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Director
/ writer and narrator of the Secret of Redgate:
Jim Marrs
A
native of Fort Worth, Texas, Mr. Marrs earned a Bachelor of Arts
degree in journalism from the University of North Texas in 1966
and attended Graduate School at Texas Tech in Lubbock for two years
more. He has worked for several Texas newspapers, including the
Fort Worth Star-Telegram, where beginning in 1968 he served as police
reporter. Mr. Marrs then became a general assignments reporter covering
stories locally, in Europe and the Middle East. After a leave of
absence to serve with a Fourth Army intelligence unit during the
Vietnam War, he became military and aerospace writer for the newspaper
and an investigative reporter. Since 1980, Mr. Marrs has been a
free-lance writer, author and public relations consultant. He also
published a rural weekly newspaper along with a monthly tourism
tabloid, a cable television show and several videos.
Since 1976, Mr. Marrs has taught a course on the assassination of
President John F. Kennedy at the University of Texas at Arlington.
In 1989, his book, Crossfire: The Plot That Killed Kennedy, was
published to critical acclaim and within three years had gone into
an eighth printing in both hardbound and softbound editions. Crossfire
reached the New York Times Paperback Non-Fiction Best Seller list
in mid-February 1992 and remained there for more than six weeks.
His book became a basis for the Oliver Stone film JFK. Mr. Marrs
served as a chief consultant for both the film's screenplay and
production.
Beginning in 1992, Mr. Marrs spent three years researching and completing
a non-fiction book on a top-secret government program involving
the psychic phenomenon known as remote viewing only to have it mysteriously
canceled as it was going to press in the summer of 1995. Within
two months, the story of military-developed remote viewing broke
nationally in the Washington Post after the CIA held a press conference
revealing the program but putting their own spin on psychic studies.
In 2001, "Psi Spies" was finally published in a paperback
form and is available from JimMarrs.com.
In May, 1997, Marrs' in-depth investigation of UFOs, Alien Agenda,
was published by HarperCollins Publishers. In less than two months,
Alien Agenda had garnered many positive reviews and gone into an
eighth printing. Mr. Marrs has been a featured speaker at a number
of national conferences including the Annual International UFO Congress
and the Annual Gulf Breeze UFO Conference. Publisher's Weekly described
Alien Agenda as "the most entertaining and complete overview
of flying saucers and their crew in years." The paperback edition
was released in mid-1998 and has since become the best-selling UFO
book ever in the United States. Beginning in 2000, he began teaching
a course on UFOs at the University of Texas at Arlington.
In early 2000, HarperCollins published Rule by Secrecy, which traced
the hidden history that connects modern secret societies to the
Ancient Mysteries. In 2003, his book The War on Freedom probed the
conspiracies of the 9/11 attacks and their aftermath.
An award-winning journalist, Mr. Marrs is listed both in Who's Who
in the World and Who's Who in America. Mr. Marrs has won several
writing and photography awards including the Aviation/Aerospace
Writer's Association's National Writing Award and Newsmaker of the
Year Award from the Fort Worth Chapter of the Society of Professional
Journalists. In 1993, Mr. Marrs received Freedom Magazine's Human
Rights Leadership Award.
Mr. Marrs has appeared on ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, CSPAN, the Discovery,
Learning and History Channels, This Morning America, Geraldo, Montell
Williams, Today and The Larry King and Art Bell radio programs along
with numerous national and regional radio and TV shows. He is a
former president of the Press Club of Fort Worth and a current member
of the Society of Professional Journalists, Sigma Delta Chi, and
the Investigative Reporters and Editors.
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