UAP Unidentified Alien Podcast - UAP Weekly 7-2-24 Aliens in Show Business? An Interview with Michael Ian Black
Episode Date: July 2, 2024Is their an alien conspiracy in Hollywood? Do some movie makers know more than they let on? Actor and comedian, Michael Ian Black, joins Stephen Diener to discuss that and much more. Includin...g his own childhood experiences that he refers to as "dreams" and why he thinks his friends in the media didn't want to cover the Schumer amendment story. Listen here...See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Welcome in to another edition of UAP Weekly.
I'm Stephen Deiner back with you here on the Unidentified Alien podcast.
And it feels great to be back.
It feels like it's been forever since I spoke with you and got to put out a new episode.
But it is the first new episode of July.
And today, being July 2nd to this release date for this new episode, is World UFO Day.
And believe it or not,
the three-year anniversary of UAP.
How about that?
Three years of doing UAP.
I'll talk about that a little bit more
at the end of the episode,
but it is my pleasure to be doing this for three years now,
so thank you all so much for allowing me to do that.
But getting into this episode today
to celebrate World UFO Day in the three-year anniversary,
I get to do another really cool interview on UAP,
thought-provoking, fun, funny interview with Michael Ian Black,
who is an actor, a comedian, a writer, and just a really cool guy.
I really enjoy talking to him.
I think you're going to enjoy hearing his perspective on kind of like the show business end,
but he does make it clear he's not really in the Hollywood scene,
but he has all the experience with the Hollywood types.
So cool to get his perspective from that end on how it's looked at from the show business angle
and how he looks at it in his own personal experiences.
Tell some great stories here during this episode.
during this interview and just again really thoughtful guy and a really thoughtful
conversation that went in a different couple of directions that I was not expecting
including maybe his own personal experience with the unknown when it comes to
abduction now I was going to put that out there I know he and I went back and forth and
it's a little bit and I respect his you know his opinion on what happened to him so I
definitely let him have that answer but it's
pretty interesting. So I'll let you decide for yourself on what you think might have happened to Michael
Ian Black as a child when he explains the dreams that he had. But we do go into, you know, what type of
conspiracy, if any, is there in Hollywood. When it comes to what they know, what they tried to maybe
leak out in some of their productions, the Phoenix Lights. We talk about Jason Sands, the Schumer
amendment, and how that was squashed in the media and he saw it firsthand. And also the future of
disclosure in Congress. We cover a lot of
is here during this interview. Again, a lot of fun and really interesting discussions,
so I hope you enjoy it here. And when it's over, stick around for the end because, like I said,
I'll talk more about the three-year anniversary of UEP. And I have some updates on some episodes
coming up, including my new episode with Scott Roder, the crime scene investigator, or I
should say crime scene reconstruction expert, who, of course took on the Las Vegas Alien case.
And you've heard a lot about that and seen a lot of that on Twitter specifically.
and I know a lot of you've been asking, when are you going to talk to him again?
When is he going to reveal these pictures that you keep talking about,
that we've heard about that he has about these Las Vegas aliens?
So I have the update and all that and more coming up at the end of the episode.
But for now, enjoy this discussion with Michael Ian Black right here on UAP.
Really cool here.
Thank you so much to Michael Ian Black for joining us here on UAP today.
Of course, you know, I'm actor, writer, comedian, and podcast host of his own podcast called Obscure.
Michael, thanks so much for coming on here to UAP.
This is great.
My pleasure.
Thanks for inviting me, Stephen.
Yeah, of course.
And so you and I have a mutual friend in Dan Harari.
So I just want to give him a shout out real quick and connecting us.
So I'm glad we were able to do this and bring you on here because I find it so fascinating
with so many of the different topics when it comes to the UAP conversation where it
kind of spills over into Hollywood sometimes.
You're one of those people in that conversation where it has spilled over into.
through the Hollywood scenes. So how much of that, you know, do you see kind of behind the scenes
where the conversation takes place? Is it a lot, is it not as much? Nearly zero? Really?
Zero. However, I will say that I'm not really in the Hollywood community. I don't live there.
I don't interact with a lot of show business people in my day-to-day life. But when I have talked
about it on sets or wherever, most people have at best a passing familiarity with the topic. I would
say like the level of interest and knowledge in the Hollywood community is probably roughly
equivalent to the knowledge people have in any community other than say the military. But yeah,
I mean, it's some people are interested. Some people aren't. Do you think there's a stigma at all,
kind of like, you know, just in everyday society where other actors or comedians might not want to
talk about it because there's that stigma like people feel like I'm going to be crazy or is it
just kind of just not really a thing as much? Well, the good thing about actors and comedians,
sometimes to a fault is that I think we tend to be a little bit more open-minded about all subjects.
So, for example, like, you know, there'll be a lot of actresses in particular who are like into
astrology. And I'm like, okay. But, you know, there's a lot of new agey people in that community,
but that doesn't necessarily equate to UFOs or anything like that. In terms of stigma,
No, I don't think there's a stigma.
And in fact, I would say, like, in my day-to-day life when I talk about this,
I don't really sense any pushback.
For the most part, I feel like the topic has become so mainstreamed over the last few years
that people are at least vaguely aware that the topic is kind of in the ether
and so are maybe more willing to engage than they would have been, say, 10 years ago.
Yeah, it's interesting you say that because I've noticed that,
even with just coming out with this show over the past few years of where the conversation started
when it started three years ago to now it is it feels like it's a lot more open it's in the
news more is that kind of what led you down the path of becoming interested in this or is that
something that you've been this is something you've been really intrigued by for a long time
i've been interested in it for as long as i can remember i mean ever since childhood i mean i
I distinctly remember having a two kind of nearly identical UFO dreams when I was like,
bore.
So this would have been pre-Star Wars, pre-Close encounters.
So, yeah, it's just something I've always been fascinated with and by.
So that's really interesting because you talk about having dreams at a young age about
this topic and you weren't influenced by things like Star Wars and close encounters. So where do you
think that came from? And do you think that was more than a dream or was it just something kind of
maybe popped into your head? So I'm going to say I think it was just a dream. Are you sure?
Because you don't sound sure. I think that it is curious that I would have those dreams and remember
them so specifically and the fact that they were nearly identical. I had them twice. They were nearly
identical. The fact that I still remember them to me is a curiosity, but I'm definitely not willing to
go beyond that. So the reason I ask that is because I definitely respect where you're coming from on
that. So by all means, but I can't help but to be intrigued by that because I always hear so many
different stories, just like I'm sure you have about abduction cases where it might come across
as a dream. It always happens at an early age.
In fact, I spoke to Snooki from Jersey Shore.
She was on here a few months ago.
She's great.
So shout out to her.
She's a fan of the show.
And I was blown away when I spoke to her because she told her own abduction story.
Really?
And she had never told it before.
And she told it as kind of just like what you were saying.
She had a dream as a child.
She was around nine or 10 years old.
And she remembers being on this ship surrounded by Aalienel.
and they put something in her back.
And then she, like, shot up out of the dream, she says.
And when she woke up, she could actually feel something at the base of her spine.
And to this day, she actually showed me the picture.
She could, you can see there's still a mark there.
So when you talk about having that dream, I started wondering, I'm like, wait a minute.
Did Michael Liam Black have a similar experience at a young age?
Well, look, I've asked myself that question and can come up with absolutely zero.
evidence to suggest that it was anything more than a dream.
Fair enough.
Have you ever considered regression therapy?
Have you ever spoken to anybody who's gone through that before?
I've thought about it, but I have never pursued it.
See, this.
Now I'm going down a rabbit hole with your story because I wasn't expecting.
I'm so intrigued by this.
Now I'm like, holy cow, this, you might have had a real experience here.
But so, but because of that, this really kind of led you down the path of always being
interested in the subject. Well, so even then my memory is, and my, obviously, memories are
fallible, particularly at that age. Even then, I remember feeling like that this was a kind of,
it wasn't such an unfamiliar topic to me. You know what I mean? Like, even then when I was having
that dream, like, I was aware kind of what I was.
looking at. So it must have been, I must have been aware of sort of the pop culture of it at an early
age. But yeah, that, that's, that's as far as I'm even willing to speculate. I mean, as far as I know,
no, nothing like that has ever happened to me. Because you don't remember anything else since then.
I mean, or have you had any other like, you know, vivid dreams about this since that or just,
just that one time? No, well, it was two times and they were close to, they were, they were,
relatively close together chronologically, but not since then.
What do you make of the connection?
And I've been kind of investigating this when it comes to, you know, abduction cases
or dreams of like this.
The connection to visions of animals, owls specifically.
Have you come across stuff like that just in your own time?
In my reading, sure, of course.
I mean, I just read Mike McClellan's book.
I might be getting his name.
name wrong. Oh shoot, what is it called? I literally just read it. But he writes about owls all the time.
And the way synchronicity seemed to be connected to owls. And Darren from exo-academic was talking about this, like the
synchronicity storm that he had that involved owls. Whitley Stryber obviously talks about owls.
I don't understand what the connection to owls is. I mean, I know people speculate that it's some sort of
masking filter. I don't know. I have no experience with owls. It's good to know. So no,
no owls in the dreams of Michael Ian Black then. No, no owls. Do you remember real quick,
last thing on this, because I'm just so fascinated by, do you remember what you saw in that dream?
I mean, as far as figures being. At this point, only vaguely. So I was living in Illinois.
That's how I know of my age, because I remember sort of where we were living.
And I'd left there by the time I was five.
And I know that we're living in a townhouse and behind the townhouse was sort of like a, almost like a gully, but like planted with grass and stuff.
And I remember that the dream took place there.
And there was some sort of craft on the ground.
I think it was saucer shaped.
And in my memory, there were beings.
And I feel like they were small.
but again like memory is so fallible that it's it's it's hard for me to to give you a much better
description than that and I felt like I was observing it but wasn't like a part of it necessarily
and this and nearly the same exact dream recurred very shortly after that really interesting
that's good stuff appreciate that um kind of going down it
conspiracy theory. I love a good conspiracy theory. Yes, good. I'm right there with you. Because this is
one that just kind of pops into my mind sometimes. When I see just as a consumer, right, when I see
different movies or shows come out, whether it's, you know, Independence Day or even going back,
you know, with Close Encounters of the Third Kind, the alien movies, all these different things in
pop culture. I can't help but to think sometimes that there is an element of we're telling you
something, we're kind of slow dripping information because we know a little bit more than we're
letting on here in Hollywood when it comes to different producers or directors or writers. Do you think
there's anything like that going on or has been going on over the years where they're trying to
give us little hints on things because there's some more information that they know behind
the scenes? Obviously I've come across this idea before and my best guess is no in the direct
way that you mean, meaning like, no, I don't think the CIA, I'll just use a hyperbolic example.
No, I don't think the CIA is running a movie studio and sort of drip, drip, drip, dripping
information to the masses through popular entertainment. However, I do think that Hollywood tends to reflect
the sort of public gestalt. And when we see an increase in
movies about aliens or alien invasions or the mysticism around aliens, like in contact.
I think that tends to be reflecting certain amorphous truths that exist in the culture.
I also think it's certainly possible that there are times when somebody, say,
Steven Spielberg, is making close encounters, for example, if he does his research,
he talks to people in the intelligence community and they give him some information that may or may
may not be true and may or may not be pertinent. I think those conversations happen. But no, I don't believe
that there's anybody directing Hollywood to produce science fiction films for the purposes of slow
disclosure. So just to be clear then, Stephen Spielberg and Michael Bay are not CAA operatives.
No, they're part of the Majestic 12th. Okay.
I'm glad we can clear that up.
Thank you very much.
Also, kind of sticking on that subject, though,
when it comes to, like, other actors and people in the industry,
what do you think about the story of Kurt Russell going back to the Phoenix Lights,
1997?
He told the story, forgive me, I think it was on Jimmy Kimmel.
I forget which night show it was on, but he told the story about he apparently was the first
one to call that in flying his plane and seeing the Phoenix Lights in 1997.
Well, I mean, it's cool that he was an eyewitness to that event.
It's cool that he called it in.
You know, I've never heard a satisfactory explanation for the Phoenix Lights.
Obviously, thousands of people witnessed it, including Kurt Russell.
I've never heard anything that comes close to being a satisfying explanation for what that could have been.
Because the size of it is enormous.
And it seems like the initial, the initial debunk was like, oh, it's flares.
It wasn't flares.
People saw this thing traveling horizontally across space.
And it was massive.
I have no idea.
I mean, I feel like that's one of the great cases.
I'm with you on that because I feel like when it comes to mass sightings, that's got to be one of the top ones.
I mean, think about that.
And like you said, the debunk of flares, there's.
just no way because flares eventually descend. They eventually kind of fizzle out. Like you say,
that was moving across the sky. The more more kept popping up. It was to this day, like you said,
there's no real explanation for that. And you had, it was the governor of Arizona or it was the
governor, right, where he came out in the alien mask and they played a joke about it. But later on,
I think just a few years ago, he said in an interview, he apologized for that because he saw it too
and he still has no explanation for it. Yeah, exactly.
I mean, look, I understand. I don't understand. Actually, his thinking at the time. I think it was faulty and bad.
Fife Symington, I believe his name is. He later claimed I was just trying to like make sure the public wasn't panicked or whatever.
But really, I think what was going on is the more obvious answer, which is that he was worried about being ridiculed.
and he was worried about the stigma for himself personally.
So even though he personally saw it,
he decided to make fun of it as a kind of cover your own ass political move
so that he wouldn't be, you know, the target of ridicule and scorn.
Yeah, I know it's wild.
See, again, right, going back to the stigma idea, right?
And of course, stigma is a lot different in 1997 than it is now
because it has become more mainstream, more people are open to it.
Yeah, and the fact that he owned up to it later,
I think really indicates the way that the stigma has kind of dissipated over the last couple
decades.
Yeah, absolutely.
What do you make, and this is purely speculation.
So, I mean, there's really no right answer to this.
But what do you make of mass sightings, right?
So we have Phoenix Lights in 1997.
We have the mass siting in Zimbabwe, the school children who saw the UFO essentially land,
you know, in the back of the school.
And they all saw the beings.
They all describe it the same way and a lot of other different mass sightings.
So two questions.
why do you think those happen and why do you think they don't happen more?
Well, in terms of why they happen, it's because something appears and a bunch of people see it.
That would be my best guess as to why they have.
In the simplest terms, yes.
As to why they don't happen more, I actually think that's a really good question.
Part of it, I think, may have to do, I mean, I think there's a lot of theories that could explain it.
First is they may not want it to happen more.
The second is a lot of the earth is unpopulated by humans.
So things that are happening in remote areas may not be seen, particularly over the water.
And other than that, I don't know.
I wish they would happen more.
I wish more people were seeing these things.
because the mass sightings tend to be, I think, really good evidence for something.
It's one thing to have a single person with a single camcorder or a single witness or even a
handful of witnesses.
It's quite another to have thousands of people witnessing the same thing.
Then again, we've seen a lot of mass sightings in the past that really haven't generated
any particular movement towards disclosure or even particular public.
interest. I'm thinking of the sightings in Washington, D.C. in 1952. Mass sightings, mass sightings of
something just hanging out in the Capitol where it wasn't supposed to be, where it legally wasn't allowed
to be. Everybody saw it. It was well reported. The Air Force held a press conference about it,
and then it just sort of went away. So I don't know. I don't know how persuasive actually,
as I think about it, mass sightings actually are because people have such a fixed worldview.
you. So when the Phoenix thing happens, people go, wow, that's really interesting and weird,
and then they forget about it. But they don't take the next step and go, it's interesting and weird,
and it's true. And therefore, something is occurring that I don't understand. Once people get to that
cognitive dissonance of I don't understand, I suspect most people are happy to sort of file it away
in their unknown box in their brains and move on with their lives.
And that's a perfectly viable thing to do, I think.
Like most people are busy.
They don't want to spend a lot of time going down the UFO rabbit hole because, as you
and I both know, you will never escape from that rabbit hole.
That's correct.
And it just gets deeper and deeper.
You think you have something figured out.
And then you're like, wait, now there's 10 other questions because I found this out.
That's right.
It is the truest sort of rabbit hole.
I mean, except the rabbit holes end.
This is just a journey to the bottom of the earth.
This is just an infinite tunnel.
It's a wormhole.
I don't know what the hell it is.
But there is no end to it.
And in fact, as you just said, the more that gets revealed, it doesn't solve anything.
It just opens up a whole other panoply of questions.
Yeah, it's so true.
And, you know, when it comes to things like that, because it kind of to your answer with the first question of why do we think it happens.
see my mind goes towards the conspiratorial where I think well it doesn't happen more because like you said maybe they don't who's they right but maybe they don't want it to happen more but maybe it does happen at all because they do want it to happen I mean do you think those are messages when we do have mass sightings is that or am I going to off the rail?
I mean I have to believe that if these craft are intelligently controlled then we have to assume that they understand at least in a
vague way, the kind of geopolitics of this country, I mean, of this planet, sort of who's the dominant
life form on this planet. And so they must be aware that if they show up in Phoenix in 1997,
that dominant life form is going to look at it and wonder what the hell it is. They may not care,
but my guess is they're at least aware of it. Yeah, it's really interesting idea to consider, I think.
So who knows when the next mass siting will be.
You can call the Tic Tac sightings.
That's a mass sighting.
I mean, you've got all these sailors.
You've got all this radar data.
You've got all, you know, you've got so much corroborative evidence.
And then there's congressional testimony.
And even that hasn't moved the needle particularly.
I mean, yes, people are kind of aware of it.
And yes, we hear rumblings that are going on in Congress and behind the scenes and et cetera,
et cetera, et cetera. But it has progressed the conversation incrementally, but I wouldn't say it has
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What do you make of some of the things you've seen, you know, as far as Congress is concerned,
do you find these, well, let me ask it this way.
The first hearing, right, David Fravor and Grush and Ryan Graves,
did you find that useful in the disclosure movement?
And do you think a second one would be useful as well?
I found it incredibly useful for a number of reasons.
First of all, the fact that they went under oath, and these are military guys going under oath.
They don't take that lightly, you know.
These guys, I don't know how many military dudes you know.
I've known many in my life, and they mean it, you know.
None of those guys, no commander, naval commander, is going to get up in front of Congress and lie, unless it's like about a bribe that he took or something, but not about something like this.
So it was incredibly useful to have all of that on the congressional record for a number of reasons.
First of all, just hearing them tell their story, I think for the public watching, very important.
Having them do that under oath, very important, having them be questioned by sometimes skeptical Congresspeople.
Very important.
How do they answer?
Do they seem credible?
Yes, they do.
Very important.
Grush's testimony is obviously the bombshell testimony.
from everything that I know about Grush, he's a straight shooter. He's an incredibly straight arrow.
There's zero percent of me that believes that guy is in any way lying. However, that does not mean that he is in possession of the truth.
I do think it's possible that as Kirkpatrick said, that Grush's testimony is the result of kind of circular conversations happening within a small community.
of believers. I do think that's possible. However, I don't think it's probable. I think Grush and the people
that he was in contact with, if Grush's testimony is to be believed, and I'm inclined to believe it until
there's evidence to suggest I shouldn't, according to Grush's testimony, he spoke to firsthand witnesses.
So unless 40 people were directly lying to Grush, people who didn't necessarily know each other
or have some sort of coordinated agenda,
then I don't understand why people wouldn't take that testimony seriously.
It was incredibly important, compelling testimony from Grush.
Yeah, I think that's a great point.
And I want to ask you, what do you make out of some of these whistleblowers,
whether it's Grush or whether, have you heard of Jason Sands?
I don't know.
So Jason Sands is someone that I've actually spoken to recently.
I've had fortunate enough for him to reach out.
And we've had a couple of conversations.
very fascinating guy.
I personally believe what he's telling me
just because of the conversations that we've had.
And when it comes to Grush,
he said basically that he gave a lot of that information
to Grush that we heard from Grush.
Jason Sands being a firsthand witness
saying that he came across this alien
in the desert by the Nellas Range.
What do you make out of some of that stuff?
I mean, do you think there's something there?
My instinct is always,
my instinct is always to believe that the person speaking is telling the truth as they understand it.
So somebody had an anomalous experience.
They relay that anomalous experience to the best of their ability.
And my inclination is to believe that they believe that.
But because this is such a complicated, nuanced topic, I don't necessarily.
automatically agree with their conclusions about what happened or what they saw,
nor do I necessarily believe that their memory, as my own memory is fallible, is infallible.
So in the case of Jason Sands, which I'm, you know, familiar enough with, the answer is,
I don't know. I do believe that he had something happened to him. I do believe the events as he
described them, at least in terms of the alien being that he encountered, I do believe that he believes
he's telling the truth. Now, then you go to, you know, he was making some sort of vague allusions
to a 20 and back program that he was a part of. And you go, well, wait, hold on a second,
because now you're going into that he was part of a program that there is no evidence that I've seen,
that it exists. There's certainly been theories about it. And so I take that with a massive grain of salt,
not because I necessarily think he's lying in the sense that he's intentionally trying to deceive,
but because I need way, way more before I'm willing to take him at his word on that.
Yeah, totally understood.
I mean, who do you think, as a name like Jason Sands, someone that you would like to see on a second congressional hearing,
or who do you think should be up there?
Because this came up a few days ago I was talking to some people.
And I asked the question, I opposed.
I said, would you be satisfied or disappointed with the same three names?
up on the standard? Do you think we need, and I don't mean this in the bad way, but do you think
we need new blood up there? Just because it would be repetitive otherwise. It would be repetitive
to have those three witnesses back in front of the committee unless it was augmented with other
witnesses and unless it was further augmented by better evidence than they were able to provide
in their testimony. You know, it's very frustrating.
for people like me, lay people, who will listen to a grush talk and he will be asked a specific
question and he will say, I'll have to talk to you about that in a classified setting. So we understand
why that might be necessary, but it doesn't, for the lay person and for the general public,
unfortunately, it doesn't help the cause, you know, because what is preventing so many people
from being willing to embrace this narrative is the lack of,
of physical evidence. So I do think it would be helpful to have, I don't know about Jason
Sand specifically, I'm not opposed to it, but to have as many of those 40 whistleblowers that
Grush says he spoke to in front of that committee with immunity protection, just spilling the
beans. I'm just very dubious that will ever happen. I know. We can only hope, right? I mean,
know, what do you think, I guess, a kind of a twofold question here, as far as what some of
these Congress people actually know, rights, as far as, you know, are coming from a place
of sincerity, whether it's a Jared Moskowitz or Tim Burchett, or even in the Senate with Mark
Rubio and Chuck Schumer. And these are names that are on opposite sides of the aisle, right?
We have Democrats or Republicans both with all those names. So number one, are they, do you think
they're coming from a place of sincerity.
And do you think that what don't they know?
I mean, are they really left in the dark here when it comes to this information?
Obviously, I don't know.
I'm not a Washington insider.
I'm not a politician.
I have no idea.
My speculation as informed as it can be, which some people may say is not very informed at all,
is this.
Burchett, Luna, Moskowitz, and let's say Gates.
I would expect are not as read in on this as Rubio and Schumer and rounds.
For the simple fact that they're not, the house people that I just mentioned aren't nearly as
senior and don't have those kinds of high-ranking committee assignments.
I don't think.
I could be wrong about that, but I don't think.
whereas Rubio Schumer rounds are part of the Senate Intelligence Committee in rounds, and Schumer
in particular, I believe, are in the gang of eight. So they are privy to the most highly sensitive
U.S. secrets. Again, I could be wrong about the details of some of this, so please don't hold me to it.
What's particularly interesting to me about what happened in the last year, fascinating, actually,
was Schumer and Rounds introduction of the UAP Disclosure Act?
Because in particular Schumer, I didn't understand why Chuck Schumer, the arguably second most
Democrat, a second most important Democrat in the country, maybe the third most, however you
wanted to find it.
Why would that guy risk his reputation on a bill that.
that talks about disclosure of non-human intelligence, why would he do that? And is it possible for him
to do that without the blessing of the White House? I have to believe the answer is no,
because if there's nothing to this, it would make one of Biden's chief allies look like an utter
fool. So why the hell did they introduce this and fight for it so hard? He said it's because of his
friendship with Harry Reid and that legacy. And I'm like, there's something more going on here.
And Schumer and rounds are trying to pry open that box lid. That to me was the most interesting
story of the last year in terms of UFOs, was just the introduction of that amendment,
which to me personally amounted to disclosure. To me, that was soft disclosure.
That's a really good point. And even kind of going back to, you know, mass size.
Like that in its own kind of way was almost like a mass siding because for every reason you just said when it comes to Chuck Schumer standing and everything that he has to lose by coming out for an amendment like that in the NDAA, it was almost like that, you know, oh shoot moment where people see that in the news.
It was a big story. And they all have the same reaction like you just said.
But it wasn't a big story. That's the thing. It was a big story in the UFO community. Like everybody was talking about in the UFO world. But in the mainstream world, I could. Nobody was interested.
In fact, when it was being killed, when it was in the process of being killed, I texted with a very well-known journalist to pay attention to this, to try to cover it.
And that very well-known journalist could not have been more condescending.
Oh, no.
Not in a mean way.
It's a very nice person.
Yes.
But was like, yeah, okay, Michael, sure.
You got it, Michael.
You know, like the stigma was very present in that person's forehead.
But to me, it's like, to me and to you and to everybody else in this community, it's a massive story to people outside of this community.
It didn't register at all.
That's a good point, right?
Because I think you're right.
When I say big story, I am.
I'm thinking in terms we're kind of like insulated, right?
In this community.
And when you have something come out in the news, like even within the past couple weeks, Dr. Michael Masters from Harvard, that made kind of the nashire.
That made kind of the national headlines when he has the paper come out, you know, aliens amongst us.
But when it comes to the Schumer Amendment, yeah, why do you think that is?
What do you think the reasons are?
And this is kind of a complex question that keeps disclosure kind of in the, you know, down in the belly.
Is it more than one reason?
Is it religion?
Is it, you know, government contracts?
Is it because of crimes over the past 80 years?
One of those, all the above.
Like, what do you see from all?
I think it's all of the above. I mean, I think it's everything. It's, you know, it's whatever that CIA
report was in the 50s, basically saying discredit anybody who believes this stuff. And it's trickled down
since then, you know, the evidence for the existence of something is overwhelming and voluminous.
I don't even think there's any debate about that anymore. Like, I've, I've totally moved on from
the, are UFOs real question? To me, that question,
is now settled. But the conversation in the mainstream continues to be unable to move past that question.
And so we're still in the mindset of our flying saucers real. And I think that's deliberate as well
in terms of people trying to slow down disclosure, which at this point to me feels inevitable.
I mean, I think actual disclosure, capital D disclosure, sort of feels inevitable.
The nature of that disclosure, I think, is still very much up in the air.
So in some ways, we've already had disclosure.
So Kirkpatrick, for example, says there's no evidence of any extraterrestrial, blah, blah, blah.
But then in the next breath says, but we've got these orbs flying over Mosul and all over the planet.
Nobody understands what the hell they are.
Okay.
So what are you saying, bro?
What are you saying?
So is he saying there's no evidence of extraterrestrial technology, but we've got these
orbs.
These orbs aren't extraterrestrial, but they're also not the technology of any known nation.
What are you saying?
And I think disclosure is kind of going to happen like that, sort of piecemeal, this thing,
that thing, that thing, the other.
I do not anticipate, although I hope I'm wrong, anybody getting up in front of the cameras,
any world leader or collection of world leaders, which would be ideal, to get up in front of
microphones and say we're making a joint statement, we're aware of these craft, we don't know
what they are, they're not ours, they're not anybody else's, we've determined that they are
the construction of some sort of non-human intelligence. I don't anticipate that happening
anytime soon. It's a great segue actually to my next question because I was just about to say,
what do you think disclosure would look like, right? I mean, I think,
it's different to everybody. The word disclosure means a lot of things. It's very layered.
So what do you think it would look like? What is that moment that would be satisfactory enough
to the UFO community where we could say it's finally happened? So capital D disclosure,
I think would mean that it was literally the president getting up and saying aliens are real
or non-human intelligence is real. Let's call it that. That's what I think the UFO community wants
in terms of capital D disclosure.
And we all know the problems with that.
We all understand that once you say those words,
once a president of the United States or, you know,
the secretary general of the UN or whatever,
once somebody says those words,
the game has now changed for the planet.
And the repercussions of it,
although it has been studied,
a lot, I think remain unknown.
The sort of secondary effects, I think, are complicated in terms of, okay, so who's in
possession of this stuff?
Where does it come?
Like, just all the questions that immediately arise from that statement so quickly overwhelm
the global conversation.
I think, I just think it's so unlikely to happen because of all the sort of wild card variables that are going to be thrown into humanity once somebody makes that announcement, which is why, I think, we're experiencing that kind of lower D slow disclosure of drips and drabs, drips and drabs, drips and drabs, dribs and drabs.
For me, disclosures already happened. Like for me, with the introduction of Schumer and Rounds' bill,
that's disclosure to me. That's them basically saying, yeah, there's something out there.
We think it's some sort of non-human intelligence. We don't know what it is. It may be in the hands
of private contractors, but there's something to this. We need to understand it better.
To me, that was disclosure. The more formal disclosure, I don't anticipate ever happening.
Unless, you know, some external force makes it impossible for it not to happen. For example,
an Independence Day scenario, which I also don't anticipate happening.
So Will Smith and Randy Quaid aren't going to be flying up into there to save us from aliens.
No, you don't see that one?
Oh, no, no, no, no.
If disclosure happens, I fully expect Will Smith and Randy Quaid to save us.
Who misunderstand?
That's perfect.
That makes me feel better.
What is, and, you know, a few more minutes here, Michael, I really appreciate you spending all this time here on UAP today.
I really enjoyed this.
What is one of the things that kind of like sticks in your mind, right?
If you're doing your podcast, right, if you're on obscure and you're talking about these things,
what's one of the main questions you end up asking yourself or just in a conversation when it comes to this topic?
So for me, and I think for a lot of people in this community, the actual nuts and bolts UFO is the least compelling part of this story.
in a very like I almost don't care about the craft.
What I care about is what the existence of these things tells us about our own history,
about the nature of reality, about the larger phenomenon and how it relates to UFOs.
And then all the sort of esoteric related questions or seemingly related questions,
things that overlap with this community, things like near-death experiences,
things like paranormal experiences, psychic experiences, like all of that.
I should have said supernatural and then paranormal.
All of those things to me in the way they tie into this topic and the way all of that connects
to human consciousness, to me that's the story.
Like, yes, if there are extraterrestrials, for example, yeah, I definitely want to know
where they came from.
I definitely want to know what the state of their technology is.
I definitely want to know about their culture.
but I'm much more interested in how it relates to the human experience, how it relates to who we are, how we perceive the world, and what larger truths does the existence of these non-human intelligences reveal about reality itself?
Very deep. It's good stuff.
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I want to get you out of here on this.
Well, kind of like two questions.
What's your favorite story?
And by favorite, I mean someone comes up to you.
You're at a show or something like that.
And someone says, convince me of aliens, Michael, why do you think it's real?
So what story would you give them?
And then have you heard Billy Corgan's story that he told on Howard Stewart?
No, I've never heard Billy Corgan's story.
So I'll look that up after this.
I wouldn't necessarily point to any one story because they can all be picked apart in any number of ways you want to pick them apart.
Sometimes well, and sometimes they're picked apart badly.
But what I would say to somebody who says, well, wait a minute, what the hell are you talking about?
I would say, please refer to the U.S. government.
own statements on this topic going back to 2017 when they admitted to the New York Times
that UFOs are real and they don't know what they are. I mean, that to me seems like the best
evidence that the government itself, after decades and decades of denying it, is now admitting
that this is a phenomena that we don't understand. And then from there, you can look at the
TikTok and then go fast and everything else and you could start looking at Brush. I actually
wouldn't even have him look at Grush first.
I think that might be a bridge too far for some people.
But then if they're interested, if they're further interested, I would say, look at all the popular cases.
Look at Roswell.
Look at Phoenix.
Look at the one in Brazil.
You know, there's so many good cases that you can point to that at the very least, at the very, very least, I think prove that there is technology out there in our skies and our seas that we do not understand.
and it is actual technology.
This is not natural phenomenon.
I think that's what I would say.
And to your point, that's verbiage that's been used by the Pentagon.
Yes.
It's out there.
So is it possible the Pentagon is lying?
Sure.
I can see no obvious explanation for why they would.
And I know that some people are like, well, they just want to get more money for the Pentagon.
And I'm like, that is maybe the dumbest argument I've ever heard, only because
the Pentagon has so much money. They don't need to invent UFOs to get more money. Literally,
they're drowning in money. They're fine. Congress has sometimes apportioned them more money than
they've even asked for. They don't need to concoct UFOs to get more money. They're saying it because
it's true. They're saying it because they can no longer deny the corroborating.
evidence.
Yeah, I think it's a good point.
And by the way, Billy Corrigan told Howard Stern that he slept with a shapeshifter
by accident.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
At what point did the person shape shift?
I suppose after the act is kind of what he ended up telling Howard Stern.
He didn't go through the whole story.
I don't know if you know Billy Corrigan at all.
You can ask him.
I never met him.
Okay.
I was with this chick.
And after we're done, she grew a d-d-like, to me, that's not shape-ship.
To me, that's something else entirely.
And to be fair, he said he was not high or anything because Stern asking that question.
He said, but yeah, just something that happened.
He didn't go into the whole story.
He said it was disturbing.
But apparently he told Stern off the air.
It's wild.
The underappreciated aspect to all of this, I think.
I don't know how many, but I'm going to guess it's the majority of.
of us have anomalous experiences in our lives that make no rational sense, no matter how often
we run them through our brains and try to make sense of them in some way that would co-cohere
with the reality as we understand it.
Many, many, many people have these experiences, whether it's a ghost or it's Bigfoot or it's a
shape shift or or it's something appearing out of thin air or something moving off a bookshelf
for no reason or lights flickering.
And in a lot of cases, you can go, well, there's probably a physical explanation for that.
And to that, I would agree there probably are in a lot of these cases, but not all, certainly not all.
And the anomalous, I would say, is a feature of human life.
The world, the more I get to understand it, is an incredibly mystifying.
place. And when I say the world, I mean everything, the universe or universe is. It's a mystifying
place. And every time we think we have it figured it out, something comes along and slaps us in the
head and says, no, you idiot. You don't know a thing. Dark energy and dark matter are the best
examples of that in recent years. We don't know what 85 or 90% of the universe is made of
after all this time. So the idea that
our version of reality comports with capital R reality to me is is probably incorrect.
And if our vision of reality and our understanding of reality is incomplete and incorrect,
then I think we have to allow that there may be reasons that these anomalous things
keep happening to people. People are experiencing all kinds of bizarre, inexplicable events
in their lives. What are those? How do we understand them? Unfortunately, most of the time,
they're not replicable. So you can't study them in the way that science would prefer to study them.
But when we take the totality of these experiences across centuries, millennia, we have to,
I have to come to the conclusion that not all of these people are lying and not all these people
are crazy and not all of these events can easily be explained. That's the mystery. That's what
continues to fascinate me in this topic. That's a great point. It's really well said to kind of put a cap on
it because I think that is one of the most important points is to kind of say, not everybody has all the
answers. Some people might have an answer to this, another person might have an answer to that.
But when I think the most important thing to remember in this discussion as, you know, UFO community
and really as society as a whole is that not one person has all the answers to all these questions.
And I think it's it's important to keep.
that in mind even for ourselves. When someone does say, oh, well, that's this and that's that,
it's like, well, and that's one way or the other, right? You might have someone completely
write something off. You might have somebody say, well, this is obviously that. So I think it is.
I think you're right. It's always important to remember that. We don't have everything. Like,
there's pieces to the puzzle that we're trying to figure out. I would say we have, at least in the
public, almost nothing at this point. We really don't know what we're looking at. We really don't
know what we're experiencing. We don't know in any meaningful way, which is why I'm so heartened
to hear people like, oh, Gary Nolan and others talking about formalizing the study of this topic
into at the college level and beyond. Let's have UAP studies be a credible college major.
and let's have degrees in it and let's have masters and doctorates in it.
Let's really get our handles around our handle around this thing in a formalized manner
so that the study of it can be coered and formalized and rigorous in a way that it really can't be
when it's just dudes talking on Twitter.
It's very frustrating for me to read various UFO commentators because
they're all over the map. Everybody's in such a different place on this topic, and people will
throw out assertions as if they're true when they're just not, when they're just speculation.
So, for example, people will talk about the difference between the grays and the reptiles and the
manitids and the tall whites. Okay, I believe that some people are experiencing that, those different
entities. But I don't think collectively we're at a place where we can just assume that those things
are quote unquote real in the way that we mean when we talk about reality. There's a disconnect,
I think, between where the sort of general public is and where the UFO community is.
And while I have moved on from the UFO question, I have not moved on from the abduction question,
which is to me, you know, sort of the next step.
What is an abduction?
What does it actually mean?
What is actually happening?
How are we supposed to interpret the reports of these beings who say things to the abductees
that in many cases turn out not to be true even a little bit?
So what is it?
What are they experiencing?
And so for you, for some of the UFO community to go, well, you know, the grays are from here
and the reptilians are from here.
the minute says i'm like slow down dude like we haven't established that those things exist in the way
that the world would commonly accept the definition of exist so i'm i'm pretty cautious about it like
i'm willing to entertain every theory i'm willing to embrace very few theories hmm right it's to me
you know this could be interdimensional like we don't we have no idea what we're dealing with yeah
i feel like we could probably go for another hour but i won't do that to you so maybe
we can catch up another time here on UAP.
This has been great.
So I will get you out here on this.
I promise last question on a high note, I suppose.
If you had to name one person, now I'm talking name names,
somebody in your circle in Hollywood or, you know, behind the scenes, comedians,
anything on that circuit, someone is not a human.
Who would you peg as non-human?
Oh, non-human?
Yeah.
There's a few that comes.
The one that immediately comes to mind is Trump's immigration dude, Stephen Miller.
I know who you're talking about. Yeah.
That guy's just a lizard. I mean, he's just a lizard.
He might be a lizard person.
I think he's a lizard person. I think he's just a lizard.
It's a lizard, right. Now, that would be disclosure if Stephen Miller comes out on the podium on Zips.
There he is. Hey, guys.
That's great. Michael Liam Black, thanks so much.
much for spending all this time here on UAP.
It's been an awesome discussion.
Really enjoy this.
A lot of layers to this.
And if people want to find you, all the different projects that you're in,
or you've been a part of in future projects, how do they find you?
Yeah, who cares?
You can find me if you want me.
My name's Michael Ian Black.
Find me wherever you want.
Just in any of those spots.
You can just Google.
You'll come up.
Are you going on tour at any time soon?
I'm sort of on tour right now.
I mean, I go out, you know, a couple weekends a month.
But I try not to stay out on the road too much because I'm an old band and I get tired.
Fair enough.
I understand that.
You just want to stay home and sleep sometimes.
Watch TV.
Michael,
thanks so much for coming on here.
And hopefully we can talk again soon.
This has been a lot of fun.
My pleasure.
Thanks for having me.
Absolutely.
So again, really fun interview there.
Hope you enjoyed that.
I truthfully did.
He was great.
So thanks again to Michael Ian Black for coming on to UAP.
I really hope you'd like that.
He was cool to talk to.
Coming up, I did say that.
I was going to explain more of what's coming up here on UAP.
So coming up next week after the 4th of July holiday,
I'll be speaking with two really exciting guests.
Number one, another person I'm really excited to talk to is Thomas Jane.
Again, someone else from the Hollywood scene actor.
You probably know him from his role as The Punisher,
from the early 2000s version of The Punisher movie with John Chavolta.
I personally love that movie.
I'm just going to throw that out there.
So I will be a little bit biased in that interview.
I'm not going to lie, because I think Thomas Jane is great.
And that role he played as the punisher, I thought, was fantastic.
I love that movie.
So excited to talk to him because he is into the scene.
He was actually at Contact in the Desert not too long ago.
So he's definitely into this discussion.
So I'm really intrigued to get his perspective as someone who is a well-known actor in Hollywood
and kind of talk about, you know, how he sees this discussion and how he sees all this playing out.
He actually emailed me some ideas on some things that talk about, so really intrigued to kind of cover some different things that I don't normally get to cover when it comes to this discussion, some different angles that he emailed me that he wanted to cover.
Because I always ask anybody who I have on, just kind of like behind the scenes thing here.
Whoever I talk to, I always say, hey, if there's anything specifically you'd like to speak about, please let me know.
because I'd love to talk about anything that interests you.
And there's a couple of things that he's shot my way.
Then I'm like, yeah, absolutely.
I think this is great when it comes to the, you know,
UAP discussion.
So really looking forward to speaking with Thomas Jane coming up next week.
He was also in the movie The Mist,
so I'm sure you probably know who it is.
You can look up Thomas Jane.
But also coming up next week is Scott Roder.
I mentioned that at the beginning of the episode.
Crime scene reconstruction expert spoke to him last month or so,
maybe about six weeks ago,
where he came out, made national news about how he was able to say that he has proof that the Las Vegas alien case from last year was real with the Kenmore family in Las Vegas.
And we went over some different pictures and everything like that.
And he has new evidence.
And I had been talking about this for about six weeks.
I said he's going to come back on the show and discuss his new evidence.
And we're going to show this new evidence.
And that's happening.
So we are going to be talking in that.
will be coming out next week. Scott and I are getting together here in the coming days,
and that episode is going to come out next week. So I know I've been getting that question a lot.
Hey, when is he going to release these pictures? When are you going to talk again on the show?
It's been a lot to kind of process for Scott, also with his normal job of crime scene reconstruction.
He travels a lot. So we'll get into all that. We're going to answer those questions and go over everything
when it comes to Las Vegas case
and why it took until now
to come back on and discuss it.
You know, we both wanted to do this as soon as possible.
So I'm happy now that I can finally tell you,
yes, it's happening.
Yes, I'll be talking to Scott.
I know I've been saying this for a couple weeks now,
but it is happening, and you're going to be able to hear
and see that next week after the 4th of July holiday.
So absolutely look forward to that.
But outside of that, before I go,
let me also just say real quick,
thank you again.
I mentioned it a little bit at the beginning of the episode, three-year anniversary of UAP.
I've mentioned it before, but it's worth saying again here today on this three-year anniversary
of the show.
I could have never imagined what this has turned into, the attention that it has gotten
worldwide, not even in the United States, but worldwide, the attention that this show
has received because of you.
I mean, the way, I'll never forget this as long as I live.
however long UAP goes on, maybe it's another week, maybe it's another 10 years.
I don't know.
I'm just going with the flow.
But however long this goes on and whatever else happens after UAP, whenever that might be,
I'll never forget the love and support that you have shown me in my work in doing this show.
Because it is a lot of work.
But I don't complain about that.
It's something that I enjoy doing.
I really, it's truly been a passion project every single time I come in the microphone or write a new show or do more research about a specific topic.
It's absolutely a passion project from start to finish on every single one of these episodes, interview, whatever.
And it's something that I love to do to have this discussion for you and with you.
And the fact that you still take to it and that it's only growing more and more as I continue the show on means literally the world to me.
So that's why I continue to do it because of you.
So the fact that I've been able to do this for three years is not a testament to me and any work that I've done.
It's a testament to you because of the way that you've taken to the show and the way that you download it and subscribe to it and rate it.
And all the messages that I get from everyone, it means so much that this has become when it has become.
And I can't wait to see what else it becomes in the future.
Again, because of you, because you listen and because you.
you know, subscribe to the show and download it and everything like that.
So thank you so much.
And here's to the future of UAP.
Whatever that holds.
I'm going to keep going as long as you'll have me.
So thank you.
On that note, definitely continue to subscribe and download the show,
wherever you get your podcast on Apple and Spotify,
anywhere you get your podcast.
It's there.
Also, you can reach me directly.
I always say on social media at UA Podcast 850.
I do a lot on Twitter, so you can reach me there,
as well as, you know, other social media.
UA Podcast 850 is where you can find me in the show and on YouTube at UA Podcast without the
850. So just at UA Podcast on YouTube. I've been putting it more episodes and interviews and
little vignettes on there. So you can check out YouTube as well for UAP. And of course, email
S-Dieneru-A-P at gmail.com. If you'd like to reach me directly, it's S-Diener-D-I-E-N-E-R-U-A-P at
Gmail.com. But that will do it for now on this edition of UAP. I cannot wait to come back in the
future with all those things I mentioned there and even more coming up in the future episodes
of UAP. It's Stephen Deiner here on the Unidentified Alien podcast. Thank you again so much to Michael
Ian Black and to you for listening and for making the show what it has been over the past three years.
And here's to more. Speak to you again soon. Be well. Thanks.
