I was pretty stunned to see the other reviews here working from the premise that this was in fact a genuine documentary. While the people and beliefs mocked in the film are often far-fetched, none more so than this movie itself. That anyone would believe this is real is as laughable as anything LeRoy ever believed, perhaps more so. Sadly, it wasn't just the other two reviewers who got it wrong. Reviews from CBS to Huffington Post reviewed this film with the same flawed and naive premise. In a brief search only the LA Times managed to see through the inauthenticity of the film. Without examining the claims mocked in the 'documentary' we can see that the film itself is a trap for well-meaning but gullible people looking to gain kinship and identity by confirming their biases with any information that does so, no matter how ridiculous. Team Lazy Skeptic is now every bit as irrational and easily manipulated as Team Tinfoil Hat. The irony that a movie highlighting gullibility has itself duped so many of the gullible is either completely genius on Blake Freeman's part, or completely disheartening as a portrayal of how gullibility, certainty and self-righteousness are often simultaneously present in our culture. But since Freeman hasn't called out the gullible fans of his half- witted circus of debunking, it is probably the case that even he doesn't see how ironic it all is. I look forward to seeing this as a Friday Night movie in the near future, right after 'Ow My Balls!'.