Where did mankind come from and how did we get so far? For an answer to that age-old question some have looked to evolution and science, others have looked to the Bible and some are looking to âAncient Aliens,â a TV series on the History Channel thatâs like a âdocumentaryâ without the need for documentary research, a documentary crew or anything but the quotation marks around the word âdocumentary.â
But can âAncient Aliensâ really provide an answer to mankindâs origins and development? Short answer, âNo.â Long answer, âOf course not.â But that doesnât mean you canât pick up some very crucial knowledge while watching the series. In fact, here are six important lessons I learned while watching âAncient Aliensâ far more often than anyone should ever admit in public.
Ancient Civilizations Did Nothing for Ancient Civilizations
According to âAncient Aliens,â everything from the Sphinx to Stonehenge to the fact people stopped stabbing each other with pointy sticks to hear âouchyâ noises is not the result of any human civilization but rather intergalactic beings. It was these very ancient astronauts whoâwhether out of strategic planning, selfless charity, outright boredom or a need to create the premise for âBattlestar Galacticaââvisited earth, saw we were still trying to make portable fire by igniting our own hands, let out a heavy sigh and then told mankind, âFor starters, when building a large stone pyramid make sure the pointy part goes on top.â
If You Say Something Out Loud Then Itâs Fact
When it comes to âAncient Aliens,â the scientific method is a long, tedious process that can easily be streamlined by simply beginning and ending with the conclusion. Hence an opening title sequence doesnât flash the question âDid ancient aliens actually visit?â but rather âWhy did they come?â and âWhat did they leave behind?â Thatâs also why statements on the show like âAliens crossbred with humans,â âIf it werenât for space visitors we wouldnât have the color greenâ and âThe earth is currently inside a mason jar on a librarianâs shelf in Alpha Centauriâ are not met with such remarks as âAnd we know this how?â or âSeriously, what the f***?â but rather the showâs executive producer slamming his fist on his desk, yelling, âDone! Science!â and then devoting an hour to exploring Incan-Venutian bar mitzvahs.
Every Structure Was a Spaceship Landing Pad
If it had stairs, a flat surface or was slightly taller and wider than a sundial, âAncient Aliensâ knows it was a landing pad for intergalactic travelers. That means every surrounding structure historians initially presumed were homes, temples or a random pile of bricks were in fact places one would expect to find in an airport, including ancient Cinnabon stands, magazine/neck pillow kiosks, the first Brookstone store and a place to pay $14 for a croissant.
The Word âExpertâ Means âGuy Currently on Cameraâ
To bolster its claim that ancient astronauts visited, colonized and/or tagged earth, the show features a panel of experts one can only amass by placing a âHelp Wantedâ sign outside a methadone clinic that reads âWill pay you in craft service food.â The result is a collection of pundits and specialists with such professional titles as âUFOlogist,â âAlternate History Writerâ and âUnemployed Plumber/Talker.â But of course, no one stands out from this esteemed crowd like âLegendary Times Magazineâ publisher and living Internet meme Giorgio A. Tsoukalos. With an accent that indicates Switzerland has itâs own Brooklyn, a hairstyle that can only be the result of Gorilla Glue and witnessing a visiting alien or oncoming semi, and a tan that proves he was either flash-fried by mothership lights or V8 now has its own line of skincare products, Mr. Tsoukalos is proof that if you believe in yourselfâand get a cable channel to believe in youâyou can end up on TV actually saying, âThe only way the ancient astronaut theory can be disproved is when the extraterrestrials show up and say, âWe were never here.ââ
The History Channel Forgot Its Own Name
In the beginning the History Channel consisted almost entirely of World War II footage and Time-Life ads for World War II books and VHS tapes. But then the channel wished to expand its audience beyond viewers who still had post-traumatic flashbacks to the Normandy Invasion and wondered when the hell women were allowed to start wearing pants. And so the network slowly modernized, going from covering WWII to the Korean War to the Vietnam War to Star Wars Tech, until it gave up any legitimate right to call itself âHistoryâ and started showing âPawn Stars,â âCajun Pawn Starsâ and âAncient Aliens,â who opened up a pawn shop selling giant heads on Easter Island.
We May Never Know. But Oh, We Know.
Much as we canât travel back in time and prove to naysayers that President Kennedy was killed by a lone gunman or that NBCâs airing of âWhitneyâ was the result of a horrible, horrible blackmail scheme for which all of humanity must now pay, we canât go back and prove that ancient aliens arrived on earth. Of course, that also means we canât travel back in time and disprove that ancient aliens were here. In fact, the lack of hard evidence may very well be the showâs best evidence of all. Which means rather than ever having to admit âWe got nothingâ the series can simply say, âJust give us another ten seasons to ask the same six questions.â
What do you want to learn from aliens? Let us know in the comments!
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