@stack
It is sad to see you miss the point so egregiously.
The "aliens" in close encounters are in no way grays. They are modeled after the betty and barney hill "aliens" and they have beautiful/deep eyes for that reason.
http://sfa.admin.srv.e-makers.fr/images/uploads/objectitemPicture/419/picture/532a_845x485p.jpg
Independent research is not for everyone.
P.S. lucas and speilberg are shameless revisionists. you have been hoodwinked.
I think you have entirely missed the point from the get go. You come out with the “I’ve studied more than most” gambit on the subject. Like you are some sort of an authority we are simply supposed to believe. A notion you seem to rail against in every other thread you make. Then coupled with some sort of strange determination, based upon your seemingly self proclaimed expertise and copious independent research, that Grays (Greys) as we know them today didn’t come to be until the 1990’s? Weird, because why such a claim? What would that even have to do with anything?
In any case, I take exception to both of your claims; Your self-assigned supposed expertise on the matter and your strange narrow claim as to when Grays, as we know them, entered into popular culture. Aside from all that, I am in no way arguing in the validity of any Gray encounters documented. I just take issue with your claims.
- First off, your
deeper than most study, independent research” as you call it, into this seems to be extremely shallow. As for you 90’s only claim, you cite a non-screen used CEotTK (1977) costume with happy eyse - I think you lean toward this notion of 90’s Grays are depicted as more sinister and scary - And completely overlook the screen used costume, not so happy eyed and miss all of the scary elements in the 1977 film.
- You cite a book, though very popular, Communion, came out in the late 80’s, (Not the 90’s) followed by a movie no one saw. And after you laid this on me, "Considering you haven't studied them, and are simply regurgitation a wiki article…”, your sole citation is a wikimedia image of the book cover. Apparently your intensive independent research looks very similar to mine. Why your's is better is a mystery.
- Then you cite a TV show, canceled after 2 episodes as evidence that literally no one saw.
- And you cite the Walton case, originally a book from 1978 (Not the 90’s) and a movie version 1993. I’d say the Walton case was pretty scary and perhaps sinister.
Again, with your “studied more than most” you must have come across this paper from 1995 out of the Sociology Dept on Popular Culture at Chapman University titled, "The UFO Contact Movement from the 1950's to the Present”.
https://digitalcommons.chapman.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1002&context=sociology_articlesYou claim, "The "aliens" in close encounters are in no way Grays. They are modeled after the betty and barney hill "aliens" and they have beautiful/deep eyes for that reason.”
You claim, "The 90's gray is designed to be scary. They have nothing in common with the betty and barney "little people", whose skin was white/pale (not gray, until MANY MANY years after the fact.... Memory is a funny thing!)”. “MANY MANY years”? Try 3. And seemingly a lot in common with modern Grays.
In the paper, it cites a hypnosis session with Barney Hill 3 years after the alleged encounter, 1964:
“
[They] had rather odd-shaped heads, with a large cranium, diminishing in size as it got towards the chin. And the eyes continued around to the sides of the head, so it appeared that they could see several degrees beyond the lateral extent of our vision.. .The texture of the skin...was grayish, almost metallic looking...I didn't notice any hair...[and] there just seemed to be two slits that represented nostrils (Fuller, 260).Sounds like a definite Gray description to me. Not to mention the sinister and scary descriptions of the experiments performed. Again, that was from 1961-1964, not the 90’s. And is probably one of the more famous “abduction” cases.
And the paper goes on to contradict you and support my claim regarding the depictions in the Walton and CEotTK examples (1978 & 1977, respectively:
“
Most recently, American UFO researchers have focused on but one creature dubbed the "Grey". The Grey closely resembles the creatures encountered by Travis Walton- short in stature, with white or gray skin, a large head with huge cat-like eyes, a slit mouth and small nostrils, and thin, clawed limbs. It would be impossible to overestimate the prominence of the Grey stereotype in UFO circles. Its image is plastered across the cover of most every UFO magazine and book. It has appeared in movies such as Close Encounters and countless television UFO documentaries. In recent years the Grey has made an even stronger appearance in American popular culture. A1991 episode of the Fox situation comedy Married With Children featured Grey-type creatures stealing A1 Bundy's socks. A1992 beer commercial featured the beings cavorting about a field drinking brews."
So yeah, I find your claims dubious at best. And perhaps independent research is not for you as your notion of who has “studied more than most” seems to be an exceedingly low bar for evidence and actual research.