JOHN KEEL NOT AN AUTHORITY ON ANYTHING

October 12, 2011

Mack & Myer For Hire

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 11:55 pm

secure site to buy clomid RIOTZONE

Mack & Myer For Hire was a short slapstick TV show from 1963. It was produced by Sandy Howard Productions, for Trans-Lux in NYC. Mickey Deems starred as Mack, and Joey Faye as Myer; both were showbiz veterans, with long careers in nightclubs, burlesque, and legit. Each show was about ten minutes, and was often packaged with other shorts and cartoons; it was meant strictly for kids.

John wrote many of the shows. He remembered that they had a small prop budget, and kept trying to come up with gags for cheap items–balloons, for example. He also recalled that Margaret Hamilton was cast in one episode, and had no objection to knockabout comedy, as long as she didn’t have to play a witch.

A few of the episodes have been archived here, if you’re curious. They’re not exactly deathless comedy; but do have a period charm, and are remembered fondly by those who watched them as kids. Watch for John’s screen credit; he’s listed as “script editor.”

September 21, 2011

John Keel and Rosemary Ellen Guiley

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 12:09 pm

KEELGUILEY

John Keel with one of his favorite people, the prolific writer/researcher/speaker Rosemary Ellen Guiley.

John Keel and Jacques Vallee

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 11:58 am

KEELVALLEE

John Keel and Jacques Vallee, side by side, at the “Congreso Internacional: 100 años de investigaciones de los grandes misterios del hombre,” in San José, Costa Rica, October 14-19, 1985.  Can anyone out there identify the others?

September 5, 2011

Drawings by Silent Contactees (13)

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 4:54 pm

SCDRAWINGS15

The twelfth figure, the last in the booklet, shows us birds in flight.  There are two in the upper part; one looks to me like an owl.  Perhaps the other is a crow, like those in Figure 9.  There are three birds flying over the horizon at the bottom left; I don’t know what that sketch below it shows, possibly a seated figure.  And at the bottom right is a standing winged figure.  It could be an angel, or even Mothman, given that this was 1967.  The line on the figure’s right side (our left) may be an incomplete wing.  Perhaps the semi-circle in which it stands is significant, given the circles in Figures 6 and 8, and the dome in Figures 5 and 11.  Flying birds suggest freedom to me, and seem to end the series with an image of liberation — from what, I don’t know.

One of my reasons for posting these was to see if anyone else had seen them, since John’s note suggests that he circulated them among other researchers.  So, let me know if you know anything more about them.

I do suspect that the ordering of the pictures is part of their meaning; that there is a narrative, or some kind of progression.  They seem to have little to do with UFOs, although some of them could be interpreted as pictures of aliens or craft.  Instead, we have crows, campfires, bugs and people running in circles.  We begin with a baby and end with an angel, so perhaps a life cycle is intended.

The themes of birth and family have always been part of the UFO story, as well as the fairy lore with which it has so much in common.  It may be, though, that these pictures have more to do with the inner conflicts of the artist.  As I said at the outset, I think they were drawn by Jaye Paro, but I’m not sure.  It would help if we knew where they came from.

September 3, 2011

Drawings by Silent Contactees (12)

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 7:32 pm

SCDRAWINGS14

For the eleventh drawing, we return to the dome, or cave, or whatever it was, that we saw earlier, for the other half of Figure 5.

SCDRAWINGS8

If this is a voyage, we may have returned; and the family can scale that ladder and go on with its life.  It may be significant that the focus was on the family earlier in the series, and is now on that curious pair to the left.

September 2, 2011

Drawings by Silent Contactees (11)

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 1:54 pm

SCDRAWINGS13

The tenth drawing doesn’t add much information.  Again, we have a campfire.  The campfire certainly seems to take on more importance in these drawings than in most contactee artwork.  The creature with the bearlike head is back, unless it’s a different one, or the snouted head is just a stylistic quirk of the artist.  The other being is vaguer, but does remind me of the couple who confronted our little family group back in the fifth picture.

Animals in dreams may also be a symbol of the dreamer’s more physical side, of lusts, appetites, and fears.  In that case, the other figure might be a stand-in for the soul; and we might see this as a meeting of the body and soul, over the domestic or alchemical fire.

September 1, 2011

Drawings by Silent Contactees (10)

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 7:02 pm

SCDRAWINGS12

We have another campfire.  Fire may signify home, and the family unit; it could also refer to purification.  And there are two birds; the “caw” probably identifies them as crows, or ravens.  The two small animals next to them are more problematic.

The crow is as potent a totem animal as the stag (from the second picture), although in a different way.  Although the two ravens that accompanied Odin were associated with thought and memory, they’re usually linked in folklore to disappointment, disaster, and unhappiness.  For Native Americans, the crow is a creator and trickster; in the Talmud, it’s punished for copulating on the Ark.  And corvids are among the most intelligent of animals.

We again have a pair of couples: is there a parallel with the two couples in the fifth/eleventh picture?  It seems as if the crows are talking to one another, while the other figures listen in.

There is also a structure in the back, with a figure in it.  Is the figure sleeping, perhaps dreaming?.

August 31, 2011

Drawings by Silent Contactees (9)

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 8:20 pm

SCDRAWINGS11

This creature looks familiar; we’ve seen something like it in Figures 3 and 5.  Does that mean that it’s the same, or that the artist has a limited range?  It’s crouching over a bug, which seems to be running in circles, like the being in Figure 6.  Knowing what kind of a bug it is would help with our interpretation.  It might not be running after all: it could be a water beetle, swimming in a pond; or a spider, spinning a web.  Or that most significant of insects, the scarab.  Whatever it is, the crouching creature seems to like it, and the heart-shaped flower is a sweet touch.

August 29, 2011

Drawings by Silent Contactees (8)

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 5:23 pm

SCDRAWINGS10

This picture is different: it shows some sort of writing, presumably the language of whoever was contacting the contactees.  There seem to be four words: two letters, three letters, two letters, three letters.  And there are four symbols; the equal signs indicate there’s a correlation between the words and symbols.  At first I took the words for garbled solfeggio, but the symbols don’t seem to fit.

Perhaps the symbols are meant to resemble cuneiform.  That would certainly fit the Mesopotamian theme I’ve alluded to here.

August 25, 2011

Drawings by Silent Contactees (7)

Filed under: Uncategorized — admin @ 10:20 pm

SCDRAWINGS9

In the sixth picture, we again have two scenes.  The top one shows somebody, or something, who seems to be running in circles, while another sits under a tree.  Maybe the Reptilian, or whatever it is, from the fourth picture is still at its post.

At the bottom, we have two very sketchy figures, so sketchy that I have trouble interpreting them.  The one on the right may be a tree; nearby is a campfire, and possibly a fish.  The other figure seems to be running; it has the antennae we’ve seen in the earlier pictures.  That may be a hill next to or behind it.

In case number has any significance in the psychic wellspring informing these images, I’ll point out that we have four semicircles, a campfire of four logs, and four figures.  In the top scene we have four hills and five trees.

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Powered by Ibusuki WordPress