An ode to aliens

I’d say this was me when I finally saw that the Sunday post didn’t post, but I’d been dealing with a sour stomach before I saw I’d forgotten to “schedule” it. Plus, I look nothing like Michelle Obama.
GIF found on giphy.

Note to regular readers: I only just discovered that my Sunday blog post didn’t publish (and it was adorable, of course). I’m sorry about that. Maybe I’ll find a way to salvage it for this coming Sunday. Gotta love technology.

Really, you do. They’re watching.


The truth is out there, said The X-Files. You just have to look harder now.
Image from sciencefiction.com.

I started watching The X-Files midseason in the first season (it premiered in September 1993). From that moment, I was hooked. No, not because I was an alien nut, but because creator Chris Carter had a way of bringing mystery, drama, the paranormal, skepticism and humor together in an irresistible way.

I don’t recall Mulder’s answer, but I’m sure it prompted an eye-roll from Scully.
GIF found on Tenor.

Making skepticism intelligent and funny is a sure winner for me.

I was reminded of my love for the show by the “Storm Area 51” craze started by California college student Matty Roberts as a joke on Facebook to “see them aliens.” According to CNN, “Roberts said he came up with the idea for the meme page after podcaster Joe Rogan interviewed Area 51 whistleblower Bob Lazar and filmmaker Jeremy Corbell. Lazar claims that he worked with an alien spacecraft while he was employed in one of Area 51’s underground facilities.”

Reportedly, more than 2 million people have signed up for the event. Roberts told a local news station he was afraid to come forward as the initiator until a few days ago, saying he thought the FBI would be at his door.

It took The X-Files till its sixth season in the two-part set of episodes called “Dreamland” to make it to Area 51/Groom Lake at the Nellis Air Force Base complex near Rachel, Nev., though it had faced aliens before and would again. (Mulder’s mind-switch with an MIB played by Michael McKean was a howl.) Some of its best episodes had nothing to do with aliens at all (“Humbug,” about murders at a freak show, is still a favorite), but aliens were central to much of the show’s mythology.

One of many highlights from the episodes. Michael McKean makes me laugh anyway, but pair him with David Duchovny in underwear dancing in front of a mirror, and I’m on the floor.
GIF found on reddit.

While I loved The X-Files, do I believe that aliens are visiting Earth on a regular basis?

Nah. Most aliens would probably think us too much trouble and too little benefit for the effort. Maybe that’s our fault for giving lucrative careers to people like Teen Mom cast members, the Kardashians and various YouTube stars, many of whom play video games on camera. This is entertainment?

The fact that people have fallen for the Area 51 prank scares me a little, especially considering one of the descriptions (by a video-game streamer) of the event, which would rely on large masses of people because “They can’t stop all of us,” was: “If we naruto run, we can move faster than their bullets.”

Not being a manga fan (I have a nephew who is, though), I had no idea what this meant, but apparently the Naruto character runs with his head forward and arms behind his back … so he’ll run faster, is the apparent theory … uh, yeah. You’ll just look like you’re easily led by Internet pranks.

If you’re crazy enough to show up, this is what you’ll find. That and a lot of military police.
Image found on The Hill.

I have to believe that most people understand it’s a joke. Please. Just give me this. Still, Air Force spokeswoman Laura McAndrews told The Washington Post that officials were aware of the event, planned for Sept. 20, and warned that the facility “is an open training range for the U.S. Air Force, and we would discourage anyone from trying to come into the area where we train American armed forces. The U.S. Air Force always stands ready to protect America and its assets.”

The people who got the joke headed to Twitter (as usual) to share their theories on what would be #FoundAtArea51 … at least the ones who weren’t making elaborate maps on how to raid the base to find all those little green men. I can always count on Twitter for a good laugh at the ridiculous.

While this has nothing to do with storming Area 51, it is ridiculous.
Screenshot from Trent Capelli’s Twitter page.

Among the guesses were “all the missing Tupperware lids,” from @bsnfc_. I don’t have any Tupperware, but I can testify that Rubbermaid lids are just as prone to disappear. Thotimusprime surmised that it would be “the answer to how many licks to get to the center of a Tootsie Pop”; apparently he doesn’t remember that commercial with the owl. It’s three and a bite; ignore those science students and their estimates of anywhere from 144 to 411 licks.

Iain Wilson, who I swear is not me, thought it might be “my self-control when someone puts chocolate in front of me.”

Really. It’s not me. I don’t even have a Twitter account.

And all those missing single socks (always the socks we like, of course)? “Ahhh, that’s where they all went!” proclaimed Mrs. B. If there’s a cat pawprint sock there, it’s mine. I’ve been looking for that one …

As far as I know, there are no illegal aliens being held at Area 51, but I could be wrong.
Editorial cartoon by Bruce Plante, Tulsa World.

Others guessed that perhaps Tupac and Biggie could be found there, the footballs from DeflateGate, Sheriff Hopper (I’m sure my fellow Stranger Things fans hope this one is true), Waldo, the only McDonald’s ice cream machine that works … and those are some of the ones that didn’t require a lot of explanation.

Perhaps the most emphatic/suspicious contributor was @WayneV454, who said of what could be found at Area 51, “Nothing. Because there is nothing to see there. Nothing at all. Now move along.”

Gosh, do you think he’s in with “the man” on this whole cover-up?

This is so not my idea of fun.
GIF found on giphy.

Roberts (who sorta reminds me of the long-haired dude in the TurboTax commercials) has realized the idea of storming Area 51, joke or not, could prove dangerous, and has proposed an EDM (electronic dance music) festival instead. That may be fine for millennials, but I have a feeling my fellow Gen X-ers would prefer something … oh, I dunno … better. But ya know, it’s out in the desert, and it’s hot, even in September … someone can have my spot.

Other alternatives suggested in lieu of storming a government facility include storming animal shelters in Longview, Texas, and Oklahoma City to take home “aliens” (cats and dogs dressed in alien costumes or tinfoil hats) at the Texas shelter, or pets (some donning tinfoil) to protect you from aliens in Oklahoma. I’m especially fond of the orange alien in Texas.

There’s also a Storm the Bermuda Triangle event (a party in Florida), though the creator says it’s not a joke … even though it requires that attendees dress as pirates or SpongeBob SquarePants. I’ll just settle for getting lost on my way to the bathroom (it happens).

The Water Horse appears to suggest that young Nessies might be found in the bathtubs of estates near Loch Ness.
Image found on Video Detective.

Another Facebook event suggests storming Loch Ness in Scotland on Sept. 21 because “Nessie can’t hide from us all,” but the Royal National Lifeboat Institution warns that the loch is deep and cold (about 42 degrees F), and the thousands who’ve shown interest could pose challenges to rescue if they all show up.

I have to say, though, that if we have many more days like this past weekend, 42 degrees is going to sound awfully tempting, even if I can’t swim. I’ll bring floaties.

Sure, this photo is a hoax, but who’s to say Nessie’s not real? Plus … Scotland!
Image found on Encyclopedia Brittanica.

19 thoughts on “An ode to aliens

  1. Let’s storm the White House in search of intelligent life.

    BTW, the little green men weren’t green until they were put on a fast food diet.

    Enough of that. Move along, humans, there’s nothing to grok here.

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  2. Thank you Brenda. I was wondering what happened to your Sunday blog post. I kept looking for it and looking for it but could not find it. I suspected that maybe you didn’t post anything because you were still sick.

    Like

  3. If someone is looking for Waldo, it is in Columbia County in southwest Arkansas on US highway 371 about seven miles from the county seat of Magnolia. When I was a boy, I had relatives who lived there and we did visit with them at least once.

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  4. Many years ago I read a story about an alternate history Earth in which the Roman Empire was still in existence in the twentieth century. This Roman Empire still had slaves and slavery was still legal. Some aliens from another solar system many light years away had begun communicating with the Romans. The Roman astronomers were replying to the alien transmissions and telling the aliens about their world and their society and their civilization. When the Roman astronomers casually mentioned that most people still had slaves because slavery was still legal there, the aliens abruptly cut off communication and never, ever sent any more messages to the Romans.

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