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@theartofmadeline
occasionally subtle
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Misplaced Lens Cap

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Three Goblin Art
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

titsay
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
will byers stan first human second
DEAR READER
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JVL

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
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Not today Justin

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Janaina Medeiros

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@professorgort
Or, why I'm even here
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Seven-Up Ad, 1957
In the fall of 1957, about the time that the United States was experiencing one of its most concentrated waves of UFO reports, Seven-Up ran this ad in a series of national publications. The other-worldly visitors featured in these advertisements had no interest in taking over the world. They were just thirsty.
Image via UFOPOP
Fairytown USA, Middle Island, NY, Late 1950s
Kids getting on your nerves as you make the drive out to Long Island? Send them into another dimension at Fairytown USA amusement park!
Image via Playle
Fantastic Universe, March 1955
Next time you find yourself cursing rush hour traffic, just be glad you aren’t having to deal with a bunch of road raging extraterrestrials.
Image via UFOPOP
Flying Saucer Cartoon, 1952 (by Alan Ferber)
Los Angeles Daily News cartoonist Alan Ferber came up with this vision of U.S. Air Force flying saucer denial after reading the just published book, Flying Saucers from Outer Space, by Donald Keyhoe. Keyhoe was, by late 1952, well on his way to becoming the nation’s foremost UFO proponent.
Image via Dave Kenney
Flying Saucer Sheet Music, 1950s and 1960s
Sources (Clockwise from Upper Left): Dave Kenney; UFOPOP; UFOPOP; and UFOPOP
Artist’s Depiction of the Kenneth Arnold Sighting (Coronet Magazine, November 1952)
Forget for a moment that the guy in this picture doesn’t look anything like the real Kenneth Arnold. It’s still a great example of saucer-era pop art. By the time Coronet magazine published this image and its accompanying article, “Flying Saucers: Myth or Menace?” in late 1952, the Kenneth Arnold sighting was more than five years old. By then, many Americans were at least somewhat familiar with the story. Arnold claimed that on the afternoon of June 24, 1947, as he was flying his private plane to Yakima, Washington, he spotted something strange: a formation of bright objects moving south between Mount Baker and Mount Ranier. The next day a newspaper reporter in Pendleton, Oregon, wrote up the story and sent it on to the Associated Press. Soon people around the country were talking about the “saucer-like objects” that Arnold had reported seeing. It didn’t matter that Arnold had never used the word “saucer” to describe the objects he saw. The term “flying saucer” was now embedded in the national lexicon.
Image via UFOPOP
Flying Saucer Convention (Mojave Desert, 1957)
Artist’s Conception of Nash-Fortenberry Sighting, 1952 (by Joe Kutula)
On the evening of July 14, 1952, the flight crew of a United Airlines DC-4 reported one of the most intriguing aerial encounters of the flying saucer era. Captain William B. Nash and First Officer William H. Fortenberry—both World War II veterans trained in the identification of enemy aircraft—claimed they saw eight reddish-orange circles flying in echelon formation over Chesapeake Bay. They said the objects flew between their aircraft and the ground, which allowed them to estimate the discs’ size and speed. Nash and Fortenberry calculated that the objects were about 100 feet in diameter, about 15 feet thick, and were moving at approximately 12,000 miles per hour.
Image: True Magazine, October 1952, via UFOPOP
Santa Catalina Island UFO, 1947
Another early piece of photographic evidence from the 1947 wave of UFO sightings, this one purportedly shows one of six discs seen flying over Santa Catalina Island, California, on July 9, 1947. Three visiting Army veterans reported the sighting. One of them, a former aerial photographer named Bob Jung, snapped the photo.
Photo via AboveTopSecret
Artist’s Depiction of the Kenneth Arnold Sighting (Coronet Magazine, November 1952)
Forget for a moment that the guy in this picture doesn’t look anything like the real Kenneth Arnold. It’s still a great example of saucer-era pop art. By the time Coronet magazine published this image and its accompanying article, “Flying Saucers: Myth or Menace?” in late 1952, the Kenneth Arnold sighting was more than five years old. By then, many Americans were at least somewhat familiar with the story. Arnold claimed that on the afternoon of June 24, 1947, as he was flying his private plane to Yakima, Washington, he spotted something strange: a formation of bright objects moving south between Mount Baker and Mount Ranier. The next day a newspaper reporter in Pendleton, Oregon, wrote up the story and sent it on to the Associated Press. Soon people around the country were talking about the “saucer-like objects” that Arnold had reported seeing. It didn’t matter that Arnold had never used the word “saucer” to describe the objects he saw. The term “flying saucer” was now embedded in the national lexicon.
Image via UFOPOP
The Strange World of Planet X, 1958
I’ll get my own world with malt and stylish futuristic chicks.
August 1953
Saucer Commuter Article, 1957
From the March 1957 edition of Modern Mechanix.
Image via The Retronaut
"To Serve Man" (The Twilight Zone)