Glenn Beck’s recent sit-down with investigative journalist Billy Hallowell wasn’t entertainment — it was a national wake-up call. Hallowell, who fronts CBN’s new docuseries Investigating the Supernatural: Angels & Demons, laid out a case that forces serious-minded Americans to stop scoffing and start paying attention to the spiritual dimension of reality. What he described goes beyond spooky headlines; it’s an invitation to ask hard questions about what unseen forces might be shaping our culture and politics.
Hallowell told Beck that the research behind his film left him “shocked by the staggering amount of evidence” and that this material is converting skeptics — especially younger people hungry for truth. That admission should sting the elite institutions that have peddled naturalism and moral relativism for decades: if evidence and testimony drive people back toward faith, maybe those institutions haven’t been defending reason so much as suppressing it. Conservatives who love this country should welcome scrutiny, not censorship, when it leads citizens back to moral clarity.
Far from a fringe curiosity, the documentary explicitly grapples with the hard question: are some UFO and alien encounters actually manifestations of spiritual reality — demons, fallen angels, or even the Biblical Nephilim? CBN’s coverage confirms the film examines scripture, expert testimony, and historical accounts to make that case, and it began streaming in mid-March 2026. This is not merely spooky late-night talk; it’s a media project with the aim of shaping how Christians and patriots understand the unseen world.
Americans ought to be skeptical of conspiracy-mongers, but we should be even more skeptical of the smugness of those who dismiss whole realms of experience because it’s inconvenient to their worldview. The re-mystification of our culture — the return of interest in angels, demons, and spiritual warfare — didn’t start with a streaming doc, it started with lived experience and testimony that our institutions have too often ignored or ridiculed. Conservatives who cherish truth and the Constitution should defend the right to investigate, report, and publish uncomfortable findings without being gaslit by gatekeepers.
CBN’s film and accompanying coverage emphasize that the project includes theologians, historians, and firsthand accounts — not just late-night speculation. That level of sourcing is exactly what thoughtful Americans demand: rigorous reporting, credible witnesses, and the humility to admit when long-held assumptions might be wrong. If the left’s media apparatus won’t touch subjects that point to spiritual realities or moral accountability, then it falls to independent patriots, faith-based journalists, and conservative platforms to keep the public informed.
Glenn Beck saying he “reconsidered everything” after talking with Hallowell should be a jolt to every conservative who has assumed this conversation belonged to the lunatic fringe. It doesn’t — and the stakes are too high for ridicule to win the day. Watchmen of the republic don’t ignore potential threats because they’re unfamiliar; they study, they verify, and they warn. Hallowell’s documentary is a spark; let it light a broader, courageous conversation among Americans who still believe truth matters.
