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Spielberg Declares They're Here Based on Consistent 80 Years of UFO Reports

StarTalk Radio · Disclosure Day with Steven Spielberg & David Koepp · June 16, 2026
Spielberg Declares They're Here Based on Consistent 80 Years of UFO Reports
StarTalk Radio
StarTalk Radio
Disclosure Day with Steven Spielberg & David Koepp
"I am on much firmer ground now, certainly with all the circumstantial evidence that's out there, for me to believe that, you know, they're here."
Steven Spielberg publicly affirmed his belief that extraterrestrials are present on Earth, citing the consistency of UFO reports over eight decades as compelling evidence. He described this position as grounded in accumulated circumstantial evidence rather than mythology. This marks a direct personal conviction from one of Hollywood's most influential filmmakers on the UAP phenomenon.

About this episode

Neil deGrasse Tyson hosts Steven Spielberg and screenwriter David Koepp for an in-depth discussion of their new film Disclosure Day, exploring UFOs, government secrecy, and humanity's readiness for alien contact. Spielberg publicly declared his belief that extraterrestrials are here on Earth, citing 80 years of consistent UFO reports as compelling evidence and framing continued government secrecy as an injustice rather than policy disagreement. He revealed his conviction that deep state contractors, not elected officials, maintain UFO secrecy because private companies are better at preventing leaks. The director described his film as a summation of his entire UFO filmography and warned of coming ontological shock when full disclosure occurs, though he noted current Pentagon releases are too vague to trigger societal disruption. Koepp detailed the creative process behind the film, explaining how empathy became the central theme and how they developed alien communication as psychic rather than linguistic, with contact granting humans instant multilingual abilities. The conversation examined eye contact as a storytelling device across Spielberg's work from Jurassic Park to E.T., the balance between scientific accuracy and entertainment, and why the film positioned local news as more trustworthy than major institutions. Both filmmakers emphasized that cooperation and empathy represent evolutionary advantages necessary for human survival, themes embodied in a key monologue by Colman Domingo. Tyson probed the plausibility of various alien scenarios and the responsibility of filmmakers when depicting potentially real phenomena to mass audiences.

Key takeaways

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