It was quite interesting to watch!
It was 5 people going around America to different spots where there's been sightings, but the 5 people believed they'd had experiences with either E.T's or UFO's.
Just because something in the sky is unidentified doesn't mean it's a flying saucer from outer space.
I have 2 examples : I watched a circular silent large object travel at terrific speed across the summer evening sky last year...I was convicted it was something inexplicable...why? Because I hadn't seen one before.
I found out (after a lot of digging) that what I had actually seen was the international space station which was especially visible as it reflected the suns rays in an unusual way.
On the other hand, some years back, I was up before dawn to get to an early meeting and watched a star split into 5 tiny stars and speed off at perfect tangents across the whole horizon. I just stood in my dark kitchen with my gob hanging open.
That, my friends, was f***ing weird but not proof of ET.
The universe may be incomprehensibly big, but anyone who thinks that because of its size that life is inevitable elsewhere hasn't give enough thought into what life actually is, simply put.
25 years ago myself and a friend saw something in the sky which acted incredibly oddly and gave us the freaky heebee jeebies. needless to say its not something we talk about at parties
Aliens frequently visiting earth and abducting Americans and Mexicans.......probably not
Life on another planet.......i havnt yet had anyone explain to me with good reason why this is impossible
The universe may be incomprehensibly big, but anyone who thinks that because of its size that life is inevitable elsewhere hasn't give enough thought into what life actually is, simply put.
Bearing in mind the age of the earth and the fact that intelligent life has existed here for only a very tiny proportion of the time that the earth has been spinning - and the strong likelihood that life on earth will disappear in the next few million years, you have to ask the question as to whether there is any likelihood whatsoever that external contact with another life form would happen during the relatively small window of opportunity that exists for TWO civilisations (each of them equally fragile) to make contact with each other.
I disagree. There are (conservative estimate) 100 billion galaxies, with around 100 billion stars in each. Some of these will have planets, and some of these will be able to support life at some point in their existance. Although it isn't 'inevitable' as you say, it's pretty likely that there will be life (as defined by NASA) somewhere in the universe at some point that isn't here on earth.
I think in terms of there being life out there, in my opinion it's pretty much certain. In the next 15 years I expect life or the remains of life to be found on Mars and one of the moons of Jupiter. If this comes to pass, it shows that life will find a way, in spite of the challenges.
Whether there is intelligent life out there, I'd say the odds are in favour of a yes to this; however, the size of the Universe, and the distances between stars means that we're highly unlikely to ever meet them (precluding some means of travel that bends the known physical laws).