A new three-part docuseries takes an “in-depth look at the whistleblowers who sparked a UFO revolution” and reveals “evidence that the government knows much more than they’re letting on.”
According to investigative reporter Jeremy Corbell, it “blows up decades of conspiracies.”
TMZ’s “UFO Revolution” is “more than just a docuseries,” Corbell told Fox News Digital. “It really peels back the veil and lets people see how many people are fighting for this. How the American people have been lied to. It just blows up decades of conspiracies.”
(Video: Fox News)
Corbell, a documentary filmmaker, appears in the docuseries and said the project was “a big risk to my safety.”
But the risk was worth it.
“I’m really happy that this series was able to peel back a layer of mystery about the UFO subject, and what it takes to fight to get the truth on this subject,” he said. “I let them into my personal life, so they could see what it’s like and what it takes to do this kind of work and what the adversarial forces are against you … People take big risks coming forward.”
UFO enthusiasts will tell you that America is closer to “full disclosure” than it has ever been.
Testifying under oath before Congress, whistleblower David Grusch said he got death threats after coming forward about a government-run program that retrieves UFOs and attempts to reverse engineer the technology.
And Corbell has released jaw-dropping videos — each of them vetted — of unidentified anomalous phenomena — UAPs, as they are now known — maneuvering in ways that defy the laws of physics.
“That includes particularly concerning unexplained flying objects buzzing over active war zones, U.S. military bases and nuclear sites,” Fox News Digital notes.
Earlier this month, Corbell released what is being called a “jellyfish UAP,” seen in 2018 by the U.S. military circling a joint operations base in Iraq.
“Today we release the RAW footage of a military filmed UAP incursion within a United States joint operations base. This UAP of unknown origin displayed transmedium capability – and has been officially designated by the United States intelligence agencies as a UAP (Unidentified Aerial Phenomena),” Corbell announced on X. “This designation is currently maintained.”
According to the journalist:
An incursion by an object of unknown origin was filmed at a United States joint operations base in Iraq. The object was designated UAP (Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena), and was tracked for a durational period. The object moved through a sensitive military installation – and eventually traversed over a body of water, where it actuated a controlled descent – submerging into the water. After an observational period of about seventeen minutes – the UAP reemerged from the body of water and shot-off at an extreme rate of speed – beyond the optical scope of the observation platform. The origin, intent and capability of the Anomalous Aerial Vehicle remains unknown. Official designation remains UAP.
“The UAP was not visible with Night Vision (IR) and appeared to jam the targeting capability of the optical platform,” Corbell reported. It “displayed positive lift – without the normally associated aerodynamic means for lift and thrust.”
“The signatures typically associated with the propulsion maneuvers observed – were absent,” he stated.
Today we release the RAW footage of a military filmed UAP incursion within a United States joint operations base. This UAP of unknown origin displayed transmedium capability – and has been officially designated by the United States intelligence agencies as a UAP (Unidentified… pic.twitter.com/gomB8N2eI2
— Jeremy Kenyon Lockyer Corbell (@JeremyCorbell) January 9, 2024
The stunning video is featured in “UFO Revolution.”
Michael Cincoski, a U.S. Marine veteran, was at the base when the UAP was spotted. Though he wasn’t a first-hand witness to the object, he said the UAP appeared in 2017, not 2018, and the Marines nicknamed it the “spaghetti monster.”
A Marine who worked on the base in Iraq tells me he saw the full 17 minute “jellyfish” UFO video.
He says the Marines nicknamed it the “spaghetti monster.”
Michael Cincoski says he worked in intelligence surveillance recognizance — and that the video is from 2017, not 2018. pic.twitter.com/TVYVO3S87K— Brian Entin (@BrianEntin) January 11, 2024
“This morning I spoke with a former team member who was with me in Iraq back in 2018,” he wrote Friday on X. “They wish to stay anonymous, but they confirmed that we actually had multiple recordings of the ‘Jellyfish UAP’ with different durations.”
This morning I spoke with a former team member who was with me in Iraq back in 2018. They wish to stay anonymous, but they confirmed that we actually had multiple recordings of the “Jellyfish UAP” with different durations.
— Michael Cincoski (@MRCinco96) January 12, 2024
Meanwhile, a bi-partisan bill — the “Safe Airspace for Americans Act” — was introduced in Congress by Reps. Robert Garcia (D-Calif.) and Glenn Grothman (R-Wis.)
“It is the first bill that would allow civilian pilots to report on UFO sightings and receive legal protections from professional reprisal,” Fox News Digital reports.
“Our new bipartisan UAP bill, the Safe Airspace for Americans Act, ensures aviation personnel can report UAP encounters or sightings safely to the FAA without fear of retaliation,” Garcia wrote on X. “It’s a big step forward for transparency and disclosure.”
Our new bipartisan UAP bill, the Safe Airspace for Americans Act, ensures aviation personnel can report UAP encounters or sightings safely to the FAA without fear of retaliation. It’s a big step forward for transparency and disclosure. pic.twitter.com/qxiLmoWpL4
— Congressman Robert Garcia (@RepRobertGarcia) January 12, 2024
Former Navy pilot and Americans for Safe Aerospace (ASA) co-founder Ryan Graves made headlines when he became the first active-duty pilot to testify to Congress about UAPs.
He praised Congress for the proposed legislation, saying the members he spoke to “are smart about this bill.”
“They’ve been working and looking [for] something like this since the hearing, so I think we’re going to see a lot of support for this bill, at least in the House,” he said. He also expects it to do well in the Senate, he added.
“I think I would say to pilots that this legislation doesn’t force you to report anything, but it now provides the means for you to take that information and forces the FAA to accept it and channel it to the proper places. So for the first time, we really have an opportunity to take advantage of that,” Graves said. “I know there’s hesitation, there’s been stigma around this conversation, but there’s a responsibility to national security and to the aircraft that you’re responsible for in order to report issues that could be a problem now or in the future. So now we have the means to close the gap that has been present.”
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