I have to disagree with this. His ex-CIA credentials are cited for credibility purposes and he is helping to (indirectly through his presence and non-critical takes, and directly through his own statements/behavior) convince the audience of false or misleading things.
This is the show description
on the website right now:
External Quote:
Ex-CIA agent Andy Bustamante and Investigative Journalist Paul Beban investigate a flurry of new and disturbing activity as they continue their forward-recon mission to research areas of high strangeness beyond the borders of Skinwalker Ranch. While deploying the Skinwalker team's roster of experts along with some of their own, the shocking results they obtain are changing the game at Skinwalker Ranch and beyond. It's no longer a question of whether there are unexplained phenomena outside the borders of Skinwalker Ranch—it's a question of how many hotspots the team can find.
Bustamante may not believe anything they show is necessarily aliens, but I don't really think it matters what he believes deep down or strategically avoids saying explicitly. What matters is that much like Travis Taylor he is serving as an expert with credentials and actively participating in misleading the audience of this show into believing that mundane things are unexplainable and extraordinary. He is not correcting mistakes or misleading things aired on the show. He's nodding along and even providing some of those misleading things himself. Maybe folks like Bustamante really want to give contrary/critical takes but are bound by NDAs and contracts to not say anything that contradicts the agenda of convincing the audience of anomalous events. But it is a choice to participate in this, and if there are restrictive terms, then it's also a choice to agree to participate under those terms. He is being paid to help the show convince people of falsehoods, along with the rest of the team, and they know this is the job, and they are succeeding to some extent, no matter how many specific data points are addressed by skeptics. If Bustamante comes out with criticisms of the show's practices, and helps deconstruct some of the misleading content aired and associated with his face and credentials, then that would be welcome, but taking the paycheck to mislead people is a choice.
In
this video, from 8:21 until the end at 10:12, Bustamante is presenting this photograph and discussing with the team.
View attachment 82085
At 9:58, after the discussion of the photo, Brandon Fugal says "congratulations gentlemen, I think we have a bona fide unidentified aerial phenomena event". All the while Bustamante and Taylor (notably, who has a PhD in
optical science) nod along and do not point out caveats or the possibility it was simply a long exposure of their own lights.
The photo is clearly a long exposure. In long exposures, either stationary or very bright objects show up most clearly. Regions that are both darker and are moving, show up in the final image much less, if at all. This photo looks possibly like a couple people with headlamps on walking out a few dozen meters, and then walking back. It's entirely possible that the people would not show up at all, even though the streaks from their headlamps do. They said they only saw this much later upon reviewing all the footage they obtained that night. They might simply not remember or be aware that someone walked over that way briefly with a light on during this exposure.
Here's a photo I just took in my living room. It's a 15 second exposure. For ~5 seconds of that exposure I am standing directly in front of the camera in a bright red t-shirt, waving a flashlight around in circles in front of me. I think I may see a may see a very slight red tint in the lower center, but this is a decently well-lit room in the middle of the day, and a bright red shirt in front of an off-white wall, a high color contrast, while the flashlight itself has lower contrast with the decent ambient lighting compared to nighttime. But still the stationary objects and the flashlight overwhelmingly dominate.
View attachment 82082
Here's a 30 second exposure (with a narrower aperture setting, hence darker) of me walking away from the camera and then back towards the camera, wearing a headlamp strapped to my forehead.
View attachment 82086
Here's a 30 second exposure in a darker room with the curtains cracked open, again with me standing directly in front of the camera waving a flashlight around for 5 seconds.
View attachment 82084