Stuff You Should Know - How Area 51 Works
Episode Date: June 13, 2019The secret military base Area 51 is inextricably linked to every secret, shady project the US government is rumored to be involved in – from reverse-engineering alien technology to coordinating a on...e-world government. The truth is much more mundane. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know,
a production of iHeartRadio's How Stuff Works.
["How Stuff Works"]
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark, and there's Charles W. Chuck Bryant
over there, and there's Dylan, the guest producer again.
And this is...
Stop it, you should know.
The podcast.
Mm-hmm. About Chuck, some pretty heady stuff.
Yeah, I could have sworn we did this one.
No.
What'd we do, Roswell?
No. UFOs?
Yes.
We did that at a Comic-Con or something, right?
Yeah, we did, we did it live.
I've never been satisfied with that one.
I agree.
Maybe we'll redo it one day.
No, this is good, this Area 51.
I think this kind of covers some ground
that I didn't think...
I was surprised by this, is what I'm saying.
Yeah, me too.
And I think the thing that I would wager,
you were surprised about,
which I was definitely surprised about,
was just how mundane the explanations
for what goes on at Area 51 probably is.
Yeah, secret government research.
The end.
Right.
But it probably doesn't have anything to do
with reverse engineering alien technology
and the secret seat of the one-world government,
the Majestic 12 probably isn't located there.
No, probably just bombs and planes.
Probably, it makes sense.
And if there is a conspiracy going on,
the one conspiracy theory I saw for Area 51
that made the most sense to me
is that it's actually meant to be a distraction
or has developed into a distraction
for some other place that no one even knows about.
Area 50.
Maybe.
Maybe.
Hopefully they're not quite that on the nose,
but it's possible.
All right.
So let's go back in time, I guess, to World War II.
And well, first of all, Area 51,
just to geographically level set,
it's less than 100 miles from Las Vegas in Nevada.
South Nevada.
Yeah, it's 600 square miles.
And it's basically, if you look at it on Google Earth,
it looks like a big airfield with a bunch of buildings.
So I think the whole restricted airspace
that's part of the test range and the air base
and all of that stuff, the Area 51 is located in,
I think that's 600 square miles.
I'm pretty sure Area 51 itself is no more than 60 square miles.
Oh, yeah, sure.
Just like it's not like there's 600 square miles of buildings.
Right, it's just, yeah, the installation that people think
of as Area 51 is part of a larger, huge,
big chunk of the American desert in Nevada.
Right, so next to Area 51
is what you were kind of talking about,
the Nevada test site.
And this is where for about 10 or 11 years,
the Atomic Energy Commission was setting off nuclear bombs
underground, above ground,
and really sort of figuring out
how to kill a lot of people very easily.
And sort of the most dangerous way you could imagine.
Yeah, and you could see this from Vegas,
like they would have parties when they were doing the test
because Vegas is like 80 miles away or something like that.
And they would have like atomic cocktails
and viewing parties and stuff like that.
And people would watch them shoot off bombs.
Unbelievable.
Right, but this is obviously a part of the country
that the government would be very interested
in keeping people away from, not just for the bombs,
but because of the fallout, the radiation,
but also the fact that they're testing
like super sensitive military equipment and weapons,
right, like atomic bombs.
Yeah, like previous to this, it was just land.
It was, there were silver mines,
there was cattle and wildlife.
But then in 1940, the government said,
no, this is ours and we're gonna train bombers here.
Right.
And there was a big bombing range
and they were split into different numbers.
And that's where the number area 51 comes from,
which seems, I don't know about arbitrary,
but no one knows if it really matters
why it was named area 51.
No, I think it was, if you look at old bombing range maps,
just the area where area 51 is located
was denoted as area 51.
Between 50 and 52 is probably the answer.
Yeah, that's basically from what I saw that was it.
Yeah, so there's another part to this story
with World War II and this is Germany.
They were a bit ahead of us as far as jets go,
jet airplanes.
Yeah.
The United States was like, this won't do it all.
So we're gonna get, kind of put the gas
on our jet development.
And in 1943, Lockheed said, was tasked
with developing a jet fighter plane.
You can use a British jet engine
and they tasked engineer Kelly Johnson,
said get a team together.
He got a team together and they delivered
the P80 shooting star, which is one of the coolest
looking old jets, all these planes
are just amazing looking.
Agreed.
Yeah, very cool.
It's a good idea when we talk about a new jet
or something, go look it up as we're talking about
because most of them are pretty boss looking.
Yeah, I've never been a plane guy
but I'm getting more and more into it.
Is that right?
Yeah.
I wanna do a stealth bomber episode one day, okay?
Possibly the coolest plane.
Yeah.
So Kelly Johnson was a, just that right there
delivering America's first jet on like under time
and under budget was huge.
And he became a legendary engineer right off the bat.
And they, I think Lockheed said,
hey, how would you like to keep this pace up?
We'll give you your team of elite engineers,
whatever funding you need,
whatever resources you need, just ask, you can have it.
And you just keep developing stuff really quickly for us.
And we will put you at the cutting edge of aviation research.
And so Kelly Johnson and his team
eventually became known as the Skunk Works,
which is legendary in aviation engineering
because they developed a whole bunch of really cool stuff.
But also they had a pretty great name too,
that was fairly intriguing.
But they were the first ones to kind of basically develop
agile project management from what I understand.
Yeah, and this was all out of the,
what was known as site one,
which was in Burbank, California,
just sort of a suburb of LA.
But then in 1954, they said,
you know what we need now is a spy plane.
The CIA wants a spy plane.
We want something that can fly above radar
and photograph Soviet military bases, missile installations.
We're gonna name it, cause we name everything,
Project Aquatone.
And that's where Johnson and his team developed
the U2, the Skunk Works team.
But they couldn't do this at site one anymore
cause it had to be super, super secret, obviously,
because it was a spy plane.
So they needed a different place.
And that's where that sort of all converges
onto this testing site in Nevada.
Yeah, Kelly Johnson, CIA officer named Richard Bissell
and a couple of pilots started scouting locations
for where they could develop this in super, super secret.
And they went to look at the old Nevada test range.
And specifically the thing that attracted them
was a dry salt lake called Groom Lake.
And one of the pilots recounted taking some
like 16 pound shot put balls and dropping them on the ground
to see just how sandy the ground was.
And he said it was solid as a tabletop.
This lake was the dry lake.
They were like, this will probably do.
And there was a lot of reasons why it would do,
not just because there was a dry lake bed
that was as hard as concrete,
but because it was in an area
that was already off limits to the public.
The airspace was already restricted.
It was remote.
There were two mountain ranges
that shield the test site from view.
So this area, what became known as Area 51
was just perfect for developing
a super secret spy plane in super secret.
And so the CIA and the Skunk Works team said,
this will do, let's take this place over.
Did I ever tell you about one of the most fun things
I ever got to do as a PA?
What?
Wait, weren't you arrested by Eric Estrada?
Is that what you're gonna say?
Oh no, that stopped in.
Okay.
We did a car shoot on a dry lake bed in Death Valley.
Nice.
And they had like a big, huge line of cars in a row,
all driving in perfect synchronicity.
And the director wasn't happy
and they were like, we want all the dust is behind them.
He went, I want dust in front of them.
So the AD ran and grabbed the keys to a Mustang,
threw them to me.
And he said, get in that Mustang
and drive 100 feet in front of them as fast as you can,
fish tailing and doing donuts and stuff.
Awesome.
I was like, me?
Yeah.
Oh man, it was so much fun.
Cause this is a dry lake bed.
It's like there's just no fear of hitting anything
or flipping, like you could just do whatever you wanted.
It was wonderful.
That's cool.
It was so much fun.
Did you didn't hit a jackrabbit or anything?
Did you?
Just a couple.
No, it was fine.
It was a lot of fun.
So what was the last thing he said?
Super secret.
Yeah.
The last thing I was talking about
how amazingly perfect AD-51 is
for developing a super secret spy plane.
Yeah. So they called it Paradise Ranch
and the locals around there,
they were used to because of all the atomic bomb testing.
It kind of worked out because they weren't gonna,
first of all, it was in the middle of nowhere,
but even the nearby communities,
the ones that were close enough,
it just wasn't on anyone's radar
because they had always been doing weird things out there.
So it's not like it pricked up anyone's ears.
So it was kind of the perfect cover
to be there at Paradise Ranch,
doing these development of these spy planes and stuff.
Right, right.
So, but in addition to that,
the cover story initially that the CIA produced
was that they were a team of bomb experts
who were cleaning up unexploded munitions
from the time when it was used as a bombing range.
So that was the story they used
for why there was a sudden appearance of trucks
and people when there hadn't been
really much of anything there before.
Yeah, there were also natural barriers.
There were a couple of mountain ranges
that kind of shielded it from view.
It was already remote, the airspace was already restricted.
And then Eisenhower came along
and signed executive order 10633 in 1955,
which basically extended the airspace over area 51.
And then in 1958, a public land order made this,
basically said that this area doesn't exist anymore.
Right.
It's not on maps, it's not acknowledged.
And this is one of the huge reasons
why site to the ranch, area 51 has been so,
and we'll see later things have changed
a little bit in recent years,
but just for the government to say,
like, I don't know what you're talking about
over and over again, it's sort of crazy making.
It is, but like they would, as we'll see later,
they would say in open court,
the place where this person claims to work does not exist.
Like in court, and the judge would just be like,
what are you, how are we gonna get around this?
This is a real problem.
But from what I read Chuck,
originally area 51 was a CIA installation.
And around 1970, it transferred hands to the Air Force.
But from what I could tell, up until that point,
or at least the first several years
in the mid to late 50s and early 60s,
no one had any idea that area 51 existed.
They did a really good job of keeping that place
a genuine secret.
Not an open secret like it became later on,
but a real secret.
And one of the ways that they did that was they,
from what workers later said in like testimony
in court cases, is that like they would be interrogated
at gunpoint to see if they were actually spies.
There were all sorts of like weird loyalty tests
and things like that.
And while they were working on the U-2 spy plane,
in particular, they kept that secret so serious
that if you were out there working
and you had nothing to do with the U-2 program,
you were just a worker,
you were working on a different program,
they would move you indoors, close the doors,
close the blinds on the windows
before rolling the U-2 out or testing it.
Like you were not allowed to be outside or look.
Yeah, that was pretty like remarkable.
Like within area 51, they even had
sub-security protocols in place.
I kind of just figured like, if you were in there,
then you had access to the alien room,
you know, all the good stuff.
Right, but think about that,
because to even be on the base or in area 51,
you had to have the highest level of security clearance
you could possibly have, just to work on there.
And even if you had that,
you still couldn't see the U-2 spy plane
or know that it existed or hear people talk about it.
They wouldn't even let Bono in on it.
Nope.
So that was a terrible joke.
It was really bad.
I was really hoping we can get around that one.
No.
So the U-2 spy plane was great until it wasn't.
And that was when Francis Gary Powers was shot down in 1960
and the plane was all of a sudden
in the hand of the Soviets.
And they basically were like, well, that's the end of that.
You can't have a secret spy plane anymore
once it's in the hand of the Soviets.
And it was also a big deal because the American people
all of a sudden knew that the US government
is definitely doing things in total secret
and developing technology that no one knows about.
It was a surprise to everybody, not just the Soviets,
but also the American public, like you were saying too.
And I looked to see if this was looked upon by historians
as like the point where Americans realized
that the government did things in secret
that the American public didn't know about.
And I didn't see anything like that.
So I don't know if this is an ed comment or what,
but it makes sense.
And certainly people didn't know
that the U-2 spy plane existed.
The CIA did a really good job of keeping it secret.
But when it was out, it was pretty humiliating for the US.
And it was also a big deal that this spy plane
was shot down because Eisenhower had approached Khrushchev
and said, hey, why don't we maintain
an open airspace policy to one another
so we can keep tabs to make sure that either side
is keeping our word with our armament treaties
and the stuff we're doing, like we're enemies,
but maybe we should kind of be able to keep tabs
on one another.
And Khrushchev said, no, there's not gonna be
any open airspace policy.
And so the United States went
and developed this U-2 spy plane instead.
And when it got shot down,
flying over restricted airspace of an enemy,
that's an act of war.
And it could have gone way differently than it did.
But instead, it was a big humiliation
for the United States.
And instead of just kind of tucking tail and running,
the guy who was in charge of it for the CIA, Richard Bissell,
went to the government and said, hey, I've got an idea.
Let's get even more secret
and develop an even more secretive plane
under an even more secretive project.
And that, the government said, hey, let's do it.
We're scared of the Russians.
We'll double down.
We'll triple down if you want, buddy.
And that became Project Oxcart.
That's right.
And that was a black project.
And it was so secret and so concealed
that no one was even allowed to know
how much money was being spent.
Yeah, this is a big turning point here.
It was.
I mean, this kind of started the era
that we still live in today,
in which the military just dumps money into secret projects
where there's, that don't exist as far as anyone knows
and that there's very little oversight for.
Right, exactly.
It's really interesting.
Yeah, and apparently it was this Richard Bissell's idea.
All right, well, let's take a break.
Old Dick Bissell.
And we'll get back to Dick Bissell
and the rest of Oxcart right after this.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s,
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So one of the problems with, I guess it's not a problem
if you're comfortable with dumping money into a project.
But one of the, I guess, expenses of a super, super secret
project is that it just costs a lot more.
Background checks take time and cost money.
Putting something in a super remote location costs money.
Having extra security forces.
And it all just costs a lot more money.
I mean, it's a serious multiplier on cost to do something
that, quote unquote, doesn't exist.
Right, but in addition to that, Chuck, too,
is just the fact that the technology that was being
developed was so cutting edge, it just, by definition,
required even more money on top of the extra money
for it being so super secret.
Yeah, so OXCARD eventually led to the SR-71 Blackbird,
another amazingly cool plane.
Probably the coolest of all time, if you ask me.
Yeah, I said the stealth bomber earlier,
but the SR-71 is, it was pretty awesome.
Although there is another one later on that I'll mention.
Well, I'll go ahead and say the Bird of Prey Stealth Jet.
You like that one, huh?
It's pretty cool.
It looks a little bit like a super cool tongue depressor.
You know what I'm talking about?
I know what a tongue depressor is.
This looks like that, like a flying gray tongue depressor.
It's like a popsicle stick, though, right?
Yeah, but wider.
Okay, but the SR-71 Blackbird,
definitely not a popsicle stick.
No, no, it's just cool.
Plus, it doesn't hurt the fact that G.I. Joe,
well, Cobra, technically, had the SR-71 Blackbird
as one of their planes.
That's funny.
So OXCARD, they needed better infrastructure, basically,
and they couldn't just pour money
into the development of the jet at this point.
They had to really update all the facilities,
expanding on land, expanding in more restricted airspace,
even, that happened in 1962.
And it just sort of, I think, ingrained
the super permanence of Area 51.
And also the fact that the government said,
no, okay, this was a humiliating thing
to have our U-2 shot down,
rather than maybe we'll just kind of take another tack.
They really went further down the path
of just completely secret black projects.
And they developed some pretty amazing stuff there.
I think you were saying the Bird of Prey,
that was from the 90s, right?
Yeah, I think it's cool looking.
The F-117 Nighthawk, that's the one
that's like a single-wing stealth bomber, I believe.
Yes, and this is also where they take,
like if you capture an enemy plane,
you will take that to Area 51 to check out as well.
Yeah, there's another program at Wright-Patterson Base
in Dayton that's set up specifically for that,
but I wonder if this is even more highly sensitive,
I don't know.
I don't know.
But yeah, they've captured MiGs before,
captured radar systems, and they reverse engineered them there,
which we'll come in and pull you later on.
And then there was another one called
the Tasset Blue Stealth Bomber.
So basically any stealth aircraft,
whether it was the Stealth Blackhawks
or the Stealth Bombers that were developed
from the 60s onward,
it was probably developed and tested
in super secrecy in Area 51.
Right, so like I said, this made it just sort of a shop
that wouldn't close essentially at this point.
In 1993, there's an area known as Freedom Ridge,
very ironic name because Freedom Ridge was taken
by the government and closed off to the public.
And this is where tinfoil hats used to gather
with their binoculars to try and check out things.
And they said, no more.
Freedom Ridge is now ours.
It's called Get Outta Here Ridge.
Shot on site Ridge.
That's right.
So if you are like, get to the aliens,
what are you guys even talking about?
Aliens in Area 51 as synonymous as they are now,
and they are synonymous.
The highway that Area 51 is off of,
that the road to Area 51 is off of,
has been officially renamed by the state of Nevada
as the extraterrestrial highway.
It's Highway 305.
As synonymous as this base is with aliens and UFOs,
that's actually relatively recent.
It was operating for a good 25, 35 years, I think,
before aliens became tied to Area 51.
And there's actually a moment in time
that you can point to where it happened.
And it happened on a broadcast in May of 1989,
almost just past 30 years ago,
on KLAS, the local Las Vegas TV network.
I'm not sure what network affiliate they are,
but they had like their five o'clock news and on it,
they interviewed a guy who was anonymous,
went by the pseudonym Dennis,
and he basically said,
hey, I'm doing a lot of weird stuff out there at Area 51.
Let me tell you all about it.
Yeah, his real name was Bob Lazar.
And he, have you seen interviews with this guy?
Yeah.
Did you see the more recent one?
No, but the one where he said,
I think it was a good idea, that one?
No, I'm talking about,
there was one just from a few years ago.
I gotta say, I mean, I'm not a conspiracy guy at all,
but when you listen to Bob Lazar talk today,
he just doesn't seem like some crackpot or a weirdo,
or like he would be lying.
He hasn't like made money off of this,
or like, he's basically like, listen, man,
I kind of wish this wasn't attached to my name,
because I'm trying to run a business in Michigan,
and it doesn't help that people think I'm some UFO kook.
Bob Lazar's Alien Apples.
And he said,
oh good, and he said,
but he was like, everything that I told you was true though,
and that's just the deal,
and I don't care if anyone believes me.
He's kind of like that though too,
in the early interviews, at the very least,
he's very calm and not at all kooky,
or anything like that.
It's specifically the stuff he was talking about
that was so compelling.
Yeah, so his story is,
then you can go watch this stuff for yourself
and see it all, but he basically explains how
he's an engineer, and he was working on reverse engineering
flying saucers essentially, alien spacecraft,
and alien technology, and at one point,
he was in a room, and they left him alone
with all these files that describe alien technology
and alien autopsies, and all of this stuff,
and it's pretty remarkable to listen to.
It didn't make the hugest waves,
because it was 1989, and it was a local news station.
At first it didn't.
Yeah, and then it was picked up by Japan, oddly enough,
and after it went to Japan, it went kind of worldwide,
and before you know it, the whole area
just sort of became alien-central,
and this is, we should point out,
this also has a lot to do with the fact that
in the 70s and 80s, the United States
kind of went UFO nuts.
Oh yeah, man, there were so many great books
at the time that were coming out
that claimed everything from like,
UFOs were responsible for the muta triangle,
or Atlantis was populated by UFOs,
or the Nazca lions were for UFOs,
or the Egyptians built the pyramids with UFOs,
all that stuff came out of the 70s and 80s.
Yeah, so this all kind of coincided with Lazar
having his news interview,
and it really just kind of changed everything.
It did, right?
So he kind of like came out at a time
when America was primed to really believe it,
but if you think about it,
like everything you hear about,
and think about Area 51 today,
did not exist pre-1989, pre-Bob Lazar.
All started with Bob Lazar.
And the reason why everybody wasn't just like,
so he's just some nut who came out and said this stuff,
who cares?
How did that become truly cemented with Area 51?
Is that weirdly, some of the stuff he talked about
kind of held water.
Like he would talk about just mundane day-to-day stuff
that went on at Area 51
that seemed to be able to be correlated from locals.
Like it held up.
There was a scanner once.
He said that you would get in and out of rooms
by scanning your hands,
and it would scan the bone structure of your hand.
That was how you were identified
and could come in and out of rooms.
And supposedly somebody found,
like 30 years later,
mention of something like that
and some declassified report about Area 51.
He also, and this is what really kind of legitimized him,
he would take people out on Wednesday nights.
And at the time he would say,
I never saw what time it was,
but at the time he said it would happen,
lights would rise up in the sky
and they would do all sorts of UFO-y kind of stuff.
And the fact that he knew about these schedules
really kind of added legitimacy to his claims.
Yeah, and the new interview that I saw,
he was explaining some of the anti-gravitational
propulsion technology that the aliens had supposedly used.
He was supposedly assigned to reverse engineer.
And he was sort of walking the person through it
that was in the room.
And he was like, oh yeah, and he said,
we had this thing, it was sort of like half a basketball.
And when you went to put your hand on it,
he was like, there was this,
he was like bringing two magnets, opposite poles,
there's opposite poles that repel.
And he said, that's kind of what it felt like.
And he said, so we would drop like a golf ball
and it would just skirt off to the side
without hitting it.
And like as if it had bounced.
And the way he was describing it,
I was just like, this guy just seems so credible.
Right.
It was so like shocking.
I didn't know what to expect.
I thought he was not going to be credible, I guess.
Right.
I didn't see the interview with him,
but I read about that technology.
And by the way, everybody, you can erase your email.
It's like poles that repel each other, Chuck.
Not obviously.
Oh, right.
The anti-gravity technology is talking about
was basically saying like around the craft or whatever
that they were reverse engineering,
it would bend gravity so this could just move
right through space, basically at light speed.
That's the big suspicion among UFOlogists
who follow this stuff is that they were reverse engineering
light speed aircraft that was propelled
using anti-gravity technology on engines
that were matter, anti-matter engines.
And back in 1989, there wasn't an internet to start with,
but even if there was, you couldn't find stuff
like descriptions of anti-gravity craft at the time.
So for this guy to just come out and start talking
about this in an authoritative way,
he's an enigmatic figure for sure.
But he was also one whose credibility
was questioned right out of the gate too, right?
Yeah.
I mean, he says that he went to MIT and to Caltech.
There are no records of him being a student.
The conspiracy theorists will say like,
you know how easy it is for the government
to wipe that clean?
Do you?
Yeah, I'm like, I don't know, is that easy?
So that's what they will say.
They will also say that they also like got in touch
with his professors to make sure they never talked
and stuff like that, but that's when I get a little bit
like you can't have hundreds of people
or thousands of people involved
in some big massive cover up.
Like someone's gonna talk.
You're just not thinking big enough.
I agree with you.
That's when it kind of starts to get inky for me.
But he did disappear and so, I mean,
not disappear, disappear, disappear,
but he, I mean, it's not like he was like, all right,
and now I'm gonna go make all the money on this.
Right, exactly.
Like he moved and tried to start like a regular business
and tried to just not be in the public eye.
Yeah, he did, which I think adds to his credibility
even more, you know?
A little bit.
Let's take our last break and then come back, shall we?
Let's do it.
But let's promise we're gonna come back.
Okay.
All right.
All right.
We're learning things with Chuck and Josh,
the stuff you should know.
No!
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Okay, Chuck.
So Bob Lazar comes along,
just starts spouting out at the mouth
about all the crazy alien stuff that's going on at Area 51.
And then he kind of like fades into the background
for a while.
And everybody else kind of took it from there.
If you have anything to do with government conspiracies
or believe in UFOs or aliens or whatever,
all that stuff started to get saddled little by little
onto Area 51.
And one of the things that pretty early on
got connected to Area 51,
but almost across the board,
any reasonable source or skeptical source will say
like the two have nothing to do with one another,
is Roswell and Area 51.
Yeah, the Roswell crash in 1947
when something crashed,
gentlemen found pieces of an air,
well, pieces of some kind of unidentified object.
And it became UFO central.
Later it was said to be a weather balloon.
But first the army said it was a flying disc.
Right.
That kind of changed things.
You've seen the pictures, right?
Sure.
I mean, it looks like,
I've seen that one famous picture of the guy crouching
with what it looks like, just some balloon material.
Yeah.
Right.
But, you know, he was just a stooge for the government
and that was just a prop that they came up with.
So the Roswell crash happens in 1947.
There's no way Area 51 would have been associated with it.
The whole mythos around Roswell
is that there was a UFO crash that happened.
Some aliens survived,
or at the very least their bodies were recovered,
depending on who you ask.
And the UFO and the aliens, alive or dead,
were taken for further study to where Area 51?
Right.
Area 51 back in 1947 when the Roswell crash happened
was not even on the CIA's radar.
It was that basically a defunct airstrip
and a nuclear testing range still.
So there wouldn't have been any place
to take the aliens in the first place.
And then secondly, after the Roswell crash happened,
the idea of an alien crash having taken place there,
that didn't come about until like the 80s too.
So really people started to kind of catch on to this
a little late.
So probably Area 51 and Roswell
have nothing to do with one another.
And let's not forget that they're like 800 miles apart too.
Even though to everyone in America,
and really the rest of the world outside of the Southwest
thinks they're like right next to each other.
I think so.
Yeah, so there have been a lot of crazy theories
over the years.
The very most basic, or like you just said,
like there's alien corpses there, there's alien technology
there, and the US military has been studying this stuff
and trying to perfect everything from time travel
to light speed travel.
Right, fine.
That's the basic ground zero approach.
Don't forget interdimensional travel too.
No, why not?
Another one I saw, there's some pretty low hanging fruit
that I love.
The moon landing was faked there.
Sure.
And then after that.
Right, but then after that,
Kubrick was executed on site and replaced by a clone.
Well, that clone did some great work.
He did.
Better than Barry Lyndon, right?
Oh, I love Barry Lyndon.
I've never seen it, so I can't really hate on it.
Oh, it's amazing.
Weather control experiments,
that's probably the most believable for me.
Sure, clouds eating.
Sure, why not?
Why not?
And then there's like stage two of conspiracy theories.
Yes, that is, there are aliens that clock in every day
at area 51 and work side by side with us in harmony.
In harmony, in order to build like an alien human hybrid
race maybe.
Sure.
And if all of this sounds familiar,
I will bet that you watched a pretty hefty amount
of X-Files.
Oh, yes.
Because they really tapped into this stuff.
They basically just appropriated it for plot lines,
which is great, I love the X-Files,
but it was just, I guess Chris Carter used to hang out
with like ufologists or something just to get ideas.
Probably, did he really?
Yeah, he had to have.
Yeah, or he has one himself.
I don't know much about that.
Maybe so, maybe so.
So, and then of course, if you even ramp that up
a little bit more, that this is all part of a giant
conspiracy to create a one world government
that is human alien run.
Right, and that's where that Majestic 12,
I mentioned at the beginning comes in.
They are supposedly a panel of academics,
elite scientists, there's 12 of them,
who were impaneled by Eisenhower after the Roswell crash.
Or I guess it would have been Truman, I think still.
And they were put together, just the cream of the crop
to basically go contact the aliens
and basically broker a meeting, I guess,
between the president and the aliens.
And they managed to leverage this
to catapult themselves into status of actual people
who run the world.
So they're the ones who are forming this one world
government, and that is where Area 51,
or that's where it's located,
the seat of this government is located,
underground in Area 51.
Yeah, this next one is a little more recent
and very kooky.
And it's the notion that Hitler and Stalin
got together and hatched a plan
to undermine the United States in World War II
by distracting us about the threat
of an impending alien invasion.
And they would do this by building a fake spaceship,
filling it with mutant children
that Joseph Mengele created,
and fill the spaceship with those kids.
And then the craft crashed in a storm,
and that was the Roswell incident.
Right, it was meant to land,
and then these mutant children come out.
It's speaking German.
Right, supposedly the mutant children
who were the aliens that were found in the Roswell crash
had huge heads and giant eyes.
They were basically like the grays of alien legend.
Right.
And that Stalin and Hitler were inspired
by the public's reaction in America
to the War of the Worlds broadcast.
They wanted to incite that kind of panic
by actually creating this fake alien invasion.
With all the drugs Hitler was on
after we know this now, who knows?
I'm sure he's like, yeah, yeah, yeah,
that's a great idea, that's a great idea, man.
What else you got, what else you got?
What else can we do?
Stalin's like, mellow.
He tried CBD.
He's like, no, that's the one thing I haven't tried.
You got any?
Right, a bit of a mix well with everything else.
So this is obviously not a thing either.
Well, this is from a book by an author
named Annie Jacobson, I believe.
And she, this book came out in 2011,
and she based this whole thing on an alleged Area 51 insider
who was her source, who said that he worked on a project
that had to do with this somehow, some way.
But this was where all of this alien stuff came from.
It was a hoax by the Nazis and the Soviets.
The weird thing is there is another guy out there
who supposedly has a different source
who tells the same story,
but this other source says that it was all fake,
that I saw the files myself,
but I believe that it was meant to be a test of loyalty
or to see how I would react working at Area 51
to files like this and be like, oh my God,
this is real, this is real, I can't believe this is,
this is actually real.
I guess to see how gullible you were
and therefore how trustworthy you were.
Right, which could explain Bob Lazar's situation too,
because he was supposedly in a room full of files
that he probably shouldn't have seen either.
Right, so that's-
He probably failed the test.
You got three different sources
who supposedly worked at Area 51.
Technically, I should say, because we'll get email,
Bob Lazar worked at S4,
which is an even more secret installation
that's attached to Area 51.
But you got three people who allegedly worked in Area 51
who all tell a story about basically being left in a room
with files that contained information about aliens,
whether it was a hoax or real or whatever.
And maybe that is,
because that kind of correlates with the idea
that there were like gunpoint interrogations
to verify your allegiance to the government
or the military or whatever.
Maybe that is something they tried there.
It doesn't make the actual aliens real,
it just makes the presence of the files real.
That's true.
Yeah.
So, Area 51 today, as it truly exists,
if you're driving down Highway 375,
there's an unmarked dirt road between mile markers 29 and 30,
or I guess 30 and 29.
And you turn on that road,
it's 12 miles on a dirt road and you'll get to a gate
and there'll be warning signs all along
saying restricted area,
sort of like close encounters type stuff.
There will be cameras and sensors everywhere,
so don't think you're like getting away with anything.
No, there's mics that listen to your conversation.
Like you were under as close surveillance
as you've ever been in your life from what I understand.
Yeah, and there are guards, of course,
and they will say, I'm sorry,
turn around and drive back to the highway.
And if you persist a little bit, then you will get arrested.
If you're around the perimeter area,
kind of walking around with your binoculars,
they will probably come and take your binoculars
and tell you to leave or drive you back to the highway
or maybe smash your face in and bury you in the desert.
Well, there's a sign that says use of deadly forces authorized.
Oh, I'm sure.
But from what I've seen,
there's never been an incident where that actually happened.
You're much more likely to get handed over to the local cops
who will slap you with a several hundred dollar fine.
Sure.
If you give them any kind of guff
and don't leave immediately when they tell you to.
So kind of the cool thing about Area 51,
there are, obviously, I mean,
there are civilian workers that work there.
It's a huge facility that apparently is still growing
because you can look at satellite photographs
and year by year, it seems to be getting bigger and bigger
with more buildings.
Right.
If you work there and, I mean,
they have to have everything from food services
to custodial services to plumbing
and electricians and stuff like that.
And all of those people have the highest possible
security clearance an American can have.
Oh, sure.
So they don't drive down that dirt road
and just go to the gate and say, how you doing, Rick?
And they go, come on in, Jane.
They go to McCarran Airport in Las Vegas
and they all get on a big, basically, air taxi.
It's a 737 passenger jet that fly,
they call them the Janet Jets.
It's under the call sign Janet.
They're white, the big thick red stripe.
You can look it up online.
And that's how they get to work every day.
They fly everyone in on a 737.
And you can see them on the tarmac.
They just get in with the regular planes.
It's just look for the giant 737s
that are white with the red stripe and no logo, no nothing.
They don't actually have a name.
Like you said, they fly under call sign Janet.
People have tried to figure out forever what Janet means.
There's an idea that it's just another
non-existent terminal, stands for that,
rejoin air network for employee transportation.
But if you go visit the Nevada Aerospace Hall of Fame,
they tell the story that there was a commander of Area 51
named Richard A. Samson from 1969 to 71.
And he chose his wife's name, Janet,
to identify the commuter shuttles.
That's sweet.
And that's the most romantic,
super secret government story of all.
So we kind of teased earlier on that the government
is no longer saying like,
I don't know what you're talking about.
Like, no, the satellite image that we're all looking at
of buildings, I don't see anything but dirt.
That's all changed a little bit now because of a lawsuit.
In the mid 1990s, there were a group of workers from Area 51
that sued the government because of the,
it's an environmental disaster there,
or maybe that's changing now,
but it had been for many, many years
because of the fact that it's a black project
and so unregulated that they were just basically
doing everything like dumping hazardous waste
and burning it in trenches.
And people were there just inhaling these fumes
and getting really sick.
And a guy named Robert Frost that worked there
and employee had a lot of really bad health problems.
Doctor said, you were suffering from some kind
of a really bad chemical reaction.
And in order to treat it, we need to know what it is.
And the government said, sorry, we can't tell you that.
And he died.
He died and some other coworkers filed this lawsuit
and one of them ended up dying too.
And they finally got to like a Nevada, I think,
or a federal circuit court that said,
no, you guys don't have a right to know
what you've been exposed to.
Yeah, they weren't looking for money.
They just wanted to know what was killing them.
And the reason that they had no legal right to know was,
and this is that trial that I was referring to earlier
where the government representatives were saying like,
we, like the place that they're talking about
doesn't exist, sorry.
So imagine like trying to just get past that barrier, right?
You're suing the government to find out
what they were burning that made you sick.
But the government's in court saying like,
the place that they're talking about doesn't even exist.
That's like, that's obstacle one.
But the whole reason that they were burning this stuff
in the first place is because area 51 operates
under what's called the mosaic theory.
And the mosaic theory is that any little piece of information,
a spy gets his hands on, could be fit together
with other information to provide a larger picture
of what's being done at area 51.
And as a result, nothing can come out of area 51.
Like the chemical that's killing the people.
Right, or computers that go in and are used.
Once they get decommissioned, they get put in this pit
in these trenches and every two weeks,
they go out there with jet fuel
and everything that's been put into the trenches
over the last two weeks gets doused with jet fuel
and set on fire with road flares.
Amazing.
And whatever is in that smoke,
the workers get exposed to because for some reason
they built the trenches upwind of this installation
rather than downwind.
And so people were exposed to this every two weeks
for years and years and years.
And things like anti-radar paint,
the jet fuel that they were using as an accelerant,
I'm sure wasn't helping,
but just all sorts of exotic materials
that was super, super classified.
This is what was killing these people.
Aliens kill.
They were making them sick, exactly.
And the government said,
no, this is just too classified.
These people can't know.
They're just gonna have to go off and die untreated
because we're not going to say publicly
what they were exposed to.
And that's where it stood.
That case, they did finally,
finally in that case say,
okay, there's an area 51.
I know, the whole courtroom went out for beers that day
afterwards.
So there's a thing there
and that's really all we can say, sorry.
Is there's a thing there.
But that was the very first sort of insight
and just that admission that there was something there
was the first time that it ever happened,
which is in the mid 1990s.
Yeah.
And you were saying like people would point
to satellite images of the place
and you can see that it's growing now.
Like you can see it on like Google Maps.
That is really new because it wasn't very long ago
where all the satellites in space
were controlled by the government
and the government could control
what ended up in satellite images.
So they blocked out anything, any image of area 51.
But as private firms started launching their own satellites
it became basically impossible.
So just little by little,
it's becoming to the point now
where they're like, yes, they acknowledge something's there.
No, you can't know what's going on there.
It's basically the status quo now.
Pretty much.
So that's area 51 and sorry,
we kind of took the government tack here
and didn't really go all in on the alien theories,
but I just don't think that's what it is.
No.
If you want to know more about area 51,
I guess just start reading about it.
There's some pretty interesting stuff out there.
And since I said that, it's time for a listener mail.
This is about nicknames.
This is from Rob Bob.
Oh yeah, I love this one.
Hey guys, my name is Rob Bob.
Rob and Bob combined into a singular form.
Like Jim Bob, but better.
My mom has explained to me that it started
when I was about six months old.
I was a really chunky kid,
like in the 99th percentile for weight.
They felt like no other nickname like Robbie or Bobby Fit.
So they started calling me Rob Bob.
Many years later, I meet my wife,
which is almost eight years ago now,
and quickly found out that her favorite writer
is Richard Wright.
Since reading his novel, Native Son,
has wanted to name her kid Richard to honor the impact
he had on her life.
She had visited his grave in Paris
and has every book he ever published.
When she met me, I told her about my super nicknames
that I'd wanted to call my kid.
Because you see, my father is William, Bill for short.
But now, since we came up with these weird names,
I call my dad Will Bill to bug him.
This leads me to why I've always wanted
to name my child Richard since high school.
Then we would, in order, have a Will Bill,
a Rob Bob, and a Rick Dick,
all in three generations of awesomeness.
My wife does not approve
and thinks we should look elsewhere for name ideas,
with great admiration, Rob Bob and Rachel.
Thanks, Rob Bob.
Good luck with that, with your quest.
Yeah, I don't think Rick Dick
is gonna fly in your household.
I don't think so either.
Rachel may have the cooler head here.
I think so.
Well, if you wanna get in touch with us like Rob Bob did,
we would love that.
You can go on to StuffYouShouldKnow.com,
check out our social links there,
or you can send us an email to stuffpodcastatihartradio.com.
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I Heart Radio's How Stuff Works.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called,
on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new I Heart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, ya everybody,
about my new podcast and make sure to listen,
so we'll never, ever have to say, bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.