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Show Notes
Art Bell opens the phones on Inauguration Day 1997, as callers weigh in on President Clinton's second term, Newt Gingrich's $300,000 ethics fine, and the lingering fallout from the Courtney Brown Hale-Bopp photograph scandal. Art shares his weekend of deep reflection on the human toll of the fraud, revealing that Prudence Calabrese has resigned from the Farsight Institute and that Brown has posted a public statement refusing to release any physical evidence or name the astronomer who supplied the fraudulent image.
Callers debate whether Brown was a willing participant or a victim of disinformation designed to discredit remote viewing. Art reaffirms that while the photograph is undeniably fraudulent, other unexplained images of a Hale-Bopp companion still exist and the comet itself remains real. He also floats an ambitious proposal for micro-broadcasting, suggesting the FCC create new AM and FM bands where citizens could operate low-power neighborhood stations without heavy regulation, sparking a new industry of transmitters, receivers, and grassroots media.
The episode captures a pivotal moment in the show's history, with Art candidly discussing the power and responsibility of mass media broadcasting. He concludes that honesty at every juncture is the only protection against the inevitable controversies that come with exploring the unknown.
Callers debate whether Brown was a willing participant or a victim of disinformation designed to discredit remote viewing. Art reaffirms that while the photograph is undeniably fraudulent, other unexplained images of a Hale-Bopp companion still exist and the comet itself remains real. He also floats an ambitious proposal for micro-broadcasting, suggesting the FCC create new AM and FM bands where citizens could operate low-power neighborhood stations without heavy regulation, sparking a new industry of transmitters, receivers, and grassroots media.
The episode captures a pivotal moment in the show's history, with Art candidly discussing the power and responsibility of mass media broadcasting. He concludes that honesty at every juncture is the only protection against the inevitable controversies that come with exploring the unknown.