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What guests would you like to hear on C2C

Posted: 05-12-2007 09:55 PM
by SETIsLady
If you got to pick the guests on C2C, who would you like to hear ?

I would like to hear Art interview Bob Lazar again.

Posted: 05-12-2007 09:56 PM
by Dynja
Dannion Brinkley

Posted: 05-12-2007 10:00 PM
by Shirleypal
Michio Kaku, Barbie Taylor, Dean Radin, Graham Hancock for starters, Art interviewing them of course.

Posted: 05-12-2007 10:14 PM
by majda
Robert Felix

Posted: 05-12-2007 11:30 PM
by Dominic
Pius Mau Piailug a.k.a. Mau Pialug

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mau_Piailug

There is not enough info on this guy. But I believe that Art would enjoy his company very much on the air. There may not be a telephone where Mau is but it would be worth it to airdrop a satelite cell phone to do the interview. I am not even sure if he is alive.

I am not sure about his command of English today as compared to his work with the Hawaiians. Maybe some of the scholars who are familiar with him can facilitate a meeting.

Posted: 05-12-2007 11:35 PM
by Shirleypal
Dominic sent an email to [email protected] and suggest him as a guest for Art.

Posted: 05-12-2007 11:35 PM
by HurricaneJoanie
Dynja wrote: Dannion Brinkley


Ditto -- get Dannion on the horn, Art!

Posted: 05-12-2007 11:49 PM
by Dominic
Shirleypal wrote: Dominic sent an email to [email protected] and suggest him as a guest for Art.


I am assuming you meant SEND. So I sent it. Let's see what those guys on the uppity up can do about this.

Posted: 05-12-2007 11:55 PM
by Shirleypal
Dominic Alan is cool, he will answer you.

Posted: 05-12-2007 11:56 PM
by Shirleypal
Remember when Dannion was very ill and Art and Romona went to Georgia I think to see him.

Posted: 05-13-2007 02:12 AM
by Psychicwolf
Lookin' good, Ro. That's what you are looking like now, aren't you, you hot thing?

Posted: 05-13-2007 02:42 AM
by OMG
Brinkley is a name I haven't heard in a while, he was always a quality guest in my mind, would like to hear him again

This is a pretty good question, for me I'd love to see Reverse Speech be done again on C2C, doesn't nessesary need to be David Oates but would like the subject be tackled again on C2C. Probably won't happen after all this time though.

Posted: 05-13-2007 05:37 AM
by gpshealy
I guess there is no accounting for taste. I always thought Dannion was boring, dull, yawn. O, I get it you were struck by lightening. You were a wretch, not now. yada yada yada.


EDIT -- To answer your question (and leaving out people who have already been on), I would say:

Penn Jillette: Magician, expert on debunking phony psychic claims, Libretarian, very engaging.

Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke: University Professor at Exter and the acknowledged Expert on the relationship between Nazism and esoteric, supernatural cults. Should be an interesting episode.

Posted: 05-13-2007 07:57 AM
by Dynja
"I guess there is no accounting for taste."

Isn't that the truth. ;)

Posted: 05-14-2007 08:06 AM
by Janus232
I think this guy would be a cool guest for Art......

Mark Tamisiea (- Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Massachusetts)

"If the Earth were a perfect sphere, gravity would be the same everywhere around the sphere....... Knowing there are the two domes gives us a way to put tighter constraints on how the ice sheet develops and evolves with changing climate"

Recent mass balance of polar ice sheets inferred from patterns of global sea-level change
".... non-eustatic—sea-level redistributions can be produced by variations in the volume of the polar ice sheets. Here we present numerical predictions of gravitationally consistent patterns of sea-level change following variations in either the Antarctic or Greenland ice sheets or the melting of a suite of small mountain glaciers. These predictions are characterized by geometrically distinct patterns that reconcile spatial variations in previously published sea-level records"
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v4 ... 026a0.html

Temporal Gravity Trends in North America
"We compare geoid rates over North America from GRACE data to predictions based on glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA). The return flow of mantle material to regions previously covered by the large ice sheets of the last glacial cycle produces one of the largest non-hydrological secular signals present in the GRACE data. Predictions of the geoid rate due to GIA have a characteristic increase centered near Hudson Bay. The observed geoid "rate" has a similar pattern with amplitudes (depending on the GRACE dataset and analysis approach) that are within the range of model predictions. In addition, a broad, lower-amplitude signal south of the previously-glaciated regions is also observed, presumably due to hydrology. We will present preliminary findings regarding the analysis of GRACE data in this region, and describe the ability of current time series to_discriminate between ice and Earth models"
http://www.csr.utexas.edu/grace/GSTM/ab ... 56888.html

Observationally-Derived Estimate of Glacial Isostatic Adjustment
"Understanding the ongoing response of the solid Earth and oceans to glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) is a key component in interpreting mass variations observed from GRACE in many polar regions, such as Greenland and Antarctica. Uncertainties in the ice sheet history and 3-D viscosity structure of solid Earth complicate the numerical prediction of GIA. Uniquely parameterizing the ice model is not possible, given the limited number and spatial distribution of sea-level histories and end moraines. Moreover, most GIA predictions are currently generated using spherically-symmetric Earth models. To minimize the impact of model shortcomings, we have developed a data assimilation approach that combines GRACE and GPS data together with expected covariances of these signals across North America derived from forward models to generate a new GIA estimate. This technique has the advantage of allowing the estimated GIA fields to be further constrained by the observations without having to determine the impact on the initial model parameters (ice history and viscoelastic Earth structure). Since this approach was introduced at the 2006 Spring AGU Meeting, further work has yielded significantly improved agreement between the GIA estimate and the GRACE rates over Canada, while preserving the much improved fit to GPS observations. We will describe the improvements made to the technique and implications for the combination of additional geodetic data types"
http://www.csr.utexas.edu/grace/GSTM/20 ... l#tamisiea