(streaming audio only version of video below this)
What do you do when you come across a conversation so important, so mind-bending, so criminally overlooked by the mainstream, that you can’t stop thinking about it?
You recreate it.

That’s exactly what I did when I found the published transcript of a conversation between Dr. Manu Seyfzadeh and ChatGPT—one that dives deep into a revolutionary breakthrough by Dr. Filippo Biondi and his team, who scanned beneath the Giza Plateau and found massive underground structures using Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR).
These structures aren’t just random cavities—they appear intelligently designed, symmetrical, and staggeringly deep, some over 1.2 kilometers below the surface.

This isn’t fringe speculation. This is science. Real science. Physics, signal processing, vibration analysis, Doppler filtering, inversion algorithms. And Biondi isn’t a YouTuber making wild claims.
He’s a peer-reviewed physicist with over 88 scientific papers to his name, including earlier confirmed SAR studies that mapped known structures to astounding accuracy.
So why did I recreate this conversation?
Because important truths get buried, and not just under limestone bedrock. When the team unveiled these discoveries in February 2025, the public didn’t get a clear explanation.
The press conference was in Italian. The visuals were technical. And the world media? Silent—or worse, dismissive.
And here’s where it gets ugly.
Instead of serious scientific discussion, we got YouTubers and archaeologists with no physics background calling it all "bullshit".
One such "expert" is Flint Dibble, who seems to have made it his full-time job to gaslight actual scientists and journalists like Graham Hancock. Another is Milo Rossi, a guy who’s more into drama than data.
Their podcast? Ironically titled "Uniting YouTube Against Fake History Fraud". Translation: uniting ignorance against inconvenient discoveries.
It’s enraging. Because archaeology is not a hard science. It’s a branch of the humanities. Yet these self-appointed gatekeepers think they can overrule teams using advanced radar algorithms and satellite data to see through the Earth—something no traditional excavation has ever done.
This video dramatization of Seyfzadeh’s chat with ChatGPT captures what these critics never could: the science behind the discovery. It’s clear. It’s visual. It explains:
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Why peer review isn't always the gold standard when the method has already been validated on known structures, volcanoes, dams, and even CERN’s underground tunnels.
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How SAR doesn't just penetrate the ground—it picks up micromotions on the surface that reveal what lies far beneath.
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How structures under all three Giza pyramids are shockingly similar, suggesting a single origin and possible connection to a civilization far older than dynastic Egypt.
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Why critics who don’t even know what SAR is are totally unqualified to dismiss this research.
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How Biondi’s “inversion process” transforms satellite radar into three-dimensional underground maps.
One of the best lines from the original chat?
“We are bullshit. But we are the ones giving results. The scan pyramid is gold—but it gave no results. So why is our bullshit the only one producing data?”
Now that’s a mic drop.
This is the kind of discussion that can change how we see the past. It’s a hard slap to the face of the dusty orthodoxy that’s spent decades guarding the gates of academic archaeology. And it’s a beacon to anyone who’s ever suspected that we’re being kept in the dark about our origins—sometimes deliberately.
So if you’ve ever wondered:
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Could the pyramids have a hidden function?
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Is there a vast underground network beneath Egypt?
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Could free satellite data be the key to revealing ancient secrets?
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Why do the real experts keep getting silenced?
Then this video is for you.
And let me say—if you’ve ever listened to a podcast while jogging, doing dishes, or commuting, this one is worth your time. It’s not just a recreation. It’s a rescue mission for a conversation that deserves to be heard, shared, and debated.
Watch it. Share it. Rage about it if you must. Just don’t ignore it.
Because while the self-appointed high priests of orthodoxy are busy rolling their eyes, the future of history is being rewritten—by satellites, science, and those who dare to ask better questions.
Link to transcript of Manu Seyfzadeh original conversation with ChatGPT about Biondi Protocol:
Link to all scans from March 15, 2025 Press conference by Dr. Filippo Biondi, Armando Mei , Corrado Malanga
