Before Roswell made headlines, strange objects were already falling from the sky—and not all of them were weather balloons.

Before Roswell made headlines, strange objects were already falling from the sky—and not all of them were weather balloons.
Strange lights in the sky, eerie creatures lurking in the shadows, and dark rituals unfolding in the dead of night—1963 was a year drenched in mystery, terror, and the unexplained.
For over a century, Pennsylvania has been a hotspot for UFO encounters that baffle experts and leave witnesses questioning reality. From glowing discs in remote lakes to crafts that defy physics, the Keystone State’s skies are filled with the mysterious, paranormal, and extraterrestrial.
A seasoned forest lookout reports a blazing wildfire—only for it to vanish without a trace. A young woman discovers that not all hauntings are terrifying. A 19th-century murder in a Boston laundry remains unsolved, shrouded in mystery. And did Mary Shelley’s obsession with graveyards shape one of the most famous horror stories of all time? From phantom flames to historical hauntings, we’re diving into the strange, the eerie, and the unexplained in this episode of Weird Darkness.
Long before the modern UFO craze, cowboys, trappers, and even future U.S. presidents reported eerie lights, sky-serpents and crashed crafts with mysterious hieroglyphs—suggesting the Wild West may have had more than just outlaws lurking in the night.
In the summer of 1963, a mysterious crater, eerie lights, and a baffling military response turned the quiet town of Charlton, England into the center of a UFO controversy that still refuses to be neatly explained.
Recently declassified files expose decades of eerie UFO encounters, bizarre sightings, and mysterious figures—could they be proof that we are not alone?
In January 2000, something massive drifted through the night sky over southwestern Illinois – so big and strange that a handful of small-town cops, watching from different locations, tracked it in real time over their radios, completely baffled by what they were seeing.
In 1952, a quiet evening in Flatwoods, West Virginia, turned into a chilling legend when a fiery object from the sky led a group of locals to an otherworldly encounter they’ll never forget. But how much truth is there to the story?
Back in 1966, a group of cops chased a mysterious glowing object across two states, and what happened next wrecked their lives and left everyone wondering—was it really a UFO, or just another government cover-up?
Five cases where mysterious lights in the sky left behind tangible artifacts – and the investigations might uncover evidence that could change everything we know about alien encounters.
Could the ancient legends of the Djinn hold the key to understanding shadow people, UFOs, and other paranormal phenomena, or are they simply the unseen architects of myths and mysteries beyond our grasp?
Before Roswell UFOs were already haunting our skies. In the early 1900s, from the battlefields of World War I to quiet farmlands across the globe, witnesses reported encounters with mysterious airships, glowing discs, and their otherworldly occupants.
On September 1, 1969, about 40 people in Berkshire County, Massachusetts reported seeing a UFO — and one boy named Thomas Reed claimed that he and his family were all taken aboard.
The U.S. Government explained the rapidly maneuvering lights as a weather balloon. But if you believe what fighter pilot George F. Gorman says, you’ll believe there are some giant holes in the U.S. Government’s story. Because Gorman ended up in an aerial battle with one of those so-called “weather balloons”.
UFO stories are a dime a dozen. Even stories of UFOs crashing have become humdrum for many. But what if I were to tell you that there was a UFO crash in Missouri that was so fantastic that a local pastor was asked to come and pray over the three dead alien bodies found at the crash site?
Only once in the history of law enforcement and ufology has there been a case where a UFO incident turned into an actual criminal investigation. We’ll look at the Dechmont Woods Encounter.