1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:05,000 on this edition of sightings. 2 00:00:05,000 --> 00:00:08,000 Everyone loved Skipper Parker. 3 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:11,000 That's why his murder was as shocking as it is mysterious. 4 00:00:11,000 --> 00:00:19,000 Now, a psychic may have information that can help solve this horrible crime. 5 00:00:19,000 --> 00:00:25,000 How do sacred sites around the world help heal body and soul? 6 00:00:25,000 --> 00:00:30,000 I got in more trouble than anyone could ever imagine. 7 00:00:30,000 --> 00:00:36,000 It was called Project Blue Book and it continues to raise more questions about UFOs than it answers. 8 00:00:36,000 --> 00:00:40,000 I'd hate to think that Project Blue Book was the best we could do. 9 00:00:40,000 --> 00:00:45,000 A controversy rages over whether computers should store the total output of the human mind. 10 00:00:45,000 --> 00:00:51,000 Which would leave you with an 80-year-long home video. 11 00:00:51,000 --> 00:00:55,000 And a look at the better angels of Andy Lakey's life. 12 00:01:21,000 --> 00:01:28,000 Welcome to Sightings. I'm Tim White. 13 00:01:28,000 --> 00:01:32,000 A teenage life cuts short. A senseless murder. No witnesses. 14 00:01:32,000 --> 00:01:36,000 It's a story told too often in the news. The names, the faces may change, 15 00:01:36,000 --> 00:01:41,000 but the family's grief and law enforcement's frustration never change. 16 00:01:41,000 --> 00:01:45,000 In North Carolina, where the brutal murder of Skipper Parker remains unsolved, 17 00:01:45,000 --> 00:01:49,000 his parents have vowed to try everything before they give up. 18 00:01:49,000 --> 00:01:54,000 Will it be a psychic detective who finally cracks the case? 19 00:02:01,000 --> 00:02:08,000 It's very clear to me. I'm experiencing it right along with the victim. 20 00:02:08,000 --> 00:02:14,000 It's like a movie in my head. 21 00:02:14,000 --> 00:02:19,000 The movie playing in Nancy Meyers' head right now is a true story. 22 00:02:19,000 --> 00:02:26,000 With the clarity and impact of a 70-millimeter scream, Meyers says she is seeing only what the killers have seen. 23 00:02:26,000 --> 00:02:28,000 The death of Skipper Parker. 24 00:02:28,000 --> 00:02:32,000 You're haunted every moment that you live and breathe. 25 00:02:32,000 --> 00:02:36,000 All you can think about is how or why. 26 00:02:36,000 --> 00:02:40,000 How could this possibly happen to your child? 27 00:02:40,000 --> 00:02:45,000 You try to protect them and do everything you can to take care of that child. 28 00:02:45,000 --> 00:02:50,000 And then one moment, someone can just take that all away from you. 29 00:02:50,000 --> 00:02:53,000 The how and why still elude police. 30 00:02:53,000 --> 00:02:58,000 Skipper was so loved, so innocent, and his death was so random. 31 00:02:58,000 --> 00:03:03,000 It would appear that this young man was on the way to work while in his truck. 32 00:03:03,000 --> 00:03:06,000 He was fired on by some unknown assailant. 33 00:03:06,000 --> 00:03:10,000 One of those projectiles struck and killed him. 34 00:03:12,000 --> 00:03:15,000 The truck then ran off the road, struck a tree, and came to rest. 35 00:03:15,000 --> 00:03:21,000 The last time that we saw Skipper was around 3 a.m. the day that he died. 36 00:03:21,000 --> 00:03:28,000 He was extremely happy that morning and very talkative. 37 00:03:29,000 --> 00:03:32,000 Did not seem to have a care in the world. 38 00:03:32,000 --> 00:03:36,000 Was to report to work at 4 o'clock, and he never made it. 39 00:03:37,000 --> 00:03:43,000 Up to now, the police have, I think, to the best of their abilities, done what they can. 40 00:03:43,000 --> 00:03:47,000 Given what the resources that they have available to them. 41 00:03:47,000 --> 00:03:51,000 And it's been tough for our family because we want the answer and we want it now. 42 00:03:51,000 --> 00:03:55,000 We've pursued many leads that have allowed us to know where. 43 00:03:55,000 --> 00:03:58,000 And we've pursued some leads that have given us information, 44 00:03:58,000 --> 00:04:02,000 but certainly not any that has led to the identification of the suspects in the case. 45 00:04:02,000 --> 00:04:05,000 The case is still open, the case is still unsolved. 46 00:04:06,000 --> 00:04:09,000 The crime shocked everyone in Oak Ridge, North Carolina. 47 00:04:09,000 --> 00:04:15,000 Skipper's partner was so well-liked, the feeling around town, is that the murderer must be a stranger. 48 00:04:15,000 --> 00:04:22,000 From the first day that he was born, he came here with boundless energy. 49 00:04:23,000 --> 00:04:28,000 He had a real zest for life, and he made a lot of people very happy. 50 00:04:28,000 --> 00:04:32,000 Skipper's personality was wonderful. 51 00:04:32,000 --> 00:04:38,000 He could be friend, anyone. He found the good in everyone. 52 00:04:41,000 --> 00:04:44,000 Skipper had just graduated from the Oak Ridge Military Academy, 53 00:04:44,000 --> 00:04:48,000 where he'd risen from the rank of private to captain in less than two years. 54 00:04:48,000 --> 00:05:01,000 He thoroughly enjoyed the regalia, and he enjoyed the camaraderie and the brotherhood of the Corps. 55 00:05:01,000 --> 00:05:03,000 He did very well. 56 00:05:04,000 --> 00:05:11,000 Greensboro, North Carolina homicide detective John Barrow had been working the Parker murder for several months 57 00:05:11,000 --> 00:05:15,000 before Skipper's family asked Nancy Meyer to join the investigation. 58 00:05:16,000 --> 00:05:18,000 They were impressed by Meyer's track record. 59 00:05:18,000 --> 00:05:23,000 In 20 years as a psychic detective, Meyer claims she has provided new leads. 60 00:05:23,000 --> 00:05:26,000 In 90% of the cases she's been asked to investigate. 61 00:05:27,000 --> 00:05:34,000 I hope that Nancy Meyer can pick up something that they're missing. 62 00:05:34,000 --> 00:05:42,000 A clue, a vibration, whatever it takes to solve this crime. 63 00:05:42,000 --> 00:05:48,000 I've never worked with a psychic in a criminal investigation, or in any way. 64 00:05:48,000 --> 00:05:51,000 This was first proposed by the family. 65 00:05:51,000 --> 00:05:55,000 My position with the family has been that if this is something they want to do, 66 00:05:55,000 --> 00:05:57,000 and it's not interfering with the investigation, 67 00:05:57,000 --> 00:06:01,000 and I think it's the position of me as an investigator, 68 00:06:01,000 --> 00:06:04,000 and the Greensboro Police Department will accommodate them any way we can. 69 00:06:05,000 --> 00:06:11,000 Meyer works with crime scene photos first to set the reels of her psychic projector in motion. 70 00:06:12,000 --> 00:06:18,000 When I work from photos with an impact like this, it's almost instantaneous. 71 00:06:18,000 --> 00:06:21,000 When it starts to roll, it's so strong, it's like I'm right in the middle of it. 72 00:06:21,000 --> 00:06:27,000 Her first psychic impression was one that Skipper's friends and family had not considered. 73 00:06:29,000 --> 00:06:32,000 He knew who did it. This was not random. 74 00:06:32,000 --> 00:06:35,000 It may look random, but he knew them. 75 00:06:35,000 --> 00:06:40,000 Actually, it seems like a sort of a running conflict. 76 00:06:40,000 --> 00:06:42,000 Money's involved. 77 00:06:42,000 --> 00:06:47,000 From one photograph, a psychic vision of the murder emerged. 78 00:06:47,000 --> 00:06:51,000 And he's looking at the driver, and there's a passenger, and there is someone in the backseat. 79 00:06:51,000 --> 00:06:53,000 There are three young men there. 80 00:06:53,000 --> 00:06:57,000 And he knows the driver, and he knows the person in the passenger seat. 81 00:06:57,000 --> 00:07:03,000 Well, all three of them are early 20s, 19s, somewhere around. They're all about the same age. 82 00:07:03,000 --> 00:07:09,000 After studying the disturbing pictures for more than an hour, Meyer began to describe the killer. 83 00:07:09,000 --> 00:07:13,000 There's some schooling in common between the two of them. 84 00:07:13,000 --> 00:07:19,000 There's a ring on his right hand that looks like a heavy class ring. 85 00:07:19,000 --> 00:07:21,000 And there's something on the side other than the date. 86 00:07:21,000 --> 00:07:27,000 It's a symbol that looks almost like a naval symbol of some sort. 87 00:07:27,000 --> 00:07:34,000 And the conflict between the shooter and the victim started way back. 88 00:07:34,000 --> 00:07:39,000 He seems to have been very jealous of the victim, jealous of the friendliness of the victim, 89 00:07:39,000 --> 00:07:44,000 jealous of the victim's success with young ladies. 90 00:07:44,000 --> 00:07:48,000 Detective Barrow sat stone-faced on camera. 91 00:07:48,000 --> 00:07:51,000 He does not want to give away just how much the police know. 92 00:07:51,000 --> 00:07:58,000 I don't feel like this is a fully premeditated murder in the sense of he set out to kill this young man. 93 00:07:58,000 --> 00:08:03,000 I think he set out to scare him and lost control of himself in the process. 94 00:08:03,000 --> 00:08:06,000 I think she's intuitive and I think she's perceptive. 95 00:08:06,000 --> 00:08:12,000 There are some perceptions perhaps that are similar to some information that we already have available. 96 00:08:12,000 --> 00:08:18,000 But the accuracy of the information provided will only be borne out based on the investigation. 97 00:08:18,000 --> 00:08:23,000 Meyer agreed not to reveal where the case stands now, but said the killer will be caught. 98 00:08:23,000 --> 00:08:25,000 I think they've got two very good cops on this. 99 00:08:25,000 --> 00:08:30,000 You got two bloodhounds. They're great. They'll go after it. They're gonna dig and dig and dig. 100 00:08:30,000 --> 00:08:38,000 And Nancy Meyer was also able to reassure the Parker family that their youngest son was blameless in the brutal attack. 101 00:08:38,000 --> 00:08:44,000 I don't feel that the victim holds any responsibility in any way for what happened here. 102 00:08:44,000 --> 00:08:51,000 There are victims that put themselves in situations. This young man has done nothing wrong. He's basically a really nice kid. 103 00:08:51,000 --> 00:08:59,000 Catching his killer is crucial, but remembering Skipper's zest and joy for life is more important still. 104 00:09:00,000 --> 00:09:08,000 He was so special to me. I think anybody that ever knew him will never forget him. 105 00:09:08,000 --> 00:09:16,000 My world stopped that day I can date. And that's...we have three other children and that doesn't mean a thing. 106 00:09:16,000 --> 00:09:24,000 We love them just like we always did. But we have one less now. 107 00:09:25,000 --> 00:09:33,000 As the Greensboro Homicide Squad investigates the fresh leads that Nancy Meyer has given them, sightings will try to keep you updated on their progress. 108 00:09:33,000 --> 00:09:37,000 Meanwhile, the search for Skipper's murderer continues. 109 00:09:37,000 --> 00:09:41,000 Next, the surprising healing powers of Earth's sacred sights. 110 00:09:41,000 --> 00:09:48,000 The sacred sights are wonderful to take the kids to because it gives them a chance to start over and turn over new leaf. 111 00:09:54,000 --> 00:10:00,000 Teachers who work with troubled kids know that the only rule is that there are no rules. 112 00:10:00,000 --> 00:10:05,000 And as so often happens, programs that were once tried and true just don't seem to work anymore. 113 00:10:05,000 --> 00:10:13,000 Perhaps that's why new and controversial programs that expose teens to the paranormal are gaining a foothold in the classroom. 114 00:10:13,000 --> 00:10:26,000 What good are ancient mystical practices in the 20th century world of chaos, conflict and senseless violence? 115 00:10:26,000 --> 00:10:32,000 What can shamans or cloistered monks offer to children who aren't even safe in their own neighborhoods? 116 00:10:32,000 --> 00:10:34,000 Apparently, quite a lot. 117 00:10:35,000 --> 00:10:46,000 In Los Angeles, a foundation called Healing the Causes of Violence has brought in Tibetan monks to teach juvenile offenders meditation and the sacred ritual of sand painting. 118 00:10:46,000 --> 00:10:52,000 We introduce the Tibetan culture because one of the things with children like this, their view of the world is quite narrow. 119 00:10:52,000 --> 00:10:55,000 In fact, they don't know anything outside of their immediate neighborhood. 120 00:10:55,000 --> 00:11:03,000 The fire walk of ancient cultures is now reborn as a way to instill courage and self-esteem in troubled teens. 121 00:11:03,000 --> 00:11:10,000 The benefit of walking on fire is the very fact that they are taking more action in their lives and thus taking more control in their lives. 122 00:11:13,000 --> 00:11:19,000 And kids with deep emotional problems are being taken to sacred Native American sites. 123 00:11:19,000 --> 00:11:24,000 It is here, many of them say, that they feel peaceful for the first time. 124 00:11:24,000 --> 00:11:32,000 Sacred sites emit a certain amount of geo-anomaly energy that you're not going to find in other places. 125 00:11:32,000 --> 00:11:37,000 And those earth energy frequencies can affect our brain chemicals. 126 00:11:37,000 --> 00:11:44,000 And that brain chemistry can make changes in our attitudes, in our actions and in our health. 127 00:11:44,000 --> 00:11:54,000 Bernice Barlow has two careers. She is an Earth Mysteries researcher and writer who has long espoused the healing power of Native American sacred sites. 128 00:11:54,000 --> 00:11:58,000 Bernice is also a counselor who works with out-of-control teens. 129 00:11:58,000 --> 00:12:06,000 And recently, when she began combining the two into one new therapy, Bernice discovered that the results were magical. 130 00:12:07,000 --> 00:12:17,000 Tight-lipped, angry kids began to open up because Bernice says the energy flowing from sacred sites can reach into the deepest recesses of the human heart. 131 00:12:17,000 --> 00:12:28,000 The sacred sites are wonderful to take the kids to because it gives them a chance to start over and turn over new leaf and kind of wash away everything that's been in the past. 132 00:12:28,000 --> 00:12:42,000 So take a deep breath and release, hurt, anger, confusion, whatever you want to let go of, let go of. 133 00:12:42,000 --> 00:12:53,000 By the time he was 11, Ronnie Pilcher had been in and out of so many schools and residential treatment centers that his mother began to fear that the next stop for Ronnie would be prison. 134 00:12:53,000 --> 00:12:59,000 He wanted to run the streets, he wanted to get in and out of trouble, he's always breaking things up. 135 00:12:59,000 --> 00:13:07,000 I got in more trouble than anyone could ever imagine because I'd do anything just to get trouble. 136 00:13:07,000 --> 00:13:19,000 My first impressions of Ronnie were that he was out of control, that he manipulated adults, that he liked to get into fights, and that he was going to be a very difficult child to work with 137 00:13:19,000 --> 00:13:28,000 because he had no impulse control and he had very little respect not only for other people, but he had very, very little respect for himself. 138 00:13:28,000 --> 00:13:34,000 The McKinley School for Boys in California was Ronnie's last chance and this is where he met Bernice Barlow. 139 00:13:34,000 --> 00:13:44,000 She brought him to this sacred site and showed him the ancient rituals that Native Americans used to ease pain and heal themselves. 140 00:13:44,000 --> 00:13:54,000 Make sure all of the rocks are in perfect alignment and when everything is in line and everything is balanced, things work much better. 141 00:13:54,000 --> 00:14:05,000 He found through the earth and through the medicine wheel that he could not only find identity and belonging, but that he could learn life lessons. 142 00:14:05,000 --> 00:14:11,000 The American medicine wheel, like the Tibetan sand mandala, is used to teach and to focus thought. 143 00:14:11,000 --> 00:14:22,000 The simple wheel that Ronnie started on just explained nature, explained creation, the women's position on earth, the men's position on earth, the duality and the balance. 144 00:14:22,000 --> 00:14:35,000 The wheel for some of us was a part of us. No matter what, we would be there and it would listen to our problems and if you had open ears and you could listen, it would tell you what to do about it. 145 00:14:35,000 --> 00:14:47,000 Ronnie used it as a visual. He could actually see on the ground as the stones were placed out where he was on the earth and what position that he was supposed to take. 146 00:14:47,000 --> 00:14:49,000 He works eight and a half hours. 147 00:14:49,000 --> 00:15:00,000 Dr. Jean Quim has been a teacher and educational therapist for over 40 years. She believes Ronnie has benefited from Bernice's non-traditional approach. 148 00:15:00,000 --> 00:15:20,000 Bernice's program was an all-encompassing program. It included everything that children learn in school, not just taking in all of what children need to learn, but also administering to the needs that the children have missed out on. 149 00:15:20,000 --> 00:15:33,000 Some earth scientists hypothesize that sacred sites emit resonant waves of electromagnetism, a kind of natural biofeedback that can calm the mind and relax the body. 150 00:15:33,000 --> 00:15:42,000 Bernice believes that this may be why her students can meditate, think more deeply and speak more freely here than in a classroom. 151 00:15:42,000 --> 00:15:54,000 Think of all the things that you want to let go in your life and just like leaves on a tree, just watch them float down to the earth. 152 00:15:54,000 --> 00:16:10,000 The human resonance will eventually cause the body to slow down and get in concert with the earth resonance and that's where the kids find control. That's where they find creativity and that's where they find themselves. 153 00:16:11,000 --> 00:16:21,000 What sacred sites have done for me is getting to know my inner self instead of approaching my outer self and doing what I usually do, violence. 154 00:16:21,000 --> 00:16:39,000 Ronnie's progress has been phenomenal. I see the changes in Ronnie at the sacred sites. He becomes more spiritual. He is more in control and Ronnie in control is a child that has a great future, a great future. 155 00:16:40,000 --> 00:16:49,000 And as Ronnie begins community college, his progress is being echoed by other teenagers exposed to the sacred rituals of the past. 156 00:16:49,000 --> 00:16:59,000 It did wonders for me in the manners of respecting other people. The sacred sites are a source of energy what's greater than you can ever think of. 157 00:17:00,000 --> 00:17:10,000 Since his exposure to the sacred healing program, Ronnie Pilcher has formulated a plan for his own future. First, he plans to finish college, then enlist in the service. 158 00:17:10,000 --> 00:17:17,000 Ronnie tells sightings that his ultimate goal is to become an army medic so that he can dedicate his life to helping others. 159 00:17:18,000 --> 00:17:28,000 Next, getting inside Area 51. The astrological signs of the times and later re-examining Project Blue Book. 160 00:17:36,000 --> 00:17:44,000 Here are some of the stories sightings has been following in the news. It's known as Groom Lake, Dreamland, Area 51. 161 00:17:44,000 --> 00:17:57,000 A super secret military installation where many people believe extraterrestrials are being held against their will. After years of speculation, finally you can peek under the veil of secrecy via your computer. 162 00:18:02,000 --> 00:18:09,000 On the worldwide web, Dreamland Interactive is the closest most people will ever get to entering Area 51. 163 00:18:09,000 --> 00:18:17,000 Information on the Dreamland site comes from declassified documents and secret sources with an ample sprinkling of rumor and conjecture. 164 00:18:17,000 --> 00:18:27,000 Longtime UFO researcher Ernie Green has designed the site to resemble a virtual Area 51 where users can explore and then discuss UFO projects. 165 00:18:27,000 --> 00:18:37,000 The site also covers a wide array of other UFO related topics including aliens, black projects, government disinformation and abductions. 166 00:18:37,000 --> 00:18:46,000 New images are being added all the time such as this newly discovered crop circle and more cattle deaths which some say are UFO related. 167 00:18:46,000 --> 00:18:55,000 Green prides himself on being a hands-on designer and ufologist and he says he is constantly updating and expanding his site. 168 00:18:55,000 --> 00:19:03,000 If you'd like to connect with Dreamland Interactive, the address is www.tripledub.fordreamland.com. 169 00:19:08,000 --> 00:19:17,000 In Phoenix, Arizona, the release of a new book from world-renowned astrologer Noelle Till takes prophecy and prediction in a whole new direction. 170 00:19:17,000 --> 00:19:29,000 In predictions for new millennium, Till has compiled an unusual collection of birth charts but these don't chart the future path of any individual, rather the future course of nations. 171 00:19:29,000 --> 00:19:35,000 Nations have birth data. They are born just as individuals are. 172 00:19:35,000 --> 00:19:42,000 We have an imprint placed upon us by the time, date, place of our birth. 173 00:19:42,000 --> 00:19:51,000 This portrait becomes your personality, your list of potentials, the dynamism of your presentation to your future. 174 00:19:51,000 --> 00:20:04,000 Critics charge that Till's predictions are based on a pseudo-science more relevant for comic books than world leaders, but Till's traditional research methods and computer simulations do seem to give him an edge. 175 00:20:04,000 --> 00:20:18,000 There's nothing supernatural about it. It is a method of measurement. It's like projecting stocks or predicting the weather or a doctor telling you about the prognosis for disease. 176 00:20:18,000 --> 00:20:27,000 In the past, Till has impressed even his detractors with accurate predictions about the fall of the USSR, the Gulf War, and the Arab-Israeli Peace Accord. 177 00:20:27,000 --> 00:20:42,000 As an astrologer, I know the past feeds the future and we were able in studying the past in a special humanistic way to come up with the themes that will change the world. 178 00:20:42,000 --> 00:20:47,000 Till predicts that China will dominate economically and the US will dominate politically. 179 00:20:47,000 --> 00:20:57,000 A president will die in office near the turn of the 21st century and Till believes that the year 2005 will be the most dramatic in the history of humankind. 180 00:20:57,000 --> 00:21:08,000 2004 and 2005. The United States has a tremendous probability of making contact with outer space intelligence. 181 00:21:08,000 --> 00:21:17,000 And Till says this contact will redraw the boundaries of not only the cosmos, but of Earth and the new age of global accord will emerge. 182 00:21:21,000 --> 00:21:26,000 We'll have more stories in the news next time. Now, here's what's coming up as sightings continues. 183 00:21:27,000 --> 00:21:32,000 Operation Blue Book was the government's only official investigation of UFOs. 184 00:21:32,000 --> 00:21:38,000 I don't think they want the public to know that they don't have the answer for it. So maybe that's where this conspiracy idea comes from. 185 00:21:38,000 --> 00:21:42,000 Find out why it's raised more questions than its answer. 186 00:21:48,000 --> 00:21:56,000 In 1969, the Beatles were in, Shorthair was out, and the Air Force slammed the door on Project Blue Book. 187 00:21:56,000 --> 00:22:00,000 The US government's only acknowledged study of UFOs and extraterrestrials. 188 00:22:00,000 --> 00:22:08,000 By terminating official interest in flying saucers in Little Green Man, the Air Force thought that public interest in UFOs would also disappear. 189 00:22:08,000 --> 00:22:11,000 It didn't. And it still hasn't. 190 00:22:17,000 --> 00:22:21,000 Several important milestones captured the nation's attention in 1969. 191 00:22:21,000 --> 00:22:23,000 Neil Armstrong stepped onto the moon. 192 00:22:23,000 --> 00:22:31,000 Flower power peaked in a muddy farm in upstate New York, and the war in Vietnam was raging under Richard Nixon's watch. 193 00:22:31,000 --> 00:22:40,000 And on December 17, 1969, few were aware that the Air Force, with little fanfare, terminated its 22-year-long Project Blue Book. 194 00:22:42,000 --> 00:22:47,000 Veteran UFO investigators like Don Berliner have been asking why ever since. 195 00:22:47,000 --> 00:22:57,000 From the shutting down of Blue Book, until today, the Air Force hasn't said anything beyond, we've studied the subject, there's nothing to it, we've lost interest. 196 00:22:58,000 --> 00:23:00,000 I don't believe it. 197 00:23:00,000 --> 00:23:05,000 Berliner believes that the military has covered up the UFO reality from day one. 198 00:23:05,000 --> 00:23:12,000 Ever since the very first sighting of the Air Force examined, Kenneth Arnold's disturbing saucer sighting of 1947. 199 00:23:12,000 --> 00:23:17,000 Soon after, growing concerns about national security led to the creation of Blue Book. 200 00:23:17,000 --> 00:23:26,000 Since the Air Force has the responsibility of protecting our skies, if there's something flying around, they better know what it is. 201 00:23:26,000 --> 00:23:30,000 Because there was fear initially that they might be Soviet. 202 00:23:30,000 --> 00:23:44,000 As the program grew, and additional sightings were investigated, they suddenly decided, well, there is a possibility that these things are from extraterrestrial origins. 203 00:23:44,000 --> 00:23:52,000 This didn't go down well with the higher-ups. They wanted everything explained, no matter how it was done. 204 00:23:52,000 --> 00:23:58,000 The kind of explanation the higher-ups were demanding was not one that countenanced visitors from another planet. 205 00:23:58,000 --> 00:24:05,000 This was never more evident than in 1952, during the infamous UFO flap over Washington, D.C. 206 00:24:05,000 --> 00:24:12,000 Despite solid radar returns, Blue Book said it was either weird weather or a misidentified weather balloon. 207 00:24:12,000 --> 00:24:19,000 Hundreds of reports showed the data and the explanation have no relation to each other. 208 00:24:19,000 --> 00:24:26,000 A typical case, two military pilots chase something that looks like an aluminum 50-foot disc. 209 00:24:26,000 --> 00:24:31,000 And when it's all over, Blue Book decides that it was two balloons. 210 00:24:31,000 --> 00:24:36,000 Not one. They only saw one thing, but it ends up as two balloons. 211 00:24:36,000 --> 00:24:42,000 It's not the sort of thing where you could argue the fine points. There are no fine points. 212 00:24:42,000 --> 00:24:45,000 Even the Air Force conceded that they couldn't explain everything. 213 00:24:45,000 --> 00:24:52,000 When Blue Book closed in 1969, 5% of all cases were still categorized as unknown. 214 00:24:52,000 --> 00:24:57,000 Uphologists say the government is being less than candid about what they really know, 215 00:24:57,000 --> 00:25:01,000 but a filmmaker and Defense Department consultant disagrees. 216 00:25:01,000 --> 00:25:07,000 I don't see a cover-up. I think that they're very puzzled by this phenomenon and can't get a handle on it. 217 00:25:07,000 --> 00:25:11,000 It's sort of like, I don't think they want the public to know that they don't have the answer for it. 218 00:25:11,000 --> 00:25:14,000 So maybe that's where this conspiracy idea comes from. 219 00:25:14,000 --> 00:25:23,000 Robert Friend headed up Blue Book from 1958 to 1963 and insists that the project was open-minded about UFOs. 220 00:25:23,000 --> 00:25:28,000 UFOs exist. Alien spacecraft, that's another thing. 221 00:25:28,000 --> 00:25:32,000 I don't believe all these people are running around reporting things that they imagine. 222 00:25:32,000 --> 00:25:38,000 They see something and that's a UFO. It's unidentified and it's an object. 223 00:25:38,000 --> 00:25:41,000 But that's still not an Air Force mission. 224 00:25:41,000 --> 00:25:46,000 The Air Force's concern was whether or not it had any intelligence value 225 00:25:46,000 --> 00:25:51,000 and whether or not it constituted a threat to our national security. 226 00:25:51,000 --> 00:25:58,000 Uphologists don't believe that Robert Friend is hiding the truth, just that he wasn't in on all the secrets. 227 00:25:58,000 --> 00:26:09,000 Whether or not there was a second or third investigation behind the smokescreen of Project Blue Book is still highly debatable. 228 00:26:09,000 --> 00:26:14,000 I certainly hope there was. I'd hate to think that Project Blue Book was the best we could do. 229 00:26:14,000 --> 00:26:18,000 If a hidden agenda existed, Berliner was determined to expose it. 230 00:26:18,000 --> 00:26:27,000 In 1974, he obtained Air Force permission to copy nearly 600 of the more than 12,000 cases in the official Blue Book files. 231 00:26:27,000 --> 00:26:35,000 There were dozens of file drawers full and I only had a week, so I had to concentrate on the unexplained cases. 232 00:26:35,000 --> 00:26:40,000 And so I managed to get all the information, including witness names. 233 00:26:40,000 --> 00:26:47,000 The Air Force then decided that they were afraid of suits under the Privacy Act if the names of witnesses got out. 234 00:26:47,000 --> 00:26:54,000 So they pulled the files out of circulation, removed all identification of witnesses, forgetting that I already had hundreds of them. 235 00:26:54,000 --> 00:26:59,000 The Air Force sent the newly censored documents to the National Archives in 1976, 236 00:26:59,000 --> 00:27:02,000 and those are what UFO researchers will find to this day. 237 00:27:02,000 --> 00:27:07,000 Thousands of documents with identifying information blacked out or unreadable. 238 00:27:07,000 --> 00:27:12,000 They wanted to make it as difficult as possible for people to reinvestigate cases. 239 00:27:12,000 --> 00:27:21,000 You can't tell if a report came from a nearsighted plumber or from the commander of an Air Force fighter squadron. 240 00:27:21,000 --> 00:27:26,000 According to friend, blackouts protect private citizens, not the government. 241 00:27:26,000 --> 00:27:33,000 I'm not saying that there isn't life somewhere in this huge cosmos. 242 00:27:33,000 --> 00:27:43,000 What I am saying is that I don't believe that anyone yet has solved the problem of getting across these vast distances. 243 00:27:43,000 --> 00:27:48,000 One Blue Book investigator who didn't tow the party line was Jay Allen Heineck, 244 00:27:48,000 --> 00:27:53,000 an astronomy professor who would later coin the term, close encounters of the third kind. 245 00:27:54,000 --> 00:27:59,000 Dr. Jay Allen Heineck was the Air Force consultant in astronomy, 246 00:27:59,000 --> 00:28:03,000 and he had been working for the Air Force since 1948. 247 00:28:03,000 --> 00:28:09,000 He had been rather avid skeptic about the whole thing until he got to the Lonnie Zamora case. 248 00:28:09,000 --> 00:28:16,000 In 1964, Lonnie Zamora reported that an Ovoid spacecraft had landed near Socorro, New Mexico. 249 00:28:16,000 --> 00:28:22,000 It was a pivotal case for a lot of skeptics because Zamora, a police officer, was such a credible witness. 250 00:28:22,000 --> 00:28:26,000 And his report was followed by more reliable sightings all over the country. 251 00:28:26,000 --> 00:28:33,000 So many, in fact, that at Heineck Surgeon, the Air Force commissioned its first scientific UFO investigation. 252 00:28:33,000 --> 00:28:44,000 And the University of Colorado took the contract for about a half a million dollars and studied it for about two years before they issued their report. 253 00:28:44,000 --> 00:28:50,000 And then when their report came out negative, then the Air Force said, OK, we're out of the UFO business. 254 00:28:50,000 --> 00:28:58,000 Paul believes the panel was intentionally misled and that their report was an elaborate ruse and a defining moment in UFO history. 255 00:28:58,000 --> 00:29:04,000 Stephen Friedman defines it as the moment the government alienated millions of its people. 256 00:29:04,000 --> 00:29:09,000 Most people think most people don't believe in UFOs even though all the polls have consistently shown, 257 00:29:09,000 --> 00:29:16,000 not only that most people do believe in UFOs, but that the greater the education, the more likely to believe in UFOs. 258 00:29:16,000 --> 00:29:30,000 The legacy of Project Blue Book is that the Air Force could have done a terrific job of investigating thousands of potentially important UFO cases, but didn't. 259 00:29:30,000 --> 00:29:32,000 A ton of information was ignored. 260 00:29:32,000 --> 00:29:39,000 But the information is out there, somewhere, and we all have the right to see it, ufologists say. 261 00:29:39,000 --> 00:29:50,000 But while researchers continue to unearth evidence of a cover-up, the Air Force continues to insist that UFOs pose no threat, do not advance science, and do not come from outer space. 262 00:29:50,000 --> 00:29:59,000 But lingering doubts, even within the hallowed halls of the Pentagon itself, indicate that the death of Blue Book may have been premature. 263 00:29:59,000 --> 00:30:10,000 In 1969, an American citizen inquiring why Project Blue Book was dropped likely received a form letter stating, 264 00:30:10,000 --> 00:30:16,000 quote, there is no evidence to indicate that further investigation of UFOs is warranted, end quote. 265 00:30:16,000 --> 00:30:23,000 And if you inquire about Blue Book at the Air Force today, you will receive an almost identical form letter. 266 00:30:23,000 --> 00:30:28,000 Next, how computer science will make it possible to store a life in cyberspace. 267 00:30:28,000 --> 00:30:33,000 We're not talking about recording consciousness, we're talking about television. 268 00:30:40,000 --> 00:30:43,000 Will cyborgs one day rule the galaxy? 269 00:30:43,000 --> 00:30:51,000 Researchers at British Telecom have already conceived of a device that makes a future world of human replicants a distinct possibility. 270 00:30:52,000 --> 00:31:03,000 The idea is founded on the theory that extraordinary advances in microchip technology will soon allow you to record for posterity everything you see, feel, and think. 271 00:31:12,000 --> 00:31:14,000 At birth, it was implanted. 272 00:31:14,000 --> 00:31:17,000 Now, at death, it is being impounded. 273 00:31:18,000 --> 00:31:24,000 Doctors are removing something from this man's brain that contains a recording of every moment of his life. 274 00:31:24,000 --> 00:31:31,000 It's installed in a computer, and now that computer controlled by the human brain will live on forever. 275 00:31:31,000 --> 00:31:38,000 This is not a science fiction movie. It is the future, a microchip capable of storing your consciousness. 276 00:31:38,000 --> 00:31:44,000 It's been dubbed the soul catcher, and futurists predict that the technology may be ready within the next 30 years. 277 00:31:45,000 --> 00:31:56,000 I think it would just take a form of a record of what your mind was doing at that time, what impulses were coming into your mind, what you were seeing through your eyes and hearing through your ears and so on. 278 00:31:56,000 --> 00:32:00,000 Maybe even what you were feeling, all the different impulses into your brain. 279 00:32:00,000 --> 00:32:03,000 Ian Pearson is a professional dreamer. 280 00:32:03,000 --> 00:32:10,000 As a futurologist for British Telecom, the worldwide communications giant, Pearson's job is to predict the future, 281 00:32:10,000 --> 00:32:14,000 not through a crystal ball or tea leaves, but with scientific vision. 282 00:32:16,000 --> 00:32:21,000 What I do is I talk to a lot of experts and I read a lot of industry press and so on, 283 00:32:21,000 --> 00:32:27,000 and try to keep well informed on what's happening now and make some guesswork as to where it's going to be in next year's time. 284 00:32:27,000 --> 00:32:35,000 Pearson conceived of the soul catcher after figuring out that the sum total of an 80-year-old's consciousness equals 10 terabytes, 285 00:32:35,000 --> 00:32:43,000 10 million million bytes of computer memory, an amount, says Pearson, that computers will soon be able to process. 286 00:32:44,000 --> 00:32:49,000 We expect a computer by 2015 to have roughly the same memory capacity as you do, 287 00:32:49,000 --> 00:32:55,000 and we expect it all surround about the same time, plus or minus five years, to have the same intelligence. 288 00:32:55,000 --> 00:33:04,000 No one questions Pearson's timeframe for the necessary technology, but could a plastic machine loaded with your consciousness ever really be you? 289 00:33:05,000 --> 00:33:16,000 Well, if I have this right, they're talking about implants that would record all of an individual's audio-visual input throughout their lifetime, 290 00:33:16,000 --> 00:33:23,000 which, as far as I can see, would leave you with an 80-year-long home video. 291 00:33:23,000 --> 00:33:28,000 It's a very western concept of existence. 292 00:33:28,000 --> 00:33:36,000 William Gibson burst onto the science fiction scene in 1984 with the publication of Neuromancer, in which he coined the term cyberspace. 293 00:33:36,000 --> 00:33:43,000 In his screenplay for Johnny Mnemonic, Gibson wrote about a man who could upload his brain directly, 294 00:33:43,000 --> 00:33:51,000 but the reality of recording and storing human consciousness in a computer, Gibson says, is not even close to science fiction. 295 00:33:52,000 --> 00:34:03,000 Imagine that we could go back and implant one of these things for one day in Einstein, and then get it back to the time machine and run it back. 296 00:34:03,000 --> 00:34:10,000 We're sitting there, Einstein has stopped, he's looking at a tree, he looks at the tree for 15 minutes, and then he walks on. 297 00:34:10,000 --> 00:34:15,000 What we all want to know is what was he thinking about, which we don't know. 298 00:34:15,000 --> 00:34:20,000 So we're not talking about recording consciousness, we're talking about television. 299 00:34:20,000 --> 00:34:24,000 Doctors and scientists who study the brain agree. 300 00:34:24,000 --> 00:34:29,000 Human consciousness isn't simply a matter of record, rewind, and playback. 301 00:34:29,000 --> 00:34:38,000 The whole notion of uploading the wiring in someone's brain at death so that you boot up the computer and there's the person back. 302 00:34:38,000 --> 00:34:49,000 The sort of pure mind and soliloquial notion that you get from this, I think is very unlikely simply because a brain without a body 303 00:34:49,000 --> 00:34:51,000 is really a fish out of water. 304 00:34:51,000 --> 00:34:56,000 William Calvin is a theoretical neurophysiologist at the University of Washington in Seattle. 305 00:34:56,000 --> 00:35:04,000 In his just published book, How Brains Think, Calvin puts the notion of a soul catcher implant in perspective. 306 00:35:06,000 --> 00:35:11,000 That sort of neural tap is further away than I think people realize. 307 00:35:11,000 --> 00:35:16,000 We don't know the coding schemes yet that you'd have to mimic to do these things. 308 00:35:16,000 --> 00:35:23,000 We are capable of only handling about a dozen nerve cells at the same time with any precision. 309 00:35:23,000 --> 00:35:28,000 And to do anything fancy would require millions. 310 00:35:28,000 --> 00:35:34,000 Building a computer with enough memory to replicate the way the human brain works may be centuries away, 311 00:35:34,000 --> 00:35:39,000 but perhaps that is not the only way to create true consciousness in a machine. 312 00:35:39,000 --> 00:35:42,000 We'll get a lot better at some point. 313 00:35:42,000 --> 00:35:46,000 There has been work done that it has people actually controlling computers, 314 00:35:46,000 --> 00:35:51,000 especially people with severe handicaps with the nerve signals from muscles in their head. 315 00:35:51,000 --> 00:35:59,000 Computer engineer Keith Henson has devoted much of his career to the exploration of computer brain interface. 316 00:35:59,000 --> 00:36:05,000 As nanotechnology comes along, we'll be able to tap into what's going on in human brains. 317 00:36:05,000 --> 00:36:10,000 Being able to actually, if you will, eavesdrop on the connections that are being made between nerve cells 318 00:36:10,000 --> 00:36:16,000 and something very close to telepathy will exist between human beings and their computer counterparts. 319 00:36:16,000 --> 00:36:22,000 Nanotechnology is a newly emerging field of engineering that's working toward building machines smaller than a single human cell. 320 00:36:22,000 --> 00:36:28,000 In lay terms, instead of putting your brain in a computer, we'll have the ability to put a computer in your brain, 321 00:36:28,000 --> 00:36:33,000 but does an essentially battery-operated brain without a body equal immortality. 322 00:36:33,000 --> 00:36:43,000 I would define relative immortality as some sort of ongoing consciousness for me, 323 00:36:43,000 --> 00:36:53,000 as opposed to those models in which, say, my consciousness is downloaded into something else, which then becomes immortal. 324 00:36:53,000 --> 00:36:58,000 But I have to stand there watching it walk away, and I will subsequently die. 325 00:36:58,000 --> 00:37:09,000 So, personally, if they can't continue my consciousness from in here, from this point, it's not immortality. 326 00:37:09,000 --> 00:37:16,000 While it is true, as William Gibson says, that we know very little about the essence and the mechanics of human consciousness, 327 00:37:16,000 --> 00:37:22,000 it is also true that figuring out what makes us who we are is not beyond knowing. 328 00:37:23,000 --> 00:37:28,000 It's very difficult to know exactly what people will do with such kinds of abilities. 329 00:37:28,000 --> 00:37:34,000 I think that we are far less than a century away from, if you will, almost transcended humanity. 330 00:37:34,000 --> 00:37:41,000 People that are so far above us in their ability to think and to comprehend it, to understand the universe that's around us, 331 00:37:41,000 --> 00:37:45,000 that it will be very difficult for them to even relate to our era. 332 00:37:45,000 --> 00:37:53,000 It should be emphasized that right now, soul catcher experiments are still at the theoretical stage. 333 00:37:53,000 --> 00:37:57,000 But the ethical implications of human testing need to be addressed now. 334 00:37:57,000 --> 00:38:04,000 We should start to formulate an ethical standard for microchip implants, before computers decide for us. 335 00:38:04,000 --> 00:38:08,000 Next, the angelic mission of a former drug user. 336 00:38:09,000 --> 00:38:15,000 Instead of going home and doing a line of coke or drinking a beer, I wanted to create my angels. 337 00:38:22,000 --> 00:38:25,000 On a past edition of Sightings, we introduced you to Andy Lakey. 338 00:38:25,000 --> 00:38:32,000 He's an artist and philosopher, who's driven by a mysterious desire to paint 2,000 angel pictures by the year 2000. 339 00:38:32,000 --> 00:38:39,000 A visit with Andy today finds him still in his studio, but also on the streets, helping kids stay off drugs. 340 00:38:39,000 --> 00:38:48,000 He's developed his own unique program because Andy once walked that dark road himself, and knows how to fight back and win. 341 00:38:48,000 --> 00:38:50,000 Do you like to paint, too? 342 00:38:50,000 --> 00:38:56,000 When artist Andy Lakey was a boy this age, he wasn't creative, compassionate, or even really here at all. 343 00:38:56,000 --> 00:38:58,000 He was a drug addict. 344 00:38:58,000 --> 00:39:03,000 My next-door neighbor was my 7th grade buddy. His brother was a high school drug dealer. 345 00:39:03,000 --> 00:39:08,000 So I used to dabble and smoke a little pot back then. That continued into my adult life. 346 00:39:08,000 --> 00:39:15,000 Andy thought he was just a dabbler, that he could stop anytime he wanted, but a brush with death in 1986 proved him wrong. 347 00:39:15,000 --> 00:39:19,000 That night, we were free-basing coke and snorting a little coke. 348 00:39:19,000 --> 00:39:23,000 I felt my body shutting down, and in the party, I wanted to get out of the party. 349 00:39:23,000 --> 00:39:28,000 I felt paranoid, I felt embarrassed. I felt like if I was going to die, I wanted to die alone. 350 00:39:28,000 --> 00:39:35,000 I got down to my apartment, I literally fell into my apartment, and all I knew is I wanted to get near water. 351 00:39:35,000 --> 00:39:41,000 So I crawled to the shower, I crawled into the shower, turned the cold water on, my clothes were still on, 352 00:39:41,000 --> 00:39:46,000 and I remember the water going all over my face and going down back on my neck. 353 00:39:46,000 --> 00:39:51,000 I started to pray to God for the first time since I was 8 years old, that if he'd let me live, 354 00:39:51,000 --> 00:39:57,000 not only would I quit doing drugs, it's easy to say that at that moment, but I'd do something to help mankind. 355 00:39:57,000 --> 00:40:01,000 And a tourniquet sensation almost instantly started to happen. 356 00:40:01,000 --> 00:40:04,000 The best way to describe it is like a mini tornado. 357 00:40:04,000 --> 00:40:11,000 And there were 7 figures on the bottom around my feet. These 7 figures turned into one and they put their arms around me. 358 00:40:11,000 --> 00:40:19,000 The figures looked like there was 2 arms or stubs that were sticking out with a head that was elevated above the body 359 00:40:19,000 --> 00:40:22,000 with just a very narrow, smooth torso. 360 00:40:22,000 --> 00:40:29,000 Andy had overdosed and ended up in the hospital. It was the beginning of a new and drug-free life. 361 00:40:29,000 --> 00:40:34,000 Andy gives a lot of the credit to the amorphous figures who appeared to him near death. 362 00:40:34,000 --> 00:40:40,000 They're called Lakey's Angels and have become the inspiration for Andy's life work, the subject of his art. 363 00:40:40,000 --> 00:40:47,000 Instead of going home and doing a line of coke or drinking a beer, I wanted to create my Angels. 364 00:40:47,000 --> 00:41:00,000 First they were doodles, then sketches. Then in 1989, Andy Lakey walked out on a lucrative career to devote his full time to celebrating his Angels through paint and canvas. 365 00:41:00,000 --> 00:41:09,000 Soon the figures that changed Andy's life were reaching out and healing others, like Matthew, who, after the Northridge earthquake of 1994, 366 00:41:09,000 --> 00:41:13,000 developed a serious condition requiring surgery. 367 00:41:13,000 --> 00:41:19,000 The night before my surgery there was a special on Andy's artwork and stories about other Angels. 368 00:41:19,000 --> 00:41:26,000 And when I walked off of the elevator for my surgery, there in front of me was a picture of Andy's. 369 00:41:26,000 --> 00:41:32,000 As I touched it and felt it, I felt relaxed and I felt like I had an inner peace in me. 370 00:41:32,000 --> 00:41:39,000 I wasn't as scared about my surgery and I felt like somebody was telling me that everything is going to be okay and not to be scared. 371 00:41:39,000 --> 00:41:47,000 Matthew was not the only member of his family to be transformed by Lakey's Angels. His mother and brother felt the power of the paintings too. 372 00:41:47,000 --> 00:41:54,000 Just feeling those Angels, you can feel the power that comes from them, the calmness, the serenity. 373 00:41:54,000 --> 00:42:12,000 I believe in Angels. I've always believed in them, but the Northridge earthquake, I got so scared I went into my mom's room and my brother bought me one of Andy's paintings 374 00:42:12,000 --> 00:42:18,000 and it makes me less nervous about the earthquake and I'm not as scared anymore. 375 00:42:19,000 --> 00:42:29,000 When Siding's first brought you Andy's likey story, he had just completed 1,000 of the 2,000 paintings he said the Angels had asked him to complete by the year 2000. 376 00:42:29,000 --> 00:42:40,000 Since then he has completed 650 more and just recently Andy initiated a program to ensure that many of his last Angel pieces will make a real difference in the world. 377 00:42:40,000 --> 00:42:50,000 Well if children out there send me a letter, if they're 18 years older under, in the letter if they write that they promise they won't do drugs or smoke cigarettes, 378 00:42:50,000 --> 00:42:58,000 at least till they're out of high school I'll send them an original drawing or a painting or a sketch, something originally created by me from my studio. 379 00:42:58,000 --> 00:43:01,000 The response to Andy's offer has been overwhelming. 380 00:43:01,000 --> 00:43:10,000 I've received thousands of letters from kids from all over America and it's really exciting when you look at a 9 year old or a 10 year old or an 18 year old saying Andy, 381 00:43:10,000 --> 00:43:11,000 or dear Mr. Lake I promise that. 382 00:43:11,000 --> 00:43:16,000 I promise I will never do drugs, drink alcohol, smoke cigarettes or do anything bad like that. 383 00:43:16,000 --> 00:43:23,000 I'm 11 years old and I want to live until I'm 100. I have always believed in Angels, love Ashley. 384 00:43:24,000 --> 00:43:31,000 So if I can get kids to focus in on their schools and not doing drugs it makes me feel that you know what I went through is well worth it. 385 00:43:31,000 --> 00:43:38,000 Andy continues to share his story and his artwork with the world, especially the children who've been touched by Lakey's Angels. 386 00:43:38,000 --> 00:43:44,000 He's released an autobiography titled Andy Lakey, Art, Angels and Miracles. 387 00:43:44,000 --> 00:43:49,000 And he has a web page that Andy hopes will be a permanent ray of hope in cyberspace. 388 00:43:49,000 --> 00:43:59,000 I was a person on a path of self destruction, but today I'm able to focus and because of my experiences know that anything is possible in this world. 389 00:44:01,000 --> 00:44:06,000 Andy Lakey enthusiastically encourages anyone interested in this program to contact him directly. 390 00:44:06,000 --> 00:44:09,000 If you're interested you can reach Andy via the internet. 391 00:44:09,000 --> 00:44:14,000 His address is www.lakeyart.com. 392 00:44:19,000 --> 00:44:23,000 If you've had a paranormal experience please write to us at Cytings. 393 00:44:23,000 --> 00:44:27,000 Cytings can also be contacted at America Online at keyword Cytings. 394 00:44:27,000 --> 00:44:31,000 Download images, sounds and quick time clips from Cytings episodes. 395 00:44:31,000 --> 00:44:38,000 On the internet access information about Cytings and the paranormal at sci-fi.com slash Cytings. 396 00:44:38,000 --> 00:44:43,000 Until next time remember no mystery is closed to an open mind. 397 00:44:43,000 --> 00:44:46,000 For Cytings, I'm Tim White. 398 00:44:50,000 --> 00:44:53,000 Next on Sci-Fi Dark Shadows 399 00:44:57,000 --> 00:44:59,000 I got two more bogies coming in hot. 400 00:44:59,000 --> 00:45:01,000 Let's make them bleed. 401 00:45:02,000 --> 00:45:04,000 Matthew Lillard, Freddie Prinze Jr. 402 00:45:04,000 --> 00:45:06,000 I love this baby. 403 00:45:07,000 --> 00:45:10,000 Wing Commander, Thursday at 9. 404 00:45:10,000 --> 00:45:12,000 On Sci-Fi. 405 00:45:19,000 --> 00:45:24,000 Sci-Fi Dark Shadows