you're like on probation. So I got out there and web, and web,
passed through this trial by fire, which I could tell you about. But I realized, oh my God,
and I really realized that again this weekend, I'm like, these are the cool people I love to hang out
with. These are, you know, just like in George's Day, all the musicians and artists and desert rats
and inventors and people who also may not have the money to live in a Beverly Hills mansion,
as somebody says in the film, there is something about the desert that was just
always magical, and so I feel very akin to a lot of people there.
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Yeah, I know what you mean, man.
I mean, being in downtown Los Angeles, like, you get one perspective of California here,
but the minute you step outside of that bubble, you know, like any city, I would imagine,
and branch out, something just pulse you, you know.
Whenever I even see the word mojave, I just, I want to get out there.
I just want to go and experience it.
And as an East Coaster, like, I feel that even more now.
magnetic pull to something I never experienced.
Yeah, and I don't know about you, but I, you know, it's also like small town living in a good way because you know everyone.
Like you go to the saloon and it's like, oh, there's this guy, there's that guy, and everyone's friends.
You can let your guard down a little bit.
Right, right.
I mean, I know living in New York, I don't know about you, but, you know, you find your pockets every now and again.
But I couldn't even tell you my next door neighbor's name in my apartment building.
It's just so, you know, everyone.
sort of on guard and on their own.
Oh, that's funny. Because in New York, I don't feel that way.
But it is a thing in New York where you like, I don't know if it's historically, but you don't
want to know your neighbors.
Because when you're blasting your music at three of the morning, you don't want them complaining.
Exactly.
Maybe that was it.
Maybe that's it.
I always felt very at home in New York, actually.
Yeah.
But L.A. is a whole other world.
You know, it's a different geographic and a cultural makeup.
You know, this was Mexico.
and really, you know, supposed to still be part of that country.
And really, yeah, when you look at Los Angeles itself,
it's a bubble of kind of English speakers surrounded by what continues to be.
I'm not an ethnographer, really.
I'm not an anthropologist.
It does seem like there is a bubble here.
And I feel like I felt a lot of the early settlers,
early people who came from other places out to California,
probably felt as kind of an alien nation.
Absolutely.
What better place to put this mission into fruition as Van Tassel did.
So, I mean, who was George Ventasso?
What exactly was his connections to these people you mentioned in the film?
Howard Hughes.
I mean, my God, Nikola Tesla.
What?
What is this?
Well, just to take a step back since we were on that thread.
Yeah.
You know, so many people came out here seeking something.
They were the seekers.
They came out to the Southern California to be movie stars.
They came out like the grapes of wrath to eat food because they were starving in the dust bowl.
People were seeking something when they headed west.
And they were also seeking nourishment of the soul, right, as well.
And these are the people who leave their towns a lot of times are more adventurous.
and they were looking for something new, and it was a fresh place.
George Ventasel came from the Midwest, as did a lot of people out here in SoCal, and they wanted
new forms of spirituality as well.
So for the very beginning, there was all kinds of wild stuff operating in these here hills
of Los Angeles and the environs' theosophy, which wasn't, of course, just in L.A., there was
Simple McPherson.
she had a huge church that was here in Echo Park.
The church is still there, actually.
Amy Simple McPherson.
And kind of like you had, you know, as you got on, you had Gene Scott in the 60s and 70s and 80s.
Reverend Gene Scott was classic.
And I just love that aspect of California as people seeking.
Once the atomic bomb was dropped in, tested in New Mexico and then dropped in.
In Japan, everything changed, and people like George Vintasel felt an awakening.
So George came from Ohio, and he loved airplanes.
I don't know if this is how he got into airplanes.
I should find out.
I would be the person to find out.
I do know that a lot of people in the Midwest or people with farms, you can operate a plane
at any age.
And it's still true, I think.
My friend's son started flying when he's like 14 or something.
Because you're dusting crops, you know?
For whatever reason, George was fascinated by aviation and moved left Ohio, moved out to, may have studied some aeronautic stuff.
His whole story is slightly clouded in mystery, which is really as it should be, learned a lot about airplanes, came out to California.
The World War II was on, and they needed people to work making airplanes, and George was up for it.
he worked at Lockheed and Hughes and a few other facilities.
And as the story, legend goes, he became friends with Howard Hughes and his personal flight inspector.
And in 1947, as it was all shutting down, he moved out to the desert.
And some would say he moved out just to get out of the rat race.
I think he even said that.
I mean, he certainly was one of the first counterculture people of the new age, I would say.
And then other people would say, no, George actually was going out to the Harper Dry Lake,
which was a test facility, a secret test facility that Howard Hughes had.
So either way, in early 1950s, when August night full moon, George looks up and under a butteryellow light,
he hears a voice, booming actually voice.
That's how it comes to him.
And it says, my name is Solganda, and I would be pleased to show you my.
my craft. And that's how his adventure began in direct communication, like personal communication,
according to George, with beings from another world. He had already been channeling. He had
already been living out there for a year and had been singing spirituals with his family.
They moved underneath this giant rock with the name of giant rock. And they were singing
spirituals and invite people over.
Pretty soon these spirituals were morphing into channelings.
And George was getting messages.
And one of the messages was that they were going to give us a buzz over our capital,
1952.
Yeah.
You know the Washington flap?
Absolutely.
Yep.
Yep.
Where the Air Force and Pentagon, I believe it was, even had to get involved to be like,
everyone calmed down.
But yeah, they sent jets up even to try to intercept the objects.
crazy. So in Washington, D.C., some unidentified objects flew right over the Capitol, really,
really near the White House. And George had, according to George, sent a registered letter to various
officials in the U.S. government a few months beforehand. So they had told them that they were
going to try to get our attention that way. What I would give to have seen those letters postmarked.
I know. I know. That would be something to find.
You know, like this poem is never finished, only abandoned.
Absolutely.
You heard that expression.
Yep.
Yep.
I love it.
It fits perfectly here.
I know because I'm like, oh, I could, I'd love to see those letters.
I did not find them.
We did a lot of research.
Okay.
So he gets, he's channeling.
He gets this message.
You know, we don't want to give away too much of that.
But the biggest outcome from these messages was to build this machine.
So I'd love maybe if you could sort of describe what this machine was to us, Jonathan, if you don't mind.
So, yeah, the Integratron was a building design for basic research into life extension, is how George termed it.
But it was much more than that.
So one of the reviewers of the film called it the Swiss Army knife of like of the new age, you know, of all the things that people wanted.
One of which was free energy.
What this was was a domed machine that was supposed to be.
supposed to spin around and create electromagnetic waves, multiple wave oscillations, that would then
use George Creel's idea, Creel having been the first doctor to have done blood transfusion,
and Creel's idea that the cells are like little batteries and that they need to be recharged.
So zapping the cells with electricity to rejuvenate people.
And the reason why it wasn't just vanity, George's explanation of this was that you get wisdom and just as you start moving towards being, giving some wisdom, you die.
So the intent was to bring wisdom to the people and extend life.
At the same time, the dome worked on a number of different principles, although it never was turned on, as you know.
And those include Tesla's benefits of negative ionization and George Lakovsky's multiple wave oscillations that we were talking about.
So it is a wild and crazy and audacious idea.
And one of the things, as I talk about the film, I'd really love to do a conference where we get together the more esoteric scientists with the more hardcore scientists.
One of the things I love visually about George, by the way, speaking of just hardcore scientists, is how like middle American kind of square.
jawed he is. Right. It's not like hippie-dippy. Exactly. Yeah, you look at him and you're like, oh, he could work on my car.
And he did work on cars. And that's another story. That's how he found out about the area at first.
Oh, interesting. Yeah, he were, George, well, since you said that, George worked with his uncle. It was the
depression. They were fixing cars out in Santa Monica. And this German minor comes along, or German,
German American. Again, another Roshaman. There's a whole Roshaman aspect of the film,
Roshaman being the Japanese film where there's multiple stories of the same event from different
perspectives. So this miner, his car broke down. He needed some bucks to get the car fixed and money
to get his mine going out in the desert. And he ran into George and his uncle. And they staked him
some money. They fixed his car and they stayed in touch. And then one day, the sheriff of a nearby
County to where he was mining, which was under this giant rock, right? And they came by to see what was going on. After all, this guy was a German with shortwave radios and dynamite and aircraft living in the middle of the desert during World War II. And they came and there's multiple versions of the story, which you'll have to see the film, I guess, to find out. But it turns out that he dies in an explosion there at the rock at George and his family.
circling back, come there a number of years later and scrub the walls of the blood and start
their venture, which they did not know was going to turn. They started living under the rock
and singing the spirituals, yeah.
And the rest is sort of history. So out of all this, Jonathan, he creates these conventions,
which was another big part of your film, this counterculture that were coming out to the deserts
to sort of support the Integritron, which was really interesting idea. And then the intelligence
agencies kind of got involved with this. Can you kind of maybe briefly run us through this whole string of events?
Well, first of all, it's easy to forget that he invited the intelligence agencies in. Well, the FBI is the one that he contacted. But he contacted other people in the military, like at, what is it called Dwight? I think it's called Dwight Patterson. It's the one in Ohio.
Wright Patterson. Right, Patterson. Yeah, exactly. And so he invited a lot of people because he got this message.
So he was on their radar almost by like he called them in.
However, they were very interested in George.
And again, multiple potential reasons why.
One, he was gathering after he got the message.
What happened when Solgand?
You're getting a little bit of a modern art version of the story, right?
But Solganda came down and he said, I would be pleased to show you our craft.
and then they gifted him or direct downloaded it.
I don't know how else to put it.
The plans or the basic inspiration for this Integritron, this machine.
And that needed funding because if you're going to combine extraterrestrial technology
with Tesla's negative ionization, with George Creel's charging of the cells as batteries,
with George Lakovsky's multiple wave oscillation, you better have some bucks.
So he started doing these conventions and he invited out all the contactees, you know, the classic in Georgia was one of the classic 1950s contactees and he invited them to the desert to speak and barbecue and, you know, and all the fans, right?
There was no coast to coast.
There was no somewhere in the skies back then.
There was just you and your little town and you may have had an experience and you felt weird about it.
And all of a sudden you read in a magazine and at one point, particularly life magazine.
did a piece where they were kind of mocking it,
which happens a lot with the media for various reasons that we can go into.
But that just backfired and people came out to the desert
and thousands of people came.
And it was the first burning man, in my opinion.
Yeah, a very early predecessor, for sure.
And of concern to the government, one, they could be communists.
They're talking about free love and they're hanging out in the desert
and they're trading ideas that if you really go to the roots of some of the original settlers
of this country were part of their roots,
You know, to be communitarian, to help people.
You're right?
But they saw it as a potential threat and possibly Soviet-backed of the government.
On the one hand, on the other hand, he was mucking around with some technology that maybe was secret.
Or the other hand, he maybe was just going to blow up the whole grid of the Southern California.
Oops, electrical system.
You know, there's two sides to this whole world, right?
There's the excitement when you feel it and you see it with Formica and, you know,
and cars and shopping centers, for better or worse,
and all the inventions and television, you know,
like things that we just take for granted.
These were new and bright.
And then on the other side was the fear of the bomb.
And these two polarities play into this whole story on every beat.
Absolutely.
I mean, you sort of have like the foreshadowing of the Cold War creeping in, I guess,
is another good way to look at it.
Like, what if these contactees?
What if, like, the message they were given was a Trojan horse of sorts?
You know, build this device that's going to blow up the planet.
Who knows?
I mean, a lot of this, to me, stems.
You look at like Operation Paperclip, the bringing of the Nazi rocket scientists to the U.S.
Because it was like, well, are they going to go to the Soviet Empire?
Are they going to go to the U.S. Empire?
So they were successful in bringing these folks here.
I think that to me is the start of Cold War.
See, 1947, yeah, right after World War II.
So this was really smack in the Cold War.
Yep.
And there are, I don't know if there's been a lot of innuendo, including freaky book about, what was the area 51, that there was, that the craft that landed at Roswell was some kind of Soviet disinfo program.
And Jacob's saying, yep.
Yeah, I think that's a bunch of hooey.
but, you know, everybody's entitled.
I mean, she got that from a tail spun to her by some old, you know, tech, a science guy.
You know, I don't know if she has any proof of that.
But I wouldn't be surprised if there was some support of UFO stuff from the Soviets.
Oh, absolutely.
Yeah.
I mean, again, like, these might just be stories, but you always hope there's even a shred of fact to some of them, for better or worse, I guess.
And I haven't found any actual proof that there was Soviet backing of that.
I think there's a lot more proof of Soviet interference now and Facebook and all that.
Very good point.
Yeah, bring it to present day for sure.
Yeah, this has proof.
I haven't found it.
There is one journalist, Nick, what is his name?
Nick, and he, do you know what I'm talking about?
He's kind of a punk rocker.
He's great.
Oh, Nick Redfern, yes.
Nick Redfern, yeah.
Nick Redfern wrote, oh, no, Nick Redfern.
who I met at Contact in the Desert, where we tested the film, this wonderful kind of relative
son of of George's activities.
I met Nick, and he did a book where he talks about all the contactees and the FBI and George Van Tassel.
So it's been a wild ride in the UFO communities, what is going on, and there's so much disinformation from the very beginning, including.
Do you know about the national – national lampoon?
I was just in Josh Street.
National Enquirer and the Weekly World News.
Do you know how they were started?
No, I mean, I remember buying it every week or whatnot when it came out when I was a kid.
But no, I don't know how it all sort of started, no.
So these are papers.
They were like early – I don't know.
Well, one was really out there, right, with Weekly World News.
The Inquirer had some out there stuff too.
the original founders of the National Enquirer or a family that was connected to the Bafia, you could say,
and were paid by the government as disinformation conduits.
And actually, nothing has changed there because did we see that recently with Trump and his ladies, his mistress?
Yeah, good point.
And, I mean, we have Operation Mockingbird as well with the CIA.
they actually bought out journalists back in the 50s through the 70s to spread propaganda.
I mean, so I mean, these things have been going on for a while, but I didn't know that about the Inquirer and Weekly World News, Bat Boy.
Bat Boy.
That boy was one of my favorites, for sure.
Oh, Bat Boy, okay.
You know, this stuff was from so far into the past that it's, you know, it was more like the OSS, the original CIA group,
the office of special services?
Strategic services.
Yeah.
So, you know, it's a great way of controlling information is to make fun of it.
So a lot of the stuff that came out in the weekly world news did damage control that way about UFO stuff.
Now, people may have just been seeing top secret stuff, you know.
We have Eric Bird and the great rock and roller from the animals in the film.
And he's like, look, you Americans, he think here's the most.
to know everything right that's somehow part of our it really is a blessing to be born in a place like this
when you see what's going on around the world unfortunately what's going on around the world
has a lot of culpability from this country but um when when you see that somehow uh we have this
freedom that we've been granted and hopefully we will continue to exercise it uh where we think
we should know everything but i think eric burton might be right maybe there's some stuff you're not
supposed to know. Yeah, I mean, there's secrets for a reason. So part of me is a very patriotic
American and part of that has to do with also being able to exercise our rights as citizens
in free conversation, but also understanding there's some stuff, like there's stuff that
are people in a secret, whatever, what do you want to call it, like protective services, whatever,
they've thwarted plots that we'll never know about, you know.
Of course.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, sort of coming back to your whole narrative in this one, you go into great detail about Ventassel's plans with the Integrachon.
And then just, you know, all systems are ready to go.
You know, he got funding.
He got it up and ready to run.
And then something happens that sort of brings everything to a screeching halt.
So could you maybe give us this little part of the story as well?
George had an untimely death.
He, well, it depends how you look at it.
you know, I'll go with the print the legends, as they say. He was just about to turn on the dome.
It had been a lot of years, and he was on his way to an interview, and he mysteriously and suddenly
died. That's one version of the story. In other words, a lot of people would say, and I'm not
going to vociferously deny their assertations. They would say that George was stopped by
elements of the government. I'm not sure what it is, but this whole populist conspiracy thing has been a
big part in the history of this country as well, you know, like people getting all crazy about
Illuminati and stuff. It's true that there are, you know, cabals of certain types, but I don't know
if they were out to kill George. It's a beautiful legend. It's possible, you know, circling back to
our history of California part, right?
You know, all these alienated communities and, you know, little towns connected by dusty roads and this hard scrubble life.
You know, it wasn't what people, you know, yeah, there were oranges and olives and stuff.
And it had a Mediterranean aspect to it, definitely.
But really, a lot of fast food was going on, the origins of the great and terrible McDonald's and Rick Rock.
Depending on the day, that's why I feel.
great work.
So some people say George died from eating too much crappy food.
A long way from, yes, murder conspiracies for sure.
Yeah, I mean, I could give you three or four versions for sure of his death.
But he did die in 1978 and the dome was never completed.
And, you know, various forces or people rushed in and grabbed up the stuff and the plans, you know.
Right.
Yeah.
And that sort of brings me.
to the three sisters.
So, I mean, these are kind of the people who run the Integritron now, am I correct?
You are correct.
And it's so funny because you make these films and you stitch together audio and you put
together video and you hope it makes some kind of sense.
And I was watching it after I cut the whole thing, you know, many, many times.
And I realized that Nancy and Joanne are the Carl's the Carl sisters.
The third sister is like, she's like the gummo.
She's never around like from the Marx brothers.
and Tron, they're the ones that I know.
The stewards are owners of the dome.
And Joanne says about Nancy.
She's like, yeah, she's brilliant.
She used to work at Stanford Research Institute in intelligence,
in a bright software, artificial intelligence.
And that recently, I was like, oh, my God,
she worked at Stanford Research and Artificial Intelligence.
I'm sure her listeners are aware of SRI and its place in both the wonderful scientific history of this country,
the invention of the mouse and the computer, I think, was invented there, or that was Xerox as well,
also in the more woo-woo parapsychology work that was done there.
So that, I was like, wow, so they own the dome, they bought it from another owner.
It went through a series of owners, it went fallow for a while.
I just love that it's the spot where people project their own stuff onto, and I think that
the current stewards of the Dome are really good about that, like they're able to allow me to
engage in my predilection for the counterculture activities of California and make a film about
it and they will enable someone else to do their yoga retreat there. You know what I mean? It's like,
it's this space and this place that we can project our hopes, fears, and desires and work on to.
So it's kind of neat. And just in a pure art level, like installation art, like someone like
Robert Smithson and other earth artists and site-specific artists.
It really has that, if nothing else, it's a beautiful piece of art.
But I do believe it's a lot more than that.
I do, too.
And I think that's a really good point.
It's sort of the lens in which you look at the Integratron and even the counterculture that
stemmed around the time.
So, I mean, I guess sort of to wrap up this story of Fantasso and the Integratron, Jonathan,
where do you stand in terms of what's going on in Joshua Tree now in terms of back then
and how it's all sort of changed?
The contacting movement was at its peak and Fantaso was doing his work and you had others around the world trying to give this message of, you know, peace and harmony and all this really good positive stuff.
Yeah, that's right. That was the message that they came down with. Really, you know, it's like you look at the channeling stuff, some of the channelings and all the story around that is cool. And then you get to the actual content and it's always kind of similar, beneficent stuff. In this case, peace.
love and harmony and and and especially a warning about the hydrogen bomb over the other
atomic bombs that that was going to be a real issue uh so listen uh as the uh preeminent
historian of the state of california says in the film the desert has always attracted you know
mystic visions starting with the uh the bible and before right so this is no exception and uh i guess
back then it was pretty empty and there were the original native American people who were there
and who had their own very deep spiritual connection including a connection to the extraterrestrial
which is relayed in the film by the way there's a website for the film it's calling all earthlings
movie.com and there's a there is a 70 page paper that was recently printed and if people sign up
for our mailing list I'm happy to send them a copy of that paper it's brilliant it really gets
into every aspect of it.
But I don't know if he gets into this aspect, which is in the film about the Native
American connection to extraterrestrial origin, origin theory of mankind.
But everybody who went out there seems to have been on some kind of spiritual trip,
or at least don't tread on me trip, right?
A lot of veterans went out there.
We have one in our film.
And a lot of veterans went out there and were given free land and the Jack Rabbit Chucks.
And now it's a wild and crazy history.
It is.
And I mean, again, like, you know, the areas in Joshua Tree, a lot of them have changed.
You got all the Airbnbs and the commercialism popping up.
Right.
I know.
I know.
But, I mean, your film brings us back to a better time when this, when they could invite veterans to, you know, deal with their PTSD or go somewhere where they're welcomed, you know.
So, I mean, I'm hoping that's still the case when it comes to the Integratron and the work with the three sisters.
and in all of this swirling around Van Tessel's original message.
And what I find also really interesting is that you recently, in your interviews,
you talked about you went to Malibu for a screening,
and someone told you that they believe there's other integratrons that have been built throughout the world.
Now, I know there's nothing to sort of prove this,
but I found that pretty interesting as well.
Well, the dome itself is built right on the border of one of the largest military installation.
in the world's 29 pumps facility, 29 pumps. It has a official name, but we know what it is.
It runs from the town of 29 pounds all the way it's up towards the top, up the five.
It's a huge area with, you know, faux, Iraqi villages, you know, and all kinds of stuff going on up there.
And there's always been this connection between the military and the Integratron, one ringing more about aggression and the other.
more about the peace and the people in josh tree who are the peaceful airs spiritual air is of
van tassel who i just hang out with this weekend you know not officially but you know they they are
carrying on a lot of the same stuff so yeah it is a funny thing about uh capitalism i'm i'm not
against capitalism i think it's a good thing i think a mixed economy is nice but i was just out there
and somebody was saying oh uh clive right is one of the musicians in our film and he lives he's lived there
forever, brilliant, a British musician.
And they were like, oh, I can get you
200 bucks a night for your
Airbnb instead of 75.
I'm like, hey, hold on.
Next time I come out, my rate to
stay at Joshua Tree is going to double.
It's like this weird double-edged sword.
People need to make a living, and I don't
want to regulate anything. I'm not a regulator.
At the same time,
you know, price gouging
is hard. I guess the market
will figure it out. I expected
to see a lot more
activity, but it seems pretty much the same trippy cool place. It's just like the rents have gone up,
you know, and the house values. It might be one of those places, too, that shakes out the people who
can't hack it. Well, I mean, okay, so, you know, aside from this, Jonathan, where do you think
we stand today as a society? 2018, we get like the biggest bombshell story of UFO disclosure
from the government.
You know, the New York Times puts out this article.
The Pentagon's been investigating UFO secretly for like eight, ten years or something like that.
Which article are you referring to?
This was the New York Times article that came out in December.
Right.
And I think that was through Tom DeLong's, DeLange.
How do you say it?
Correct, yeah.
Yeah, organization.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, for a lot of people, they're like, duh, we knew that.
Right.
But for that to be in the New York Times.
is a big step, yeah.
Yeah, where do you stand on, you know, UFO disclosure, you know, this idea that the government
is going to tell us what they've known for so long or that a...
It's an interesting question.
I never, I haven't really fought that through.
I mean, I would think that people love to gossip and talk.
So let me say it brings up a more, not more, but an interesting question of the whole world
we're in right now of fake news and real news.
How the heck do we know what's really?
real and this is the ultimate subject where we don't know. One thing that lends credence to it for me,
which is very intriguing. I spoke to this guy, Robert Salas, as I was making the film,
do you know him in his work? Yes, the gentleman with the nuclear bases, right?
Exactly. That is, you should get him on your show because that is a really interesting story
that nuclear, he has a group of people who were military officials, many of them high-ranking,
and that they experienced odd shutdowns from extraterrestrial forces, according to the way Salas describes it.
I don't know if he explicitly says, yeah, I think he does.
And so there is something going on.
I don't know.
You know, it's like if you ask me about George Van Tassel, on Monday I might say, oh, he's Tom Sawyer trying to get his fence painted and, you know, live a life in the desert.
And on Wednesday I could say, yeah, the guy who's had this brilliant idea that's 30 years ahead of his time.
So the disclosure issue is interesting.
We all want to have an interesting life of significance, right?
So if we said now it's all a bunch of hooey, that would suck.
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It would suck either way.
I say that as a film professor and a Cal State wonderful school, Cal State, San Marcos.
But we all want to live lives with significance on the one hand, and it's possible it's all just illusion.
And on the other hand, it could be disinformation to keep Bibiol busy.
And on the third hand, because we're aliens, we have three hands, it's very possible that there is a bunch of stuff that is hidden.
I'm sure there are people you've had on your show who know a lot more about this than I do.
I'm just a film guy.
I make films about communes and weird domes.
And on to my next thing after this.
Yeah, absolutely.
Well, we're happy to have you, man.
Yeah, thank you.
Yeah, I have really, I think it's fascinating now.
And then the thing is like, yeah, of course I fell into a lot of rabbit holes, the majestic
papers for one.
It's like, aha, we have definite proof.
And then it's like, oh, turns out they were probably faked.
Yep.
Welcome to my life.
Yeah.
Right.
And even, and maybe they weren't faked.
Although, according to someone who I really love and trust, who's a great filmmaker,
Chris Munch, and you should try to get him on your show.
He's doing a film about that Eisenhower meeting.
Chris was saying, yeah, that the majestic papers are probably a hoax, but he's a believer.
Yeah.
I certainly believe there's intelligence outside our planet.
I don't think anyone would say otherwise.
I would hope not at this point.
I think the visit could have been more of a mushroom, you know, what are the, like, mushroom spores kind of thing, like crystallized intelligence.
that could live for millions of years, and that's how we became associated.
We're all star dust.
We're all from multiple planets, right?
So I don't know what the government knows.
Yeah.
I just feel like on the one hand, the government is still working with, like, old IBM machines with a green type.
You know, like, these are the people who are keeping all these secrets.
Do you know what I mean?
That's what I was saying about gossip and all that.
Absolutely, yeah.
But people have stepped forward.
What's your, what's your feeling?
We'll go into our UFO chat mode.
What's your feeling on Bob Lazar and that whole thing?
Yeah, so I mean, I've looked extensively.
We did a special episode all about Bob Lazar.
And the community, the quote unquote UFO community is very divided on it.
Okay.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, I personally, I give him, I want to give him the benefit of the doubt.
I don't see what this man really had to gain.
I mean, he's sort of, you know, put through the ringer.
both personally and professionally after coming forward with all this.
So I don't really see a motivation to lie about it.
We've recently found people who have worked with him at Los Alamos, where he said he'd worked.
So, I mean, there have been some developments in that whole Bob Lazar story,
but enough to definitively say, yes, he was there.
He worked on what he said, no, we'll never know.
It's just a story, just like all of these things I think we deal with within the UFO community
and beyond. So yeah, I'm still on the fence about it, but I'm leaning more towards believing
a lot of his story than disbelieving for sure. Yeah, there are elements where it seems like
he made some stuff up. And then it's always hard, like my friend, my friend Paul, right,
who I did the film about after robbing all these banks, he eventually went to prison.
In prison, he was put in a minimum security facility. And his buddy there was Lyndon LaRouche.
And if you're into conspiracy stuff, Lyndon LaRouce was a real interesting, squirrelly character, definitely involved with some dark stuff.
But the thing is, he knew he was smart.
And like for every crazy thing he would say, like 90% crazy, one would be really true and brilliant.
So people are shapeshifters, you know.
Yes, the art of deception.
Well, don't worry.
We're going to be taking the human out of all this, according to Elon Musk.
And I do believe he's a very smart guy.
and apparently we're heading towards the singularity for better or worse, hopefully for better,
and hopefully they'll keep us around as pets or something.
Hopefully, man.
Oh, my God.
I can only imagine what Ventassa would have thought about all this now going on with Musk and everyone.
Well, that's the thing, Ventassel was a peace of love guy, you know, and that was a radical message,
and that's not the way things have transpired, unfortunately.
Although some people would say we're in a period now that's more peaceful than ever.
You know what I mean? There's always another side to the story.
And the thing about good science fiction, I've been starting to reconnect with my professor at McGill, where I went to college,
and he's the world's one of the leading, he's, I think, the leading critic of science fiction.
And these worlds in science fiction and futurism are often very politically radical.
They're utopianists, their better world.
I'm not talking about your Star War, Star Wars space opera.
That's just a Western with Rayguns.
I'm talking about more your Star Trek, you know,
alternate worlds of different possibilities,
often thinly cloaked visions of utopia,
and often more leading towards the left of the spectrum.
In the film, we really tried to show also the whole economic set of it like that,
that all these experiences are,
about humanistic impulses and dignity for people who have money or don't, you know.
And that's like the special world of the desert has been able to kind of encapsulate both
the rich and the poor in maybe a better life than they would have in the city.
Jonathan, this has been so awesome, man.
I got to ask, where can we find the film in all of your other work?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, thanks for having me today.
I hope it makes some sort of sense.
like I said, just back for Joshua Tree, so I'm operating on very, very altered realities right now.
Hey, we've got to challenge your minds every now and again.
Yeah, I mean, no drugs or anything, just being there in the beautiful landscape.
I mean, people who live in the country, I'm starting to understand why they're like, yeah, I never come to the city.
Me too.
You really see the stars there, and you really do connect in a very, very deep level.
So this film is available everywhere on iTunes, on Amazon Instant, the one that you, you know, pay a few bucks for.
You can download it from iTunes and the voodoo and all those kind of places.
Every digital Xbox, you name it.
You can get it.
Calling all Earthlings.
And then, you know, if somebody wants to show it at some kind of semi-theatrical, you know, theater or group that they have, they should get on.
They should, everybody should get on our website and sign up for the mailing list.
I'm very bad about the mail, but I do send something out every month or so.
Keeping you up on what we're doing, we're having a European premiere,
and we have a few more screenings, including one at the Anthropological Meeting of American Anthropological Association meeting in San Jose, which is exciting.
Oh, wow. That's awesome. Yeah.
Yeah, it's totally different context. Yeah, I might have to make a trip out there.
Oh, cool. Yeah.
Awesome. Well, I mean, I personally hope there's more Integriton's up there and more films like years.
you know, in a time where I think we need them now more than ever, let's be honest.
It's a hard road to hope because the films that have been done beforehand seem to be either
sloppy, you know, rabidly pro, you know, just cheesy UFO 1980s video shelf stuff or
quick TV films. And I tried to take my time that I'm blessed with as a professor to really
think some of it through and tell these people's stories with dignity and show multiple
world's multiple possibilities.
Well, I really think you hit the mark, man.
Again, the film is Calling All Earthlings.
Jonathan, thank you so much for joining me today.
Thank you. This was a blast. I feel transported.
That's it for this week's episode.
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