Real alien invasion5/29/2023 ![]() ![]() ![]() The investigators proved their susceptibility when they agreed not to stand in the poking area instead of leaving the basement altogether. It is interesting that another member of the team feels something on the back of his neck moments later, but that could be the power of suggestion. When they go down to the basement, it is the daughter who feels a poke and tells the investigators not to stand in “that spot” where she felt it. The investigative team is a little too amenable to their hosts’ precautions. She tells a story about her husband hearing a voice, which sounded like an airport announcement, saying something about a portal, and hearing the words “chosen by the forty” and “back in the hole we go.” The team believes the mother is a conduit or magnet for the phenomenon. In the basement, where her husband used to tinker, things get even hairier. The mother keeps an emergency bed in the living room in case she gets nocturnal visitors hulking over her as she sleeps. She and her daughter see things like entities which shouldn’t fit into the spaces they occupy. She was born in that house and her family has owned it for generations. They speak with a lady in town, whose house was a general store in the 1800s. Luckily, they get it in a one-stop-shopping spree. All of which have nothing to do with the case. Amidst the quick-cuts of the setting changes, mixed in with drawings of “greys” and photographs of apparent alien craft, we can see shots of Bigfoot, the Loch Ness Monster, angels, demons, and mothmen. The special throws quite a bit of subliminal imagery into the visuals to associate the “undisputed UFO capital of the world” with other paranormal activity. It wouldn’t be too much of a stretch for Alien Invasion: Hudson Valley to add a murder mystery to the growing list of supernatural happenings. By this point, the team has already had paranormal contact which goes beyond alien invasions and into hauntings, poltergeist activity, and possibly other etheric wonders and urban legends. One says she can’t take it anymore, as she walks the investigation team back and back, further into the woods behind her house. They admit straight out they don’t know what they’re dealing with, and want to get to the bottom of what’s going on. The women in town don’t make any such disclaimers. Most, and this goes on throughout the special, of the witnesses identify themselves as “science guys.” But if you say you’re a science guy, you are probably not. The team starts by taking in first-hand accounts, after an amusing impromptu town hall meeting with locals who don’t want to be seen as crazy. The team is innovative, pushing investigative confines by combining paranormal equipment along with the usual methods of probing extraterrestrials. According to its website, GAIA is the “’Netflix’ of consciousness with thousands of acquired titles and original content that pushes the boundaries on our current reality.” D’Antonio calls in extraterrestrial/paranormal expert Ben Hansen, and investigative journalist Melissa Tittl, who is also the Head of Content and Development for the GAIA Network. ![]() But it probably is the reason the area gets special treatment. Alien Invasion: Hudson Valley goes on to show how easy it is to call extradimensional activity. His easy local access isn’t the reason the area’s complaints take up most of the log. Marc D’Antonio, the chief photo researcher for MUFON, was born, raised and lives in the Hudson Valley. Ever since ghostly dirigibles were reported over the area in 1909. ![]() But the reports go back over 100 years, the two-hour special documentary points out. Just north of New York City, they’ve logged more UFO complaints than any other area in the world, bugging MUFON, the world’s largest civilian UFO investigative organization, with 3,000 extraterrestrial encounter reports in the past 10 years alone. The Hudson Valley wants to be Roswell East. Aliens are a nuisance, let’s face it, especially when you’ve got “an alien highway” in your basement.Īrea 51 has an excuse for its reputation, being government controlled and heavily secure. government can no longer deny the existence of UFOs, eyewitnesses feel emboldened to share their stories.” The residents of Pine Bush, in the heart of Hudson Valley, New York, can no longer take the undeniable. Alien Invasion: Hudson Valley, the latest installment of discovery+’s Shock Docs franchise, opens with the disclaimer: “Now that the U.S. ![]()
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