Jim Macdonald, a resident of the area in which the Hills claimed to have been abducted, has produced a detailed analysis of their journey which concludes that the episode was provoked by their misperceiving an aircraft warning beacon on
Cannon Mountain as a UFO. Macdonald notes that from the road the Hills took, the beacon appears and disappears at exactly the same time the Hills describe the UFO as appearing and disappearing. The remainder of the experience is ascribed to stress,
sleep deprivation, and
false memories "recovered" under hypnosis. After reading Macdonald's recreation, UFO expert
Robert Sheaffer writes that the Hills are the "
poster children" for not driving when sleep deprived. In the
Skeptical Inquirer, Sheaffer also wrote: "I was present at the National UFO Conference in New York City in 1980, at which Betty presented some of the UFO photos she had taken. She showed what must have been far more than 200 slides, mostly of blips, blurs, and blobs against a dark background. These were supposed to be UFOs coming in close, chasing her car, landing, etc. ... After her talk had exceeded about twice its allotted time, Betty was literally jeered off the stage by what had been at first a sympathetic audience. This incident, witnessed by many of UFOlogy's leaders and top activists, removed any lingering doubts about Betty's credibility — she had none. In 1995, Betty Hill wrote a self-published book,
A Common Sense Approach to UFOs. It is filled with delusional stories, such as seeing entire squadrons of UFOs in flight and a truck levitating above the freeway." Sheaffer later wrote that as late as 1977, Betty Hill would go on UFO vigils at least three times a week. One evening she was joined by UFO enthusiast John Oswald. When asked about Betty's continuing UFO observations, Oswald stated, "She is not really seeing UFOs, but she is calling them that." On the night they went out together, "Mrs. Hill was unable to distinguish between a landed UFO and a streetlight." In a later interview, Sheaffer recounts that Betty Hill wrote, "UFOs are a new science ... and our science cannot explain them."
Influence from The Outer Limits Image:Bellero.png|The alien from "
The Bellero Shield", aired 1964-02-10 Image:ChildrenOfSpiderCounty28m42s.jpg|The glowing-eyed alien from "
The Children of Spider County", aired 1964-02-17 Image:ChildrenOfSpiderCounty30m55s.jpg|A clear shot of the alien from "The Children of Spider County" Image:Barney_Hill_hypnosis_sketch_Feb_22,_1962_-_cropped_downrezed.png|The drawing Barney Hill made under hypnosis, 1964-02-22 Image:ChildrenOfSpiderCounty09m43s.jpg|First glimpse of the alien in "The Children of Spider County", as it holds up its hands to stop the protagonist's car In his 1990 article "Entirely Unpredisposed", Wraparound eyes are an extreme rarity in science fiction films. I know of only one instance. They appeared on the alien of an episode of an old TV series
The Outer Limits titled "
The Bellero Shield". A person familiar with Barney's sketch in
The Interrupted Journey and the sketch done in collaboration with the artist David Baker will find a "frisson" of "
déjà vu" creeping up his spine when seeing this episode. The resemblance is much abetted by an absence of ears, hair, and nose on both aliens. Could it be by chance? Consider this: Barney first described and drew the wraparound eyes during the hypnosis session dated 22 February 1964. "The Bellero Shield" was first broadcast on 10 February 1964. Only twelve days separate the two instances. If the identification is admitted, the commonness of wraparound eyes in the abduction literature falls to cultural forces. When a different researcher asked Betty about
The Outer Limits, she insisted she had "never heard of it". Kottmeyer also pointed out that some motifs in the Hills' account were present in the film
Invaders from Mars (1953). In 2012
Jason Colavito pointed out "The Children of Spider County" aired five days before Hill's February 22 hypnosis session. Meanwhile, Colavito also relates the Hills'
recovered memories of aliens in "shiny black jackets" to the
Twilight Zone episode of January 31, 1964, titled "
Black Leather Jackets", in which three aliens disguised as humans in black leather jackets come to Earth, but one of them falls in love with a human girl. Coincidentally,
Lee Kinsolving plays the alien in love with a human girl in both "
The Children of Spider County" and "
Black Leather Jackets". ==In popular media==