They must not have syndicated the Jack Webb PBB where I lived in the 70s & 80s. I don't recall that at all. We only had 5 stations.
They must not have syndicated the Jack Webb PBB where I lived in the 70s & 80s. I don't recall that at all. We only had 5 stations.
and yet.... https://scoobydoo.fandom.com/wiki/Category:Real_monstersIt’s still funny to me that one of the few well-known American shows to take a consistent stand about the supernatural being fake is a cartoon with a talking dog.
Curses, foiled again!
I watched that show as a kid and I would have sworn it was called Project Blue Book.Heh. Though apparently I was misremembering slightly, per Christopher above (haven’t seen it since it aired).
I watched that show as a kid and I would have sworn it was called Project Blue Book.
I watched it when it originally aired, and I remember it as Project UFO. I think I was watching it on Canadian TV.IMDb claims it was called that in Canada
I watched that show as a kid and I would have sworn it was called Project Blue Book.
I watched it when it originally aired, and I remember it as Project UFO. I think I was watching it on Canadian TV.
Unless,of course, you're Spielberg, but he was playing on a different level.
Sure Fred.Curses, foiled again!
I think that show is a big part of the reason I was familiar with the Blue Book references in Twin Peaks.I definitely remember a show that aired occasionally on UK tv called Project Blue Book
Around 1974-76, or from when I was 11 to 13, I read a lot of UFO books (and books about ancient astronauts, the Bermuda Triangle, etc) until I couldn't take any of it seriously any more, and I don't think I came across the "close encounters" thing until the hype for the movie. Wikipedia says Allen Hynek came up with it in a 1972 book, but I didn't have that one.I dunno, I think the "Close Encounters of the nth Kind" scale was fairly prominently featured in UFO literature and media at the time, which is why Spielberg used the title.
Around 1974-76, or from when I was 11 to 13, I read a lot of UFO books (and books about ancient astronauts, the Bermuda Triangle, etc) until I couldn't take any of it seriously any more, and I don't think I came across the "close encounters" thing until the hype for the movie. Wikipedia says Allen Hynek came up with it in a 1972 book, but I didn't have that one.
I know too much...Christopher said:Hangar 18
I remember reading about all those things (the 70s UFO fad was huge with many books at the library plus Natl Enquirer and Weekly World News always at the grocery) and Nessie and Sasquatch in the mid 70s. They were fun at the time for this 5th and 6th grade voracious reader but I never believed them.Okay, you may be right. I had basically the same experience, but I was 5 years younger than you at the time, so my memory is probably worse.
I do remember Hynek being a big name in UFO circles, and I understood that to be the reason Spielberg drew on his ideas as a foundation for the movie, but it's possible he was more of a niche figure before the movie raised his profile.
Ahh, the Bermuda Triangle. It was such a big deal when I was a kid that I assumed the lore had been around for centuries, and the fiction about it tended to assert as much. So I was surprised to learn a few years back that the name "Bermuda Triangle" was coined only 4 years before I was born. (The Lynda Carter Wonder Woman series erroneously asserted that the Bermuda Triangle had been known by that name during World War II.) It was hyped like crazy for a decade or so, and then kind of faded out. I guess it got eclipsed by the Roswell nonsense when that started to emerge in pop culture around 1980. The original 1947 weather-balloon crash was just one incident in a flurry of UFO hysteria at the time and was quickly debunked and forgotten, until a researcher dredged it up in the late '70s and wrote a book about it. That's why there's never any mention of Roswell in Close Encounters or Project U.F.O. or the like -- it just wasn't part of the lore back then. (The movie Hangar 18 is often misremembered as being about Roswell, but it's about a fictitious present-day UFO crash. However, it was released around the same time as the first book about Roswell, so it probably contributed to the spread of the myth in the culture.)
I remember reading about all those things (the 70s UFO fad was huge with many books at the library plus Natl Enquirer and Weekly World News always at the grocery) and Nessie and Sasquatch in the mid 70s. They were fun at the time for this 5th and 6th grade voracious reader but I never believed them.
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