Coast to Coast AM with George Noory

Coast to Coast AM with George Noory

Coast to Coast AM deals with UFOs, strange occurrences, life after death, and other unexplained phenomena.Full Bio

 

This Week's Weird News

An NBA star's surprising thoughts on the moon landing, Russian  cosmonauts trying to find the source of a mysterious hole found at the  ISS, an eerie entity appearing to pop up behind a woman during a web  chat and a possible glimpse of a reptilian on a Ukrainian internet  program were among the strange and unusual stories that caught our  attention this past week.

One of the weirder mysteries of 2018 saw some new development this  week when two Russian cosmonauts performed a spacewalk outside of the  ISS to examine the increasingly suspicious hole that was recently  discovered in a Soyuz capsule docked to the station. Although the  mission itself seemingly did not provide any smoking gun which could  explain the baffling damage, the endeavor allowed for a new perspective  on the hole as well as some samples from the spot that will, hopefully,  lead to an answer as to what or who may have created it.

A truly weird video out of Washington state surfaced online this  week and seemingly showed some kind of entity appear behind an  unsuspecting woman during a video chat. Was it an alien? A ghost? A  clever hoax? We're still not quite sure. Similarly, an odd piece of  footage from the Ukraine appeared to capture a moment when the eyes of a  TV presenter suddenly looked reptilian for a split second, leaving some  to wonder if the unsettling rumors of such beings lurking among us may  actually be true.

Weather watchers in a number of states were left scratching their  heads earlier this week when radar showed a number of odd blobs suddenly  appear over parts of Illinois, Indiana, and Kentucky. The puzzling  sight was particularly perplexing to meteorologists as there were no  storms in the area at the time. Fortunately, fears that the anomalies  could have been alien in nature or a sign of clandestine weather control  were put to rest when the source of the strangeness was traced back to a  National Guard jet burning off some chaff. 

This past week put the infamous moon hoax conspiracy theory on the  proverbial front page for the first time in quite a while when one of  the most famous athletes in the world today, Stephen Curry, expressed  skepticism that the historic journey ever really happened. As one can  imagine, this set off something of a firestorm with numerous media  outlets mocking the Golden State Warriors' star for his unorthodox  opinion. It culminated with NASA inviting Curry to their Houston  facility to see their collection of moon rocks.


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