Current:Home > reviewsNew Netflix series explores reported UFO 'Encounters'. It couldn't come at a better time. -Blueprint Wealth Network
New Netflix series explores reported UFO 'Encounters'. It couldn't come at a better time.
View
Date:2025-04-16 13:48:40
The chance that extraterrestrials hailing from deep within the incomprehensibly vast regions of outer space have discovered and visited planet Earth may be infinitesimal.
But it's not zero.
Witnesses have for decades comes forward to share their alleged encounters with strange flying objects and even otherworldly beings themselves, only to often be ridiculed and dismissed. The specter of flying saucers and little green men has long been a topic relegated to the realm of pop culture at best, and hokum at worst.
Yet for better or worse, UFOs have increasingly entered the mainstream in recent months as military whistleblowers and others come forward with accounts that lend credibility to a long stigmatized concept.
Now, witnesses once made to feel like crackpots are sharing what they believe are sightings of UFOs in "Encounters," a docuseries premiering Wednesday on Netflix. Across four episodes, the series will rely on firsthand accounts to explore the evidence (or lack thereof) that we may not be alone in the universe.
"Most people would say the question is, like, 'Are we alone,'" one person says in the trailer, released earlier in September. "I think the question is, 'Who are we?'"
Watch the trailer:
NASA UFO briefing takeaways:How NASA hopes to shift UAP talks 'from sensationalism to science'
What is 'Encounters' about?
The upcoming docuseries is the latest in recent years to explore UFOs in the wake of a 2017 article in the New York Times that first exposed a shadowy Pentagon program to study what the government officially refers to as UAP, short for unidentified anomalous phenomena.
Directed by Yon Motskin, each episode of the series produced by Stephen Spielberg's Amblin Television, Boardwalk Pictures and Vice Studios explores a separate report of a mass sighting in a different part of the world.
Billed in Netflix press materials as a "detective story," "Encounters" relies on both firsthand accounts and also the testimony of various scientists and military officials to delve into reports of suspected extraterrestrial phenomena. The four episodes feature accounts of strange lights in the sky in 2008 over small-town Texas; Cold War-era submersible crafts lurking near a coastal Welsh village; a non-human intelligence reportedly interfering in 2011 with the operations of a nuclear power plant in Japan; and an alien encounter in 1994 experienced by schoolchildren in Zimbabwe.
"UFOs, UAP's, non-human intelligence, whatever we might call it — I didn’t before but now I think it exists," Motskin told Netflix. "It could be non-human intelligence from far away, or from the past or future, or even us from the future. But I believe ‘the phenomenon’, as it’s called, has been around for a long time."
No longer conspiracy theories:How UFOs became mainstream in America
Why is the docuseries relevant now?
Public interest in UFOs has been building since July when three former military officers testified in front of Congress about mysterious objects sighted by Navy pilots, as well as a clandestine program to retrieve and study downed spacecraft.
The claim of the crash retrieval program came from former U.S. Air Force intelligence officer David Grusch, who testified before a House Oversight subcommittee that his country has been aware of “non-human” activity since the 1930s. Though he was constrained in presenting hard evidence about alleged classified programs, Grusch claimed to have been informed that the Pentagon has been able to obtain and study not only interstellar crafts, but the bodies of extraterrestrial pilots themselves.
More UFO documentaries:Here are 3 other UFO docuseries streaming now
The Pentagon has repeatedly denied that such a program exists.
Since then, the Pentagon's office to investigate UFOs unveiled a website where the public can access declassified information about reported sightings and soon make reports of their own.
And earlier this month, NASA released the findings of a long-anticipated report on UAP while appointing a new chief of UFO research. The announcement came on the heels of Mexico's first ever UFO hearing that featured wild testimony from a UFO researcher presenting what he alleged were the mummified bodies of ancient aliens, a claim that has been disputed by scientists.
NASA scientists and other astrophysicists acknowledge the phenomena of objects sighted in skies flying in ways believed to be beyond the capabilities of known human technology, but also caution that otherworldly explanations for UFOs aren't likely even in the absence of a natural one.
'A promising step:'NASA says planet 8.6 times bigger than Earth could support life
Eric Lagatta covers breaking and trending news for USA TODAY. Reach him at [email protected]
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Flurry of Houthi missiles, drones fired toward Red Sea shipping vessels, Pentagon says
- What is Hezbollah and what does Lebanon have to do with the Israel-Hamas war?
- Pizza Hut offering free large pizza in honor of Guest Appreciation Day
- Small twin
- Todd and Julie Chrisley receive $1M settlement in 2019 lawsuit against tax official
- What if I owe taxes but I'm unemployed? Tips for filers who recently lost a job
- Todd and Julie Chrisley receive $1M settlement in 2019 lawsuit against tax official
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Bill Belichick's most eye-popping stats and records from his 24 years with the Patriots
Ranking
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Mariska Hargitay reveals in powerful essay she was raped in her 30s, talks 'reckoning'
- Senate border talks broaden to include Afghan evacuees, migrant work permits and high-skilled visas
- Study: Bottled water can contain up to 100 times more nanoplastic than previously believed
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Twitch layoffs: Amazon-owned livestreaming platform cutting workforce by 35%
- Online sports betting arrives in Vermont
- $100M will be left for Native Hawaiian causes from the estate of an heiress considered last princess
Recommendation
Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
Vivek Ramaswamy says he's running an America first campaign, urges Iowans to caucus for him to save Trump
Riots in Papua New Guinea’s 2 biggest cities reportedly leave 15 dead
Lisa Marie Presley’s Memoir Set to be Released With Help From Daughter Riley Keough
Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
Double Big Mac comes to McDonald's this month: Here's what's on the limited-time menu item
A non-traditional candidate resonates with Taiwan’s youth ahead of Saturday’s presidential election
Judge rules Alabama can move forward, become first state to perform nitrogen gas execution