UFOs and the Zero Point Field:
You Can Get Here From There
by Marie D. Jones
Most ufologists agree that alien spacecraft must be using a highly
advanced technology or propulsion system to move them across vast
distances in short periods of time. Quantum physics may hold the answer to
how they are getting “here from there,” and that answer just might be the
Zero Point Field (ZPF).
Nothing exists in a vacuum. The concept of empty space has been
shattered by the discovery of an infinite field of teeming activity, where
tiny electromagnetic fields continuously fluctuate, even when temperatures
reach absolute zero. A field where nothing, literally, is impossible
because even at zero baseline values, there is something; quantum
fluctuations or “jiggles” that cannot be measured, yet permeate every inch
of space.
A field that, if tapped into, might possibly produce enough energy to
power the entire planet for a long, long time…and send a spaceship or two
across the galaxy at near-light-speed to boot.
The Zero Point Field.
The ZPF is made up of Zero Point Energy (ZPE), a literal sea of energy
that we swim in, like fish in the ocean, unaware of the vastness of our
surroundings. ZPE was first suggested in the early years of quantum
mechanics, when physicist Paul Dirac theorized that the vacuum of space
was instead filled with particles in negative energy states. These
particles were predicted to materialize for brief periods, and exert a
measurable force. This force was predicted in 1948 by Dutch physicist
Hendrik B.G. Casimir. The Casimir Effect is a weak, but measurable force
between two separate objects, like two metallic plates hanging parallel to
one another, which occurs due to the resonance in the space between the
objects. This force can only be detected when the two plates are very
close to one another, and the effect diminishes as the distance between
the two plates increases. This force indicates a change in the
electromagnetic field between the two plates.
The Casimir Effect proved the existence of ZPE, certainly in a
scientific sense. As far back as 1911, Max Planck, Albert Einstein and
Otto Stern were researching ZPE, and in 1916, Walther Nernst formally
proposed that empty space was filled with this field of zero-point
electromagnetic radiation. Nobel Prize winner Willis Lamb was the first to
measure the discrepancy between calculated and measured energy levels of
hydrogen gas in an excited state, which lead to a greater understanding of
vacuum field fluctuations and the development of quantum electrodynamics
and the concept of zero point energy.
In the Zero Point Field, particles pop in and out of existence,
creating a “foam” of virtual particles that makes up empty space. Based
upon the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, which states that the more
accurately we can know the position of a moving particle, the less
accurately we can measure its momentum, and also states that no quantum
object can ever truly be completely at rest, the electromagnetic
fluctuations of ZPE fill every corner of space, every nook and cranny, and
are never at a state of absolute zero momentum, but instead vibrate at the
most minute rate of oscillation allowable by the laws of quantum physics.
Thus, the tiny residual ”jiggle.” As it is the lowest state possible
for energy to possess, the ZPF can only be visually detected in
experiments like the Casimir Effect. But were we to somehow magically
remove all matter and energy above the zero-point state that exists in
space, what would be left is the ZPF.
The most fascinating promise of the ZPF is its potential as an infinite
source of energy, one that modern-day physicists like Hal Puthoff believe
may one day propel space craft to distant parts of our universe.
Ufologists believe alien civilizations far in advance of our own are
already using the ZPF, harnessing the unlimited field of energy as they
literally shoot across amazing distances without ever having to stop “for
gas.”
The ZPF is estimated to be massive, even infinite, and to exceed
nuclear energy densities, meaning that just a small amount of ZPE could
provide a whole lot of fuel. Science fiction novels and television shows
already hype the ZPF as a powerful source for creating everything from
“Star Trek’s” quantum torpedoes to “Stargate SG-1’s” modules made from the
field that can allow intergalactic space travel.
Although currently we can only measure minute amounts of ZPE levels,
physicists like Puthoff believe we can achieve the technology to one day
tap the field in much bigger ways. And the aerospace industry seems to
believe we can achieve that, too. A March 2004 article in Aviation Week
and Space Technology titled “To The Stars” stated that two large aerospace
companies, and one U.S. Defense Dept. agency are betting on ZPE, launching
bold research projects exploring the potential energy source. Puthoff
stated in the article that the potential is “practically limitless, way
beyond what can be conceived.” But he points to the need to first design a
viable way to extract the energy from the Zero Point Field, a process that
as of yet remains utterly inefficient at producing more energy than “a
butterfly’s wing.”
There is also a yet-to-be-found catalyst that would “ignite the ZPE
process.”
This “new physics” of the Zero Point Field could one day take us to the
nearest planet in a matter of weeks instead of years. As a method of
propulsion, the sky is literally the limit, thus the intense interest in
the ZPF by NASA and both government and private industries.
But intense interest in the ZPF and its potential for powering
spacecraft was not limited to U.S. agencies, nor was it limited to the
last three decades. In “The Hunt for Zero Point,” author and Jane’s
Defence Weekly aviation editor Nick Cook documents the Nazis’ intense
interest in antigravity and Zero Point Energy. This potentially limitless
source of power intrigued scientists in Nazi Germany, who were later
brought over to live and do their research in the United States as part of
Operation Paperclip. These scientists believed in ZPE as not just an
energy source for fueling rockets and planes, but as the potential
material for a powerful bomb.
Cook chronicles the quest to control gravity and take to the stars at
speeds near or surpassing that of light. Military, aerospace and corporate
interest in ZPE has been heated since the 1940s on both sides of the
Atlantic, beginning with the concepts of “electrogravitic lift” of Thomas
Townsend Brown, an inventor who, in 1929, wrote a paper called “How I
Control Gravitation” to accompany his own creation – an electrical
condenser he called the “Gravitor.” This device was a type of motor that
utilized the principles of electro-gravitation, and led to Brown
developing the ideal shape for electro-gravitational lift – the disc. This
was in the 1920’s, when the aviation industry was still trying to get a
fighter plane over 160 mph.
Brown’s research would lay the foundation for his later work with the
Naval Research Laboratory, where he would be assigned to work on
experiments with acoustics and minesweeping. But he would during that time
invent a method for canceling a ship’s magnetic field, a critical element
in wartime, and would later be linked to the notorious Philadelphia
Experiment, which supposedly involved the disappearance of a naval warship
and its crew into another dimension.
Brown went to demonstrate his Gravitor and flying discs to military
officials eager to grasp the potential of defying gravity and eventually
he established is own research foundation, continuing to pitch the
military on his amazing disc technology.
Even the Nazis and their brilliant scientists were at work on
antigravity technology, which Cook believes might account for the “foo
fighters” so often spotted by Allied pilots during World War Two, and of
course, the United States was forced to keep pace, doing their own black
budgeted research. Other nations would step into the fray, with Russian,
Finnish and British scientists all searching for a method of not just
controlling gravity, but overcoming, or nullifying, it altogether.
Much of the groundwork into antigravity and ZPE had been laid by the
likes of T.T. Brown, and German scientists working for the Third Reich
(both voluntarily and involuntarily), such as Viktor Schauberger, who had
built an unconventional machine in the early 1940s that generated lift,
dubbed the “fleigende scheibe,” or “flying saucer.” The craft would later
be dubbed the “Repulsine,” and would be one of many prototypes created and
tested under the Nazi flag.
ZPE research would fall into a kind of black hole of its own for the
next few decades, with little public information and even less government
admittance that it was even a serious pursuit. But documents recently
declassified, and investigative reporting like Cook’s would reveal a
continuing interest at NASA and other government agencies, all of which
were spearheading (including financially supporting) the work of various
researchers. Russian intelligence agents also showed interest in the
lifter technology of Viktor Schauberger, suggesting their own ongoing
black program into antigravity.
UFO sightings would be linked with the disc technology of the Nazis,
and when America made their power grab of the German technology after the
war, many ufologists would wonder just how many UFOs were from “out
there,” and how many were from “down here,” like the recently declassified
Project Silverbug, a supersonic saucer being developed by the United
States Air Force. Silverbug was rather conventional, being a jet-powered
vehicle, but for the Americans, it was an attempt to develop prototypes
closer to what the SS had been developing before the end of the war.

Today, physicists studying the ZPF and its energy believe we are
nowhere near understanding how to extract and large amounts of Zero Point
Energy for such uses as heating our homes and fueling our cars and planes.
Yet, research is going on now that may come up with viable ways to tap
into this repository of ground energy states and virtual particles that,
according to physicist Richard Feynman, could contain enough energy in
just one single cubic meter of space to boil the world’s oceans. That’s a
lot of energy. And if the ZPF is indeed as infinite as space itself, the
energy will never run out. Unlike fossil fuels, this field of energy will
be constantly self-regenerating. In fact, Puthoff calls the ZPF a
“self-regenerating grand ground state of the universe.”
Research into the ZPF also shows its ability to affect gravity, and the
ZPF may possibly be the missing link in the quest to bring together the
four fundamental forces of gravity, electromagnetism, and the weak and
strong nuclear forces, and give theoretical physicists their long
sought-after Theory of Everything. ZPE spacecraft could also potentially
solve the two main space travel problems of speed and fuel supply. The
quantum fluctuations of ZPE must first be extracted from the vacuum, and
engineering a machine effective enough to do so is the only thing many
physicists believe stands in the way of human space travel beyond our
wildest dreams. It is certainly feasible that advanced alien technology
has already found a way to extract the ZPE, and according to the
documented research of Nazi interest in the subject matter, we may be able
to one day duplicate it beyond just lifting a disk a few feet off the
ground in a lab. Delving deeper into the Casimir Effect might hold the
key.
ZPE and antigravity both offer tantalizing methods of UFO propulsion,
but the ZPE also holds the immediate appeal as a cheaper fuel source for a
world “addicted to oil.” Some investigative researchers such as Jim Marrs,
author of “Alien Agenda” and “Rule By Secrecy” suggest that these
alternative technologies lack the funding and attention they require
because of the monopolies of interest, such as oil and gas companies, that
would suffer from the discovery of such abundant and cheap fuel sources
being made available to the public. Marrs is also quick to note that
antigravity and the ZPF might explain the many UFO sightings involving
automobile engines stopping and starting up again, and other such examples
of the manipulation of energy reported by UFO witnesses all over the
world.
Hal Puthoff, in an interview with “Fortean Times,” also speculated that
someday the ZPE could be used in the process of water desalinization, as
well as reducing dependency on fossil fuels. It may also play a role in
heating homes, and if a process is found to convert this energy into
electrical form, Puthoff suggests we may one day have batteries that far
outlast the Energizer Bunny in longevity!
The great thing about using ZPE as a fuel source for skipping across
space is that your ship doesn’t have to slow down and “stop for gas” along
the way to another universe, as the fuel source is always available as you
flit along, and the ship itself would be free from carrying a weighty
amount of fuel to slow it down. But Puthoff pointed out to Fortean Times
that a UFO could also possibly use ZPE as a means for “the perturbation of
the space-time metric,” and suggests ZPE might also account for natural
atmospheric anomalies that some people mistake for UFOs, such as ball
lightning.
Not all physicists are jumping on the ZPE bandwagon. Professor Steven
Weinberg, in an interview with Scientific American’s “Ask the Scientist”
series, referred to the law of conservation of energy, which tells us that
if we get energy out of empty space, we must leave it in a condition of
lower energy. What, he asks, could have lower energy than empty space? But
Puthoff, appearing in that same interview series, cites modern research
that shows that a vacuum state such as the ZPF can have different energy
values, and can even decay to a state of lower energy under specific
conditions.
Though lab experiments with ZPE have shown results on a small scale,
with further research and funding Puthoff hopes that within the next
decade, “we will either be confident that it is only a matter of time and
engineering, or it will reveal it self to be only a laboratory phenomenon
without the possibility of constituting a major energy resource.” He
compares attempts to harness ZPE to a “long list of harnessing energetic
processes we find in our natural environment.”
For our alien friends eager to visit our planet or just do a quick
fly-by, the ZPF is like a superhighway of energy that might just be the
preferred mode of fuel for civilizations that have already found
extraction methods. Only time and a lot of cutting edge research will tell
if we will one day be able to do the same.
© Marie D. Jones
Click a book to read it's description and to
order:

* * *
MARIE D. JONES is the author of PSIence: How New Discoveries
in Quantum
Physics and New Science May Explain the Existence
of Paranormal Phenomena,
published by New Page Books, 2006
(www.warwickassociates.net/psience).
A
metaphysics and paranormal researcher, and a trained field investigator
for both MUFON (Mutual UFO Network) and CUFOS (Center For UFO Studies),
Jones is also renowned for her accomplishments in the field of
metaphysics.
PRESS RELEASE
Science and the Supernatural
Converge in PSIence
“Marie Jones has joined the list of forward thinking individuals who
are taking us to the next level in science and our understanding of the
universe and our place in it.” Jim Marrs, author of the New York Times
Bestsellers, Alien Agenda and Rule by Secrecy
San Francisco, CA (November 1, 2006) –– Many of the world’s leading
scientists, researchers and spiritual leaders—from noted physicists like
Michio Kaku to the Dalai Lama—are beginning to accept the possibility of
alternate realities and dimensions that warp time and space. In PSIence:
How New Discoveries in Quantum Physics and New Science May Explain the
Existence of Paranormal Phenomena, author Marie D. Jones leads us on a
journey to where the “normal” and the paranormal intersect, where the
known and unknown converge, where science greets the supernatural.
A renowned investigator of metaphysics and the paranormal, Jones
reveals, in layperson’s terms, how the latest discoveries in quantum
physics and New Science may explain the existence of UFOs, ghosts,
poltergeists, time anomalies, the Bermuda Triangle, energy vortices—and
psychic abilities such as ESP and telekinesis. As Nick Redfern said,
“Jones takes the reader on a roller-coaster ride into the unknown. Daring
to penetrate the shadowy realms that co-exist alongside our own world.”
She answers many fascinating questions:
- Are poltergeists energy fluctuations in the Zero Point Field?
- Can the experience of déjà vu be explained by the quantum theory of
parallel universes?
- Do thoughts have the energy to move physical objects?
- Is the Zero Point Field the source of all creative energy?
- Can every human being experience the paranormal?
- Do UFO’s use wormholes to traverse between universes?
- What are the parallels between ancient religions and modern quantum
physics?
The author of Looking For God In All the Wrong Places, as well as
hundreds of published articles and essays, Jones is a New
Thought/Metaphysics minister and counselor from San Diego (more on Jones
at
http://www.warwickassociates/PSIence).
PSIence today’s hottest topics together into one book, covering the
paranormal, quantum physics and the new science of consciousness studies
in a style that is appealing and easy for everyone to comprehend. Simple
sidebars and graphics explain complex concepts, and a touch of humor
lightens the scientific material, resulting in a book as entertaining as
it is educational.
Readers interested in mind-body subjects will enjoy the chapters on the
role of perception and consciousness in paranormal activity, as well as
the power of the mind and the ability of quantum physics to explain some
of those powers. New Science fans will delve into the chapters on the Zero
Point Field and the current research into the potentially holographic
brain and how it parallels the holographic universe theory.
© Marie D. Jones
Presented with permission of the author
The Déjà vu Enigma:
Doing It Again for the Very First Time
By Marie D. Jones and Larry Flaxman
I t comes on without warning. It can happen at any time, in any
place, with any one. Suddenly, you get that eerie feeling of “I’ve
been here before.” Yet, you are certain that this is the first
time you have ever set foot in such a place. Maybe you are in the
midst of a conversation, and realize that you have spoken those
very same words before, to the very same person now standing
before you. But there is no possible way you could have.
Déjà vu anyone?
French for “already seen,” déjà vu is one of the most widely
reported, yet least understood, anomalies of the mind. Theories
run the gamut from a neural glitch, to a brain slip, to a glimpse
into a parallel world, to a backwards memory of something
happening in the present instead of the past. But how could you
remember something happening…now? Yet that is exactly what
déjà vu appears to be – the memory of something that is happening
in the present moment. Impossible, yet every day millions of
people experience just such a phenomenon.
Also known as promnesia or paramnesia, which implies an amnesia
of the very near or present, déjà vu gives the distinct and often
unsettling sensation of remembering something that is happening in
that very same moment, an utter contradiction in terms, for you
cannot remember something as it is happening, as in
instantaneous memory.
“I could swear this happened before, in just the same way,” we
hear people say as they scratch their heads in wonder and
amazement. “I did this before.” “I said this before.” “I saw this
before.” Yet those who have experienced this baffling phenomenon
know without a doubt that they indeed did not do, say, or see this
before.
The most common theories into déjà vu involve the brain and
memory. The latter part of the 20th century has led to some
serious scientific study of the phenomenon as an anomaly of memory
recall. To validate this explanation, researchers point to the
fact that the “sense” of recollection of a déjà vu is actually
stronger than the actual details of the recalled event itself. It
is this “sensing” that the focus is placed upon. Some people,
studies claim, actually will go on to have déjà vu of past deja
vus!
While this sounds incredible, the emphasis here is on a glitch
in the brain’s short term memory processing. This software “bug”
in our brain’s programming gives an almost precognitive feel to
the experience, like we are getting a peek into the future.
Perhaps there is an overlap between the neurological systems
responsible for short-term memory and those responsible for
long-term memory.
Some scientists suggest that déjà vu is simply one eye
perceiving an event in a fraction of a second before the other eye
does. The idea is that one eye might record the stimuli
fractionally faster; creating the sense of “recollection” once the
other eye kicks in and makes the same perception. But this theory
has been disproven by research showing that people with only one
functional eye still report déjà vu!
Obviously, when an anomaly is presented to science, the result
is often to immediately categorize it as a disorder, and déjà vu
is not immune. Some researchers have associated déjà vu with
everything from anxiety to multiple personality disorder to
epilepsy. Of all of the possible syndromes, temporal lobe
epilepsy, which is the result of improper electrical discharges in
the brain, seems to have the most in common.
In 1955, American-born Canadian neurosurgeon Wilder Penfield
conducted his now famous experiments stimulating the temporal
lobes of the study participants with electrical charges. Penfield,
a pioneer in research into the human mind, found that only
approximately 8% of the participants experienced such déjà vu type
“memories” afterwards. Could déjà vu be just such a neurological
anomaly that only occurs in a select few?
More current research by such noted scientists as Chris Moulin,
a psychologist in the Cognitive Neuropsychology Dept. at the
University of Leeds and his former PhD student Akira O’Connor (now
at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri) has pointed to
the use of hypnosis to trigger déjà vu experiences in subjects, as
well as a connection with the temporal lobe. Interestingly, many
people with temporal lobe epilepsy do report more frequent déjà
vu, leading O'Connor to posit that déjà vu may actually originate
in this part of the brain.
But you don’t have to have a temporal lobe disorder to
experience déjà vu. In a December 2008 report published by Current
Directions in Psychological Science, researchers from Colorado
State University studied the parallels between déjà vu and
theories of human recognition memory. Headed by Anne Cleary, the
research team’s findings suggest that déjà vu occurs when a
current situation resembles a situation that has previously
occurred in one’s life. A sort of “situational overlap” leads to
the feeling of familiarity. The parts of the brain involved are
the same parts involved in memory retainment and recall.
Cryptamnesia, the unconscious recollection of material that
sometimes spontaneously rises to consciousness as memory, might
also explain déjà vu. Perhaps it is true that learned information
is never really forgotten, but instead stored away in the brain,
and when a similar occurrence invokes a need for the knowledge
learned in the past, suddenly, we remember it NOW, leading to the
feeling of familiarity.
Multiple personality disorder, now more formally known as DID,
or Dissociative Identity Disorder, hints at the spooky possibility
that we all have fractured minds, and when one experiences the
same thing as another, within the same time frame, we experience
classic déjà vu. Same body, different mind, so to speak. This
might explain why we always sense our presence in both worlds, yet
know we are only operating fully in one (or are we?).
Schizophrenia may also be linked to déjà vu, as a disease of a
split mind that could account for the dual recognition of a single
event.
Skeptics will argue that we are really just remembering a
similar event, or the actual event itself, but one that indeed
really occurred many moons ago. Or that we are recalling an event
from childhood, or a forgotten situation we barely paid attention
to the first time around. The very definition of the word skeptic
as someone who instinctively or habitually doubts, questions, or
disagrees with assertions or generally accepted conclusions really
says it all. One has to wonder, though, what the skeptics would
say if they ever had had an intense experience of déjà vu, one
that shakes the foundation of what they believe reality to be. An
experience that forces them to consider if there is truly some
deeper, more implicate meaning to their existence.
Not everyone agrees that déjà vu is an anomaly of the memory,
or even some kind of simple brain slip-up. Some suggest that déjà
vu is a doorway, or rather, a peek inside the keyhole of a door
that leads to other worlds. Or perhaps a fleeting vision of a past
life…or even a parallel life in another dimension, another
universe. Think of the incredible possibilities! Are we indeed
living double lives? And is déjà vu the connective link between
those lives?
There is also the opposite of déjà vu, known as jamais vu,
which is the sensation of not recognizing a familiar situation. In
this case, someone sees something they have seen dozens, maybe
even hundreds of times before, yet, they fail to recognize it for
a short time. It could be a word, a person, a place, or a skill.
Jamais vu could be the reason behind the popularity of games like
Trivial Pursuit, which require quick recall of trivia we all
should, but often don’t remember (most likely because it IS trivia
and thus not important or meaningful enough to be stored in our
long term memory bank).
The mind is still a mystery, and the way that memory is stored
and recalled still eludes complete explanation. Déjà vu is one of
many anomalies of the mind, memory and time that continues to
fascinate both scientists and paranormal enthusiasts alike, both
of which see clues to their own pet theories in a phenomenon that
occurs with more frequency than any other.
When in the middle of a déjà vu experience, many people report
being able to literally “mentally” anticipate the next word of the
conversation they are recalling a fraction of a second before they
speak it. Could this be because the brain works in mysterious ways
we have yet to discover? Or are we seeing and experiencing
ourselves in another universe, one that exists alongside our own,
just for that brief period of time when we know exactly what
comes next? We know it because we said it before, did it
before, experienced it before. Even when logic and reason tells us
we are saying it, doing it, and experiencing it…for the very first
time.
Marie D. Jones and Larry Flaxman are the best selling authors
of “The Déjà vu Enigma: A Journey Through the Anomalies of Mind,
Memory and Time.” They can be reached at
www.paraexplorers.com .
Marie
is a best-selling author, screenwriter, researcher, radio show
host and public speaker. She is the author of
She also co-authored,
- "SUPERVOLCANO: THE CATASTROPHIC EVENT THAT CHANGED THE
COURSE OF HUMAN HISTORY" written with her father, geophysicist
Dr. John M. Savino, and
- "11:11- THE TIME PROMPT PHENOMENON- THE MEANING BEHIND
MYSTERIOUS SIGNS, SEQUENCES AND SYNCHRONICITIES," and
- "THE RESONANCE KEY: EXPLORING THE LINKS BETWEEN VIBRATION,
CONSCIOUSNESS AND THE ZERO POINT GRID," with Larry Flaxman, her
partner in ParaExplorers (www.paraexplorers.com). Their newest
book is
- THE DEJA VU ENIGMA: A JOURNEY THROUGH THE ANOMALIES OF MIND,
MEMORY AND TIME" released in June 2010.
Marie is a regular co-host on the hugely popular "Dreamland"
radio show interviewing luminaries in the fields of the
paranormal, science, unknown anomalies and alternative history.
Marie is also a screenwriter currently developing a science
fiction feature film and a paranormal film with Bruce Lucas
Productions, and she is developing a paranormal-related television
series as well. She has a long background in the entertainment
industry, having worked for 15 years in music, film and television
promotion, publicity and development. She has written and produced
several direct-to-video releases and is also the co-author of over
50 inspirational books for PIL/New Seasons, as well as hundreds of
articles, essays and stories in magazines, online ezines,
newspapers and anthologies, including five Chicken Soup for the
Soul books. She is now a regular contributor to TAPS ParaMagazine,
and writes regularly for New Dawn Magazine and Phenomena Magazine
as well. She has written numerous book reviews for CurledUp.com,
BookIdeas.com and AbsoluteWrite.com. Her articles and features
have also appeared in The Light Connection, Whole Life Times,
Alternate Realities, The Daily Grail, ThothWeb, the North County
Times, Tuned In, Entertainment Daily L.A., UFO Digest, UFO
Magazine, and many others.
Marie also spent fifteen years as a field investigator for the
Mutual UFO Network in Los Angeles and San Diego. She currently
serves as Director of Special Projects to ARPAST, the Arkansas
Paranormal and Anomalous Studies Team. She is also highly active
in local and regional disaster preparedness, and is a trained CERT
member (Community Emergency Response Team). She is also training
with the American Red Cross and is a member of several ham radio
disaster NETs, including SATERN, MetroNet and QuakeNet. Her call
sign is KI6YES.
She recently appeared on the History Channel's "Nostradamus
Effect" series and "30 Odd Minutes" television with Jeff Belanger,
and has been interviewed on hundreds of radio shows all over the
world, including COAST TO COAST AM WITH GEORGE NOORY, SHIRLEY
MACLAINE SHOW, FEET 2 THE FIRE, NPR, KPBS RADIO, X-ZONE RADIO,
KEVIN SMITH SHOW, PARANORMAL PODCAST, RICHARD SYRETT SHOW, DAVID
JAMES SHOW, LATE SHOW WITH IAN COLLINS, BEYOND REALITY WITH THE
GHOST HUNTERS, and many others. She has been interviewed in dozens
of magazines, newspapers and websites. She is a favorite guest on
many paranormal and metaphysical radio shows, and her podcast
interviews are often the most downloaded in many show archives.
Marie is a highly regarded and popular speaker on science,
metaphysics, consciousness and the paranormal and has appeared at
major conferences and events. She has also lectured to local and
regional meet-up groups, networking organizations and libraries,
bookstores and author events.
She currently resides in sunny Northern San Diego County,
California.
"As a producer, I have worked with many, many writers over the
years, and I recently had the pleasure of being introduced to
Marie by her book agent, a long time associate and friend, Lisa
Hagan. Marie is simply put..."gifted". She started out as a
best-selling author of cutting edge science and she is a natural
born storyteller in every medium she touches - books, TV pilots,
feature scripts- Moreover, she is a terrific collaborator -- when
you give her a note, she comes back and always makes the material
better without ever losing sight of her voice, vision or backbone.
A gifted writer and a lovely human being -- a winning combination
-- I recommend her highly!"
Wendy Kram, Principal and Founder L.A. FOR HIRE, Inc. Producer
"Mad Money", "Sally Hemings: An American Scandal" May 24, 2010
Click a book to read it's description and to
order:

Related Links:
|