Robbie Williams thinks aliens are trying to send messages through him because he’s famous. The 50-year-old singer believes aliens want him to use his stardom to tell everyone about them.
Port Vale fan Robbie, who grey up in Tunstall and Burslem, says he has experienced some strange encounters in the past. He once said he saw a UFO so close he could have hit it with “a tennis ball”.
Another time, when he was writing a song called Arizona about aliens, a “gold ball of light” showed up in the studio while his music was on. Robbie believes that extra-terrestrial beings keep coming to him because they know he can spread the word about them due to his status.
He said: “I sometimes think – and I try to separate narcissism and ego, unsuccessfully a lot of the time – but there’s lots of different theories that we all have to do with this stuff but I often wonder if I’m supposed to see it because of my public platform. Am I supposed to see this so I can talk about it? ”
The Stoke-on Trent-born star lives in Beverly Hills with his wife Ayda Field and their four children Teddy, who is 11, Charlie, who is nine, Coco, who is five, and Beau, who is three. He believes the city is a hotspot for alien visitors, as reported by the Daily Star, states the Mirror.
Robbie said: “For some reason, I feel closer to the woo-woo in Los Angeles than I do in England. I had a house in Wiltshire, the grounds and the house were a thousand years old and you would think that there I would be inundated with spectres or doors slamming, other people experienced it, but I didn’t. It’s not until I go to Los Angeles where I live, or lived for a while, that it’s like there’s vortexes here, it’s a very strange land.”
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He also shared a spooky story about seeing a UFO while playing his song ‘Arizona’ in 2008: “I’d just written a song called Arizona, and it’s all about alien contact and I was playing that.”
“I stood on the balcony and there was this big ball of gold light that turned up – we thought it was Venus or Mars or something. Then the song stops playing and it disappears. But then we put Arizona on again and the ball turned back up. It happened four times. After that a massive electrical storm started and these two big massive balls of light started dancing in the sky. It was like a whole light show for about an hour.”
Source: Stoke on Trent Live, Mirror
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