Sound, Light & Frequency

PODCAST · society

Sound, Light & Frequency

Has the U.S. government been conducting a slow-drip UFO disclosure campaign through Hollywood movies and television for more than 70 years? The new podcast Sound, Light & Frequency tackles that mind-blowing question through an ongoing investigation hosted by two Hollywood insiders: Bryce Zabel and Brent Friedman, both successful writer/producers with hundreds of credits. Bryce and Brent publicly share, for the first time, the full account of their surreal encounter with a “Man in Black” who offered them a deal to use their primetime alien-invasion drama series, Dark Skies, to spread UFO truths. Each episode takes listeners behind the scenes of iconic films and TV series, connecting what’s been portrayed on screen to what might be happening in real life—and asking whether other creators were offered “the deal,” too.

  1. 14

    All About the Woo

    In the aftermath of the latest government UFO file release, Bryce and Brent decide to zig while everyone else is zagging. Rather than parsing another slow-drip document dump, they ask what may be waiting beyond the photos, videos, craft, crash retrievals, propulsion theories, and “show me the saucers” frustration. This episode turns from the nuts-and-bolts case for UFO reality toward the stranger territory of the woo factor — the part of the phenomenon that includes telepathy, synchronicity, remote viewing, out-of-body experiences, apparitions, orbs, time slips, prophetic dreams, poltergeists, cryptids, hitchhiker effects, and the unsettling possibility that the phenomenon may respond when we pay attention to it.  Using H.P. Lovecraft, Charles Fort, Jacques Vallée, John Keel, The Mothman Prophecies, Skinwalker Ranch, and a shelf full of deeply weird movies as portals, Bryce and Brent explore whether aliens, the paranormal, and the afterlife may not be separate mysteries at all. Brent lays out his theory that consciousness, energy, sound, light, and frequency may be the connective tissue between them, while Bryce recalls his own eerie Mothman Prophecies encounter in an Agoura Hills parking lot, when a menacing stranger in a long black duster walked past him and his young son carrying the exact obscure book Brent had just urged him to read. Then the episode goes intensely personal. Brent describes a lifetime of impossible-to-file experiences, including witnessing six strangers die violently in front of him, a death outside the Dark Skies production offices that seemed to involve a soul or life-force passing through him, and a terrifying daylight bedroom attack by an Old Hag/Witch Rider entity that he insists was not sleep paralysis. Bryce adds his own uncanny “power of three” story from writing A.D. After Disclosure with Richard Dolan, before the conversation widens to Twin Peaks, Phenomenon, Picnic at Hanging Rock, Annihilation, Solaris, Coherence, The Nines, and A Ghost Story. The result is one of the show’s strangest and most revealing hours: an argument that the UFO mystery may not only be about what flies above us, but what looks back through consciousness itself. To learn more: www.SoundLightFrequency.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

  2. 13

    Spielberg's Closing Argument

    Steven Spielberg is 79—turning 80 the week before Christmas—and we’re marking the moment with our first-ever guest: Ernest Cline, author of Ready Player One, the book Spielberg loved enough to turn into a movie. Together, we’re looking straight at Spielberg’s return to UFO storytelling with Disclosure Day, opening June 12—a film he teased at CinemaCon with a line that feels like a dare: “I believe this movie is going to answer questions and this movie is going to cause a lot of people to ask a lot of questions. All you need to get from beginning to end is a seat belt.” From there, the episode becomes a three-way conversation: Bryce lays out the big question—after 30+ projects involving alien contact and non-human intelligence, is Disclosure Day Spielberg’s “closing argument,” and what does that even mean? Brent pushes the pattern-recognition angle, arguing that Spielberg’s contact stories track the cultural temperature of the moment—wonder, fear, paranoia, secrecy—and that Disclosure Day is arriving at a time when the public is finally ready to ask harder questions. And Ernie brings the inside perspective: what it’s like to collaborate with Spielberg up close, why his curiosity about the unknown feels genuine, and why—whether this new film is “truth,” “fiction,” or something in between—Spielberg may be the one filmmaker who can make the entire world lean forward at the same time and say: Okay… so what now? To learn more: www.SoundLightFrequency.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

  3. 12

    Unified Field Theory of Conspiracy

    What happens when the Roswell crash, the Kennedy years, and Hollywood storytelling all collide? In this episode of Sound, Light & Frequency, Bryce and Brent use the Showtime Roswell film as their portal into one of America’s most enduring mysteries: what really happened in New Mexico in 1947, and how that event may have echoed all the way into the Camelot era. They revisit how their own NBC series Dark Skies boldly fused JFK and UFO lore in what Bryce calls “an atom collider of conspiracy,” asking whether history’s most famous secrets may be more connected than we’ve been told. Along the way, the hosts share a terrific personal JFK-and-Marilyn Monroe story from inside old Hollywood circles, examine why Roswell continues to grip the culture nearly eighty years later, and wander into some modern mystery-making as Brent casts a skeptical eye toward CERN and today’s scientific gatekeepers. It’s an episode about crashed saucers, presidential shadows, pop culture, and the strange way the past keeps refusing to stay buried. For more information: SoundLightFrequency.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

  4. 11

    We Are Watching You

    During prep for Sound, Light & Frequency, Bryce Zabel and Brent Friedman are digging through old Dark Skies files when they stumble on two artifacts they’d almost forgotten existed—objects so specific, and so unsettling, that they instantly revive a feeling they thought they’d outgrown: paranoia. Not the famous envelope. Not the party-crasher story. Something else. Something that arrives at exactly the wrong moment in their lives—right as a network series is being born—and seems to speak in a voice that doesn’t feel like fandom at all. Thirty years later, rediscovered in a file drawer, it still lands like a cold hand on the neck. To make sense of what they’ve found, Bryce and Brent take a sideways detour into the eerie Amazon cult favorite The Vast of Night, a film built out of sound, light, and frequency—and out of the creeping dread that comes when an ordinary channel suddenly carries an impossible message. If you’ve ever felt your brain “tune” itself toward the unknown—listening too closely, replaying a moment, wondering who else might be listening—this is the exact mood they’re living in again, right now. And then the story turns: because whatever these artifacts are, there are two of them, they arrive days apart, and they don’t just unsettle Bryce and Brent—they seem to change the terms of the relationship, as if someone is watching from the edge of the frame and wants them to know it. Who sent them? Why? And what does it mean that the message waited thirty years to come back into their hands? Tune in to find out what Bryce and Brent uncovered—and why it still gets under their skin. For more information: SoundLightFrequency.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

  5. 10

    Majic Kingdom

    In “Majic Kingdom,” Bryce and Brent ask an uncomfortably fun question: why does Disney keep showing up in the UFO story? Bryce starts with the modern reality—Disney isn’t a historical footnote, it’s the current epicenter of alien storytelling, “industrializing” non-human intelligence across Disney+ through Marvel, Star Wars, and the Fox-era franchises in its orbit. From there, they rewind to 1953’s CIA-sponsored Robertson Panel and its blunt talk about “training” and “debunking,” including the suggestion to use television and motion pictures and explicitly naming Disney as a partner. The episode then dives into the “two 1995 whoppers”: the wildly pro-UFO Tomorrowland lobby film Alien Encounters from New Tomorrowland (with lines that sound like a government briefing) and a two-week Disney UFO conference that flew in major speakers… yet apparently drew an audience of only about a dozen because Disney didn’t promote it at all, raising the question: what was it really for? Then Bryce opens a personal Hollywood door: his mentor Bill Asher—TV comedy legend who unexpectedly directed the 1957 Cold War saucer morality play The 27th Day, built around abductees from rival nations handed world-ending capsules and forced into an “if they push first, do we?” dilemma. Asher’s Rat Pack proximity becomes more than name-dropping when Bryce recounts Bill’s firsthand JFK/Marilyn Monroe story: a July 1960 party at Peter Lawford’splace, JFK and Marilyn disappearing to the pool house for hours, returning with Marilyn wearing JFK’s shirt, and later JFK—drunk—stopping traffic on PCH shouting he’s going to be President, with Bill dispatched to haul him back inside before it hit the papers. Layered on top is the UFO whisper: Bill’s account of Sammy Davis Jr. describing “small silver discs” that hovered, darted, and then—Bill’s word—“poof!” vanished. Finally, the episode lands on one of the strangest broadcast moments in UFO history: Major Donald Keyhoe on CBS’s Armstrong Circle Theatre in 1958, starting to “disclose” something never disclosed—only to have his mic cut while the camera stayed on him, leaving America watching his lips move in silence. Bryce reads what Keyhoe later said he’d been about to reveal—claims of working with a congressional committee on official secrecy and that open hearings would prove UFOs are “real… under intelligent control”—and then shares CBS’s chilling justification: the program had been “carefully cleared for security reasons,” and the network had to enforce “predetermined security standards.” It’s a perfect capstone for an episode about Disney, narrative power, and the eternal question: when it comes to UFOs, who gets to tell the story—and who gets to turn the sound off? For more information: SoundLightFrequency.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

  6. 9

    Days the Earth Stood Still

    In this episode of Sound, Light & Frequency, Bryce Zabel and Brent Friedman dig into the true origins of UFO storytelling in Hollywood, using The Day the Earth Stood Still as a gateway—but quickly expanding the conversation into the earliest days of flying saucer cinema. They trace the genre back to the little-known film Flying Saucer, whose director controversially claimed to be using real footage, blurring the line between fiction and reality right from the start. From there, the discussion moves into the cultural shockwaves of the early 1950s, including the famous Washington, D.C. overflights of 1952, and how that very real moment of national anxiety echoed through films like The War of the Worlds and The Thing from Another World. As Bryce and Brent point out, these weren’t just monster movies—they were reflections of a society trying to process the possibility that something unknown might already be here. Along the way, the episode takes on the kind of personal, unpredictable turns that define the series. Bryce shares a “Wonder Years”-style story from his childhood, where basement magazine skirmishes led him to his first encounter with the famous McMinnville UFO photos—taken just miles from where he grew up—and sparked a lifelong fascination. Brent, in turn, reveals a far more recent and unsettling connection: his own daughter quietly experienced a UFO sighting years ago, only choosing to share it with him much later. These stories feed directly into a broader conversation about ontological shock—what happens when people confront something that doesn’t fit their understanding of reality—and how both Hollywood and real life struggle to process it. The episode also leans into the fun and friction of Bryce and Brent’s dynamic, including a spirited disagreement over the merits of the 2008 remake of The Day the Earth Stood Still. But beneath that debate is a deeper question that runs throughout the hour: were these films simply products of their time, or part of a longer continuum of storytelling that has been preparing us—intentionally or not—for the idea of contact? By the end, Days the Earth Stood Still becomes less about a single movie and more about a series of moments—on screen and off—where reality and imagination begin to blur, and where the biggest question of all keeps resurfacing: what if the story we’ve been watching for decades isn’t just a story? For more information: SoundLightFrequency.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

  7. 8

    Cover of Fiction

    In “Cover of Fiction,” Bryce Zabel and Brent Friedman explore how Hollywood sometimes tells the truth most effectively when it’s disguised as entertainment—and why that might be the only way certain ideas can travel without detonating careers, institutions, or sanity. The episode starts with a chilling secondhand message Bryce says an investigative reporter received from multiple intelligence-community sources: if you really want to understand the phenomenon, watch the German series Dark… and pay attention to its grim nuclear future. From there, Bryce and Brent connect the show’s time-loop paranoia, wormholes, and determinism to modern UAP theories about time, “other realities,” and why disclosure might be both too destabilizing and too complicated to drop in one clean press conference. Then the episode turns personal—and uncanny. Bryce revisits how his 1993 Syfy thriller Official Denial became a kind of “greatest hits” of ufology (Majestic, crash retrievals, time-travel implications), and how the “cover of fiction” idea boomeranged back into real life through the infamous John Loengard letter and the Dark Skies mythology that followed. The rabbit hole deepens with Whitley Strieber’s Communion—including director Philippe Mora’s startling account of being questioned mid-flight by a man flashing a Defense Intelligence Agency badge. And just when the implications start to feel genuinely unsettling, Bryce lands the episode with a graceful reminder that even the hardest truths can be made survivable. For more information: SoundLightFrequency.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

  8. 7

    Staring into the Abyss

    Using James Cameron’s The Abyss as a springboard, this episode of Sound, Light & Frequency dives beneath the surface of the UFO mystery to explore the strange and increasingly serious world of USOs—Unidentified Submerged Objects. Bryce Zabel and Brent Friedman trace the connection between Hollywood’s long fascination with underwater unknowns and the growing real-world evidence that some anomalous craft may move seamlessly through oceans, lakes, and rivers as easily as they move through the sky. Along the way, they connect classic and modern screen stories—from The Abyss to Atlantis: The Lost Empire and beyond—to the deeper question of whether Non-Human Intelligence may have been hiding in Earth’s last great frontier all along.  The episode also brings the mystery closer to home with two stories that includes the host’s wives. First, Brent shares the story of seeing an unidentified object plunge into the water near Vancouver Island, with his wife as a witness, then Bryce reflects on his own creative connection to the enduring Atlantis myth when he and his wife were the original writers on Disney’s Atlantis: The Lost Empire. Smart, eerie, and highly entertaining, “Staring into the Abyss” uses movies and television as a portal into one of the most unsettling possibilities in the entire UAP conversation: that whatever is out there may not only be above us—but deep below us as well.  For more information: SoundLightFrequency.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

  9. 6

    Sagan Makes Contact

    In this episode of Sound, Light & Frequency, Bryce and Brent take on Contact (1997), Carl Sagan’s beautiful, brainy, and decidedly UFO-free journey into alien possibility. But beneath the film’s awe, wonder, and cosmic longing lies a more provocative question: what did Sagan really think about the mystery of contact — and was there more going on beneath his public skepticism than most people realize? Using the film as a springboard, the hosts explore the strange space where science, belief, Hollywood, and hidden history all seem to overlap. This episode also carries an unexpected personal edge. Bryce recalls his own face-to-face encounter with Sagan after a live television appearance, and he and Brent reflect on why the famed astronomer later found his way into the mythology of Dark Skies. Along the way, they touch on the long and complicated road that brought Contact to the screen, the emotional legacy Sagan left behind, and one of the most famous quotations he never actually said. Thoughtful, surprising, and just a little subversive, “Sagan Makes Contact” looks at one of popular culture’s most revered science storytellers from a distinctly Sound, Light & Frequency point of view. For more information: SoundLightFrequency.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

  10. 5

    The Man Who Cried Himself to Sleep

    For forty-four years, Brent Friedman has carried a story he has never fully told in public. A few fragments slipped out here and there, but never the names, never the full context, and never the larger implication of what it all meant. In this episode, that changes. Brent finally revisits a startling conversation from the summer of 1981, when an older family friend with extraordinary government access shared something so unsettling it stayed with Brent for the rest of his life. It was the kind of moment that sounds impossible — until you hear the details — and the kind of confidence given only because the speaker believed no one would ever believe it. That same year, the scrappy UFO thriller Hangar 18 was floating provocative ideas into the culture long before most people were ready to take them seriously. Bryce and Brent use the film as a portal into a bigger conversation about secrecy, storytelling, and the uneasy space where Hollywood and hidden history may overlap. As Brent tells his account in full for the first time, Bryce adds new pieces that don’t close the case so much as deepen it — and together they point toward the central question behind Sound, Light & Frequency: what if movies and television weren’t just reflecting the mystery, but helping us live with it? Hosted by Bryce Zabel and Brent Friedman. Find us on iHeartPodcasts or wherever you get your podcasts (just search SOUND LIGHT FREQUENCY). Visit us at SoundLightFrequency.com  Sound, Light & Frequency is produced by Stellar Productions. Executive Producers are Bryce Zabel, Brent Friedman, Nick Johnson, and Jackie Zabel. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

  11. 4

    Presidents' Club

    In “Presidents' Club,” recent headlines about Obama and Trump circling the alien/UFO question become a launchpad—not for breaking-news punditry, but for what Sound, Light & Frequency does best: following the secret thread between Washington and Hollywood. Bryce and Brent start with Obama’s very movie-ready riff about aliens, Area 51, and the possibility of a conspiracy “hiding it from the president of the United States”—and then immediately ask the real question: who knows more about UFOs, the presidents, or the screenwriters?  From there, the episode dives straight into the ultimate “president meets ET” portal film: Independence Day—where President Whitmore isn’t read in at all, until his Secretary of Defense leans in with the immortal understatement: “Mr. President, that may not be entirely accurate.”  Along the way, you’ll hear how the Pentagon almost cooperated with the movie—right up until two forbidden words showed up in the script: Area 51. And yes, Bryce and Brent relive the goosebump factor of Whitmore’s speech (“we will not go quietly into that night…”)—because if Disclosure ever goes public, that’s the kind of voice you’d want at the microphone.  Then it gets delightfully weird in the best way: the guys trace “Area 51 on screen” back to Spielberg’s Raiders coda (Hangar 51!), recreate the behind-the-scenes story of Independence Day being screened at the White House (yes, that White House blowing up…while Bill Clinton watches with a bowl of popcorn), and bounce through other presidential-ET pop culture detours like Mars Attacks! and its dark punchline politics.  Finally, “Presidents' Club” widens the lens to the real-world presidential UFO hall of fame—Carter, Ford, Reagan, and more—plus the uncomfortable takeaway that the Commander-in-Chief may not be “read in” the way the public assumes.  Bryce also shares a taste of what a presidential disclosure statement might actually sound like (from his work with Richard Dolan), before Brent tees up a chilling next-episode thread: a Reagan-era insider who claimed he had a higher clearance level than the President—and what that suggests about how secrets stay secret.  For more information: SoundLightFrequency.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

  12. 3

    Mr. Close Encounters

    Steven Spielberg is Mr. Close Encounters—the filmmaker who arguably made UFOs “respectable” on screen, starting with Close Encounters of the Third Kind (and its three distinct cuts: 1977, 1980, 1998). In Episode 2, hosts Bryce Zabel and Brent Friedman revisit the granddaddy of UFO cinema and explain why that movie still feels like it was beamed in from the phenomenon itself: the five-note language, the lights, the “orbs,” the stigma of reporting, and the obsessive pull that turns an ordinary guy into a human compass pointing straight at the truth.  Then the episode pivots to the question that won’t go away: Did Spielberg ever get offered “the deal”—the same kind of covert approach Bryce and Brent say they received around Dark Skies? The guys lay out the folklore, the timing, and the circumstantial breadcrumbs, including Spielberg’s overt attempts to get cooperation (and the pushback he says he got), plus the larger “two factions” idea—some parts of government discouraging UFO talk while others may be using the cover of fiction to normalize it.  And because this is Sound, Light & Frequency, it gets personal. Bryce shares what it’s like to be in Spielberg’s orbit—developing a UFO pilot for him, working on Taken, and sitting with Spielberg and Hanks on an Emmy night—yet still finding him a “man of mystery” on the UFO question. Brent brings the episode’s most hair-raising anecdote: what Dark Skies director Tobe Hooper once told him during a crop-circle scout—an offhand, no-BS story suggesting Spielberg had been approached and briefed. Hooper isn’t here to confirm it, but Brent and Bryce explain why they take the memory seriously. Finally, the guys drop the episode’s ultimate rabbit hole: Serpo—the rumored “exchange” story that sounds eerily adjacent to the film’s ending. Coincidence? Reverse-inspiration? Or something stranger, where the line between history and Hollywood gets fuzzy by design? Either way, “Mr. Close Encounters” is a smart, funny, deep dive into why Spielberg sits at the center of UFO pop culture—and why his “truth-to-fiction” ratio still haunts the conversation.  Hosted by Bryce Zabel and Brent Friedman. Find us on iHeartPodcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Visit us at SoundLightFrequency.com  Sound, Light & Frequency is produced by Stellar Productions. Executive Producers are Bryce Zabel, Brent Friedman, Nick Johnson, and Jackie Zabel. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

  13. 2

    Party Crasher

    At the Hollywood premiere party for the NBC series Dark Skies in the late 90s, a stranger—“J.C.”—crashed the celebration and claimed he was sent by the Office of Naval Intelligence. He offered the series creators Bryce Zabel and Brent Friedman a chilling bargain: help “slow-roll” UFO disclosure through their NBC series, and he’d provide insider truth—then he scribbled a cryptic “formula” on a bank envelope and called it “Sound, Light & Frequency,” the “secrets of the universe.” In this debut episode, Bryce and Brent relive the night that became Ground Zero for their current active investigation into Hollywood, UAPs, and secrecy—and ask the question that still can’t be denied: who else in showbiz was offered “the deal”? Our podcast focuses on the treatment of non-human intelligence and the UAP issue in movies and TV series going back to “War of the Worlds” and looking ahead to the upcoming Spielberg film “Disclosure Day.”  Please follow us on X, and YouTube. Our website home base is SoundLightFrequency.com. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

  14. 1

    Introducing: Sound, Light & Frequency

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Has the U.S. government been conducting a slow-drip UFO disclosure campaign through Hollywood movies and television for more than 70 years? The new podcast Sound, Light & Frequency tackles that mind-blowing question through an ongoing investigation hosted by two Hollywood insiders: Bryce Zabel and Brent Friedman, both successful writer/producers with hundreds of credits. Bryce and Brent publicly share, for the first time, the full account of their surreal encounter with a “Man in Black” who offered them a deal to use their primetime alien-invasion drama series, Dark Skies, to spread UFO truths. Each episode takes listeners behind the scenes of iconic films and TV series, connecting what’s been portrayed on screen to what might be happening in real life—and asking whether other creators were offered “the deal,” too.

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