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Some claim that many of the allegedly real creatures from the Fortean archives (see also: Fortean Times and William R. Corliss) and related reports of anomalous phenomena [18] are actually of extraterrestrial or mixed origin, such as in the extraterrestrial hypothesis, the interdimensional hypothesis, or the cryptoterrestrial hypothesis.
The Kelly–Hopkinsville encounter (also known as the Hopkinsville Goblins Case or Kelly Green Men Case) is a claimed close encounter with extraterrestrial beings that occurred near the communities of Kelly and Hopkinsville in Christian County, Kentucky, United States during the night and early morning of August 21–22, 1955.
The book, based on interviews with scientists and engineers who worked in Area 51, addresses the Roswell UFO incident [1] [2] and dismisses the alien story.. Instead, it suggests that Josef Mengele was recruited by the Soviet leader Joseph Stalin to produce "grotesque, child-size aviators" to be remotely piloted and landed in America to cause hysteria in the likeness of Orson Welles' 1938 ...
Communion: A True Story is a book by American ufologist and horror author Whitley Strieber that was first published in February 1987. The book is based on the supposed experiences of Whitley Strieber, who experiences "lost time" and terrifying flashbacks, which hypnosis undertaken by Budd Hopkins later links to an alleged encounter with aliens. [1]
The track "The Ballad of Betty and Barney Hill", from Angelo De Augustine's 2023 album Toil and Trouble, recounts the incident from the point-of-view of an alien, "traveling through the WhitŠµ Mountains to Zeta Reticuli." Serpoians from the Zeta Reticuli system are one of the alien races that appear in the 2021 manga Dandadan.
UFO abductee stories are well-documented in the psychological literature and are considered culturally based. In other parts of the world, fairies, leprechauns, and other creatures replace aliens as abductors. [2] Some liken extraterrestrial abduction to a secular version of the religious dream.
The story was first published in 1949 by author Frank Scully in his Variety magazine columns, and later in his 1950 book Behind the Flying Saucers. In the mid-1950s, the story was exposed as a hoax fabricated by two con men , Silas M. Newton and Leo A. Gebauer, as part of a fraudulent scheme to sell supposed alien technology.
The story also referenced two videos recorded by the U.S. Navy of what officials referred to as "unidentified aerial phenomena", or UAP. In 2020, the Pentagon later released three videos from Navy jets that showed unusual observations and confirmed the provenance of some leaked 2019 videos in two statements made during 2021.