Right, and I heard about it before there was an X files or an internet.
Actually I wish I'd kept the book - it compiled long lists of anomalous phenomena, and explained it with the theory that God was a crackpot. It supported its case with 13 chapters, each one using the logical form of one of Aristotle's 13 fallacies in order .
Wasn't it also mentioned in passing Ghostbusters?
Yep.
Dr Ray Stantz: You know, Mr. Tully, you are a most fortunate individual.
Louis: I know!
Dr Ray Stantz: You have been a participant in the biggest interdimensional cross rip since the Tunguska blast of 1909!
Louis: Felt great.
Dr. Egon Spengler: We'd like to get a sample of your brain tissue.
Louis: Okay.
I love that movie.
OK, I'm falling asleep in my chair. I'm not going to finish what I need tonight. Sigh.
You guys could write me a note, right? With those special internet jokes so that it'll be perfectly clear to anybody who reads it?
Ray comparing something to the "Tunguska blast" at one point.
"You have been a participant in the biggest cross dimensional cross-rip since the Tunguska blast of 1909."
I can't believe I am currently too poor for a latte until Friday. I think I may die. DIE OF NOT HAVING A LATTE.
This was the week holiday purchases all caught up with me, and I opted to pay everything all at once thinking, "I'll just have to buckle down for a week and live without spending money. It's only a week."
This week's Allyson thinks last week's Allyson is such an incredible asshole.
Yay Ghostbusters x-posty!
"Ray, when someone asks you if you're a *God*, you say 'YES'!"
Allyson, I have been there and it sucks. I'd totally buy you a latte if I were there.
I think I first heard about Tunguska when I read The People's Almanac back in the late '70s. Or maybe another book that listed a lot of funky anecdotal paranormal-type stories (not Charles Fort, though--I read him about the same time and didn't like it for some reason).
I remember reading Chariots of the Gods about the same time, but that book annoys the hell out of me now. Denying the inventiveness of pre-modern people in favor of believing in extraterrestrial aliens? Feh.
One or two people claimed there was radiation, but no one else could confirm it.
Well, if an alien spacecraft crashed or exploded, could it look like Tunguska?
If a spaceship exploded in midair because of, for example, a breach in the warp core, it could possibly create the same effect, but no one's found unusual metals or dilithium crystals at the site. You'd think that you'd find some residue.