

On what basis do you beleive the bloke in the second video was who he claimed to be? Just because someone phones up the show and claims that they arethe person who made the call the in the first video, is sufficient evidence for you to believe that he was in fact that bloke?I cant believe that someone requires so little evidence to beleive a single claim made by some bloke who phones up Art Bell's show and claimes he wasa previous caller.A reasonable person would be sufficiently skeptical to consider the possibility they they may in fact have been and professional imiitator TPTB use tosuck people like you in. Just search his name on youtube and watch the videos.You will see yet another SELF-SERVING a-hole, pushing whatever he can to make you scared.Art Bell did not do these things. In 1990 his series about UFOs was selected by United Press International as best in the nation for Individual Achievement by a Journalist.He won't do that because he is a slave to the money and notoriety he has received.

His investigative reports have been awarded the highest honors in broadcast journalism, including the DuPont Award from Columbia University and the Peabody Award (twice). Murrow awards for his investigative stories, and is a nine-time winner of the Associated Press Mark Twain Award for best Newswriting. In that capacity, he has earned five regional Edward R. Since 1995, George has been the chief reporter on Channel 8’s I-Team investigative unit. George also has co-anchored various newscasts for KLAS-TV. KLAS-TV hired him in 1981 as a general assignment reporter. Later, he worked at KLVX-TV Channel 10 as a part-time studio cameraman and production assistant. He moved to Las Vegas in 1979 and landed a job as a taxi driver.

George also taught speech at California Polytechnic University, coached the debate team at the University of California at Berkeley and taught broadcast journalism at UNLV. George Knapp earned a bachelor’s degree in communications from West Georgia College and a master’s degree in communications from the University of the Pacific, where he also taught speech and debate and served as director of forensics.
