About Bart Graves
The voice behind the signal.
Bart Graves is the creator and host of Night Airwaves, a live late-night talk radio show broadcasting from Nashville, Tennessee. He has been doing this — in one form or another — since 2013. The show covers science, consciousness, the paranormal, UAPs, culture, and the questions that don't fit in a headline. The ones that surface when the world gets quiet enough to think.
Bart operates from a single conviction: the search for knowledge is not optional. The moment a person stops asking questions — stops pushing into what they don't understand — something essential goes dark. He has never been able to stop. That's not a virtue he claims. It's just how he's wired. And it's the only thing he's ever found that makes for a conversation worth having.
Night Airwaves broadcasts Monday through Thursday, 9 PM to midnight Central. Three hours. Live. No pre-written questions. No screened callers. No script.
Annual specials: Grave Airwaves on October 31st — the darkest broadcast of the year — and Prophetic Airwaves at year's end, where predictions made twelve months prior are reviewed on the record.
Ian Punnett hosted Coast to Coast AM for two decades and became a mentor and close friend. Ian once said directly:
"You should be hosting Coast to Coast AM, and I should be at home listening to you."
Night Airwaves is the show he believed Bart would build.
Before there was a microphone, there was a decade and a half of something else entirely.
In 1995, Bart joined a metals manufacturing operation as its first employee — a ground-floor hire at a company that didn't exist yet. He learned the work from the ground up: bobcat operator, furnace operator, and eventually laser metal analysis technician, responsible for reading the precise elemental composition of aluminum alloys. Thirteen years. The same pattern he'd repeat in every field he entered — start at the bottom, learn what the work actually is, earn the technical understanding most people skip.
In 2009 he moved into a different kind of night shift, working as a night auditor at a major hotel. The hours nobody else wanted. The guests who came through at 3 AM. He got comfortable in the quiet of a building that never fully slept.
Then HSN. From 2011, Bart worked in television home shopping — learning to speak directly and personally to an audience that was often elderly, often alone, often watching at odd hours because the house was too quiet. You learn things about human connection in that environment that you can't learn anywhere else. How to be present with someone through a screen. How to make a stranger feel heard.
From 2013 to 2015 he held a corporate position at Apple, Inc., working within an iOS initiative that sharpened his understanding of how people communicate, how institutions think, and what gets lost when process replaces instinct. Somewhere in the middle of it, he asked himself a question he couldn't shake: did he want to spend eight hours a day on the phone running the same routine, following a script someone else wrote — or did he want to spend one to three hours having conversations that made every neuron fire? The answer wasn't complicated. It just required honesty.
He picked up a microphone. He started podcasting in 2013 — the radio work and the Apple years overlapping — and spent the next decade learning the craft: how to listen, when to stay quiet, how to follow a thought somewhere neither person expected to go. He went through the phases. The over-prepared phase. The book-club phase — read the guest's work, prepare a chapter list, keep it orderly. He hated it. It was performance dressed up as conversation, and he'd spent too many years doing real work to settle for a simulation of it.
He shed all of it. What remained was genuine curiosity, intellectual appetite, and the willingness to sit in uncertainty on air without flinching. By the time he stepped away in 2022, he had spoken with over 250,000 regular listeners.
Micah Hanks — author, researcher, and host — said it on Coast to Coast AM: Bart was the best new voice in paranormal radio. Peter Ward, author of The Price of Immortality, put it differently after their conversation:
"It was refreshing — it didn't feel like a formal interview. It felt like sitting down with a friend for an honest conversation."
He left because he wasn't satisfied. Night Airwaves is the return — built by someone who has now spent thirty years learning, in one form or another, how to be the most prepared unprepared person in the room.