Author, journalist and TV personality Nick Pope worked for
the British government for 21 years, at the Ministry of Defence. In the
course of his career, he served in a number of different posts, but is best
known for work that he did between 1991 and 1994, when he was posted to a
division where his duties included investigating reports of Unidentified Flying
Objects. The purpose of these investigations was to see whether anything
reported might pose any threat to the defense of the United Kingdom, or suggest
the existence of anything that might be of more general defense interest.
Most sightings turned out to be misidentifications of ordinary objects or
phenomena, but a small percentage remained unexplained. Contrary to
popular belief, there was no definitive evidence that any of these sightings
were extraterrestrial in origin. However, the Ministry of Defense
remained open-minded about the possibilities and took no position on the
existence of extraterrestrial life.
Nick Pope was initially skeptical
about UFOs, but his official research and investigation convinced him that
whatever the nature of the sightings that remained unexplained, the UFO phenomenon
raised important defense, national security and air safety issues.
He was particularly interested in cases where the witnesses
were pilots, or where UFOs were tracked on radar.
More recently, Nick Pope has been
involved in the program to declassify and release the MoD’s UFO files and send
them to the National Archives. This involved selecting some cases that
would be of interest to the media, making a film to promote the release and
giving newspaper, TV and radio interviews to publicize the story.
Nick Pope left the Ministry of
Defense in 2006. He now works as a freelance journalist and media
commentator, writing and broadcasting on a wide range of subjects, including
UFOs, the unexplained, conspiracy theories, fringe science, defense, intelligence,
space and science fiction.
Nick Pope works with a wide range of
film companies, TV networks and production companies, helping develop ideas for
new films, TV shows and documentaries. He contributes regularly to
various news programs, chat shows and documentaries.
Nick Pope works with various PR,
marketing and advertising agencies, promoting sci-fi films and advertising
campaigns themed around the unexplained. He has worked for clients that
include Microsoft, 20th Century Fox and Sony Pictures and has been involved in
promoting The X-Files: I Want To Believe and the remake of The Day The Earth
Stood Still.
Nick Pope lectures all around the
world and this has included addressing the Oxford Union and the Cambridge Union
Society, as well as speaking at the Science Museum, the Royal Albert Hall and
Global Competitiveness Forum 2011.
Nick Pope has written four books,
all of which have been published by Simon & Schuster.
His
non-fiction books are Open Skies Closed Minds, about UFOs, and The Uninvited,
about the alien abduction mystery. Both books made the Top Ten in the
Sunday Times list of hardback non-fiction books, with Open Skies Closed Minds
reaching number three and staying in the Top Ten for ten weeks. These
books have been translated into various foreign languages. Nick Pope has
also written two science fiction novels about an alien invasion, Operation
Thunder Child and Operation Lightning Strike. There have been discussions
about producing a film or a TV miniseries based on these books.
Nick Pope lives
in California
.
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