
Video 1: TALK – Talking to Aliens (Audio)
Canadian singer-songwriter TALK released the official audio video for “Talking To Aliens” on October 17, 2023. It is a track from his debut album Lord of the Flies & Birds & Bees, issued Oct 20, 2023 under Capitol/Range Music (UMG). The song is a pop-rock number about social anxiety and isolation, using “talking to aliens” as a metaphor for feeling misunderstood in a crowd. Key lyrics underscore this: “When I’m talking… feel like I’m talking to aliens… Too many people in one room… I can’t escape… like I’m on fire”. There are no factual claims to verify – it’s a creative, personal artistic work. Apple Music and uDiscover confirm the release date and label, and the quoted lyrics match those published in the album’s press materials. As an official label-backed music video, its production is reliable and free of contentious bias (it’s meant to entertain). Its newsworthiness lies in pop-culture appeal: TALK’s previous single “Run Away to Mars” was a chart-topping hit, and this new release may interest music fans.
Video 2: Some Aliens Would Rather Die Than Hurt Us (Clifford Stone)
This June 2026 video features retired U.S. Army Sgt. Clifford Stone speaking about claimed UFO crash‐retrieval operations. It appears on a fringe UFO/disclosure channel (“Best of Awaken Zone”) around June 20, 2026 (per online reports). Stone asserts the U.S. military secretly recovered crashed craft and live aliens, trained medics to care for non-human biology, and reverse‐engineered “extraneous” alien technology dating back to WWII and Roswell. He describes aerial UFOs wrapped in advanced “vacuum sheath” armor and claims medical protocols for grey aliens. These claims are accompanied by vivid testimony but lack independent support. Official sources flatly refute any such history: NASA’s recent UAP report states “no conclusive evidence suggesting an extraterrestrial origin” for any recovered objects, and the White House Office of Science & Tech Policy responded to believers that it found “no evidence” that any aliens have contacted humans. Investigative journalists similarly dismiss Stone’s narrative as unsupported and “outrageous”. The video’s reliability is very low (it is a known conspiracy channel), and it exhibits bias toward sensational UFO lore. Its “newsworthiness” is mainly to UFO/alien communities; mainstream outlets have not verified any of these allegations.
Video 3: Direct Contact with Extraterrestrials: The Evidence They’re Hiding
The third video (circa June 2026) claims a cover‐up of direct alien contact and secret UFO evidence. It is billed as “Best of Awaken Zone” (a reupload of Law&Crime Network content) and runs about 49 min. It features sensational topics (for example, a purported “Missing UFO General” 911 call scenario) implying authorities conceal extraterrestrial engagements. The video offers no verifiable proof and repeats familiar conspiracy tropes. In reality, the scientific consensus is starkly different: NASA’s study team wrote that “no conclusive evidence” exists for any alien technology behind UAP. Former government officials have likewise stated they found no proof of aliens. Investigative reporter Leslie Kean criticized similar UFO presentations as “unsupported assertions” and even “grandiose claims” when no data were provided. In sum, the video makes unsubstantiated claims about hidden encounters, conflicting with official sources. Its content is not reliable news; it is a low‐credibility conspiracy piece with strong bias. Its news value is minimal outside niche UFO outlets, as mainstream evidence for the alleged “hidden evidence” is lacking.
Video 4: The Grays Showed NASA What They Could Really Do
This June 2026 talk by Linda Moulton Howe claims that “Grey” extraterrestrials have secretly collaborated with NASA (for example, by demonstrating advanced technology). No credible source supports this narrative. In fact, NASA and science officials repeatedly emphasize the opposite: a NASA task force found “no conclusive evidence suggesting an extraterrestrial origin” for any unexplained sightings. Even dramatic images cited as “UFO crashes” have mundane explanations. For instance, NASA’s Astronomy Picture of the Day described a “flying saucer crash” photo from 2004 as simply the Genesis mission’s solar probe, stressing “no space aliens were involved”. Similarly, the White House has publicly replied to UFO petitioners that it “could find no evidence” of any alien contact with humanity. In short, official science literature offers no support for any secret NASA-alien partnership. The video’s claims are therefore unsubstantiated. Its bias is towards confirming fringe “alien contact” theories, and it carries low reliability. Its newsworthiness is limited to UFO fringe audiences, as it conflicts with NASA’s openly published findings.



