The James Webb Space Telescope messaged us with some pics this week, so we’ve been gazing at the stars and wondering what’s beyond. Are aliens out there? What do they look like? Have they reached out to Earth, and if so, why did they talk to Demi Lovato?
We’ve always been interested in alien stories, and that includes the fictional aliens from Star Wars, Star Trek, Alien, Thor, and Superman. And even without life, the planets and stars offer all kinds of mysteries for us to examine.
Here’s a look back at the facts we learned this week. The links all lead to full articles with much more info, so click every one that interests you, or the planets will destroy us all.
He made a waveform by inserting a device into ballerinas’ contracting vaginas and then beamed it into space.
It was called The Jupiter Effect, and it was nonsense, but people were terrified.
This explains why he pushes down to launch himself without destroying the ground in the process.
This planet would have been five times bigger, then a collision blasted most of it away.
We called it Vulcan, and its name lives on in Star Trek lore.
An 1890 content offered big money to whoever contacted another planet ... except for Mars, because Mars was too easy, everyone knew aliens lived on Mars.
This happened because the Sun blasted us with ten superflares a day, the kind we thankfully get now only once a century.
According to Sammy Hagar, anyway. He says they inserted a numerical code, but since it used a different system from ours, we'll never know what it meant.
10. In the '60s, the truly devoted believed aliens would save us from nukes.
This was thanks to one nut named George Van Tassel, who built a dome to commune with aliens and said they warned him of upcoming nuclear destruction.
Meaning, the story was pretty good. So good, fans remade it, without the sex scenes.
Giant robots even. Silicon forms of life would offer a lot of advantages.
People assumed the Japanese had attacked. The unidentified flying object turned out to be a weather balloon.
It might be the size of a grapefruit but heavier than Earth.
They used the names of actual news outlets, who successfully sued.
We spotted Uranus in 1781 and reached Antarctica in 1820 (though we’d theorized about a southern continent earlier).
Then a TV network remade the film on a higher budget with disclaimers that it was fictional … and it fooled viewers again.
This might seem like a fringe belief for someone so legit, but he argued that it made more sense than the alternative: life arriving from other planets accidentally.
This ancient novel was called A True Story. It was satire and yet unknowingly launched an entire genre.
They definitely embraced the dark side, based on some of the atrocities they committed.
Following initial fears of a flying saucer, people realized a weather balloon crashed, and that was that. Not till a documentary and book in the ‘70s and ’80s did people again start linking the incident to aliens.
All the “news” you’ve heard these last couple years is promoted by one organization that makes movies and sells merch.
The Milky Way alone may hold 300 million habitable planets. The universe overall? More planets than you could possibly understand.