Tucson Citizen.com
Paranormal Old Pueblo - Paranormal News and Opinion, latest UFO News, supernatural and unexplained phenomena.

Posts Tagged ‘UFO’

‘Super 8′ is great, but something is missing for nostalgia-seekers

Sunday, June 12th, 2011

Super 8 is currently playing in theaters. Let’s begin by saying that I saw the movie last night. I liked it. The movie is set in the year 1979. Take it from someone who was 8-years-old, going on 9, in the Summer of ’79. The clothes, the cars, and the music were spot on.

Kudos to director J.J. Abrams for capturing the look of 1979.

The movie itself is engrossing, at first. The audience learns in the beginning of the movie that an industrial accident has claimed the life of a woman. The woman’s son and husband are left to begin the grieving process. The film moves to four months after her death.

The son, Joe, deals with the loss of his mom while helping his three friends make an amateur zombie movie. The movie’s script calls for a girl. So, the four boys ask a girl named Alice to participate in film. Joe apparently has a crush on Alice.

On the first night of the filming with Alice, the pre-teens witness a spectacular train accident, which begins another storyline in the film. The military moves in to town, pet dogs clear out of town, and people begin to disappear from town without a trace. Strange things are afoot in town, but the filming of the film within the film continues. So does the grieving process of a widower, as well as a son left without a mother. (Warning: major plot twist revealed in the next paragraph. Skip it and move on to the next if you don’t want to know.)

The widower, who is also the local deputy sheriff, quickly moves on to the blame and anger stages of grief. We learn that his deceased wife was only working that particular shift four months prior to cover for a co-worker. It’s revealed that the co-worker couldn’t work his shift that day, because he was drunk. We learn that alcohol helps him to deal with his wife leaving him and his daughter, some time before.  The daughter is Joe’s love-interest, Alice. Alice and Joe are forbidden to see each other by their fathers. So begins a sort-of Romeo and Juliet story in the summer of ’79.

The clothes, the cars and the music, like I said, are spot-on for 1979. What was happening in the world around the fictional town was not. One reference to popular culture, early in the film, was incorrect: the Rubik’s cube. When this reference was made early in the movie, I fell out of my own personal time machine and hit the ground hard. I spent the rest of the time in the theater trying to recall that particular summer, since my memory seemed to be failing me.

I couldn’t put my finger on it until I got home. The Rubik’s cube reference would have fit the following year, 1980. So that reference threw me. Something else mesmerized the world in 1979, which I would have recalled if I wasn’t puzzled over the Rubik’s cube:

Skylab was falling that summer.

During the summer of 1979, people all over the world pondered the falling-back-to-earth of Skylab. NASA had no idea where on earth the 85-ton space station would land. Of course, it would largely break up when it entered the earth’s atmosphere, but pieces of it could still kill you.

I was terrified of Skylab. I didn’t want to die. Neither did anyone else. It was a big, big deal.

Skylab caused an international media frenzy. Who can forget  those 12 million radio listeners who participated in a mass meditation to halt a potential disaster? Those listeners employed  “mental energy”, on a day in May, to try to push Skylab into a higher orbit to prevent its re-entry. It didn’t work. It fell back to earth in July 1979.

It fell into the ocean and no one died. Still, it was a big, big deal at the time. At the time, which would perfectly correspond with the time frame captured in Super 8. Abrams missed a great opportunity to incorporate Skylab into the plot. It would have been a better reference to popular culture than the Rubik’s cube.

Okay, back to Super 8. The rest of the movie is great. It’s revealed that an alien from outer space is behind the strange goings on in town. The alien also happens to have some issues dealing with his own personal pain and grief. So, it basically all ties together and works out in the end.

If you seek nostalgia,  think back to what you were doing when Skylab was falling. This, of course, doesn’t apply to younger viewers who won’t know the difference.

The film is directed by J.J. Abrams and produced by Steven Spielberg. It stars Joel Courtney, Elle Fanning and Kyle Chandler. The film has a run-time of 112 minutes and is rated PG-13.

 

Desperation fuels comparison between Tea Party and UFO conventions?

Saturday, February 26th, 2011

BlogForArizona.com blogger “AZBlueMeanie” wrote an interesting post today. He (or she, or it) composed a nonsensical post in which it was pointed out that both the Tea Party and UFO enthusiasts are holding separate conventions this weekend.

An attempt to link the two Phoenix area conventions was made by the anonymous blogger:

“AZBlueMeanie” says:

Even “the Google” at the Arizona Republic combines the tin foil hat conspiracy theorists of UFO ufologists with Tea Party birthers. I would love to see the venn diagram of the intersection between these conspiracy theorists.

The remainder of the article is even more amusing, along with an interesting photo, which is intended to jab Tea Partiers even further.

Click here to see it, if you wish.

The International UFO Congress, originally scheduled for another weekend in February, just happened to be rescheduled for this weekend. Other than the resulting common date of the conferences, there is no other apparent link between the two groups. ” AZBlueMeanie” will need to dig deeper come up with something better to take that jab at the Tea Party.

Why use UFO enthusiasts in an attempt to make a point? Desperation? Laziness?

Come on, AZBlueMeanie, you can do better than that…

The International UFO Congress runs through the weekend at Fort McDowell Resort and Casino in Scottsdale.

________________

Signed,

Cherlyn Gardner Strong

(a blogger who uses her real name)

_______________

Read more of Cherlyn Gardner Strong’s posts at http://www.paranormaloldpueblo.com

The mainstream media’s linking of UFOs to Jared Loughner

Tuesday, January 11th, 2011

Today, The Washington Post reported that Jared Loughner, the man in custody related to Saturday’s massacre in Tucson, may have visited an alternative-discussion forum this past summer.

The information was relayed by me to my readers on the Tucson Citizen a couple of hours ago, after a bit of contemplation.

I posted without commentary. I did not go into detail about what the article said, only that Abovetopsecret.com (ATS) had a statement on their website, along with a quote from the website’s representative.

ATS is the largest alternative-topic discussion forum on the Internet, where users can discuss UFOs, conspiracies, the paranormal and other alternative topics. I do believe that the staff of the Scottsdale, Arizona-based ATS, were sincere in wanting to help in this ongoing investigation.

As far as the newspaper that ran the article, I am unsure of their intention.

The headline for the article by The Washington Post reads:

“Jared Lee Loughner apparently sought community online at Abovetopsecret.com”

When I read the headline, my first thought was: “So what?”

When I read the article, it stated “the site’s operators believe [username] Erad3 was accused Arizona shooter Jared Lee Loughner, 22.”

The keyword in the headline is “apparently” and in the article is “believe”. It’s not 100% certain that Erad3 was Loughner, but the posts made by Erad3 used the same language that Loughner used in his YouTube videos. So, the ATS  representative does believe that it was Loughner.

So, I tried to figure out what would possess The Washington Post to release a speculative article like that now, when we have not even buried the victims of the horrific tragedy in Tucson.

Well, we do know that this newspaper in Washington enjoys making light of UFO stories. When retired military men came forward in September, in a news conference to allege that UFOs interfered with nuclear facilities, the resulting coverage was inexcusable. Their journalist said that he only went to the news conference for the cookies and pastries offered at the National Press Club.

Basically, the cookies were the highlight of the resulting report of the news conference.

There were no references to Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords in Erad3′s posts on ATS, as stated by the newspaper, so it isn’t apparent why the newspaper ran with a speculative article.

I can speculate, but I won’t.

My problem with the article, is not that it could be spun to assert that people who discuss alternative-topics, like UFOs and conspiracies, are  “mentally unstable”. Instead, I would expect this newspaper to be 100% certain about the identity of the poster Erad3. The estimated 99%” certainty from the website owner that it was Jared Loughner isn’t good enough. The newspaper should have been 100% certain before running that article.

Also, running that article, which has been spreading all over the Internet all day, really could have waited.