UFO/UAP news roundup (29th October 2025).
Here’s the semi-irregular round-up of all the best new content that is fit to print, and some that probably isn’t, concerning the topic of UFOs, UAPs, and a sugary side-dollop of woo.
We’ve also bundled the semi-regular geo-politics/tech outlook to the end, given it’s getting onto Winter and things are still rather quiet.
It’s a superhero team-up, today, as Nick Cook and Professor Simon chat about how they shifted to the believer side of the UFO argument.
Using digitised Palomar Observatory plates taken long before the satellite era, Beatriz and her team uncovered over 100,000 brief, mirror-like light flashes that appear and vanish within minutes—many of which seem to be genuine, physical objects orbiting Earth decades before the space age. Even more intriguingly, these transients show a strong statistical link to 1950s nuclear tests and UAP sightings, forming a curious triangulation between nuclear activity, unidentified phenomena, and reflective orbital bodies. Despite academic pushback and professional risk, Beatriz chose to publish her findings openly, urging the scientific community to face what could be one of the most paradigm-shattering discoveries in modern history.
Richard Dolan’s discussion with Allan Lavigne explores the behind-the-scenes efforts in the U.S. Congress to push forward a UAP disclosure initiative that many assume has stalled. Lavigne, citing his Washington sources, contends that disclosure is still quietly progressing — perhaps already 80% complete — with the potential release of classified UAP Task Force transcripts forming the next major step. These whistleblower testimonies, gathered over years, could be made public if a majority of the 21 senators on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence vote to do so — an unlikely but not impossible scenario that Lavigne sees as the most viable current path toward genuine UAP transparency.
Dark Journalist Daniel Liszt delivers a deep-dive exposé on the CIA-funded documentary Age of Disclosure, which he claims is propaganda designed to promote a false UFO threat and justify emergency powers for intelligence agencies. Liszt connects the film’s director, Dan Farah, to Hollywood heavyweights like Steven Spielberg — reportedly working on his own fear-driven UFO film for 2026 — and argues that figures such as Lue Elizondo infiltrated the UFO community to push a manipulated intelligence narrative for profit and control while concealing the true contents of the real UFO files.
Dr. Steven Greer pops up on Cosmic Disclosure to swat down the latest “mothership” hysteria surrounding 3I/Atlas, pointing out that it’s far more likely to be terrestrial tinkering than little green men dropping by. In his trademark blend of whistle-blower gossip and high-concept woo, Greer explains how the “alien threat” narrative serves as a handy psyop, while much of what we call “UFOs” are really secret man-made craft mothballed since the 1950s. He also teases the Bugasphere – a metallic relic carbon-dated at 12,000 years old with what might be proto-Sanskrit scribbles – and how consciousness and CE5 might be the real key to peaceful ET contact, not another round of congressional hearings.
In this Why Files deep dive, we’re treated to a characteristically slick blend of conspiracy archaeology and deadpan humour as the host connects the dots between the infamous Maury Island UFO incident of 1947 and—wait for it—the assassination of JFK. Expect men in black, mysterious “slag” falling from the sky, disappearing witnesses, and a web of intrigue that ties early flying saucer lore to Cold War paranoia and political cover-ups. Whether you come away convinced or just entertained, it’s a wild, tinfoil-lined ride through one of UFOlogy’s strangest historical rabbit holes.
This episode of Redacted veers straight into secret space programme territory, riffing on the bizarre moment when Donald Trump briefly posted – then hastily deleted – a video about “Med Beds,” those rumoured miracle machines said to regrow limbs and cure all ills. Host Clayton Morris brings in Dr Michael Salla, who claims multiple whistleblowers have seen this tech with their own eyes, to discuss whether this was just another social-media slip-up or a glimpse of classified off-world science. It’s a heady cocktail of conspiracy, politics, and wishful post-surgical thinking served piping hot.
In this Reality Check instalment, investigative journalist Ross Coulthart jets off (figuratively) to Japan to chat with members of the Diet about whether their government and Uncle Sam are quietly teaming up to poke at UAPs buzzing around East Asia. The conversation drifts from political diplomacy to aerial mysteries, exploring how Japan’s skies have become surprising UFO hotspots — and why the U.S. military seems very interested in whatever’s flitting about up there. It’s a rare glimpse into the international side of the UAP conversation, where tea ceremonies meet top-secret radar blips.
In this latest rant-meets-lecture from The Angry Astronaut, our cosmic curmudgeon tackles the increasingly bonkers saga of 3I Atlas — the interstellar interloper that’s now apparently glowing green, spitting out metal, and maybe, just maybe, responsible for the famous 1977 “Wow!” signal. Equal parts speculation, exasperation, and genuine wonder, the video asks why an object like this would behave so strangely and whether we’re staring at the first real alien calling card or just another cosmic red herring.
And then there’s this, too.
And Sabine is getting in on the act, too.
Here’s a nice roundup of the 3i Atlas content, too.
Are we getting signals from 3i Atlas? Could be…
A little interview with Avi Loeb about the potential nature of our incoming friend from beyond the stars.
D.J is back and chatting with someone reporting some odd stuff going down in the Antarctic base. UFOs and earthquake weapons? Could be!
There’s more going on under your feet than you might realise, or even care to know about. Yikes.
Science time… and new developments in graphene might be able to produce more technological wonders than we knew about.
