Timothy Humphrey isnāt sure what exactly happened the night the visitor arrived.
āI saw something in the sky, and then an individual on the ground who spoke to me,ā Humphrey, a Temecula resident, recalled as he walked through the Saturday afternoon crowds at the Contact in the Desert UFO convention in Indian Wells. He described the entity ā a possible extraterrestrial? ā as a āblonde-haired, blue eyed dudeā dressed in all white. āI wasnāt on psychedelics or anything,ā Humphrey laughed, but the encounter left him shaken.
āI had trouble sleeping after, but I wasnāt harmed,ā Humphrey said. āI took it as an experience where the line blurred between reality and spiritual woo-woo stuff.ā
Humphreyās mind-bending night was the kind of thing many would keep private, or to the deepest trenches of UFO Reddit. But last weekend, two thousand fellow seekers gathered at the Renaissance Esmeralda resort to try to make sense of their similar encounters and beliefs.
They had much to discuss. The topic of UFOs has gone from fringe to urgently mainstream in just a few years. The highest reaches of the government, military, media and entertainment have taken serious interest in the phenomenon.
Hardcore Ufologists rightly feel vindicated, but thatās old news at Contact the Desert, which celebrated its tenth anniversary this year. There, a fascination with Ufology melded with esoteric spirituality, government conspiracy, alt-celebrity culture and a bit of self-awareness about how loopy this can all get.
Believers at the five-day convention between May 30 to June 3 nurtured a subculture thatās now passing laws and opening minds. But such belief can also self-reinforce to strange places. The worldviews on display at Contact the Desert are ascendant. They show where Americans are looking for meaning ā or solace ā in terrestrially fraught times.
āIt was a wonderful experience being here,ā Humphrey said. āIt was fellowship with a lot of like minds. It makes you wonder what else is out there I donāt know about?ā
āThey tried so hard to wipe us out, but here we are,ā said professed UFO experiencer Whitley Strieber, left, with Travis Walton, Linda Moulton Howe, and Paul Hynek at Contact in the Desert convention in Indian Wells.
(David Vassalli / For The Times)
From at least the early 20th century era of rocket scientist Jack Parsons, and the shared roots of Pasadenaās Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Scientology and the occult group Ordo Templi Orientis, the hard science of space exploration has mingled with more esoteric ideas in Southern California.
Now, UFOs are a common topic in government. The most recent national defense authorization act compelled the National Archives to gather documents about āunidentified anomalous phenomena, technologies of unknown origin and nonhuman intelligence,ā and this year yielded the first All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office report. U.S. Senate Majority leader Chuck Schumer and others drafted legislation to declassify information about Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAP, the current term for UFOs). Rep. Tim Burchett formed a bipartisan UAP caucus. Thereās been sworn testimony from a U.S. intelligence officer alleging the government may have alien craft and bodies. Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb wrote bestsellers arguing we may have found evidence pointing to extraterrestrial life.
A decade ago, after the pop-culture success of āThe X-Filesā but before the latest wave of mainstream and government attention, Ron Janix helped found Contact in the Desert as a home for all of it.
The audience was there ā according to a 2021 Pew Research Center poll, two-thirds of Americans believe that extraterrestrial life exists, and more than half believe that military-reported sightings are evidence of alien life.
Entranced by the James Webb space telescope photographs? Think the CIA is lying about the power of psychic remote viewing? See something weird out in Joshua Tree? Youād find fellow travelers at Contact.
āThe audience definitely runs the full gamut, from people with a general curiosity to diehards who claim experiences with aliens,ā Janix said. āBut thereās no question that since the New York Times story in 2017 and the release of UAP videos from the Pentagon, thereās been a lot more exposure of our community in the mainstream. We try to have fun with it ā thereās lots of new people at the event and we want them to know itās just something to ponder.ā
āIt is kind of like a Coachella for UFOās,ā laughed Dan Harary, the co-founder of the Hollywood Disclosure Alliance, a group that connects experts and āexperiencersā at Contact with the film industry. A boom in documentaries such as J.J. Abramsā sober Showtime series āUFOā and James Foxās cult hit āThe Phenomenonā proved the topic is compelling beyond red-eyed History Channel marathons.
āThere are thousands of fascinating stories for producers here. Itās not just like that Twilight Zone episode āTo Serve Manā,ā Harary said. āWeāve got a guy who is a multimillionaire businessman who said heās met with the Pleiadians ever since he was 5, and hey, I believe him.ā
Felicia LuQue is ready to encounter the unknown at the Contact in the Desert convention in Indian Wells, California.
(David Vassalli / For The Times)
Ufology, like Protestantism, is a big-tent religion, and āA lot of this overlaps,ā Janix said. āThe ways things blend here is through the idea of nonhuman intelligence, whether itās a nuts-and-bolts spacecraft to someone talking to ghost to a DMT or ayahuasca experience to talking to artificial intelligence.ā
As the topic of UAP and extraterrestrial life became a live-wire issue in Congress and the Department of Defense, with figures including the late Sen. Harry Reid acknowledging programs such as the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program, the question of UAP took on new seriousness in the halls of power.
āI think the audience feels a degree of vindication,ā said Nick Pope, a UAP researcher and former civil servant in the U.K.ās Ministry of Defense, who presented at Contact. āPeople that went to these events used to get ribbed by their families, now those families say āI saw the congressional hearing on that, I heard about UFO provisions in the defense bill.ā These people were ridiculed and now they can hold their heads up high. ā
This being SoCal, that included Thomas Jane, the actor and star of āHungā and āThe Punisher,ā who said he was ācoming out of the UFO closetā with a lecture at Contact.
āActors do lots of crazy stuff, but I hope I can help destigmatize the phenomenon,ā he said. āI had an experience I couldnāt explain, and there are a lot of people in my position where you wouldnāt feel okay to talk about it before those congressional hearings blew the door wide open. We have to be culturally ready to absorb that weāre not alone. What will this tell us about the nature of reality, physics, evolution?ā
On Saturday, crowds wandered through two floors of the Esmeralda, a swanky resort between Palm Springs and the Coachella festival grounds. The audience ranged from witchy Highland Park Gen Zāers to Nevada desert libertarian Boomers. From morning to night, they strolled between talks that ranged from the grounded (an interview with Harvardās Loeb touching on his recent book āInterstellarā) to the starstruck (a āLegends: The Pioneers Who Paved The Wayā panel with George Noory, of the long running news-of-the-weird conspiracy show āCoast To Coast AM,ā and physicist and former CIA parapsychologist Russell Targ). The hosts of the popular true-crime and occult comedy show āLast Podcast on the Leftā drew howls and groans when they smashed deep-cut UFO-sighting videos into (pixelated) clips of hardcore alien-themed porn.
Dave Magown, from Las Vegas, was at his first Contact, and felt heartened by everyoneās curiosity. His partner was an experiencer, he said, and he wanted to learn more to support her. āThe people here are so open minded, itās whatās missing in the world today,ā he said. āThey have the ability to see more than the average Joe. I plan to come every year, Iām gonna be more educated next time.ā
āThe people here are so open-minded, itās whatās missing in the world today,ā said Dave Magown about Contact In The Desert. āThey have the ability to see more than the average Joe.ā
(David Vassalli / For The Times)
Regulars walked through the halls of crystal skulls and clairvoyant booths with the renewed vigor of being proved right, at least on some of it.
āI usually speak or sell these energy devices at these, itās my favorite event of the year,ā said Apolla Asteria, an esoteric YouTuber. āWeāve witnessed changes in the field of disclosure in the few years, with the UAP task force and the Pentagon reports. Weāre getting the vibe that this is being taken seriously.ā
Other Contact in the Desert veterans, such as L.A. musician Helena Reznor, are eager to move past staid government reports. āI think people are getting bored of the whole alien thing, we pretty much know thereās something else coming into our reality,ā Reznor said. āItās time to start looking more into portal activity and all of the different, strange intelligences that seem to be interacting with us.ā
Shannon McNamara and Xander Gilbert traveled in from Denver for the convention. Gilbert had just left āa talk about Egypt where they said they were beaming people into space when they die and thatās why the Pharaohs are in pyramids,ā he laughed. āEverythingās a fun story, even when its wacky.ā
McNamara, a podcaster who covers celebrities and conspiracy theory culture, said she knew when to draw the line between silly and dangerous beliefs. āI go as deep as I can before they mention Jewish people and then Iām out,ā she said. āEver since 2020, conspiracy topics have popped off because people donāt trust the media, they donāt trust politicians, they donāt trust schools. All these systems have broken down, so people are like āMaybe I trust this author on Amazon with an e-book that resonates.āā
āAnd they want a community where like-minded weirdness resonates,ā Gilbert added.
That was the conflict at this yearās Contact in the Desert. It is no longer just a fringe event where someone like Travis Walton, the mustachioed professed abductee portrayed in āFire In the Sky,ā is mobbed like Harry Styles. Its topics are no longer taboo in the mainstream.
Should its culture shift to more scientific inquiry, or towards fan service for its most devoted? Does an event like this have an obligation to police its far edges, or to cultivate them?
āIf the government has classified information, they wonāt release it. Why wait for the government to tell us what lies outside the solar system?ā asked Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb before the Contact in the Desert convention in Indian Wells.
(David Vassalli / For The Times)
For Loeb, the director of Harvardās Institute for Theory and Computation at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, who delivered a Zoom talk at Contact on Saturday, serious researchers into this field should expect healthy criticism.
āPeople invent virtual realities. AI has hallucinations. We live in a world where you donāt get feedback if you donāt speak with other people,ā said Loeb in a phone call before the festival. āThatās become part of politics and polarization now, and itās also part of science. Thatās unfortunate, because science gives you the privilege of taking risks, making mistakes and learning.ā
Loebās scientific credibility and Harvard perch made him a potent ā if controversial ā figure. His captivating 2021 book āExtraterrestrialā posited that Oumuamua, the first known interstellar object to enter our solar system, had evidence of being extraterrestrial technology. The book galvanized the field, became a bestseller and made him UFO-scene famous.
āThe beauty of science is that there is one reality we share and can measure it with instruments,ā Loeb said. āIf the government has classified information, they wonāt release it. Why wait for the government to tell us what lies outside the solar system?ā
There are risks navigating a scene like Contact. Recently, Loeb caught blowback for appearing via Zoom before a Mexican congressional hearing about UAP where, later, a known hoaxer presented āalien mummiesā that were likely made of human and animal bones (āIt was embarrassing,ā Loeb said). Benjamin Fernando, a Johns Hopkins seismologist, recently said that seismic signals from a meteor crash Loeb was investigating were more likely due to a car backfiring.
āWhat a ridiculous statement,ā Loeb laughed when asked about Fernandoās critique. āAn eagle has crows on its back pecking at its neck. My goal is to rise to the level where the crows fall off.
āCopernicusā book was banned for hundreds of years, but his ideas prevailed because people realized they were true,ā he continued. āItās a subject of great interest. Put some limits on this, but letās explore it!ā
āWeāre so close to the finish line of disclosure,ā UFO lobbyist Stephen Bassett said. āThatās what makes this the most extraordinary activist movement.ā
(David Vassalli / For The Times)
For all the avant-garde amateur physics and brain-smoothing New Age thought at Contact, there was also real feeling that the world was being proven more complex and fantastical by the week.
If you couldnāt quite follow esoteric journalist Linda Moulton Howeās thoughts about how pure bismuth could help negate gravity, you could appreciate the vim of Stephen Bassett, a UAP disclosure lobbyist with the Paradigm Research Group, racking up legislative wins.
āWeāre so close to the finish line of disclosure,ā Bassett said. āUntil now it was as if you were arguing to end the embargo on Cuba, and the governmentās position was āThereās no such thing as Cuba. Those photos are fake.ā Thatās what makes this the most extraordinary activist movement.ā
āThe US government officially acknowledged that UFOs were real. Up until that point, everyone was struggling constantly to get their friends and neighbors to believe they werenāt crazy,ā said Daniel Sheehan, an attorney who founded New Paradigm Institute, a UAP-focused policy group, after a colorful career of other activist litigation. After the dissolution of last yearās UAP Disclosure Act, heās now lobbying Congress to establish an independent board that would gather and declassify information and protect whistleblowers.
āThereās a shift in consciousness here when people get together. Now they can talk to friends and neighbors about news reports,ā Sheehan said. āThere was this underworld club where they were oppressed in common. Now thatās been lifted, and they realize theyāre going to have to do more work.ā
The final goals of the movement ā definitive proof and acknowledgment from government of the existence of extraterrestrial life ā remain tantalizingly beyond the veil.
One hot topic at Contact was the whistleblower David Grusch, a former intelligence official and U.S. Air Force officer who set the UFO podcast world aflame with Congressional testimony that the government could be hiding recovered alien craft and bodies. (NASA administrator Bill Nelson, when asked about Grusch in a 2023 press conference, said āNASA is open and transparent in our data. He said he had a friend that knew where a warehouse was that had a UFO locked up. He also said he had another friend that said he had parts of an alien. Whatever he said, whereās the evidence?ā)
There was no faster way to get sour looks at Contact than citing Marchās AARO report, a paper from the Defense Departmentās newly established All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office. The department said āAARO has found no verifiable evidence that any UAP sighting has represented extraterrestrial activity. AARO has found no verifiable evidence that the U.S. government or private industry has ever had access to extraterrestrial technology. AARO has found no indications that any information was illegally or inappropriately withheld from Congress.ā
Rocky Angel looks to the skies at the Contact in the Desert convention in Indian Wells.
(David Vassalli / For The Times)
āI was so optimistic about AARO, but it was so dismissive,ā Janix said. āIt just felt like what the government did with Project Blue Book and the Condon Report. If this is all that AARO is, we need to go somewhere else.ā
The governmentās openness to the topic has Ufologists worried that a fragile consensus might end up in the culture-war morass ā or pernicious conspiracies.
āThe cynic in me says everything is political,ā Pope said. āIf Joe Biden said āWe have proof of alien life,ā his opponents would say āHere comes the next COVID.ā We have rare bipartisanship around this issue, and we risk unraveling into conspiracy and deep hatreds. There is a conspiratorial wing that can breed extremism.ā
As the lectures at Contact wound down into a boozy dance party with a live rock band, the crowd of Ufologists had wine-fueled disagreements: Did David Grusch have the evidence to back up his claims? Can the government be trusted to disclose what it knows?
One thing they were certain of, however, is that they were winning.
Late in the day, Whitley Strieber, the āCommunionā author and legendary professed experiencer, opened the Legends of Ufology panel to thunderous applause.
āThey tried so hard to wipe us out,ā Strieber said, voice shaking with conviction. āAnd here we are.ā