“Dude, totally. That’s the creepiest thing ever.”

UFO

Call us crazy (lord knows you’ve called us worse), but we love UFOs. Don’t know what they are or if they really exist, but there’s enough stuff out there to make even a skeptic wonder.

Here’s a clip of two guys shooting a UFO over the Denver area. As a triangle of lights hovers above them, one guy says, “I wonder if there will be anything in the news about this tomorrow.”

“Dude, totally,” says his friend. “This is the creepiest thing ever.”

Air traffic controllers, of course, reported nothing unusual.

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View Comments (18)

  • Meh. Aliens from other planets don't bother me. I have no problems with not being the only inhabited planet on the universe. It is so ego-centric and arrogant to believe otherwise in my humble opinion.

    I will be tickled and gleeful if Jesus were to descend from a space ship. That will just make my life. I cannot even begin to imagine that and how awesome that would be. If it is another race of people (humans or not) then it is what it is. They are curious and who can blame them?

    I am more concerned about those illegal aliens that hate my country who come here and demand me to pay for their crap.

  • I'm all about paranormal stuff, but when it comes to actual experiences, I'll opt for debunking over believing any day.
    When I was sixteen, a light the size of a beach ball appeared in the sky over my house. I was outside and watched it intently for about five minutes, then it started flashing, I heard a roar, and it began shrinking with the flashes. Then all of the sudden it just kind of was sucked into the space in the sky behind it... Creepiest thing I've ever seen in my life.
    In the sake of chasing away my creeped-out mess, I'll take the news that it's a stealth fighter any day.

  • It's a video of the F-117 stealth figher. They use the small, red identification lights so ground crews know where they are at during take-off and landing drills. I live near an airbase where they used to be stationed and saw this kind of thing all the time at night.

    Due to the last BRAC re-alignment nonsense a few years ago the F-117's are now gone and the base is home to a squadron of CV-22 Ospreys. Those planes are some kind of awesome to see! Maybe ya'll have heard all the protests on the news about the Airforce doing low-level training in the Osprey over parts of New Mexico and southern Colorado? I'm here to tell you that you will never know one has passed over you unless you are very observant!

    The only people I know who are tuned into their surroundings like me are folks who live in the very rural parts of the country or those who have served our country in the military. I'm guilty of both, I have always lived in the sticks and I proudly served my country, so I always pay attention to what is going on around me. I swear on my grandmothers name, if not for the spotting lights on the Osprey I would not have known one flew over my house.

    I was sitting on the deck, enjoying the evening after a long day at work, when I "felt" something going over me. It was like the sound of a big barn owl when it flys over your head but it had the red spotting lights on the nose and wing tips. The CV-22 is a big plane and it still amazes me how quiet they are. Almost silent, big enough to deliver some hurt where needed, just a barn owl flying over hunting a rabbit for dinner. American ingenuity at its best.

    • Sorry to have to contradict you on the Osprey, sir. I work right next to the MiraMar Air Base, and I see Ospreys nightly. If there is one anywhere near you, and you don't know it, you are completely deaf. Not to mention unable to feel the vibrations going to the core of your body. That is the loudest helicopter in the world, and VERY easily identifiable by the double discs and airplane-like shape of the fuselage. An absolutely awesome aircraft, but not stealthy by any definition of the word.

  • I remember an article in a 1970's science digest where they openly discussed a hybrid dirigible (half blimp/half dirigible) airship. This article talked about a ship of at least 600 feet in length and some 250 to 300 feet in width, absolutely huge airship. This article discussed military use for such an airship, maybe that's what these triangular lights are.

  • get real. that is nothing more than a government blimp at night, oooooo so scary!
    nothing more to see here, move along.

  • Haven't there been a bunch of news stories over the years about triangle shaped lights? This isn't the first video of something like that I've seen. I wonder if its not a new generation of aircraft with some pilots having a bit of fun.

    Dude I used to work with flew fighters out of the southwest. he said the navigation systems would conk out and they'd fly real low to read the road signs and follow the interstates back home. he said when they'd do that at night there would be "UFO sightings" in the local town papers the next day.

    • Yes, YT. A new breed of airplanes, triangular in shape, thousands of feet across, flying very slowly, and silently. Of course, that's it.

      • Not sure how you can judge the size or speed of 3 dots from a point source.

        or maybe thats just what the brain controlling waves the CIA puts out through fluorescent light bulbs is telling you to think!? Better put your tin foil hat back on.

  • Well I'm as skeptical as they get . . . but I love this stuff too. Coast to Coast AM . . scanning the shortwave for some crazy tinfoil shows . . . that is definitely some fun!

    • I got to see one of the most awesome sights in my life because of listening to Art Bell early one morning on my way to work. The Space Shuttle was due to re-enter the atmosphere on it's way to a very rare Florida landing, and we were expected to be able to watch it cross the sky just above the horizon. I kept my eyes peeled in the direction indicated, and got to watch the orange streak, like the tail of a comet, all the way across the sky. It was an awesome sight, made even more awesome when I thought about the fact that there were people on that ship.

  • It's a kite with led lights attached... I did this in college... Come up with something new please or I'll sue for copy write infringement. lol

    • Oh, I see. You were there, and got a better look at it than I did. Ok. I didn't try to imply that I knew what it was, but I can certainly identify a lot of things that it wasn't.

      • Try this one! Six weather balloons. Each has 100 feet of fishing line.One night, tie a flashlight to the end of each line. Let go at night when the wind is blowing towards a major city! The balloons will stay pretty much together at a high altitude. Guaranteed to get thousands of telephone calls. (Not that I would do anything like this... ;) )
        I'll bet there are even reports of alien sightings on the ground!

  • I've seen a lot of strange things in the sky, yet to see any of them reported on.

    Once when my exwife and I were driving home at the same time, but in separate cars, I saw what looked at first to be a shooting start, then as it got lower in the sky, it was clearly very green, and had a distinctly triangular shape. It looked like it hit the ground just a few miles away, seemingly in a populated area of the desert. I wondered if my lady had seen the same thing. She got to the house a minute ahead of me, and when I pulled up, she was outside her car, pointing at the sky. As I got out of my truck, she was asking if I had seen what she had seen. She described exactly what I saw. Never heard anything about it from anyone else.

    • In the desert at night you can see weird sh*t that seems like its floating. A lot of times, they are satellites. I saw a bright green blobish looking thing and the local desert people all told me it was a low orbit satellite.

      In the old days when they had this thing in cameras called "film" you could prop the shutter open and sit the camera out on a cloudless night. The stars all form a swirl, the planes make dotted lines and the satellites carve out straight lines in the exposure.

      • Yeah, I was a photographer in the film days too, YT. And I can easily do the same thing with my Canon 60d, which is decidedly digital. And by the way, I know what a satellite looks like too.