WebProNews

Tag: UFOs

  • Khloe Kardashian Knows That Was a UFO, Warns of Government Coverup

    Over the weekend, many in Southern California saw a strange light in the night sky. What was it? If you ask Khloe Kardashian, it was most certainly aliens.

    So, was it visitors from another planet? Should we get Spooky Mulder on the case?

    According to officials, the light Khloe Kardashian and many others saw was just a US Navy missile test.

    But that explanation didn’t assuage her concerns.

    The truth is out there, Khloe.

  • Dan Aykroyd Believes in Aliens, But Says They Are Disgusted With Us

    Dan Aykroyd believes.

    In 2012, David Sereda sat down with Dan Aykroyd and recorded a video interview about UFOs. That interview formed the basis of what is now Dan Aykroyd Unplugged on UFOs. The entire documentary is available on YouTube, and you can see it at the bottom of this article.

    Aykroyd says he’s been interested in UFOs since he was a kid. His interest was piqued by both real life and fictional events, including a Life Magazine article about UFO sightings over Washington, DC in 1952, as well as the film The Day the Earth Stood Still.

    He believes aliens do visit Earth, and he thinks he knows why.

    “If you look at the way mankind in the last 100 years has basically started to turn this planet into a cinder — three or four holes in the ozone layer because of industrial production around the world, nuclear testing, wars — I’m sure that, just in theory, if there were another species in the universe monitoring us or near us, they would be very interested in what we were doing to this planet, to this planet’s atmosphere, and to possibly neighboring bodies. And I think, in terms of the extraterrestrial machines that are coming and going, that may be part of a motivation.”

    Back in the late 1970s, when Aykroyd and fellow Saturday Night Live cast mate John Belushi came up with their now-famous Blues Brothers sketches, they modeled their look partly from a John Lee Hooker album cover. But Aykroyd would also tell interviewers the outfit based on the “men in black” that would reportedly show up at UFO sightings and warn people to keep quiet. This was long before the Men in Black films.

    Aykroyd also told documentary makers that he had an experience with “men in black” himself while filming a series for SyFy called Out There, about alien encounters. He said he saw these men in black very briefly before the show was shut down and went on to remain unreleased.

    Recently, Aykroyd told The Sunday Times Magazine that aliens do visit Earth, but they do not make contact with the general population for a good reason.

    “(It’s) because we are a violent species. They don’t want anything to do with us. They watch us. There were two white orbs over (New) Jersey when the second tower went down on 9/11. They were on CNN for about two minutes… They never showed it again.

    “Can you imagine what was going through their advanced minds when they saw what happened on 9/11? These humans crashing our highest evolution in aviation into our highest evolution in architecture and metallurgy, like kids wrecking toys in the sandbox. They are disgusted with us. And rightly so. Because we are a depraved, disgusting species.”

    Aykroyd claims to have had an unsettling personal experience with alien contact.

    “I woke up in the middle of the night, and I said to my wife, ’They’re calling me. They’re calling me. I wanna go outside. They want me to go outside and see,’ She said, ‘Who?’ [I replied,]’Something outside wants me to go outside and see.’”

    Aykroyd did not go outside. He went back to bed.

    “But the next day in the media, in newspapers, in radio, all over upstate New York, and in Ontario, Quebec, and Vermont, people spoke about this urge they had to go out of their houses at 3:00 in the morning and look up at the sky. And 12,000 people shared this urge. And they went out and it was a big, big news story. And of course, the Air Force said that a Chinese rocket had exploded over New York state. But what people saw was a massive, miles-high pink spiral in the sky above the Great Lakes.”

    Aykroyd related another such happening in Canada a few years later. He believes there are going to be more of these shared experiences.

  • Crop Circles Appear In History Earlier Than You Might Think

    A mysterious set of crop circles have popped up in a wheat field near Weilheim, Germany.

    Farmer Christoph Huttner, who owns the land, insisted to the media that it wasn’t his doing.

    As this is the first set of crop circles of the year, it is generating excitement not only locally, but internationally as well.

    A number of curious individuals are said to have made their way to the site of the crop circles.

    From the air, the image features a series of circles in the center and a curved checkerboard pattern, all in one larger circle.

    It’s very complex and was created with expert precision. The sort of precision that strongly suggests that the crop circles were man-made.

    There have been numerous crop circle hoaxes, going all the way back to the UFO-related crop circle craze of the 1970s.

    However, it turns out that the crop circle did not begin with the Bowers and Chorleys of the world.

    In fact, the earliest known reference to crop circles in Western civilization can be traced to a woodcut picture dated to 1647.

    The image features a shadowy figure creating a series of crop circles. The being is called the “Mowing-Devil”.

    The image was actually featured in a pamphlet created in 1678 in Hertfordshire, England. The story behind the “Mowing-Devil” image relates to bizarre crop circles that a farmer allegedly found in his field.

    The urban legend-esque story goes that a farmer was asked by a laborer to pay a fee to mow his crops that the man found rather outrageous.

    The English farmer is said to have exclaimed he’d prefer the Devil himself to mow his oats than to pay the laborer a single penny.

    The next day, the man awoke to crop circles which were said to have been Satanic in origin.

    As you can see, the narrative for unexplained events changes as society changes. Once upon a time, these crop circles would have been seen as miraculous or demonic.

    Now they’re readily associated with aliens and UFOs.

    It almost makes one wonder who or what the circular patterns will be blamed on in the future.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • UFO Sighting In Wee Hours New Years Eve – California

    You have to wonder about the condition of the people who think they saw a UFO in the wee hours of New Years Eve. But before doubt sets in, to their credit, there were people in several cities who saw the same lights. Could this be the real thing?

    ABC News reported on January 3rd that air authorities have confirmed that there wasn’t any “unusual flight activity” so that might mean that the people who were seeing lights, could have really been seeing something in the form of an alien space craft.

    “I seen like six bright orange colored lights. They were almost like in a diamond or triangle shape. It was weird. And so they started just separating,” said Kaye Pinlac who took video on his iPhone. Others reported seeing similar lights in the sky but it was the way that the lights moved, witnesses said, that suggested these weren’t fizzled fireworks or falling stars.

    The cities that have claimed seeing these “strange lights” were Stockton, Sacramento and Auburn. Reports from all the people who called in or were interviewed claim to have seen something similar: Hovering lights in a pattern that moved together like some sort of object in the sky.

    “It was bright enough to shine directly through the trees without any problem seeing it. Whatever it was moved up and to the left… It hovered there for probably about 60 seconds, then it took off at a high rate of speed,” Mr. Pinlac added.

    What is the most eerie (and almost believable) of all is that these possible UFO sightings came just days after a mysterious crop circle was discovered in the state.

    On the other hand, the Quadrantid Meteor Shower had already started on that very night and expected to peak on Thursday night. Could it be the New Year’s celebrations made these meteors just look like UFO’s – surely not everyone was inebriated though.

    When you have more than one person seeing the same thing, and something as detailed and intricate as the crop circle that showed up in a farmer’s field – it kind of makes you wonder, and hope, and then wonder some more. Could it really be?

    Image via YouTube

  • UFO Sightings in California on New Year’s Eve

    According to a number of witnesses, mankind wasn’t the only one on New Year’s Eve enjoying firework shows across the country.

    Apparently, civilians in California spotted unusual objects in the sky amidst the entertaining pyrotechnic displays.

    Witnesses in Sacramento and Auburn reported UFO sightings around the same time, making the claims a little more plausible to say the least.

    Kaye Pinlac, a resident of Stockton, actually recorded the object in action.

    “I seen like six bright orange colored lights,” she said. “They were almost like in a diamond or triangle shape. It was weird. And so they started just separating.”

    Steve Brown from Sacramento said he saw the alleged UFO amongst the trees in his yard.

    “It was bright enough to shine directly through the trees without any problem seeing it,” he told KPLC TV.

    Of course this isn’t the first time people have reported their sightings and even then, every day people aren’t the only ones who are intrigued by the mysterious objects that look to be aircrafts from another planet.

    In September, the Huffington Post reported a story on a live broadcast done by meteorologist Sean McMullen of KLKN in Lincoln, Neb.

    McMullen noticed a twinkling triangle-shaped entity on live video captured by the stations towercam.

    His response to it all seemed to be perplexed explanations.

    “At times, it seemed to have tethers hanging from it, but I really think that’s just an artifact — I think it’s light being refracted through the dome that covers our lens. I think that’s really just a star, but I haven’t really seen that before,” he said.

    One thing is for certain: UFO sightings have been a topic of debate for years. Some believe while others don’t.

    Even classified documents have been released revealing CIA’s involvement with UFO activity.

    Opposed to popular belief of Tuesday’s sighting, Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Ian Gregor confirmed, “there was no unusual flight activity reported Tuesday night.”

    Well with that said, hopefully there’s a reasonable explanation for the strange sightings on New Year’s Eve.

    Image via Youtube, ParadigmNews

  • Tiny ‘Alien’ Skeleton Debunked by DNA Evidence

    A tiny humanoid skeleton found in Chile’s Atacama Desert has been hailed by UFO conspiracists for years as proof of extraterrestrial life. Now, actual science has proven that the skeleton, as with all currently known life, originated on Earth.

    According to a LiveScience report, researchers at the Stanford School of Medicine have used DNA testing on the fossilized skeleton. Despite the figure being only 6 inches long, the testing revealed that it comes from a human who was 6 to 8 years old when they died.

    The researchers have not yet determined what deformities may have led to the obviously strange skeletal figure. The age of the skeleton has also not yet been determined, though the current estimate is that the person it belonged to died “at least a few decades ago.”

    The tiny skeleton is featured prominently in a new documentary by noted UFO conspiracist Steven Greer, titled Sirius.

    Judging from the movie’s trailer, Greer isn’t too interested in proving that extraterrestrials exist – he takes that as a given. Instead, he seeks to expose a purported conspiracy of corporate interests and oil conglomerates to keep alien technology a secret

  • FBI UFO Memo is the Agency’s Most-Requested

    The FBI revealed this week in a blog post that an agency memo referring to “flying saucers” is the most-requested file in the FBI vault.

    The memo is dated March 22, 1950 and was written by the FBI’s Washington, D.C. field office head at the time, Guy Hottel.

    The document is freely available via the FBI records vault. It reads:

    An investigator for the Air Forces stated that three so-called flying saucers had been recovered in New Mexico. They were described as being circular in shape with raised centers, approximately 50 feet in diameter. Each one was occupied by three bodies of human shape but only three feet tall, dressed in metallic cloth of a very fine texture. Each body was bandaged in a manner similar to the blackout suits used by speed fliers and test pilots.

    According to Mr. [REDACTED] informant, the saucers were found in New Mexico due to the fact that the Government has a very high-powered radar set-up in the area and it is believed the radar interferes with the controlling mechanics of the saucers.

    No further evaluation was attempted by SA [REDACTED] concerning the above.

    According to the FBI, the Hottel memo was first released to the public in the 1970s. Though it is often assumed to be connected to the legendary Roswell UFO crash, the memo is dated almost three years after the Roswell incident.

    The agency also stressed that the Hottel memo is not proof of extraterrestrials, in that it refers to a second- or third-hand account that was never investigated further.

  • Russell Crowe UFO Video Leaves Twitter Fans Baffled

    Russel Crowe may be scheduled to play Superman’s father, Jor-El, in the upcoming Superman movie reboot Man of Steel, but it wasn’t a flying Kryptonian that Crowe spotted outside his Sydney offices this week.

    The actor posted a YouTube video to his Twitter account this week, showing what he claims in a genuine UFO. Crowe stated that he and a friend set up a Cannon 5D outside his office in Sydney to capture images of fruit bats “rising from Botanic Gardens. Instead, three photos taken over 4.5 seconds show something brightly lit passing over the scenery very quickly.

    Crowe is technically accurate in that the object in the photos is unidentified and appears to be flying. However, dressing the video up with sinister music and weird editing to imply an alien presence implies that the actor is simply trolling his Twitter followers.

    The stunt has gained Crowe some attention on Twitter, though. The star has retweeted various stories about his video and has replied to several fan theories with his own explanations. He even showed that he’s in on the joke by retweeting what is clearly the best explanation for the phenomenon:

  • National Geographic to Tweet Reply to The Wow! Signal

    If you could say anything to extraterrestrials, do you think you could sum up your thoughts in 140 characters? To be so brief in a close encounter of the fifth kind, one would hope you could get your point across in such a way that, at the very least, it would not mistakenly start an intergalactic invasion of our pale blue dot.

    Brace yourself, because The National Geographic Channel will hopefully avoid starting cosmic strife when it attempts to tweet out a reply to the mysterious Wow! Signal exactly 35 years from the day the cryptic message was received.

    If you’re unfamiliar with the Wow! Signal, in 1977, while volunteering at the Big Ear radio observatory in Ohio, which was monitoring space as part of the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence program, Jerry Ehman noticed that the monitoring devices of Big Ear received a remarkably strong 72-second signal from outer space that literally sent the recording device’s needles scribbling off the charts. It is regarded as the most powerful example of possible alien communication, leading Ehman at the time to scribble the word “Wow!” on the paper of the data log.

    Although some debate has ensued over the authenticity of the Wow! Signal’s source, with even Ehman at one time questioning whether it actually could have come from UFOs, this August 15 the National Geographic Channel will attempt to reply to the Wow! signal via Twitter. As part of a new program, Chasing Aliens, the channel has invited viewers, UFO enthusiasts, or anybody else that wants to be a part of the event to tweet a message with the hashtag #ChasingUFOs that will be bundled up into a “cosmic @reply” and fired up into the cosmos in hopes of finding the author of the original Wow! Signal.

    “If The Wow! Signal really was a cosmic ‘tweet’ from our nearest neighbors, we think it’s high time we organized a @reply,” said Christopher Albert, SVP, Global Communications and Talent Relations at National Geographic Channel.

    On the August 15 episode of Chasing Aliens, National Geographic says that the package of tweets and videos will be shot into space from Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico. Interested stargazers can find out more on Nat Geo’s dedicated site, www.thewowreply.com. Here’s a promotional spot that the channel put together to get you excited.

    Two things come to mind with this publicity stunt experiment. One, maybe the reason that we were never able to find the signal again is because the aliens weren’t all that impressed with our human race and decided they didn’t want anything to do with us. Maybe Earth is that one table in the corner of the galactic cafeteria where everybody else desperately avoids sitting because its occupied by all the misfit dweebs and weirdos.

    Two, as much as I personally enjoy Twitter, is that really the best well to dip into when we’re trying to leave a good impression on our extraterrestrial familiars? If you’ve ever paid attention to the hashtags that are trending on Twitter at any given moment of the day, you know that high-brow humor isn’t exactly Twitter’s long suit. Really, is #RihannasBox really how we want to broker peace with our alien superiors?