seen from Serbia
seen from Russia
seen from Sweden
seen from Malaysia
seen from Italy

seen from France
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye

seen from Italy
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom

seen from T1
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from Netherlands
The vail is thinning
Any idea on what this could be?
A. Cosplayer with a mermaid tail
B. Manatee
C. Dolphin or
D. Mermaid / Siren
It doesn’t look like old party balloons 😭
Just an ordinary day
It’s ok they’re just ‘kites’
The McPherson Tape was an alleged video containing footage of a Connecticut family known as "the McPhersons" celebrating their relative's 5th birthday, only to be visited and eventually abducted by aliens. In reality, the footage was actually a 1989 no-budget found footage thriller film titled UFO Abduction, directed, filmed, and produced by Dean Alioto through IndieSyndicate Productions. Also, the name of the family in the film was the Van Heeses, and not the McPhersons.
Before UFO Abduction could be released on video in the United States, the original master and artwork for the film were destroyed in a warehouse fire.[1] Sometime around 1992, copies of the film were bootlegged and released by Axiom Films under the title The McPherson Tape. Since the film was made to look like a 1983 found footage video and matched many descriptions of alleged alien abductions, Axiom presented the film as actual found footage depicting a real alien abduction and the last recordings of a Connecticut family named "the McPhersons". After this, the footage was regarded as one of the most credible pieces of evidence of extraterrestrial life.
However, the creators of UFO Abduction eventually came forward and produced evidence that The McPherson Tape was not actual found footage and was merely a no-budget film, including photos of the alien costumes and blueprints for the flying saucer seen in the tape.[2]
When the film was given a limited release by Axiom Films, the original opening credits and end credits were removed. The opening credits were replaced with a description of the events, and the end credits were replaced with a fake phone number to call if you were aware of the whereabouts of the McPhersons.