More on the "alien in the attic":
Alien crash lands in the attic
But what would be the point of producing this dummy? Why would someone be making aliens like this in the 1940s?
[. . .]
"If it is a hoax, it is very well done and was clearly done some time ago," says Sci-Fi Channel spokesperson, Lawrence Hall. "There are signs of degradation on its upper and lower left arm, it is cracking."
I have to admit: I'm intrigued.
2 comments:
But in that case (and I think it's fairly obvious that it's some kind of man-made model -- has nobody taken a sample of it for analysis?), why is the liquid vinegary? Why not just use water?
I think it's already been establised that it's a clay model. But it looks as if it's an *old* clay model, which I think is kind of weird.
The overwhleming odds are that it's a hoax. But if it's a hoax that predates the 1960s, when the "Gray" became known, then where fid the hoaxers get the idea for their model?
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