There seems to be some confusion regarding the meaning of the word "Universe".
The definition I find most correct is: The universe is the set of all events.
Conceivably, a laboratory experiment show that some matter, energy, or information is irretrievably lost to the Universe.
No evidence for a newly created universe would ever exist, because you can't measure it, being irretrievably lost.
If, however, an experiment resulted in no loss of matter/energy/information, then by my definition of universe above, it would still be part of our (
THE) universe.
Analogous to the reason why there can be no first hand tales from the afterlife, there can be no evidence for alternate universes.
So, any claims of a theory of alternate universes is supernatural in nature.
However, this does not discount entirely theories that such as higher-dimensional membranes, or sum over histories. It just means that these are theories of our universe, not "alternate universes".
Of course, you can feel free to argue semantics.
Now, the term "before the big bang" is as silly as the term "outside the universe".
There is no time before the beginning of time, and no place outside of space.
We define the big bang as the first event in the universe.
Since no events lay outside the universe, no point in time before the first event has meaning.