Showing posts with label hoaxes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hoaxes. Show all posts

10 May 2026

The 1970s TV Science Fiction Renaissance: Alternative 3



 

Alternative 3. Origanally intended as an April Fool's joke but delayed due to srtrike, succeeded at frightening audiences and starting an intricate, bizarre conspiracy that's lasted for more than nearly 50 years.

On June 20, 1977, Anglia Television—a regional ITV licensee—aired a program called Alternative 3 as part of its allegedly factual Science Report series. The broadcast alleged the existence of a covert international conspiracy to relocate Earth’s brightest minds to Mars ahead of an imminent environmental collapse. It was, in fact, a hoax, conceived for April Fool’s Day but delayed into summer by industrial action, a shift in timing that cost it its satirical framing and sent the public into a panic not unlike that which followed Orson Welles’ 1938 War of the Worlds broadcast. What follows is a comprehensive examination of how the program was made, what anxieties of the 1970s it drew upon, how it expanded through novelization, and why it persists today as a self-referential myth shaping public interpretation of scientific disappearances and global catastrophe.

The reception of Alternative 3 cannot be divorced from the instability that characterized the United Kingdom in the late 1970s. Skyrocketing unemployment, persistent industrial strikes, the threat of nuclear conflict, and the immediate violence of the IRA’s bombing campaigns had produced a public with a bifurcated relationship to authority: Political leadership was viewed with increasing cynicism, while the institutional voice of television science programming retained a high degree of implicit trust.

David Ambrose built his script around the "brain drain"—the very real and well-documented flight of British scientists, engineers, and mathematicians to better-paid positions in the United States and Australia. Recast as a pattern of sinister, state-sponsored disappearances, this familiar socioeconomic trend became the production's most effective tool, collapsing the distance between documented reality and paranoid invention.

The implication was clear: These professionals had not left for better salaries. They had been taken.

Among the production's more prescient choices was its early deployment of the "Greenhouse Effect"—at the time an obscure academic concern—as the conspiracy's existential engine. Ambrose, in consultation with science advisor Arthur Garrett, needed a MacGuffin sufficient to justify abandoning Earth entirely. Garrett proposed global warming, then essentially unknown outside specialist literature. Ambrose seized on it not out of conviction but because it had, in his words, a "horrible feel of truth." It was a cynical narrative calculation that would prove, in retrospect, uncomfortably accurate.

Director Christopher Miles approached the technical execution of Alternative 3 as an exercise in subverting the documentary form from within. The production used period-appropriate film stock and then deliberately degraded it—Miles repeatedly returning footage to the processing labs with instructions to scratch and ruin it. The technicians were baffled. The effect, however, was exactly what Miles wanted: the grainy, damaged look of material that had been suppressed, recovered, and was never meant to be seen.

No single element of the production proved more disarming than the decision to cast Tim Brinton in the presenter's role. A veteran newsreader whose face had become inseparable from the ITV news infrastructure, Brinton carried with him an accumulated institutional authority that no actor could have replicated. His presence effectively neutralized the viewer' s critical faculty—the outlandishness of the program's claims was absorbed and defused by the simple fact that they were being delivered by a man the public had spent years trusting to tell them the truth.

At the narrative center of the program was an alleged clandestine summit convened by world leaders in 1957, called in response to the accelerating environmental deterioration of the planet. From this meeting emerged a taxonomy of proposed responses—each assigned a number and collectively referred to as the “Alternatives”—representing the scientific community’s attempts to chart a course away from total human extinction in the face of pollution and catastrophic climate change.

Alternative 1: The drastic and immediate reduction of the human population through artificial means. Dismissed as insufficient for long-term survival.

Alternative 2: The construction of vast underground shelters to house the elite and a representative cross-section of the population. Seen as a temporary measure; reminiscent of the bunker in Dr. Strangelove.

Alternative 3: The colonization of Mars via a waystation on the Moon, utilizing secret Soviet-American collaboration. The “true” conspiracy revealed to be in active operation since the 1960s.

According to the program's central thesis, the public spectacle of the space race served as elaborate misdirection, concealing a covert joint American-Soviet initiative to establish permanent bases on Mars—an undertaking made urgent by the conclusion that Earth' s biosphere had perhaps decades remaining. The program’s climax arrived in the form of a purportedly “decoded” videotape documenting a classified crewed landing on Mars in May 1962, in which footage from an unmanned surface probe appeared to capture movement beneath the Martian soil, while a mission controller’s voice could be heard declaring, “We have life!”

The casting strategy balanced recognizable faces against unknown performers to sustain the illusion of genuine investigative journalism. Shane Rimmer—familiar to British audiences through his voice work on Thunderbirds and recurring appearances in the Bond franchise—portrayed Bob Grodin, a man unraveling under the weight of what he had witnessed on the Moon. Richard Marner, years before his celebrated turn in ‘Allo ‘Allo!, inhabited Dr. Gerstein with such clinical conviction that a significant portion of the viewing public took him for an actual Nobel-caliber researcher. Smaller roles— George Pendlebury, played by Ivor Roberts, and Doreen Patterson, played by Nancy Adams—populated the margins of the narrative, lending the broader story of vanished scientists and grieving families its texture of mundane, bureaucratic tragedy.


On June 20, 1977, Alternative 3 aired well after its intended April Fools’ slot, triggering widespread panic. Without the holiday context, many viewers took the program as a real emergency bulletin about a secret Mars colonization plan. Anglia Television and major newspapers were bombarded with calls demanding colony selection details or decrying the “cover-up.” The Daily Express next morning headlined public “ shock and horror.” Although Anglia and ITV swiftly labeled it a hoax, many interpreted that denial as further proof of conspiracy, and the show— which never aired again—became “evidence” of suppression.

In 1978 journalist Leslie Watkins novelized David Ambrose’s script, replacing fictional witnesses with real Apollo astronauts like Buzz Aldrin and Edgar Mitchell to bolster believability, especially for U.S. readers. Watkins later claimed intelligence agencies tapped his phone and forced her into exile—a story that only deepened the mythology.

Then, in 1993, researcher Jim Keith’s Casebook on Alternative 3 tied the broadcast into New World Order and UFO conspiracies, arguing the original hoax served as plausible deniability for genuine clandestine projects.

Keith expanded the original conceit to include slave labor in space colonies, mass kidnapping, and brainwashing—even proposing that the “Alternative 3” framework provided ideal cover for a shadowy elite manufacturing an extraterrestrial threat. He connected the program to the Jonestown Massacre as a psychological operations test, Illuminati management of the space-colonization enterprise and the mind- control of abducted scientists. By framing the hoax as a “double-bluff,” Keith rendered the Alternative 3 myth permanently un-debunkable: any admission of fiction became simply another layer of institutional deception.

Alternative 3 established a template that speculative fiction has returned to repeatedly: the government concealing an existential truth, and institutional trust weaponized against the public.

Its clearest heir is The X-Files. Chris Carter's “myth arc” episodes—built around a global conspiracy to manage alien colonization—share the same psychological DNA as the 1977 broadcast. The show’s foundational premise, that extraterrestrial reality is being actively suppressed by the state, is Alternative 3 with a larger budget and a longer run.

Several specific episodes trace the lineage directly. “The Erlenmeyer Flask” closes the first season with alien DNA, hybrid experimentation, and the murder of Deep Throat— an informant who, like Bob Grodin, is destroyed for attempting to surface suppressed evidence. “Anasazi” pivots on a stolen digital tape containing proof of a worldwide conspiracy, mirroring the Ballantine tape plot, while its central image— an entire civilization vanishing without record—echoes the missing scientists thread. “Ice” and “Darkness Falls” both stage the arrival of ancient organisms that predate and threaten human dominance, a direct extension of the Martian life reveal. The series tagline, “Trust No One,” reads almost as a mission statement for what Alternative 3 had already accomplished.

Alternative 3 pioneered—fake news as dramatic grammar—resurfaced in Special Bulletin (1983), Ghostwatch (1992) and Without Warning (1994)—it remains a viable tool for filmmakers today.

Perhaps the most telling measure of Alternative 3's staying power is the ease with which contemporary events have been absorbed into its mythology. A cluster of high-profile deaths and disappearances among scientists working in sensitive government research, occurring between 2022 and 2026, required little reinterpretation to fit the original "brain drain" framework—the 1977 broadcast had, in a sense, already written the template. Official investigations returned verdicts of unrelated and varied causes. For those already convinced, this was precisely the point.

Perhaps the most telling measure of Alternative 3’s endurance is the ease with which contemporary events have been absorbed into its framework. Between 2022 and 2026, a cluster of deaths and disappearances among scientists connected to sensitive government research was met not only with official inquiry but with immediate recontextualization by conspiracy communities, who recognized in these cases the familiar outline of the original “brain drain” narrative. For those already fluent in the Alternative 3 mythos, the incidents required no new interpretation—only confirmation that the program, as they had always maintained, never stopped.

The scientists:

Amy Eskridge Anti-gravity; Founder of Institute for Exotic Science.

Suicide (believed she was being targeted).

June 11, 2022


Michael David Hicks Planetary Scientist, NASA JPL.

Deceased (Heart disease; cause not released).

July 30, 2023


Frank Maiwald Engineer, NASA JPL.

Deceased (Cause of death not publicly disclosed).

July 4, 2024


Monica Jacinto Reza Aerospace Engineer; Director of Materials, NASA JPL.

Disappeared (While hiking in Angeles National Forest).

June 22, 2025


Melissa Casias Admin Assistant, Los Alamos National Laboratory.

Disappeared (Relatives suggest stress and voluntary flight).

June 26, 2025


Jason Thomas Chemical Biologist, Novartis.

Drowned (Ruled accidental; no foul play).

Dec 12, 2025


Nuno Loureiro Plasma Physicist; Professor, MIT.

Homicide (Victim of a mass shooting at Brown University).

Dec 16, 2025


Carl Grillmair Astronomer, Caltech.

Homicide (Murdered during a carjacking).

Feb 16, 2026


William Neil McCasland Retired Air Force Maj. Gen.; former commander of AFRL.

Disappeared (Personal items found at home; boots missing).

Feb 27, 2026

The Alternative 3 mythos has proven most durable in its original conceit: the “missing scientists.” Modern incidents are routinely filtered through the lens of the 1977 broadcast by those who argue the program never ended. A cluster of high-profile deaths and disappearances among researchers tied to sensitive government work, occurring between 2022 and 2026, gave the mythology a second wind. Official investigations returned verdicts of varied and unrelated causes; believers catalogued the same cases as a continuation of the "brain drain" that Bob Grodin first tried to expose nearly fifty years prior.

Perhaps the most telling measure of Alternative 3’s legacy is not what it got wrong, but what it got right. Modern incidents—among them a cluster of high-profile deaths and disappearances of researchers tied to sensitive government programs between 2022 and 2026—have been routinely filtered through the lens of the 1977 broadcast by those who believe the Alternative 3 operation never ended. Official inquiries have found no common thread, but for those already disposed toward the mythology, that absence of evidence is itself evidence.

What Miles and Ambrose stumbled into, almost by accident, was a demonstration of how little separates authoritative truth from its convincing imitation. The program did not succeed because it was sophisticated. It succeeded because it was fluent—fluent in the cadences of broadcast journalism, in the grammar of institutional concern, in the particular register of a scientist reluctantly going on record. That fluency has proven more durable than any of its specific claims.   

Three properties account for its persistence. First, the medium carried more conviction than the message; Tim Brinton’s delivery was the argument. Second, the Greenhouse Effect—then a fringe anxiety—has since become the defining crisis of the century, lending the program a retroactive credibility its creators never intended. Third, and most critically, the conspiracy resists falsification by design: every debunking is absorbed as confirmation, every retraction as proof of reach.   

The result is a mythology that cannot be starved of oxygen. As long as scientists go missing, climates shift and governments keep secrets—which is to say, always—Alternative 3 will find new reasons to be believed.


04 November 2025

THE SATANIC PANIC WAS A HOAX LIKE PIZZAGATE AND QANON.

I had to write that in all caps. I needed to get everyone's attention.

Religious alt-right "paranormal investigators" are attempting to start another "Satanic Panic" and we can't let that happen again.

The McMartin School trials.

The miscarriage of justice surrounding the Memphis Three.

We have to stop it. Let's look at what happened in the past.

The "Satanic Panic" was a widespread moral panic and hoax that occurred primarily in North America from the 1980s to the mid-1990s, based on unsubstantiated fears of a vast, secretive network of Satan-worshipping cults engaging in organized child abuse, sacrifice and other crimes. These claims were proven to be entirely baseless, and no credible evidence of such a conspiracy was ever found by law enforcement or psychological experts. 

Origins and Spread:

Michelle Remembers (1980): The book, co-written by a psychiatrist and his patient, which detailed alleged "recovered memories" of satanic ritual abuse (SRA), helped spark the panic and provided a template for future claims.

Media Frenzy: Daytime talk shows and news programs, such as those hosted by Geraldo Rivera and Oprah Winfrey, uncritically reported sensationalist stories and "expert" testimony about SRA, amplifying the fear across the nation.

Recovered-Memory Therapy: Therapists used controversial and now-discredited techniques like hypnosis and leading questions to help patients "recover" memories of abuse, often inadvertently planting false memories.

Cultural Scapegoats: Anxiety over societal changes, such as more women entering the workforce and an increased reliance on daycares, led to these centers becoming primary targets for accusations. Other forms of popular culture, including heavy metal music and role-playing games like Dungeons & Dragons, were also falsely accused of being recruitment tools for cults. 

Key Cases and Debunking

McMartin Preschool Trial: This highly publicized California case (1983-1990) became the longest and most expensive criminal trial in U.S. history. Despite years of investigation and hundreds of accusations, no one was convicted due to a lack of physical evidence and the use of coercive child interviewing techniques.

West Memphis Three: Three teenagers were wrongfully convicted of murder in 1994 based on the prosecution's claim that the killings were part of a Satanic ritual. They were later freed in 2011 after new DNA evidence and an admission that the initial evidence was faulty.

Lack of Evidence: A major 1995 report by the National Institute of Justice concluded there was "scant to non-existent" hard evidence for large-scale satanic ritual abuse. The FBI also found no evidence of an organized, nationwide Satanic conspiracy. 

Legacy: The Satanic Panic is now widely regarded as a classic example of a moral panic and a modern-day "witch hunt," where mass hysteria leRd to ruined reputations, wrongful convictions, and the neglect of genuine child abuse issues. Elements of these debunked claims have unfortunately resurfaced in modern conspiracy theories like QAnon, which echo the same baseless fears of child-abusing cabals.

Debunking the Satanic Panic hoax and other conspiracies.




04 August 2024

The CARET "Dragonfly Drone" Incident: Another Linda Moulton Howe Farce.

Whenever Linda Moulton Howe appears online or on Coast to Coast AM with George Noory—or any other paranormal radio show—you can be rest assured it’s going to be an off-the-hook batshit crazy dumpster fire of a train wreck.

During the early stages of her career, Howe focused on addressing environmental issues. As Director of Special Projects at KMGH-TV in Denver from 1978 to 1983, she produced impactful documentaries such as Poison in the Wind and A Sun Kissed Poison—both of which exposed high levels of smog pollution in Los Angeles and Denver. She produced others: Fire In The Water, which advocated for using hydrogen as a cleaner energy source and A Radioactive Water, which revealed the dangers of uranium contamination in a Denver suburb's drinking water. Her contributions were instrumental in WCVB-TV receiving the Institutional Peabody Award for institutional excellence in 1975.

At that time, cattle mutilations were happening throughout the western United States, which led to Howe producing a 1980 documentary called A Strange Harvest, which propelled her into the spotlight.

And enabled Howe to party crash the ufology field and its eclectic subculture.

A Strange Harvest postulated that mysterious wounds found on cattle were the result of extraterrestrial beings harvesting body parts and accused the U.S. government of being involved in a cover-up. For her work, she received a Regional Emmy award for Audio Achievement in 1981 and solidified her reputation as a fierce defender of these ideas.

Note that: “Regional Emmy award for Audio Achievement.”

Howe’s proud of that Emmy and its something she and her adherents never fail to remind us. It’s an award for sound achievement, it has nothing to do with the subject matter. But, hey, it sounds impressive and gives her some gravitas.

That said, it was a life changing moment for Howe; presenting herself as the ever-intrepid investigative reporter, she delved further into UFO conspiracy theories and made claims about connections between cattle mutilations, UFOs and government secrecy. While she claimed to have been shown secret documents by a government agent—one such claim was that in 1983, she was shown a secret presidential briefing paper that revealed how aliens created Jesus and placed him on Earth “to teach mankind about love and non-violence.”

So, basically, Howe’s work might have inspired the Ridley Scott Alien prequel, Prometheus.

While Howe won over some in the ufology field, there were critics, including author John Greer, who believed her evidence lacked credibility and was based solely on decaying cow carcasses.

As noted in Howe’s RationalWiki entry, many weren’t impressed with her brand of shoddy journalism, highlighted by her “gullibility and deceptive ‘reports’ have caused even staunch ufologists to give her extremely low marks for credibility.”

Other observations:

UFO Watchdog: “Someone once summed up Howe very well with two words: ‘Media entrepreneur’. While having been a major player in the cattle mutilation mystery, Howe’s credibility has gone way downhill as she sensationalizes everything from mundane animal deaths to promoting Brazilian UFO fraud Urandir Oliveira and the Aztec UFO Crash Hoax while selling alien books, videos and lectures. Howe dabbles in all things strange including Bigfoot, crop circles, alien abductions, and UFOs. Howe also sits on the board of advisors to the Roswell UFO Museum along with the likes of Don Schmitt. See Howe’s site—EarthFiles.com—which she actually charges a subscription for in order to access some stories. Also see Howe turning an explained animal death into an encounter with Bigfoot. A leap not even Bigfoot itself could make.”

Saucer Smear magazine: “The most hilarious web posting we have read in a very long time comes from Whitley Strieber's Unknown Country, dated 9/30/05. Linda Moulton Howe is described as ‘our Dreamland science reporter’. We ask—what, if any, are the scientific qualifications of this pleasant but extremely gullible lady?? Inquiring minds would like to know!”

Here’s a LMH sizzle reel of hijinks and conspiracy theory woo woo:

  • Bigfoot DNA: Howe says Melba Ketchum has proof that Bigfoot exists.
  • Strange Explosions Sweeping the US: Howe describes alleged booms, flashes of light, ominous trumpet sounds.
  • Animal Mutilations Strike Again: Howe says it’s happening in Waddy, Kentucky.
  • The Return of Ezekiel's Wheel: Howe describes recent “eyewitness sightings” of that Biblical thing in the sky.
  • Pyramids Discovered in Alaska and Turkey: According to Howe, they are “immense structures not only built but used in some unknown way for a thousand years.”
  • Unexplained Explosions Now Worldwide: Howe says the world is blowing up, supposedly starting with Clintonville, Wisconsin.
  • Missing Time: Howe scoops “a rare case of documented missing time.”
  • Unknown objects in our skies: What are we NOT being told—yes, there’s an Obama conspiracy to deny UFO presence, according to Howe.
  • Kansas City UFO Wave: Howe says a “remarkable series of UFO sightings” are being debunked by the media due to some kind of conspiracy.
  • The Rendlesham Code: Howe endorses a UFO contactee’s claims of having telepathically downloaded binary code numbers from aliens.
  • Unprecedented Wave of Animal Mutilations: Howe warns of a “massive worldwide wave” of hacked-up animals.
  • Project Serpo: Howe was one of the first to be taken for a ride by this hoax. As of 2017, she is still saying, with a straight face, that Ebens are our allies in some sort of galactic war.
  • Thermo-nuclear war on Mars: Howe uncritically accepts and promotes the dotty ideas of John Brandenburg, thereby disqualifying herself as any kind of science reporter.

·         Secret extended Apollo missions: On 29 November 2018 Howe web-published a 3-part essay about Apollo missions 18, 19 and 20, which, she alleges, were carried out in secret and involved contact with aliens. Her information came from one Jon Harold Lavine, who claimed to have been one of the astronauts involved. On the same date Howe talked for two hours on this topic on Coast to Coast AM. She later retracted but characterized Lavine as a victim of MKULTRA memory-substitution rather than what he actually is—a fraud.

Along the way, Howe crossed paths with the infamous Air Force Office of Special Investigations officer Richard Doty. But that’s a story for another day.

In 2007, as Howe clicked through her inbox, she discovered a dozen photos of peculiar objects. This piqued her curiosity and sparked a desire to uncover their origins and purpose.

And, well, this is how the entire embarrassing situation started.

Howe later learned that from the span of 2006 to 2007, a plethora of individuals scattered across the United States claimed to have witnessed the same anomalous UFO. Described as a saucer-shaped object with thin wires protruding about 30 feet into the air, it measured at only 25 feet in diameter and two feet thick, making it impossible for any human pilot to control. Dubbed “Dragonfly Drones,” these objects baffled observers with their peculiar movements and seemingly remote operation.

Rumors swirled about their origins—were they extraterrestrial beings spying on our planet? Or perhaps a clandestine venture by the government's covert space program? The unexplained phenomena captured the imagination of Howe, who dove deeper into the mysteries surrounding the dragonfly drones. She would later learn that the pictures—all of them—were captured at the Big Basin in California, specifically in the Redwoods area.

Based on her vast experience in the UFO field –no, no—Howe’s history of willful gullibility, deceptive ‘reports and plain and simple shoddy journalism, she felt the photos were authentic and she believed the eyewitness reports.

Enter Isaac. That name has an interesting connection and I’ll talk about that in a bit.

Following the script, not long after getting the photos, Howe received a phone call from a man known only as Isaac. Not surprisingly, Isaac was connected to a top-secret government project known as CARET: Commercial Applications Research for Extraterrestrial Technology; the project was based in Palo Alto, Calif., and he had information on the Dragonfly Drone UFOs. 

Shortly after receiving the photos, she received a phone call from a person who said he had secret information about the dragonfly drones. He wouldn’t give his real name and only used the name Isaac.

In short, Isaac’s account was a modified version of Bob Lazar’s claims: A few hundred scientists, including Isaac, were attempting to reverse engineer alien or nonhuman intelligence technology—the Dragonfly Drones. Howe first talked about the Dragonfly Drones during a 29 May 2008 C2C AM appearance. Of course, Howe firmly believed the Drones were part of the CARET program; she would later present photos and documents from Isaac. Again, she was certain this was a black project program overseen by the government.

However.

A few months before, on History Channel’s seventh episode (season one) of UFO Hunters, Bill Birnes and the crew were in Colorado, where they met with Colorado MUFON—Mutual UFO Network—and they discussed the very same Dragonfly Drone UFOs. After some scripted antics, Colorado MUFON and the UFO Hunters felt that the Dragonfly Drones were some sort of psyops program or what have you. Titled “Reverse Engineering,” the episode was first broadcast on 19 March 2008.

It was interesting—and perplexing—that alleged UFO sightings from California ended up in the hands of Colorado MUFON instead of the California groups.

Oh well.

Flash forward to 15 Dec. 2008 and it’s the second season’s thirteenth episode of Terminator: Sarah Connor Chronicles called “Earthlings Welcome Here.” Throughout the previous episodes, there are mysterious drones—later found out to be reverse from Terminator tech—appear and Sarah goes to a UFO Experience Conference, searching for a shadowy blogger named . . . .

Abraham.

The Old Testament, anyone? Abraham? Isaac?

Both “Abraham” and “Isaac” have knowledge of UFO drones—both drone projects reverse-engineered from advanced tech.

Yes. It was a viral marketing for TSCC. The link is here:

It should be noted that despite the truth behind the Dragonfly Drones and that it’s been known since Dec. 2008—people still believe they are here and real.

If someone at TSCC wanted to stir things up within the UFO community—sending photos and having a mysterious informant—choosing Linda Moulton Howe was a stroke of genius.

She’ll never learn.

She’ll keep falling for hoaxes and what have you for years to come.

 Be seeing you.

-30-

Gaia Article on the Dragonfly Drones

Dragonfly Drone UFOs solved

UFO Hunters: Reverse Engineering





The photos Howe received from Isaac


Drone photos from the episode.


The 1970s TV Science Fiction Renaissance: Alternative 3

  Alternative 3. Origanally intended as an April Fool's joke but delayed due to srtrike, succeeded at frightening audiences and starting...