That's a HUGE admission for them to make. They are admitting that when they are close enough to see what they are, it turns out they are not mysterious UFO/UAPs but just normal stuff -- they are only mysterious when they are so far away you can just barely see them at all.
No, you're missing it. It's the fact that some of these things know how to stay out of sensor range that makes them mysterious. If they can get close and see it's just an airplane, then it's just an airplane, but if it can stay out of range enough to not be identified as an airplane, then that's mysterious and not an airplane. As I've said, the trick is to identify something as unidentified, because that means it hasn't been identified as anything prosaic, so it isn't.
You've got
A Skinwalker Ranch style of apparently investigation and media release in a remotish area of America
Lots of serious looking ex military guys
LIZ footage from military type EOS platforms
A vague psychic/religious/woo connection
A pretense of being open, but gatekeeping all the actual details of footage
Friendly journalists attached
Connections to some apparent investment/funding source
The Secrets of Skinwalker Ranch kicks off season 6 on June 3rd, adding to the 70 episodes already in the can.
The local government sponsored 5th annual Phenomecon will take place in September in Vernal, Utah (closest place to Skinwalker Ranch for a con) with upwards of 30 speakers, including Jay Stratton, Nick Pope, Whitley Strieber and Travis Taylor. Sorry, the $349 VIP tickets are sold out.
The original Skinwalker Ranch crowd, including people like Eric Davis, are making presentations to congressional committees, appearing at conferences, and are politically connected.
So, that worked out.
Looks like Barber and the boys are on the right track. Although, I would note it's all boys as is
The Secrets of Skinwalker Ranch. Granted, the main audience is a bunch of middle aged guys that want to cosplay a cross between the Ghost Busters and Rambo out finding aliens and Bigfoot from their couch, but it all seems just a bit to dude-centric.
The afore mentioned Phenomecon has 31 speakers listed and while 7 are women, there is a lot of bros listed. Yes, Pope and Strieber are old and there's some nerdy guys, but there are a lot of black shirts, biceps and bad-asses on the roster.
https://www.phenomecon.net/copy-of-speakers
It would seem in a world where your main audience is middle aged men, a way to differentiate your UFO brand might be to include a little eye candy. Maybe the viewers at home still have the notion that women aren't really up to the rigorous scientific field work necessary for finding UFOs. Of the 7 women speakers at Phenomecon, only 2 are non-psychic field researchers. Then again, maybe I'm completely miss-judging the audience and a bunch of sweaty dudes in tight black shirts camping out together is exactly what they want to see

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