This is a follow-up to a post we shared over the weekend about a strange situation in Panama. A TikTok user has been posting videos claiming that a meteorite fell, hit the ground, and since then has somehow developed tentacles—looking more and more like some kind of alien creature.
In the last 48 hours, the user (who goes by Kinpanama) said that people showed up to see him. He assumed they were scientists or researchers. Now, he’s even talking about putting a camera inside a safe.
What makes this story especially interesting isn’t just the videos themselves, but the comments. People who have been following this for days—many of whom started out calling it a hoax—are beginning to lean toward believing it’s real. Personally, we’re still in the undecided camp. The clips do look non-manipulated, and at least at first glance, they feel authentic.
We have to be dubious. There’s content creators everywhere, and they’re looking for as much attention as they can get. But this video, this series of scenes has definitely created attention. And we’re all fixated.. And on the edge of our earthly seats
If this all turns out to be a clever marketing stunt for a show or a movie, then it’s easily one of the best we’ve seen in years. But if it’s not… and if we really are looking at something from beyond this world… well, then maybe we’re doomed.
In a blog post over the weekend, Loeb pointed to observations by NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, which showed a “glow of light, likely from a coma, ahead of the motion of 3I/ATLAS towards the Sun.”
A coma is the hazy and luminous cloud that surrounds the nucleus of a comet.
However, there’s “no evidence for a bright cometary tail in the opposite direction,” he wrote, with scientists suggesting it was evidence that dust was evaporating from the object’s Sun-facing side.
The observations led Loeb and his colleagues to an intriguing, albeit far-fetched possibility: is the mysterious space object generating “its own light?”
We want to believe!! But it is getting tough to keep doing it..
Congresswoman Anna Paulina Luna has created some chatter after appearing on the Joe Rogan podcast. Among many topics, she said the likelihood of interdimensional beings is pretty high. In fact, she claimed Congress has seen some evidence of it. She seemed convinced that there are aliens among us, maybe interdimensional, maybe otherworldly. She also brought up Air Force incursions and other unsettling possibilities..
Of course, the naysayers were quick to point out that she has also spent time in conspiracy circles and made other eyebrow-raising claims. UFO skeptics ask the obvious question: Where’s the proof?
And here’s the interesting part: This is one area where skeptics and believers might actually agree.
The “Any Day Now” Problem
Let’s think about it. We’ve been hearing these stories for a long time… It has been 2 years since congressional hearings and public meetings where lawmakers hinted they were aware of alien beings, recovered spacecraft, and even bodies supposedly stored away in government facilities.
There have been videos of strange craft–the Pentagon has admitted that they know these videos exist and we cannot explain them. We also had a whole period of time of shooting down tech above the United States, balloons from China, and we were in awe at the New Jersey drones … (they are still around by the way despite the non-coverage) ..
But we have also been fed a steady diet of rumors, each one sounding like we’re about to get the proof. But that “any day now” moment never arrives. Tomorrow becomes next week, next week becomes next year, and the cycle repeats. The promised revelations dissolve into nothing more than another letdown.
It’s hard not to question the credibility of the people making these claims. We keep hearing tall tales about beings from other planets, other dimensions, maybe even demons or angels.. but proof?
Yep.. no disclosure. No big reveal.. all of that.. Still missing.
Meanwhile, Back on Earth
As the online joke goes, the first comment under any alien-disclosure post is usually:
“Cool, but is my rent still due next month?” Yes. Yes, it is.
Sure, strange things are happening in our skies. The government itself has released video of unidentified craft. Pilots have reported encounters with objects they can’t explain. Those things are real, and we want to believe—in fact, we probably do believe. But for every new person who steps forward claiming they’ve got fresh evidence that will blow the lid off the mystery, we’re served yet another big, fat, nothing burger.
The Hype vs. the Reality
Yes, the congressional testimony from David Grusch was big. Yes, having George Knapp sitting behind him was a cool moment for UFO enthusiasts. But since then, other major news events have grabbed the spotlight.
Now we have a congresswoman going on a major podcast to say interdimensional beings exist and Congress knows it. And yet, the national conversation is consumed by political trench wars—debates over the federal takeover of Washington, D.C., or whether Vladimir Putin should be in Alaska meeting Donald Trump.
You’d think the possibility of otherworldly visitors would dominate the headlines. But we’re politically exhausted, socially divided, and perhaps too jaded to resonate with “the bigger picture”.. especially when that bigger picture is never actually drawn.
Instead, we get vague assurances: “They’re out there. Proof is coming. Any day now.” And as mentioned before, “any day now” usually turns into “never.”
Where’s the Beef?
On this one point, skeptics and UFO believers can probably stand side by side. As the old 1980s fast-food slogan went:
“Where’s the beef?”
Maybe, just maybe, the beef got beamed up right along with all those mysteriously mutilated cattle.
3I/ATLAS: Alien Recon Mission or Just a Weird Space Rock?
Professor Avi Loeb has been keeping a close eye on a foreign object hurtling through space toward our planet. Scientists, unsure exactly what this interstellar visitor might be, have dubbed it 3I/ATLAS. Since its discovery, theories have been flying faster than the object itself.
On one side, you’ve got people like Richard C. Hoagland popping up on Ground Zero with Clyde Lewis, confidently declaring it’s indeed an interstellar object. Others worry it’s a reconnaissance mission—some kind of alien “drive-by” to check whether Earth is ripe for easy conquest. And then there are the skeptics, who think this is all a bit much. Let’s face it, the idea that an alien “interloper” is cruising in for a potential invasion is… well… pretty far-fetched.
Of course, if it is aliens, they’re probably not coming to just say “hi.” Bigger plans might be in the works. Still, the media has run with this in ways no one had on their 2025 bingo card. Across the internet, people are now claiming Harvard itself is communicating with the alien ship—a complete misreading of Loeb’s theoretical hypothesis. Somehow, a scientific discussion about possibilities has morphed into “Harvard held a meeting with the hostile invading alien army to discuss their plans.”
Is it an alien ship? I guess it could be. I mean, heck, I don’t own a telescope, and I’m not exactly equipped to tell the difference between space debris and a Death Star. What we do know is that scientists are saying this thing isn’t necessarily behaving like a comet—and that’s the part that’s making eyebrows go up.
It might be a comet. It might be something else. But the media? Oh, the media… They seem less interested in digging for real answers and more interested in hitting copy-and-paste on the same breathless story, over and over, like a galactic game of telephone.
Time will tell. If we’re invaded, I guess the Harvard scientist’s theory was right. If we’re not invaded… well, maybe they just decided to come back later—with a bigger army.
While the media is mocking her for this, maybe we are seeing hints of disclosure coming the Trump administration.
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard believes aliens might exist—and is hinting there is “classified” material to back her up supposition.
Gabbard, who oversees 18 U.S. intelligence agencies, was asked whether “there could be aliens” on the New York Post podcast “Pod Force One.” “I have my own views and opinions,” she said. “In this role, I have to be careful with what I share.”
The Post reported that when she was pressed further on the possibility of extraterrestrial life, Gabbard said: “Yes.”
Media attention has now continued on a short video from Jessica Ortiz’s Ring camera days ago.. The video seems to show a mysterious figure outside her home, Compton California. Local affiliates reported it along with the video, and others have subsequently picked up the story across the nation and world. The internet has had their say as well, pondering if this was an alien or just some trick of the lens..
“Someone ANYONE please explain to me what my ring just caught. I’m not tripping right?” she captioned the 11-second video.
According to Ortiz, it all began when she received an alert on her Ring doorbell app on June 5 around 1 a.m.
Surveillance video shows the mysterious “creature” walking in Ortiz’s driveway and exiting through a back gate. You can hear Ortiz’s gate close after the figure leaves the property…
A few of the best comment:
Well we already got Leprechaun in the hood, might as well give us Aliens in the hood
Did they seriously ask zak bagans.
It’s just a person carrying their jacket or hoodie. Take a closer look. ️
Must be a really slow day at the news station, some people are so gullible that they’ll believe this BS.
By now, you’ve probably heard there’s an interstellar interloper cruising through the solar system. It has been officially named 3I/ATLAS..
This space traveler is reportedly barreling toward the Sun at around 130,000 miles per hour (yeah, that’s fast), and it’s estimated to be about 15 miles wide, making it bigger than Manhattan. So yes, this thing is big.
Now, picture this: what if it weren’t just a big ol’ space rock with a name like a forgotten computer password, but instead a vessel carrying alien life bent on planetary invasion? (Cue dramatic music.)
Enter Avi Loeb, the Harvard astrophysicist who made waves a few years ago when he suggested that the oddly shaped object Oumuamua (remember that 2017 cosmic mystery speeding through our galaxy?) might be alien tech.
Well, Avi’s back. He’s written a post on Medium speculating that 3I/ATLAS might be a technological “spyware ship” in disguise. You know, just casually floating near the Sun like it’s trying not to be seen. According to Loeb, the object is currently on the opposite side of the Sun from Earth, which he suggests could be a deliberate maneuver to avoid detection by our telescopes.
Oh, and even if we wanted to investigate it? Our best chemical rockets wouldn’t come close. This thing is moving too fast for us to chase it down like we’re in some cosmic game of tag.
Mark your calendars: in November or December 2025, 3I/ATLAS is expected to pass by Jupiter, Mars, and Venus, and if Loeb’s theory has any merit, Earth might want to get its planetary defense team ready. He says responding to a potential threat of this scale would require defensive measures.
No pressure.
But here’s the less dramatic reality: all current evidence points to this being just a comet—ejected from some other star system like many before it.
Even Loeb admits the most likely explanation is that it’s natural. What he’s doing is classic Avi Loeb: thinking outside the box, stirring up discussion, and maybe (just maybe) getting a little media attention in the process. People who have followed him or listened to him know exactly what he is doing. As even he said in his Medium post: The hypothesis is an interesting exercise in its own right, and is fun to explore, irrespective of its likely validity.
And of course, that media attention often turns into clickbait headlines like: “Harvard Professor Says Alien Ship May Be Lurking Behind the Sun!” You’ve probably seen those floating around by now.
So, let’s calm down. Chances are, by January 2026, this comet will have zipped past us, we’ll all still be here, and the only war happening will be in the comment sections of Facebook posts.
Unless of course… it is an alien ship.
In which case… good luck to us all and may God have mercy on our souls.
Why does this feel like we just forced a nice ‘book end closure’ to this story?? All of that.. to just be a big bust like this?
The mysterious drones flying over New Jersey that caused alarm among residents last year were in large part authorized by the Federal Aviation Administration, the White House said Tuesday.
The large number of unexplained nighttime drone sightings in New Jersey and other East Coast states created a panic which at one point shut down an airport.
Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, now says many of those drones were authorized and known by the government.
“After research and study, the drones that were flying over New Jersey in large numbers were authorized to be flown by the FAA for research and various other reasons,” Leavitt said at a briefing Tuesday.
Leavitt said that the issue grew worse “due to curiosity,” as some of the drones also belonged to hobbyists and private citizens.
Yesterday, we took a trip to New Jersey for a little family adventure before Christmas. Without diving into details about dinner, I’ll skip straight to dessert—because what we really indulged in was a plethora of drone sightings.
There were so many drones, too many to count. So so many…
The most common type we saw was a triangular-shaped drone, but beyond that, we spotted a few blinking lights that would appear and vanish sporadically. A couple of times, we even mistook airplanes for drones, just because there were so many lights in the sky. It still doesn’t make sense what’s going on, but people are seeing these things everywhere—and we did too.
The most amazing (and frustrating) part of it all was realizing how bad your camera becomes when you actually spot one. Between shaky hands and trying to zoom in on something flying through the night sky, it’s almost impossible to capture anything decent.
I tried my best, but my footage is nowhere near as clear as some of the videos others have taken. That said, what I saw looked strikingly similar—if not identical—to what others have been reporting.
One notable thing there seemingly were more in Pennsylvania. Once we got back than there were in New Jersey, at least from Philadelphia to Allentown and Harrisburg.. they were seemingly regulated to the Southeast corner of the state..
These things are big. Maybe they’re some massive test by a corporation, a secret government project, an alien invasion, or something entirely different. Who knows? What’s certain is that they’re out there, and now we’re all looking for them. If they were trying to stay hidden, that cover was blown months ago.
It appears that officials may prefer the public to focu
s on their phones rather than the sky. A joint statement has been issued by the Department of Homeland Security, the FAA, the FBI, and the Department of Defense regarding reported drone sightings around New Jersey and other areas.
It is unclear whether this statement will calm public concerns or address the growing global narrative about drones. Reports have not been limited to New Jersey; sightings have also occurred in several other states and countries.
On December 15th, videos from across the country were shared, showing parking lots behaving oddly – lights blinking repeatedly and car alarms sounding without any apparent cause.
During one of their live broadcasts attempting to track drones, ABC News managed to film what appeared to be a plasma ball in the sky.
Yesterday, President-elect Trump stated that the government is aware of what is happening and that the public deserves to be informed.
However, this recent statement has downplayed the events, attributing them to hobbyist activity or standard drone technology. This explanation provides an interesting contrast to the strange behaviors being observed.
Some of the drones have displayed unusually odd movements. While it could be dismissed as rumor or conspiracy theory, some videos claim that radio interference occurred in car radios when drones hovered above them.
In the end, the message seems to be: nothing to see here, so stop looking.