
Come along for the strange case of the Salish Sea Feet!
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May 15
40 min

Come along for one of Canada's early UFO investigations!
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Apr 24
48 min

Come along for the strange case of the Moon Eyed People.
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Mar 27
30 min

Come along for some harrowing Bigfoot encounters!
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Jan 2
59 min

Come along for a strange case where a young man simply went missing after a college party.
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Our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=80108564
Dec 13, 2025
1 hr 3 min

Come along for one well known case, and some that you probably haven't heard of.
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Nov 20, 2025
50 min

Come along this week for some gruesome and bizarre deaths.
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Oct 24, 2025
1 hr 4 min

Come along for the tale of noisy ghosts!
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Oct 10, 2025
48 min

Come along for some volcanos and UFOs.
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Some notes from chatgpt for the algos, may or may not have anything to do with the show:
Quick guide — UFOs and volcanoes
Short answer: people do report a lot of “UFOs” near active volcanoes (Popocatépetl in Mexico is a famous example), but the bulk of those reports have plausible natural or manmade explanations — volcanic lightning and plume effects, camera artifacts, aircraft/drones, reflections, or misidentified lights — and only a very small fraction remain genuinely unexplained after investigation.
Why volcanoes attract UFO reports
A few reasons combine to make volcanoes a hot-spot for strange-looking lights:
Many cameras and watchers. Active volcanoes (especially Popocatépetl) are monitored by webcams and attract local observers — more eyes + more cams → more chances to spot/transmit odd footage.
Striking natural light phenomena. Volcanic plumes produce lightning and glowing discharges inside ash clouds; these can look like bright moving or flashing objects on video. Also, hot gas, incandescent ejecta and glowing fumaroles produce persistent lights. Scientists have studied volcanic lightning and charging in plumes for years.
Seismic/tectonic electrical effects. Related phenomena such as “earthquake/tectonic lights” (brief luminous displays associated with rock fracturing and stress changes) are sometimes invoked for pre-eruption or quake-period lights. The physics are not fully nailed down, but these effects are plausible near volcanically active faults.
Human activity & artifacts. Drones, aircraft navigation lights, flares, reflective glare on camera lenses, sensor noise, and deliberate hoaxes also account for many clips. Media amplification then spreads the story.
Famous / oft-cited cases
Popocatépetl (Mexico) — dozens of videos (2012–present) show glowing orbs or lights apparently approaching or vanishing into the crater; these clips are widely circulated and debated. Some commentators call them “UFOs” or “wormholes”; mainstream reporting tends to present the footage without endorsing an extraterrestrial explanation.
(There are many other anecdotal reports around other volcanoes, but Popocatépetl is the most prominent because of its webcams, frequent activity, and interest from UFO investigators and media.)
What experts say
Volcanologists and atmospheric scientists point out that volcanic lightning, incandescent ejecta, and plume-charging are well-documented, physically plausible sources of striking luminous displays during eruptions. Camera artefacts and human activity explain many stationary or oddly behaving lights on video. That doesn’t mean every clip has been definitively debunked, but the default scientific approach is to test natural and mundane hypotheses first.
How to evaluate a volcano-UFO clip (quick checklist)
Is there a reliable timestamp and source (official webcam vs anonymous upload)?
Is the object correlated with plume/eruption activity, or does it appear in calm conditions?
Any signs of lens flare, reflection, sensor bloom, or compression artifacts?
Could it be a drone/aircraft or a distant light caught by zoom?
Are there other independent witnesses or radar records?
Applying these usually resolves most cases; only rarely does something remain truly unexplained after that.
Bottom line
Volcanoes produce spectacular and sometimes confusing light phenomena. Put simply: most “UFOs” near volcanoes are misidentified or explainable natural/manmade phenomena (volcanic lightning, glowing ejecta, camera issues, drones, etc.). A handful of clips resist easy explanation, which keeps interest and speculation alive — but interest ≠ proof of extraterrestrial craft.
Sep 26, 2025
1 hr 1 min

Come along for some weapons of directed energy!
You can find all of our wonderful links on the linktree: https://linktr.ee/allts
Sep 5, 2025
1 hr 2 min
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