Watch The X-files S03e20 Access
The episode's conclusion is uncharacteristically lonely. It suggests that even if we are being visited by extraterrestrials, our own fragmented perspectives and the government’s "staged" realities make it impossible to ever truly know. It leaves the characters—and the audience—in a state of "post-truth" long before that term became a buzzword, making it one of the most intellectually daring hours in television history.
The story is framed through the perspective of Jose Chung, a true-crime novelist researching an alleged alien abduction of two teenagers. As he interviews witnesses, the episode devolves into a series of "Rashomon-style" flashbacks. We see the same events through different eyes: a "gray" alien speaking perfect English, a nicotine-addicted Man in Black played by Jesse Ventura, and even a version of Agent Mulder who yelps like a girl when he sees a dead body. Watch The X-Files S03E20
Writer Darin Morgan uses this chaos to satirize the UFO subculture of the 90s, but the core message is more cynical. In the world of The X-Files , the "truth" is usually out there, waiting to be found. In this episode, however, the truth is buried under layers of personal bias, government disinformation, and the human brain’s desperate need to find meaning in the mundane. The episode's conclusion is uncharacteristically lonely
"Jose Chung's From Outer Space " (Season 3, Episode 20) isn't just an episode of The X-Files ; it’s a brilliant, postmodern dissection of the show’s own mythology. By trading its usual dark procedural tone for a kaleidoscopic, dark-comedy narrative, the episode explores a profound theme: the subjective and often unreliable nature of truth. The story is framed through the perspective of