Diary note: it may seem a while off, but the end of the world is still scheduled for 2030, precise date TBC. After once suggesting that nameless devastation could be upon us in 2012, the evergreen eschatologist Graham Hancock subsequently updated his advice to a comet, now six years off. Or thereabouts. MailOnline, which has been exhuming an ancient Hancock text, reminds readers of his “dire warning for our age”.

What is certain, anyway, is that a great and horrifying catastrophe will occur as soon as 16 October. This is the day Netflix will launch something astounding, almost beyond belief, something sceptics said could never happen: series 2 of Hancock’s Ancient Apocalypse. And stranger still: this terrible event stars, along with Hancock, the Hollywood actor Keanu Reeves.

  • streetlights
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    122 months ago

    Nobody hated on Nimoy for In Search Of.

    That show opened with a firm disclaimer that it was all speculative.

    Hancock does say his ideas aren’t mainstream, but it’s framed more like a conspiracy by academics to hide the truth.

    I agree with you in general that you can have light entertainment shows about “unsolved mysteries” without falling into the trap of peddling pseudoscience.