Georgina Bruni

Georgina Bruni (born Linda Naylor; 12 January 1947 – 19 January 2008) was a British businesswoman and a UFO researcher best known for her book on the Rendlesham Forest incident, You Can't Tell the People.[1] She worked as a celebrity events organizer and as the founder and Editor in Chief of the online magazine Hot Gossip.[2]

Georgina Bruni
Born
Linda Naylor

(1947-01-12)January 12, 1947
Sheffield, Yorkshire, England
Died19 January 2008(2008-01-19) (aged 61)
OccupationJournalist
Ufologist

Biography

Born Linda Naylor, Bruni trained as a private investigator and subsequently became an investigative journalist in the 1980s. She specialized in the researching and reporting on cults and the paranormal. According to an obituary by fellow UFO researcher Nick Pope, she travelled extensively and at various times lived in Jersey, Italy, Hong Kong and America, before settling in London in 1992." She died from ovarian cancer on 19 January 2008. Obituary for Georgina Bruni Archived March 8, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, twinbases.org.uk; accessed 7 March 2016.</ref>[3][4]

You Can't Tell the People

Bruni wrote one book called You Can't Tell the People, a study of Britain's most famous UFO case, the Rendlesham Forest incident of December 1980. It was published in hardback by Sidgwick & Jackson in November 2000, and in paperback by Pan Macmillan in November 2001. The title comes from a quotation Bruni claims to have been spoken by Margaret Thatcher, Prime Minister at the time of the events in 1980: "UFOs! You must get your facts right and you can't tell the people".[5]

The hardback edition was launched at media event held at the Ministry of Defence, alongside fellow UFO researcher Nick Pope.[6]

Post-publication

After its publication, she worked with Admiral of the Fleet Lord Peter Hill-Norton, who asked questions in the House of Lords regarding the case.[7]

gollark: I mean, obviously the platform can do whatever, it's closed-source and centralized.
gollark: I don't think Discord can do that.
gollark: You can just write "ivermectin". I don't think there's a bot to delete references to it like there is for some other things.
gollark: 99% seems high. is this one of those "it reduces replication by horribly breaking the cell" things?
gollark: At current rates, the store of Greek letters will be depleted in about a year.

References

  1. "Pandora". The Independent. 16 November 2000. Strange goings-on at the Ministry of Defence, where security was even tighter than usual on Tuesday night for a gathering on the subject of UFOs. It's true. A very high class of punters graced the Henry VIII Wine Cellar in the chilling Whitehall edifice for the launch of a book on the subject by the socialite authoress Georgina Bruni, entitled You Can't Tell the People.
  2. Bruni, Georgina (February 2006). "Spotlight by Georgina Bruni". Hot Gossip. Retrieved 13 April 2007.
  3. "In Memoriam - Georgina Bruni". February 2008.
  4. Rendlesham - The Unresolved Mystery Archived April 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, nickpope.net; accessed 7 March 2016.
  5. Blacker, Terence (9 December 2002). "Watch out for close encounters". The Independent. More significantly, Ms Bruni claims to have raised the Rendlesham question with Baroness Thatcher a few years later, and was told: "You must have the facts and you can't tell the people."
  6. "Pandora". The Independent. 13 December 2000. Focus was also due to take her pic with MoD employee and UFO researcher Nick Pope, but all cameras were banned from the launch. The reason, it seems, was a memo circulated by the Directorate of Air Staff. "Under no circumstances whatsoever must Nick Pope or Georgina Bruni be dressed up as Mulder and Scully from the popular TV series", it said.
  7. "Parliamentary record of Lord Hill-Nortons questions in the house". Retrieved 7 March 2016.
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