Chasing UFOs (2012–…): Season 1, Episode 8 - Alien Baby Farm - full transcript

UFO chasers head to Mexico City, Mexico 'the mothership videos' by Pedro Hernandez & other by Alfredo Carrillo,.They trek to the volcano, Popocatepetl, activity have anything to do with making this an UFO hot-spot? Next is Campeche,area of the air force UFO video. Jamie Maussan, a leader in Mexican ufology believes he has proof of the existence of aliens. His shocking creature that was found in a rat trap,unknown origin? They then try to find out if there is a link with Mayan ruins at Chitzen Itza. test results and discussion between the chasers a the end.

Narrator: This time
on Chasing UFOs.

Agent: At seven o'clock
they are at the same height.

Pedro Hernandez: There are
some lights over there.

Narrator: The team heads
to Mexico looking into the

mother ship videos.

Incredible footage of what
some believe to be a craft,

releasing hundreds
of smaller UFOs

in the sky
above Mexico.

Pedro Hernandez: The
little circles were alive,

they were intelligent.

Rene Blanco: He was
having this feeling



that it was alive.

Narrator: The hunt for
answers leads the team into

perilous territory, as
locals fear this wave of

activity could be linked
to an active volcano.

James Fox: Just at
any moment this thing

could just explode.

Narrator: The investigation
takes an unexpected turn,

when a well-known
ufologist reveals what

he believes to be
undeniable proof of an

alien presence.

James Fox: Oh my God.

Narrator: In a race to find
out whether these creatures

really do exist,
the team comes

face to face with
something terrifying,



lurking deep in the
Mexican jungle.

James Fox: Go!

Erin Ryder: Where the
(bleep) is the way out?

Wayne Mattson: What
we have here is not

any earthy craft.

Ben McGee: Did
you see that?

There's usually a more
conventional explanation for

unidentified things that
people are seeing if you

take the time to
look for them.

Erin Ryder: For the
first time in my life

I'm caught believing
that the possibility of

UFOs is all too real.

James Fox: For me to be out
here looking for evidence,

this is it.

This is what I live for.

This is what I've
been dreaming about.

Erin Ryder: Oh my God!

James Fox: Wow.

Erin Ryder: You know, I've
never been to Mexico City?

This is my first
time in Mexico City.

Ben McGee: It's
my first time too.

Erin Ryder: Yeah?

Ben McGee: Yeah.

James Fox: We're here in
Mexico City to investigate

the mother ship videos.

Erin Ryder: I'm going to
pull up the mother ship

videos to just do
a quick comparison.

Alright, so here are the two
angles of the mother ship

videos that were
shot from Mexico.

Check them both out.

This is Pedro's angle.

He's the one that shot the
video looking to the east.

Ben McGee: Oh, look at that.

James Fox: Wow.

Erin Ryder: And then
this is Alfredo's angle,

looking to the west,
obviously backlit.

James Fox: So they're
actually dancing around a

little bit, look at that.

Ben McGee: That's
interesting.

James Fox: I've never
heard anyone talking about

anything like it and I've
never seen anything like it.

It looks like
giving birth, right?

To little baby UFOs.

As a UFO investigator,
someone who's looked at a

lot of footage,
it's extremely rare.

Two strangers filming the
same object at the same time

shot from two
separate angles.

I'm anticipating this
is going to be extremely

difficult for
Ben to debunk.

Erin Ryder: Oh,
is that right?

James Fox: The fact
that it's, you know,

semi daylight and you have
two separate angles and we

have both the people
that shot the videos.

That's a major boom
for our investigation.

Ben McGee: I've got the
exact opposite opinion.

I feel like because
the data is so good,

we actually have a
chance of identifying it.

To me, it does look like
something is deploying an

array of something else.

I just have no idea what it
is to start but does that

mean it had to be ET?

No.

Erin Ryder: First
things first,

we should absolutely
contact those eyewitnesses.

Having two angles of a video
like that is really unusual

and really valuable to us so
getting to speak to both of

them is imperative,
you know, for analysis.

Ben McGee: It's
unprecedented, really.

Erin Ryder: You know, since
these videos were shot on

handheld consumer cameras,
they don't have as much

detail as I would like
so I'm not jumping

on the mother ship
bandwagon just yet.

Mexico City is
bustling this morning.

Ben McGee: Yes, it is.

James Fox: After
joining our translator,

we're off to meet
with the first of

two eyewitnesses, Pedro.

Pedro Hernandez: Hola.

James Fox: Pedro.

Pedro Hernandez:
Mucho gusto.

James Fox: Mucho
gusto, señor.

Erin Ryder: You know,
we're very fascinated

by the video you shot.

We'd love to learn a
little bit more about it.

Rene Blanco:
(Speaking in Spanish).

Pedro Hernandez:
(Speaking in Spanish).

Rene Blanco: He was
looking out the window

and he noticed this
thing on the sky.

The object was white
and was moving, tilting,

so he decided to come
off the bus and then

come closer to
look at it.

James Fox: And was it, like,
the size of a motorcycle,

the size of a bus,
the size of a car?

Pedro Hernandez:
(Speaking in Spanish).

Rene Blanco: It was probably
three times an 18-wheeler.

Erin Ryder: Wow.

James Fox: Wow!

Erin Ryder: What does
he believe he saw?

Pedro Hernandez:
(Speaking in Spanish).

Rene Blanco: While shooting,
he was having this feeling

that; it's not
from the earth.

It was, something that
had intelligence and

that it was moving on its
own and it was alive.

James Fox: Clearly, Pedro
is convinced that what he

captured on film
was a bona fide UFO.

Now we're going to meet
the second cameraman who

captured the same object,
but this time it's backlit.

Hola

Alfredo Carrillo: Mucho
gusto, [speaks in spanish]

James Fox: James

Alfredo Carrillo:
[speaks in spanish]

Erin Ryder: Hola.

Ben McGee: Ben

James Fox: So, is there any
way he could sort of walk us

through, step by step, with
details of what happened?

Alfredo Carrillo:
(Speaking in Spanish).

Rene Blanco: He was
standing right here.

He was shooting the airplane
route going into the

airport, he was shooting
this commercial airline

airplane and as he was
following the plane,

he suddenly saw in the
background this oval-type

object and two
seconds afterwards,

things started coming out
of both ends of this object.

Ben McGee: So, what do
you believe you saw?

Alfredo Carrillo:
(Speaking in Spanish).

Rene Blanco: He cannot
ensure whether it is a

biological thing or
anything else that regards,

but it's something that
is out of this planet.

Erin Ryder: Does he
think that Mexico is a

hot spot for
UFO activity?

Alfredo Carrillo:
(Speaking in Spanish).

Rene Blanco: He's a believer
that whenever there is

natural phenomena happening,
volcano activity of course,

there is a sighting
of objects,

more than other times.

Ben McGee: Alfredo just
mentioned that he believes

the object he filmed
was related to the local

volcano, which, as it turns
out is named Popocatépetl,

an active volcano,
just on the outskirts

of town where people have
actually photographed

what they feel are UFOs.

Erin Ryder: So,
following Alfredo's lead,

we're off to the
volcano Popocatépetl to

begin our investigation
into this case.

In order to effectively
navigate around this

volcano, we're going
to need some alternate

transportation.

James Fox: Come
on, sweetheart.

Come on, come on.

Erin Ryder: Oh, you've
done this before.

James Fox: Oh yeah, I
haven't, actually.

Come on Ben, alright.

Hey Ben, where
are you going?

Erin Ryder: Oh my God.

Ben McGee: Hey,
hey, this way.

Erin Ryder: Ben, you tell
that donkeys who's boss.

Ben McGee: I'm just leading
the pack, people, this way.

James Fox: I don't
know who's bigger,

you or the donkey?

Ben McGee: I know
where to go!

Follow me!

James Fox: Come on.

Erin Ryder: It looks
like this path goes up

to the right over there.

Ben, quit playing with
your ass over there.

James Fox: Come
on, Ben, come on.

Ben McGee: Well, I can
cross riding a donkey

off my bucket list.

Erin Ryder: Let's tie
up the donkeys here.

Continue the rest
of the way on foot,

looks like we got a
pretty big slope to climb.

Ben McGee: What do
you think we're at?

8,000?

7?

8?

Erin Ryder: I'd
think we're higher.

James Fox: It's going to
be a long night, guys.

Ben McGee: So if we're going
to entertain the hypothesis

that extra-terrestrials have
crossed the gulf of space to

investigate this volcano,
well that to me says there

would be something
interesting

about this volcano.

So we're going to do a
mineralogical analysis to

see if there is anything
that sets this volcano

apart from other volcanoes.

Erin Ryder: Alright, you
look up there and you can

see the plume of smoke.

Two or three weeks ago there
was a big ash eruption.

We have to be cautious;
we have to, you know,

listen to our bodies.

If you feel the ground
moving, absolutely,

have to back out
and get out of here.

Ben McGee: But if the
wind shifts at all,

ash particles are like
razor blades in your lungs,

so keeping those
out is a good thing.

If people are saying, that
there's something particular

about this volcano, that
makes it an attractive

target for extra-terrestrial
surveillance, well,

let's put that to the test,
let's go grab some freshly

erupted rocks and see if
it's relatively mundane,

or if it's something
really exotic.

James Fox: Hey, while
you guys collect samples,

I'm going to head up
a little higher and

get a good look
at the skies.

Erin Ryder: I hope
the donkeys are

okay back there.

Ben McGee: They
should be fine.

All I wanted to do
was eat, take a nap.

Here, shine your light
back here, would you?

See, that's a pretty nice
exposure right there.

Erin Ryder: You
take a sample?

Ben McGee: Yeah,
multiple events.

This looks like a
pretty good spot.

Erin Ryder: Okay,
want me to pull out

the evidence kit?

Ben McGee: Yeah.

Erin Ryder: Oh,
my goodness.

Ben McGee: The ground
was so much farther away

than I thought
it was, ow.

Erin Ryder: Oh,
my goodness.

Are you okay?

Ben McGee: Yeah, I
just jammed my finger,

that's all.

Erin Ryder: You're a
complete disaster right now.

Ben McGee: I know
what the hell?

Let's see what
this ash is doing.

James Fox: Oh, man.

Whoa.

Wow, you can actually
see the steam

rising up off
the volcano.

So odd to be this close
to an active volcano,

knowing just that
at any moment,

this thing could
just explode.

If I was a UFO, why
would I come here?

James to Ben and Ryder.

Erin Ryder: Yeah James,
are you ok over there?

James Fox: Yeah, I am okay
right now but I just want

you to know I got a really
good line of sight to the

volcano right now and
it's looking very active.

I'm seeing like, all kinds
of faces being made in the

smoke stacks, you know, sort
of billowing out of this

thing, it's really spooky.

Erin Ryder: Hey, James,
we're worried that you might

have some slight form
of altitude sickness.

James Fox: Maybe so,
but this camera's not.

Erin Ryder: What?

Alright, well, I'll let
you know if you need to

put your mask on
at any point.

James Fox: Copy that.

[distant barking]

(Bleep).

[close barking]

(bleep)!

There was a dog.

He was running
across the field.

[gunshot sound]

What the (bleep)
is that?

Are those gunshots?

James for Ben
and Ryder.

Ben McGee: Go for
Ben and Ryder.

James Fox: Hey guys, listen
man, I'm hearing wild dogs,

gunshots, all kinds
of crazy activity,

I'm not sure it's safe
for us to be out here

too much longer.

Ben McGee: Can
you repeat?

Gunshots?

James Fox: You haven't
been hearing those

loud shotgun blasts?

Ben McGee: That's
a negative, James.

From what direction are
you hearing the gunshots?

Over.

James Fox: Wild
dogs all around us,

gunshots coming from,
I think it's the east.

I think it's time to go.

Ben McGee: Copy.

Well, I think we've
got enough ash samples

to take back to test.

We'll finish up here,
why don't you rally back

at base camp and we'll
get out of here.

James Fox: Copy that.

Erin Ryder: After collecting
samples at the volcano,

we decided to
follow a new lead.

Alright guys, so this
next video is really rare.

It was shot by the Mexican
Air Force on their thermal

cameras and they believe it
might be footage of multiple

UFOs captured in
Mexican air space.

Agent 1: One, two,
three, four, five,

six, seven, eight.

Eight on the screen.

Ben McGee: Wow, I've never
seen anything like that.

Agent 2: Are they all
the same height, Telles?

Agent 1: Correct, eight,
nine, ten, eleven in total,

two, four, six,
eight, ten, eleven.

James Fox: These would
appear to be orbs flying in

the sky, amazing stuff.

One of the things we need
to keep in mind for our

investigation is that these
objects were clearly visible

with the FLIR cameras.

They were airborne,
according to the

Mexican Air Force.

They were picked up
on a sea-view radar,

three of them.

There were eleven
objects seen in total,

all picked up on the
FLIR and, at one point,

they surrounded the plane,
to the point where the

pilots got so freaked out
that they switched off their

navigation beacons because
they wanted to kind of

disengage any possible
confrontation with these

objects, so these pilots
were clearly freaked out.

Agent: We had information
from the radar about an

object behind us and we were
observing several objects

through the infrared camera
towards our left hand side.

So we assumed we
were surrounded.

Man: Were you afraid?

Agent: Afraid?

Yes, yes, personally
I felt scared.

I was a little bit scared
because we were experiencing

something that had never
happened to us before,

so yes, I was scared.

Ben McGee: My gut
reaction to the footage

is not necessarily
that these objects

themselves are moving.

They're staying very
stationary with respect

to each other.

They don't seem to be doing
any extreme maneuvers.

They're not flying apart
and changing formation

or moving
toward or away,

they're all staying
very static and some

have suggested in the
past that this footage is

actually oil rigs on the
horizon and, you know,

to me, I don't think that
we can rule that out.

James Fox: One of the
theories to explain

this video are
stationary oilrigs.

The problem I have
with that theory is

I would have to
completely dismiss

two very significant
facts as stated

by the officers from
the Mexican Air Force.

One, these two objects,
out of the eleven,

were picked up on
radar at altitude.

Two, at one point these
objects seemed to circle

their very air craft which
really freaked them out.

Erin Ryder: The entire
commentary of the pilots,

you know, while
it's happening

is really valuable.

I think what's even more
important is for us to

go to this exact site
and do a test ourselves.

James Fox: Yeah, we'll go to
the exact location where the

sightings occurred, bring
our own FLIR cameras and see

if we can pick up what
some say were oil derricks

out in the Gulf, which
I highly disagree with.

Ben McGee: Get up into the
sky and then see if we can't

see something similar
while we're there looking

in the same direction.

James Fox: Mm-hm.

Our next move is we get
to meet up with a pilot in

Campeche, Mexico and
actually go up in the air

with FLIR cameras to
the exact location

for a recreation.

Ben McGee: Hi, Ben.

James Fox: Our objective is
to see whether or not our

FLIR cameras can pick
up a heat signal

from these oilrigs off the
coast of Mexico.

Erin Ryder: So, we
will start here.

We'll fly into
the coordinates.

James Fox: Yep, and
right now we're just

calling this
"Division del Norte".

We've gone over this at the
exact location where the

sighting happened with
the Mexican Air Force.

Ben McGee: Okay, ready?

James Fox: Como
se dice Vamonos?

Pilot: Vamanos.

Erin Ryder: Our plan for
this test is to get up in a

plane and head up to the
exact coordinates and

altitude and run this
test for ourselves.

Both Ben and I will be
equipped with thermal

cameras that will help
us detect distinct heat

signatures in the area.

Are you guys ready?

James Fox: Oh yeah.

Erin Ryder: Let us know
when we're in position.

Once it's a go we'll
start running the test.

In my mind, this'll help
us determine if offshore

burning oil rigs can
look anything like

that military footage.

James Fox: Okay, so you
guys our ETA is 33 minutes.

We're at an altitude
of 3,000 feet;

we're heading to an
altitude of 10,000 feet,

which is the altitude
roughly where the Air Force

captured the UFOs.

Erin Ryder: Copy that.

We should be getting there
at the perfect time of day.

James Fox: Perfect.

Think it's going to be
similar conditions too.

You can see the cloud
cover over the Gulf.

It's very similar to the
day they captured the UFOs.

Keep your eyes
peeled for any UFOs.

Pilot: Five minutes
for arrival point.

James Fox: Okay
guys, get ready.

Our ETA is one minute,
ETA 15 seconds.

Eight, seven, six,
five, four, three, two.

Pilot: Let's do this.

James Fox:
our airspeed is 110.

Erin Ryder: 110 knots.

James Fox: Our altitude
is 10,000 feet.

Erin Ryder: 10,000 feet.

James Fox: The exact
coordinates of the

Air Force's video
shot off the coast.

I believe it's roughly 80
nautical miles to the coast

right now, so we are
exactly where we want to be.

Erin Ryder: Copy that,
and a little, you know,

land below but nothing
out of the ordinary.

No platforms.

James Fox: Copy that,
can you see the

water from here?

Erin Ryder: It's a
good distance out.

I'm having trouble
seeing the water with

my eyes let alone with
the camera, you know?

James Fox: Yeah, I'm on
the binoculars right now

and I still can't
see the water.

Right now we're in the
exact same spot where

the Mexican Air Force
captured these videos.

Pilot: Okay.

James Fox: Si?

Okay.

Perfecto.

I can't even see the
water with binoculars.

Pilot: We are, um,
48 miles out to sea.

James Fox: Okay guys, we
are 48 miles from the ocean.

Not buying that explanation
of oil platforms,

that's for damn sure.

Erin Ryder: Not from
this vantage I'm not.

James Fox: I don't know.

Have you picked up
any imagery, at all?

Like any heat signals from
the direction of the water

on the FLIR cameras?

Erin Ryder: No, nothing yet.

James Fox: Okay, well
we're going to fly right

over the restricted
airspace as close as we can

get and see if we can
see some platforms.

Erin Ryder: From
this vantage point,

we can barely see the water,
let alone these oilrigs.

I just don't see how
people can mistake these

oilrigs for UFOs.

Pilot: There is
a platform here.

Erin Ryder: Yes.

James Fox: We've
located one platform.

So, can we turn?

Is it possible
to for the film?

Pilot: Okay, you see?

James Fox: Yes,
yes, yes, yes.

Guys, I got a platform,
I got a platform;

it'll be directly out your
window in about 4 seconds.

Erin Ryder: I don't see it;
I don't know what they were

talking about, honest.

I'm not picking
these platforms up.

I can see it with my
naked eye and I can't

get it on the thermal.

Finally got it, I got it.

James Fox: OK so let's
record that you guys,

we are at 860 feet, less
than a mile away from the

oilrig and we finally
picked it up on the FLIR.

Is that right?

Erin Ryder: That's
right, finally.

Finally picked it up on
the FLIR and it is faint.

It looks nothing
like what we saw.

James Fox: Okay,
copy that Ryder.

Our tests have
clearly demonstrated

that even at close range,

those oil derricks do not
even give off enough heat

signal to be picked
up on the FLIR camera.

Ben McGee: Because I think
the atmospheric conditions

were different today than
they were for the Mexican

FLIR footage and because
the military's camera may

have had a different
calibration than ours.

I don't think that
our experiment was

conclusive either way.

James Fox: I personally am
convinced that the water was

so far away at that
location that I couldn't

even see it with
binoculars so.

Erin Ryder: Well even when I
got the oil platform on the

thermal camera, it just
wasn't resonating as strong

as the lights in
the video were.

Ben McGee: The damn haze,
we couldn't see a lot,

even when we were
close to the oilrigs.

Erin Ryder: We couldn't
even see the water.

James Fox: When you
look at the video,

there's clouds all
over the place and

these objects are going
in and out of the clouds

and behind the clouds.

Personally, I'm convinced
that what was captured

was not oilrigs.

Erin Ryder: If these videos
that we're investigating are

real, like the locals claim,
then it follows that there

could also be landings and
we're about to meet a man

who believes he has proof
that they've not only

landed, they might have
left something behind.

Jaime Maussan is a former
journalist turned popular

ufologist and what he claims
to be in possession of could

change what we know about
extra-terrestrials forever.

We're really interested in
what you have to show us.

Jaime Maussan: Yeah, well,
let me show you that.

Erin Ryder: What is it?

Jaime Maussan: We
don't know yet.

We are in the process of
investigating this creature.

This could become very
important evidence.

This creature was
found in a rattrap.

There have been six
DNA analysis but the

results are amazing.

This is a creature
of unknown origin.

James Fox: Oh my God.

Jaime Maussan: Not human
and not animal known.

James Fox: I can use the
word alien loosely here

because that things alien
to anything I've ever seen.

At first glance
you're like (bleep),

this looks like alien out
of the movie and then

you start looking at those
fangs and the prolonged head.

I mean, it looks like
an alien because it is

alien to anything I've
ever seen before.

Jaime Maussan: This is
probably something that is

not from this earth.

We don't know.

This should be in a
museum for people to see,

because many people say
there are no physical

evidence of the presence
of extra-terrestrials.

Well, this could be it.

Erin Ryder: I have no
idea what this thing is,

but I want to know a hell
of a lot more about it.

So, there is an
extra-terrestrial connection

with Chichen Itza?

Jaime Maussan: Many people
think that there is a

relation between the UFO
presence and pyramids.

And that area,
through the years,

has become one of the
most important regarding

sightings of UFOs.

Not very far from where
this creature was captured,

but I think we should
look at that very closely

because that's a very
good possibility.

Erin Ryder: Jaime Maussan
is drawing a parallel

between the Mayan temples
and UFO activity.

We have to
investigate that.

If there's any truth
to this theory,

than we need to head to the
pyramid of Chichen Itza,

one of the Yucatan's
Mayan temples.

There, we'll look
for the potential

presence of aliens.

So our plan for
tonight's investigation

is to set up some
surveillance cameras

to try and capture
the existence of this

extra-terrestrial
life ourselves.

Well, tonight we have
our night vision cameras,

thermal cameras.

We've got the
monster 1200 lens.

Ben McGee: Yup.

Erin Ryder: I think
first order of business

is to try to get to
the top of Castillo.

James Fox: Set
up a camera.

Erin Ryder: Set up
a camera up there.

Ben McGee: Yeah, I'll
set up a base station on,

one of the
smaller pyramids

so I'll have field
of view and I'll

be able to zero in on
whatever it is you guys see.

James Fox: Remember
this is jungle out here,

there's probably
like monkeys and

pumas and jaguars.

Ben McGee: Keep
your distance.

James Fox: So yeah,
just keep that in mind.

Ben McGee: Yeah,
definitely, we all should.

Erin Ryder: Oh, there
it is, El Castillo.

This thing is massive.

It's going to be a nice
little workout here,

a natural stair master.

Ryder for James.

James Fox: Go for James.

Erin Ryder: Hey James, not
sure if you can see me on

the thermal camera,
but I'm at the very

base of the tower and
I'm starting my walk up.

James Fox: Copy that,
Ryder, take it easy,

remember you got a lot
of stairs to climb.

Erin Ryder:
Alright, copy that.

I'll let you know
when I hit the top.

Here goes nothing.

Well, here it is,
here's the top.

James Fox: James for Ryder.

Erin Ryder: Yeah
James, go ahead.

James Fox: You're on top of
the Mayan world right now.

How does it feel?

Erin Ryder: It
is so creepy;

this tower up
here is massive.

James Fox: Copy
that, be careful.

Erin Ryder: (Bleep).

A lot of people say
that this place is

filled with strange energy
and boy, can I feel it.

[moaning sound]

Come on.

Ryder for James.

James Fox: Go for James.

Erin Ryder: I swear I just
heard the strangest noise

being emitted from
the main doorway.

I mean terrifying.

James Fox: I'd be too
freaked out to go in there

personally alone.

Erin Ryder: Like I'm not
sure if it's wind moving

through here or not but
it is freaky up here.

James Fox: Copy that
Ryder, be careful up there.

James for Ben.

Ben McGee: Yeah, copy
that James, go ahead.

James Fox: I'll let you
know Ryder made it to

the top of El Castillo.

She's setting up a
surveillance camera

as we speak.

Ben McGee: Copy that
James, good news.

Oh, this is pretty
imposing and dark,

well, here we go.

They don't make them
like they used to,

yeah, 2000-year-old
stone staircases.

Wow.

Well I think, I
think this looks

like a good spot
for a stakeout,

I think that's Ryder.

Erin Ryder: Nice and
easy, nice and easy.

This is like never-ending;
no wonder the Mayans were

always in such
good shape.

353.

James Fox: How was it?

Erin Ryder: It was pretty
incredible up there.

I was able to set the
camera up over there to try

and see if we could
capture anything.

Let's start making our
way in towards the

thick of the jungle.

James Fox: Fantastic.

Erin Ryder: And if there is
some sort of alien creature

out there, maybe it's
deeper in the jungle.

James Fox: Wow.

You hear that?

Erin Ryder: No,
what do you hear?

James Fox: Just crawling
with life out there.

Erin Ryder: Well, luckily
I've got the thermal camera

so we'll hopefully get
eyes on something before

it gets eyes on us.

James Fox: Look
at these rocks.

These are the rocks
they used to build

the pyramids with.

Can you imagine
handling these?

Look how big they are.

Erin Ryder: Do you think
aliens had anything

to do with the building
of this place?

James Fox: Well, I
mean, the Mayans talked

about it, right?

They would know
better than me.

Erin Ryder: That's true.

James Fox: How the heck
did they know so much

about the planetary
system, you know?

They knew so much without
any sophisticated gear.

Whoa, there's something
looking at us, Ryder, Ryder?

Erin Ryder: What?

James Fox: Come
here, right now.

Look, come over here.

Erin Ryder: I'm here.

James Fox: Look through
there and see the eyeballs

looking at us.

You see that?

It's big.

See it?

See it?

Erin Ryder: I want
to see it on the

thermal camera, oh.

James Fox: You got it?

Erin Ryder: Holy (bleep).

James Fox: Oh God.

You got it?

Erin Ryder: Do you see that?

James Fox: Whoa, whatever it
is, it's definitely moving.

It's time to go, Ryder.

Erin Ryder: Guys,
everyone be really still.

Be really still.

James Fox: Back off,
man, I'm serious.

There it is, there
it is looking at us,

it's looking at us.

Erin Ryder: Dude,
that's a cat.

James Fox: It's
coming this way;

it's definitely
coming this way.

Grab this (bleep).

Machete, grab the machete.

Erin Ryder: (Bleep).

Where the (bleep)
is the way out?

James Fox: Look,
I don't know.

Erin Ryder: Go.

(Bleep).

James Fox: Are you
kidding me right now?

Go, go.

(Bleep).

Oh my God.

Erin Ryder: Talk
to Ben, tell Ben.

Luckily he's up
somewhere safe right now.

James Fox: James
and Ryder for Ben.

Ben McGee: James,
this is Ben, go ahead.

James Fox: Ben, we just
got stalked by a puma

and it was a big, big cat.

Ben McGee: Guys, seriously,
that's terrifying.

How far into the
woods were you?

Erin Ryder: Too far.

James Fox: Ryder and I
are going to head back

out to the square.

See if we can monitor what's
going on up in the skies.

Ben McGee: Yeah, copy that.

I could use your eyes
on the north side

of the pyramid, over.

Erin Ryder: Let's give
the woods a break

for a little bit.

James Fox: Yes, I think
it's a great idea.

Erin Ryder: We continued
to investigate

for several more hours,

but our investigation
is far from over.

Once we returned
home, fighting jetlag,

we got right to work
looking through all the

footage and samples we
collected from Mexico.

Ok guys, so I pulled up
the two different angles

from the Mexico mother
ship videos and let's just

do a side-by-side
comparison here.

Ben McGee: See that?

It flickered
top and bottom.

It looks like
there's rotors.

That is a very
helicopter type shape.

Erin Ryder: I'll
tell you what I saw.

You know how they make
those arches of balloons?

Ben McGee: Mm-hm.

Erin Ryder: I think this
is like that and they're

becoming untangled.

Ben McGee: You know what,
that would make sense

because they look tethered.

Erin Ryder: After analyzing
this mother ship video,

I'm pretty convinced that
this is some sort of bundle

of strung out balloons and
what you're actually seeing

is that bundle unravel
and the strings

pulling apart with those
balloons with them.

Well this is the results
from the analysis done on

the ash sample that you
took from the volcano.

Ben McGee: Right, and
this was related to the

hypothesis that we've
heard that there are

extra-terrestrial
visitors to the volcano.

Is there something
special about the mineral

composition of the volcano?

James Fox: Well, I mean
either they'd be interested

in the minerals or possibly
they could be interested in

the activity of
the volcano.

Who knows?

Erin Ryder:
That's true, too.

Ben McGee: I guess what
would be unique is if you

had an unusual concentration
of rare elements and I mean

I got to be honest, it
looks like what you'd

tend to expect from a
volcanic ash cloud.

Erin Ryder: By far our most
adventurous experiment

in Mexico was the FLIR
test that we did.

Based upon this military
video that they say are

eleven, you know, UFOs
captured on thermal imaging

by the military in Mexico.

Agent: Four, six,
eight, ten, eleven.

Erin Ryder: And now let's
look at the video that we

were able to actually
capture from the plane

when we were doing
the exact test.

I don't see it; I can't
get it on the thermal.

When we did finally get
close enough to see the

platforms with our own eyes,
that's what they showed up

like on our thermal cameras.

So, what do you think
we're looking at here?

Do you think that these
could be stationary objects?

Ben McGee: Yeah, this
is actually from the

satellite image right now.

I eliminated the original
photos so we could

do a geometric analysis.

This is all, like
those are very

identifiable
little objects.

So from my analysis, all
I did was I plotted the

locations of the oil wells
and I sort of tilted them on

angle so you view them on
the horizon and I looked at

what pattern those dots
would make when looked at

from a distance and
as it turns out,

they match what the
Mexican military

shot amazingly well.

You end up with that
collection of lights.

James Fox: Ben's
theory is impressive.

For me, these were made
unidentified flying objects.

Erin Ryder: Let's talk
about what Jaime showed us.

Ben McGee: Pretty shocking.

Erin Ryder: It was
really shocking when

he first revealed it.

James Fox: I don't know
what the hell it is.

Erin Ryder: He's telling us
that this is finally a piece

of evidence that
extra-terrestrials have

landed and that's why
he's done so much DNA

analysis of this.

Ben McGee: Palaeontology
uses the geometry of bones

to help you determine
what something is.

Maybe we can just look
at this thing's bones

and help determine if there's
a terrestrial explanation.

After doing a
little digging,

I found that there a number
of unique features to

marmosets, which are mammals
native to South America and

sold in the region as pets
that really match this

creature that we
were shown.

So I just pulled up the
skeleton and skull of a

marmoset and did a
side-by-side comparison of

the key features.

Where is the ear
cavity located?

Is it missing molar teeth?

The distance in angle
between the eye socket

and the nose.

It has clawed fingers and
it has a segmented tail.

I now think this is
definitely a marmoset.

Erin Ryder: Ben crushed
it with his analysis

of that alien baby.

I mean, as far
as I'm concerned,

I'm looking at a marmoset.

James Fox: This
creature closely

resembles a marmoset.

You can't deny it.

You got a marmoset;
you got the creature,

the teeth, the shape of
the skull, the tail.

Ben McGee: I think Mexico
presents a culture that's

very open to the idea that
we are being visited by

beings from another
world and that manifests

when everyone looks
up at the sky.

So ultimately, I'm not
convinced that Mexico is

being visited by aliens.

Erin Ryder: Oh, there
it is, El Castillo.

Mexico as a whole
was fantastic.

I definitely think that
there's some strange

sightings going on there.

Unfortunately, we
couldn't find anything

conclusive to say that
what we investigated is

out of this world.