Welcome to The Cortex Online: I am writer/freelance journalist Brad Smith and this is the official website for my Zedverse stories and blogs. The views and opinions expressed on this social media platform are entirely mine and—well, actually—do reflect what I think. Alea iacta Est—Tenebras expellit et hostes—Sic itur ad astra excelsior
31 January 2025
Part 3 Fallout 4 -- Smith's Run: The Wonderland Line Radroach Massacre of 2087
Part 2 Fallout 4 -- Smith's Run: A Scavenger Hunt
30 January 2025
Part 1 Fallout 4 -- Smith's Run: Wasteland Trackdown
I haven't streamed in nearly two years.
Fighting both Covid and Writer's Block, I returned to
gaming vids. Gaming jump-starts my brain and helps with the block; several
writers play these games.
Jonathan Nolan loved playing the Fallout games—of course,
he created the hit Amazon Prime web series by the same name.
So.
It's a bit slow and I'm getting back to the video gaming
zone.
But I'll get there.
Here we go . . . again:
Renegade SRB agent and now a fugitive synth,
Smith.0 returns to the Commonwealth Wasteland after years of wandering what's
left of North America. After reaching Old Boston's ruined outskirts, Smith
discovers a holotape with a shocking revelation: Husband and wife Nate and Nora
Anderson were violently removed from their Vault 111 cryopods—only to be
murdered by a merc named Conrad Kellogg, who kidnapped their son, Shaun.
Kellogg was one of the reasons he returned to the Commonwealth; Smith set
out on a quest to rescue Shaun.
And, after a century, finally kill Kellogg and
settle some very old scores.
06 October 2024
The Best Horror Film Ever Made Is 90 Years Old: The Black Cat.
“Supernatural? Perhaps. Baloney? Perhaps not. There are many things under the sun.”—Dr. Vitus Werdegast, The Black Cat.

Universal wasn’t about to let up, so they decided to produce other films—and then someone had the truly brilliant idea of pairing the studio’s most popular actors: Karloff and Lugosi. The Black Cat was the first of eight films starring the two, all but one produced by Universal Studios. The film was notable for Lugosi as one of the “good guys” while Karloff essays one of his best menacing and villainous roles in his career.
Another great idea was hiring director Edgar G. Ulmer.
Ulmer was a highly versatile and talented filmmaker of Jewish-Moravian descent. Despite primarily working on B movies and low-budget productions in Hollywood, he gained a cult following among critics who praised his unique style and eccentric approach to storytelling. Ulmer was known as 'The King of PRC' for his remarkable output at Poverty Row studios. Some of his most renowned works include the eerie, atmospheric science fiction film, 1951’s The Man From Planet X and the moody, captivating film noir Detour (1945).
Ulmer, along with screenwriter/pulp mystery writer Peter Ruric—known by his real name, Gregory Sims—they developed the story, “suggested by” Edgar Allen Poe’s The Black Cat; Ruric then wrote the screenplay—and by 1934’s standards, even before the Hays Code took effect, it’s one hell of an off-the-hook story.
On their honeymoon in Hungary, American crime writer Peter Alison and his new bride Joan are told that, due to an error, they will have to share a train compartment with Dr. Vitus Werdegast, a Hungarian psychiatrist on his way to visit an old acquaintance. As the night progresses, the couple discovers that Werdegast left his home 18 years ago to fight in World War I and has not seen his wife and daughter since then, as he spent the last 15 years in a notorious prison camp in Siberia.
In the midst of darkness and heavy rain, Peter, Joan, Werdegast and Thamal, Werdegast's loyal servant, transfer to a small bus. As they draw near to Werdegast's destination—the secluded mansion built by Austrian architect Hjalmar Poelzig atop the ruins of Fort Marmorus—the driver loses control and crashes the vehicle. The crash claims the driver's life and leaves Joan injured, but Peter, Werdegast and Thamal can carry her to Poelzig's eerie house.
If the story sounds familiar, well, some have said The Rocky Horror Show/The Rocky Horror Picture Show is a remake of The Black Cat. The Black Cat is a better film.
Joan starts acting strangely and it’s quite apparent that Werdegast and Poelzig—who was based on infamous occultist Aleister Crowley while the name Poelzig was taken from Austrian architect, Hans Poelzig—share a sinister secret and scheming against one another. It’s soon revealed that Poelzig, after Werdegast was imprisoned somewhere in Siberia, marries Karen, Werdegast’s wife, and along with her daughter, also named Karen, build a new life. However, the elder Karen mysteriously dies and Poelzig marries the younger Karen.
Poelzig is also a satanic cult’s high priest and a full moon is about to happen—and he plans to use Joan for the black mass’ sacrifice.
Werdegast tells a frightened, bewildered Joan:
“Did you ever hear of Satanism, the worship of the devil, of evil? Herr Poelzig is a great modern priest of that ancient cult. And tonight in the dark of the moon the rites of Lucifer are celebrated. And if I'm not mistaken, he intends you to play a part in that ritual . . . a very important part.”
Despite Poelzig’s evil plans and having the odds in his favor, Werdegast hatches a desperate gambit to save the American couple and get his revenge—no matter what.
The movie had a major impact on me was I was younger; I was 14 years old when I first saw it—one of the local TV stations showed old Universal horror films on late Friday nights, while on it was old mystery film series on Saturday nights, starting with Sherlock Holmes. I hadn’t heard of The Black Cat before so I didn’t know what to expect. From the very beginning, I was transfixed, mesmerized and totally blown away.
Even by Pre-Code Hollywood standards, Ulmer and Ruric pushed the envelope in many ways: The Black Cat unravels like a haunting nightmare, filled with disturbing scenes of serial murders involving women as victims, necrophilia, ailurophobia—the fear of cats—drug abuse, disturbing implications of incest, a deadly duel played out as a game of chess, brutal torture, skinning and a gruesome human sacrifice. This truly bizarre yet mesmerizing masterpiece, barely lasting an hour, complete with still jarring and unsettling images still lingering in my mind long after all these years.
The Black Cat's budget was $95,745 ($2.2 million today) and it made over $236,000 ($5.4 million today). The film was Universal Studios biggest hit of 1934.
The film has tension, a pair of great actors in their prime, moody, sinister atmosphere and briskly paced; again, clocking in at an hour or so, The Black Cat packs a punch and delivers more than any “modern” film made over the years. Like Halloween, there’s no gore but the shocking violence is present, it’s implied: Kristy Marlana Wallace, also known as Poison Ivy or Poison Ivy Rorschach—the Cramps’ cofounder and guitarist, as well as a horror film afficionado—once said: "(When) ******* gets skinned alive at the end but they show the shadow of it and somehow that's more gruesome.”
Reservoir Dogs. Michael Madsen’s Mr. Blonde cuts off the cop’s ear and Quintin Tarantino shot two versions: One where you see Mr. Blonde cuts off the ear; the second version is of the Mr. Blonde and the cop’s shadows are seen on the wall as the cop’s ear is sliced off.
Guess which version worked for the audience and used?
The second one. People found it more than gruesome.
Ulmer knew it’d work—but he had no other options but he made it work.
Both Carpenter and Tarantino knew it worked well.
If you’ve never seen The Black Cat, I think you should check it out. More than nine decades later, it holds well today and if you love certain aspects of filmmaking, from lighting and set design—in fact, Poelzig’s cavernous fortress-turned-home becomes a character itself. The Black Cat is available for rent or buy from most major streaming platforms. It’s even available to watch for free on the Internet Archive . . . it’s grainy but still watchable.
I hope you’ll take my advice and watch The Black Cat. You won’t be disappointed and I think you’ll enjoy it.
Be seeing you.
-30-
01 October 2024
SussuSudowrite.
I decided to give Sudowrite,
the AI writing tool, a try. Hugh Howey, has used it and loved it; I’ve heard
other good things from others, so I decided to give it a try. Now, it’s an AI
assisted tool not generative. It’s like Grammarly on steroids and does more; it
reminds me of being back in the newsroom, having that peer review which I found
useful back in the day. In fact, reminds me of a writing tool software I used over
a decade. It helps with tracking chapters and other things; when I have
problems with a big rewrite and I’m hitting a wall, I can do quick rewrite, mix
and match here or there.
I plugged various sections
into a analysis box and I got the following—the last paragraph is a condensed
version.
**Analysis of Writing Style**
**Tone and Mood:** The tone is
gritty and cynical, reflecting a dystopian world filled with crime and moral
ambiguity. The mood oscillates between chaotic vibrancy and dark foreboding,
creating an atmosphere that is both lively and unsettling.
**POV:** The narrative is told
in the first-person point of view, allowing readers to experience the
protagonist's thoughts and feelings directly. The tense is predominantly in the
present, which adds immediacy to the unfolding events.
**Vocabulary and Word
Choice:** The vocabulary is a mix of technical jargon and colloquial language,
reflecting a futuristic setting. There is a blend of formal and informal word
choices, with a penchant for specificity (e.g., "suborbital shuttlecraft,"
"biosynth humanoid-looking bot"). The use of cultural references and
slang adds depth to the world-building.
**Sentence Structure:** The
sentences vary in length and complexity, with a mix of concise statements and
longer, descriptive passages. The author employs fragments for emphasis and
uses complex sentences to convey intricate ideas, creating a dynamic flow.
**Pacing and Rhythm:** The
pacing is brisk, particularly during action sequences, while moments of
introspection slow the narrative down. The rhythm is punctuated by short,
punchy sentences that heighten tension, interspersed with longer, more
descriptive passages that provide context and detail.
**Dialogue:** Dialogue is
characterized by a mix of formality and informality, reflecting the diverse
backgrounds of the characters. The protagonist's voice is sardonic and
observant, with a tendency to critique the absurdities of the world around
them. Unique dialogue tags and interruptions enhance the realism of
conversations.
**Descriptive Style:** The
author employs vivid sensory imagery, using detailed descriptions to create a
rich visual landscape. The use of bioluminescent flora and the contrast between
modern architecture and retro fashion adds depth to the setting. Descriptions
are often layered with emotional undertones, enhancing the reader's connection
to the narrative.
**Themes and Motifs:**
Recurring themes include cultural diversity, the complexities of identity, and
the moral ambiguities of society. Motifs of surveillance, technology and crime
permeate the narrative, reflecting the protagonist's struggle within a corrupt
system.
**Cultural and Historical
Context:** The piece reflects a futuristic, multicultural society influenced by
various cultural elements from the 20th century. The blending of styles and the
presence of crime syndicates suggest a commentary on societal decay and the
persistence of human vices across time.
Overall, the writing style is
characterized by its intricate world-building, sharp wit and a blend of humor
and darkness, creating a compelling narrative that invites readers to explore a
complex and flawed society.
Gritty and cynical, the
first-person narrative unfolds in present tense, blending technical jargon with
colloquial language. Vivid imagery and varied sentence structures create a
chaotic yet immersive atmosphere, reflecting a dystopian world rife with moral
ambiguity and cultural complexity.
I've been worried if I was hitting all the marks I'd set for myself and, to be honest, it's been stressful and leading to downward spiraling depression.I feel better, I'm hitting those marks and I feel good about it.
I feel good about myself.
Be seeing you.
-30-
16 September 2024
The SF/F TV Series Renaissance of the 1970s: UFO
This week in 1970, the cult
classic TV series, UFO, debuted. It became popular in both the UK and
the United States and a second series (season, here in the States) was planned
but it later became Space: 1999.
UFO was
the first live-action series created and produced by Gerry Anderson (Fireball-XL5,
Thunderbirds, Captain Scarlett). It was dark at times, downbeat; innocent, unaware
civilians got caught in the crossfire and paid a terrible price—it was, after
all, about a secret organization fighting an invasion of organ-harvesting
aliens.
Instead of The X-Files
saying “Trust no one,” UFO said “Trust us.”
From Wikipedia:
The series’ premise is that in
1980, Earth is being visited by aliens from a dying planet, who are abducting
humans and harvesting their organs for their own bodies. The alien incursions
may also be a prelude to a possible full-scale invasion. The series' main cast
of characters are the staff of a secret, high-technology international military
agency called SHADO (an acronym for Supreme Headquarters Alien Defense Organization)
established by the governments of the United Kingdom, the United States, the
Soviet Union, France and Germany (believed to be West Germany as the city of
Bonn is mentioned along with Washington, Paris and Moscow) to defend Earth and
humanity against the mysterious aliens and learn more about them, while at the
same time keeping the threat of an alien invasion hidden from the public.
Operating under the cover—as
well as literally beneath the premises—of the Harlington-Straker Studios movie
studio in England, SHADO is headed by Commander Edward Straker (Ed Bishop), a
former United States Air Force colonel and astronaut, whose "cover"
is his role as the studio's chief executive.
SHADO has a variety of
high-tech hardware and vehicles at its disposal to implement a layered defense
of Earth. Early warnings of alien attack came from SID, the Space Intruder
Detector, an unmanned computerized tracking satellite that constantly scans for
UFO incursions. The forward line of defense is Moonbase from which the three
lunar Interceptor spacecraft, that fire a single explosive warhead, are
launched. The second line of defense includes Skydiver, a submarine mated with
the submersible, undersea-launched Sky One interceptor aircraft, which attacks
UFOs in Earth's atmosphere. The last line of defense is ground units including
the armed, IFV-like SHADO Mobiles, fitted with caterpillar tracks.
On Earth, SHADO also uses two
SHADAIR aircraft, a Seagull X-ray supersonic jet; a transatlantic Lunar Carrier
with a separating Lunar Module; a helicopter (actually, a small VTOL airplane
with large rotating propellers; and a radio-controlled Space Dumper. The
Moonbase has hovercraft-like Moon Hoppers/Moon mobiles that can be deployed for
transportation or reconnaissance.
The alien race is never given
a proper name, either by themselves or by human beings; they are simply
referred to as "the aliens". They are humanoid in appearance, and the
post-mortem examination of the first alien captured reveals that they are
harvesting organs from the bodies of abducted humans to prolong their
lifespans. However, the later episode “The Cat with Ten Lives” suggests that
these "humanoids" are actually beings subject to alien mind control,
and one “alien” body recovered was suspected of being completely Homo sapiens,
"possessed" by one of the alien minds.
=========================================
In UFO, characters
bickered and, at times, it was apparent they didn’t like each other. There
was rarely any lighthearted fare or snappy, witty banter like the relationship
between Kirk, Spock and McCoy; the storylines were also played straight and serious. Despite not being Star Trek or Lost in Space, UFO
was a dark, moody and somber alternative to contemporary SF series—and I think
that’s what people loved, and still love, about it. Again, the series is set in
1980 but the fashions including the Nehru jackets—that could be cringy but the
rest of the series is still engaging. The opening theme by longtime Anderson
associate, Barry Gray, is still amazing after these years. The special effects.
The cast of British, American and Canadian actors were great—one of them, Wanda
Ventham, who was Col. Virgina Lake, is more famously known as Benedict
Cumberbatch’s mother.
It was different. Fresh. New. It’s easy to see why UFO has had a major impact on the genre and fandom for the last fifty-plus years; you can watch online and DVDs are available—yes, I have the complete series set. You can find the series here:
The series is, yes, dated. I’m
certain some will be upset by some of the sexism but, hey, it was 1970. No
reason to get one’s knickers in a bunch. Cheesy yes but, as I’ve mentioned
begore, it’s dark, paranoid and not a plucky comedic sidekick in sight.
UFO, in
my opinion, was the first of the 1970s’ renaissance of SF series. It had a big
impact on me as I a kid and I still love revisiting it over the years.
Watch and enjoy.
Be seeing you.
-30-
04 August 2024
The CARET "Dragonfly Drone" Incident: Another Linda Moulton Howe Farce.
Whenever Linda
Moulton Howe appears online or on Coast to Coast AM with George Noory—or any
other paranormal radio show—you can be rest assured it’s going to be an
off-the-hook batshit crazy dumpster fire of a train wreck.
During the early
stages of her career, Howe focused on addressing environmental issues. As
Director of Special Projects at KMGH-TV in Denver from 1978 to 1983, she
produced impactful documentaries such as Poison in the Wind and A Sun
Kissed Poison—both of which exposed high levels of smog pollution in Los
Angeles and Denver. She produced others: Fire In The Water, which
advocated for using hydrogen as a cleaner energy source and A Radioactive
Water, which revealed the dangers of uranium contamination in a Denver
suburb's drinking water. Her contributions were instrumental in WCVB-TV
receiving the Institutional Peabody Award for institutional excellence in 1975.
At that time,
cattle mutilations were happening throughout the western United States, which
led to Howe producing a 1980 documentary called A Strange Harvest, which
propelled her into the spotlight.
And enabled Howe
to party crash the ufology field and its eclectic subculture.
A Strange Harvest postulated that
mysterious wounds found on cattle were the result of extraterrestrial beings
harvesting body parts and accused the U.S. government of being involved in a
cover-up. For her work, she received a Regional Emmy award for Audio
Achievement in 1981 and solidified her reputation as a fierce defender of these
ideas.
Note that: “Regional
Emmy award for Audio Achievement.”
Howe’s proud of
that Emmy and its something she and her adherents never fail to remind us. It’s
an award for sound achievement, it has nothing to do with the subject matter.
But, hey, it sounds impressive and gives her some gravitas.
That said, it was
a life changing moment for Howe; presenting herself as the ever-intrepid
investigative reporter, she delved further into UFO conspiracy theories and
made claims about connections between cattle mutilations, UFOs and government
secrecy. While she claimed to have been shown secret documents by a government
agent—one such claim was that in 1983, she was shown a secret presidential
briefing paper that revealed how aliens created Jesus and placed him
on Earth “to teach mankind about love and non-violence.”
So, basically,
Howe’s work might have inspired the Ridley Scott Alien prequel, Prometheus.
While Howe won
over some in the ufology field, there were critics, including author John
Greer, who believed her evidence lacked credibility and was based solely on
decaying cow carcasses.
As noted in
Howe’s RationalWiki entry, many weren’t impressed with her brand of shoddy
journalism, highlighted by her “gullibility and deceptive ‘reports’ have caused
even staunch ufologists to give her extremely low marks for credibility.”
Other
observations:
UFO Watchdog: “Someone
once summed up Howe very well with two words: ‘Media entrepreneur’. While
having been a major player in the cattle mutilation mystery, Howe’s credibility
has gone way downhill as she sensationalizes everything from mundane animal
deaths to promoting Brazilian UFO fraud Urandir Oliveira and the Aztec UFO
Crash Hoax while selling alien books, videos and lectures. Howe dabbles in all
things strange including Bigfoot, crop circles,
alien abductions, and UFOs. Howe also sits on the board of advisors to the
Roswell UFO Museum along with the likes of Don Schmitt. See Howe’s
site—EarthFiles.com—which she actually charges a subscription for in order to
access some stories. Also see Howe turning an explained animal death into an
encounter with Bigfoot. A leap not even Bigfoot itself could make.”
Saucer Smear
magazine: “The most hilarious web posting we have read in a very long time
comes from Whitley Strieber's Unknown Country, dated 9/30/05. Linda Moulton
Howe is described as ‘our Dreamland science reporter’. We ask—what, if any, are
the scientific qualifications of this pleasant but extremely gullible lady??
Inquiring minds would like to know!”
Here’s a LMH
sizzle reel of hijinks and conspiracy theory woo woo:
- Bigfoot DNA: Howe
says Melba Ketchum has proof that Bigfoot exists.
- Strange
Explosions Sweeping the US: Howe describes alleged booms, flashes of
light, ominous
trumpet sounds.
- Animal
Mutilations Strike Again: Howe says it’s happening in Waddy, Kentucky.
- The
Return of Ezekiel's
Wheel:
Howe describes recent “eyewitness sightings” of that Biblical thing in the
sky.
- Pyramids Discovered
in Alaska and Turkey: According
to Howe, they are “immense structures not only built but used in some
unknown way for a thousand years.”
- Unexplained
Explosions Now Worldwide: Howe says the world is blowing up, supposedly
starting with Clintonville, Wisconsin.
- Missing
Time:
Howe scoops “a rare case of documented missing time.”
- Unknown
objects in our skies: What are we NOT being told—yes, there’s an Obama conspiracy
to deny UFO presence, according to Howe.
- Kansas
City UFO Wave: Howe says a “remarkable series of UFO sightings” are being
debunked by the media due to some kind of conspiracy.
- The
Rendlesham Code: Howe endorses a UFO contactee’s claims of having
telepathically downloaded binary code numbers from aliens.
- Unprecedented
Wave of Animal Mutilations: Howe warns of a “massive worldwide wave” of
hacked-up animals.
- Project
Serpo:
Howe was one of the first to be taken for a ride by this hoax. As of 2017,
she is still saying, with a straight face, that Ebens are our allies in
some sort of galactic war.
- Thermo-nuclear
war on Mars: Howe
uncritically accepts and promotes the dotty ideas of John
Brandenburg,
thereby disqualifying herself as any kind of science reporter.
·
Secret
extended Apollo missions: On 29 November 2018 Howe web-published a 3-part
essay about Apollo missions 18, 19 and 20, which, she alleges, were
carried out in secret and involved contact with aliens. Her information came
from one Jon Harold Lavine, who claimed to have been one of the astronauts
involved. On the same date Howe talked for two hours on this topic on Coast to Coast AM. She later
retracted but characterized Lavine as a victim of MKULTRA memory-substitution
rather than what he actually is—a fraud.
Along the way,
Howe crossed paths with the infamous Air Force Office of Special Investigations
officer Richard Doty. But that’s a story for another day.
In 2007, as Howe clicked
through her inbox, she discovered a dozen photos of peculiar objects. This
piqued her curiosity and sparked a desire to uncover their origins and purpose.
And, well, this
is how the entire embarrassing situation started.
Howe later
learned that from the span of 2006 to 2007, a plethora of individuals scattered
across the United States claimed to have witnessed the same anomalous UFO.
Described as a saucer-shaped object with thin wires protruding about 30 feet
into the air, it measured at only 25 feet in diameter and two feet thick,
making it impossible for any human pilot to control. Dubbed “Dragonfly Drones,”
these objects baffled observers with their peculiar movements and seemingly
remote operation.
Rumors swirled
about their origins—were they extraterrestrial beings spying on our planet? Or
perhaps a clandestine venture by the government's covert space program? The
unexplained phenomena captured the imagination of Howe, who dove deeper into
the mysteries surrounding the dragonfly drones. She would later learn that the
pictures—all of them—were captured at the Big Basin in California, specifically
in the Redwoods area.
Based on her vast
experience in the UFO field –no, no—Howe’s history of willful gullibility, deceptive
‘reports and plain and simple shoddy journalism, she felt the photos were
authentic and she believed the eyewitness reports.
Enter Isaac. That
name has an interesting connection and I’ll talk about that in a bit.
Following the script, not long after getting the photos, Howe received a phone call from a man known only as Isaac. Not surprisingly, Isaac was connected to a top-secret government project known as CARET: Commercial Applications Research for Extraterrestrial Technology; the project was based in Palo Alto, Calif., and he had information on the Dragonfly Drone UFOs.
Shortly after
receiving the photos, she received a phone call from a person who said he had
secret information about the dragonfly drones. He wouldn’t give his real name
and only used the name Isaac.
In short, Isaac’s
account was a modified version of Bob Lazar’s claims: A few hundred scientists,
including Isaac, were attempting to reverse engineer alien or nonhuman
intelligence technology—the Dragonfly Drones. Howe first talked about the Dragonfly
Drones during a 29 May 2008 C2C AM appearance. Of course, Howe firmly believed
the Drones were part of the CARET program; she would later present photos and documents
from Isaac. Again, she was certain this was a black project program overseen by
the government.
However.
A few months
before, on History Channel’s seventh episode (season one) of UFO Hunters, Bill
Birnes and the crew were in Colorado, where they met with Colorado MUFON—Mutual
UFO Network—and they discussed the very same Dragonfly Drone UFOs. After some
scripted antics, Colorado MUFON and the UFO Hunters felt that the Dragonfly
Drones were some sort of psyops program or what have you. Titled “Reverse
Engineering,” the episode was first broadcast on 19 March 2008.
It was interesting—and
perplexing—that alleged UFO sightings from California ended up in the hands of
Colorado MUFON instead of the California groups.
Oh well.
Flash forward to
15 Dec. 2008 and it’s the second season’s thirteenth episode of Terminator: Sarah
Connor Chronicles called “Earthlings Welcome Here.” Throughout the previous
episodes, there are mysterious drones—later found out to be reverse from Terminator
tech—appear and Sarah goes to a UFO Experience Conference, searching for a shadowy
blogger named . . . .
Abraham.
The Old
Testament, anyone? Abraham? Isaac?
Both “Abraham”
and “Isaac” have knowledge of UFO drones—both drone projects reverse-engineered
from advanced tech.
Yes. It was a
viral marketing for TSCC. The link is here:
It should be
noted that despite the truth behind the Dragonfly Drones and that it’s been known
since Dec. 2008—people still believe they are here and real.
If someone at TSCC
wanted to stir things up within the UFO community—sending photos and having a
mysterious informant—choosing Linda Moulton Howe was a stroke of genius.
She’ll never
learn.
She’ll keep
falling for hoaxes and what have you for years to come.
Be seeing you.
-30-
Gaia Article on the Dragonfly DronesUFO Hunters: Reverse Engineering
The photos Howe received from Isaac
26 July 2024
Netflix Docuseries Encounters: The Stephenville Lights.
Angelia Joined, staff reporter for the Stephenville Empire-Tribune, who broke the story about the Stephenville Lights UFO sightings. She would later lose her job.
25 July 2024
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23 July 2024
Doggerland.
Ever heard
of Doggerland? Well, here’s some information about it. From Wikipedia and cited
sources:
Doggerland
was an area of land in Northern Europe, now submerged beneath the southern
North Sea. This region was repeatedly exposed at various times during the
Pleistocene epoch due to the lowering of sea levels during glacial periods,
though the term "Doggerland" is generally specifically used for this
region during the Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene. During the early
Holocene, the exposed land area of Doggerland stretched across the region
between what is now the east coast of Great Britain, the Netherlands, the
western coast of Germany and the Danish peninsula of Jutland. Between 10,000
and 7,000 years ago, Doggerland was inundated by rising sea levels,
disintegrating initially into a series of low-lying islands before submerging
completely. The impact of the tsunami generated by the Storegga underwater
landslide c. 8200 years ago on Doggerland is controversial. The flooded land is
known as the Dogger Littoral. Doggerland was named after the Dogger Bank—which
in turn was named after 17th-century Dutch fishing boats called doggers—which
formed a highland region that became submerged later than the rest of
Doggerland.
The
archaeological potential of the area was first identified in the early 20th
century, and interest intensified in 1931 when a fishing trawler operating east
of the Wash dragged up a barbed antler point that was subsequently dated to a
time when the area was tundra. Vessels have since dragged up remains of
mammoths, lions and other animals, and a few prehistoric tools and weapons.
Most archaeological evidence of human habitation dates to the Mesolithic period
during the early Holocene.
As of
2020, international teams are continuing a two-year investigation into the
submerged landscape of Doggerland using new and traditional archaeogeophysical
techniques, computer simulation, and molecular biology. Evidence gathered
allows the study of past environments, ecological change, and human transition
from hunter-gatherers to farming communities.
As ice
melted at the end of the last glacial period of the current ice age, sea levels
rose and the land began to tilt in an isostatic adjustment as the huge weight
of ice lessened. Doggerland eventually became submerged, cutting off what was
previously the British peninsula from the European mainland by around 6500 BCE.
The Dogger Bank, an upland area of Doggerland, remained an island until at
least 5000 BCE. Key stages are now believed to have included the gradual
evolution of a large tidal bay between eastern England and Dogger Bank by 9000
BCE and a rapid sea level rise thereafter, leading to Dogger Bank becoming an
island and Britain becoming physically disconnected from the continent.
A recent
hypothesis suggests that around 6200 BCE much of the remaining coastal land was
flooded by a tsunami caused by a submarine landslide off the coast of Norway
known as the Storegga Slide. This suggests “that the Storegga Slide tsunami
would have had a catastrophic impact on the contemporary coastal Mesolithic
population . . . Britain finally became separated from the continent and in
cultural terms, the Mesolithic there goes its own way.” It is estimated that up
to a quarter of the Mesolithic population of Britain lost their lives. A study published in 2014 suggested that the
only remaining parts of Doggerland at the time of the Storegga Slide were
low-lying islands, but supported the view that the area had been abandoned at
about the same time as the tsunamis.
Another
view speculates that the Storegga tsunami devastated Doggerland, but then ebbed
back into the sea, and that later Lake Agassiz (in North America) burst,
releasing so much fresh water that sea levels rose over about two years to
flood much of Doggerland and making Great Britain an island. The difference in
the distribution of broken shells between lower-lying and high-lying parts of
the area also suggests the survival of land after the Storegga tsunami.
Here’s an
idea:
What if a
highly advanced civilization—I mean highly advanced, hundreds of years ahead of
us—existed in the Doggerland region?
What if that
civilization was the basis for the Atlantis legend?
In the
Zedverse, Earth/Tehrani/Terra has a co-orbital twin, another Earth or
Counter-Earth called Tellus. Tellus is in a similar Ice Age that gripped our
Earth thousands of years ago.
Yes, the
Doggerland region exists on Tellus . . . along with other mysteries.
Oh.
One more
thing: Tellus has three moons.
For more information:
14 July 2024
Don't Let It Happen Here . . . Again.
13 July 2024
HEO: Hyper Enabled Operator
Say goodbye to the Ironman battlesuit concept: The United States military wants more James Bond than Tony Stark.
More brains, less brawn. Enjoy the read
Be seeing you.
-30-
11 July 2024
Readers: Tell Me Something . . . .
Hello there.
Welcome to the page. Thanks so much for the likes and follows.
Oh.
This is a character of mine from the Fallout 4 roleplaying game. More or less, this is a good visual of what Zed looks like in Night Zero and other future stories.
I need some input from all of you.
As readers, what do you like or want from the main character?
And, well, what do you dislike or don't want?
I'm looking forward to your responses.