Kentucky Goblin Encounter of 1955
Okay, buckle the F**K UP, you beautiful degenerates. Welcome back to TRUE ALIENS SHOW, the only goddamn podcast brave enough (or stupid enough) to pry open the rusty, blood-stained filing cabinets of the Deep State's paranormal fuckery. If you're new here, get ready for your mind to be warped like a cheap tinfoil hat.Tonight, we're slamming the door on your comfort zone and diving headfirst into FILE #19: The Kentucky Goblins Incident (1955 – USA). Forget little green men asking for directions. This is the story of small, glowing-eyed, bullet-dodging b******s laying siege to a farmhouse full of terrified Kentuckians in 1955. We're talking August 21st, in Bumfuck Nowhere, Kentucky – the tiny farming community of Kelly, near Hopkinsville. The Sutton family and friends, eleven people packed into a farmhouse, were just chilling when a goddamn streak of light zips across the sky and drops into a nearby gully.About an hour later, all hell breaks loose. The dog loses its mind, and armed with a shotgun and a .22, two of the men step out to find a small humanoid figure, maybe 3-4 feet tall, with a huge oversized head, pointed ears, a wide lipless mouth, spindly limbs, and f*****g claws. Oh, and did we mention the GIANT, F*****G, GLOWING YELLOW EYES? Its skin was described as silvery or greenish-grey, moving with a weird, unnatural sway.Naturally, they shoot the f****r. Shotgun at 20 feet, .22 close behind. But instead of dropping, the sound was like shooting a metal bucket – PLING! The creature flips over, scrambles up, and disappears at warp speed. Think it's over? HELL NO. That was just the warm-up. Soon, more of these things show up, peeking in windows, climbing on the f*****g roof, trying to grab people. More gunfire erupts, but these little b******s are damn near bulletproof, or at least highly resistant. They get knocked down, float away, then come right back. This went on for HOURS. Imagine the terror – trapped, surrounded by glowing-eyed creatures you can't seem to kill, bullets pinging off them. Pure, uncut nightmare fuel.Finally, after nearly four hours, the family makes a break for it, piling into cars and hauling ass seven miles to the Hopkinsville police station. They burst in, hysterical, talking about little men attacking their farm. Chief Russell Greenwell, probably thinking drunk hillbillies, rolls out with a posse. What do they find? A house riddled with bullet holes. Shotgun shells everywhere. Signs of a serious firefight. But no goblins. They find a weird luminous green patch where one was shot, but it fades – how convenient. The cops leave, the family goes back, and guess what? The goblins are back for round two, peeking in windows until dawn.The next day, the Air Force shows up. Project Blue Book – the government's official "investigation" (read: debunking) unit – gets involved. After initially trying to sell the idiotic "Great Horned Owl" story, they eventually slap the label "unidentified" on it. Yeah, f*****g owls. Owls that try to grab you by the hair through a doorframe and shrug off shotgun blasts? Right.The family faced intense ridicule. Labelled "drunk hillbillies" and hoaxers, but they stuck to their story. All eleven of them, consistently describing the bizarre creatures for years. There was no sign of intoxication according to the police chief. There was physical evidence of a gunfight. There was no clear hoax motive. And even Blue Book couldn't b******t their way out of it.This case is a blueprint for how The Powers That Be handle inconvenient truths: Deny, debunk, discredit the witnesses (especially rural ones), control the narrative, and bury the weirdest details. Was this an early test? A probe? Biological entities? Drones? Interdimensional bleed-through? Actual F*****g Aliens? The questions remain, keeping this firmly on the Mount Rushmore of High Strangeness. It reminds us that sometimes, the universe throws s**t at us that breaks all the rules, and all we can do is shoot back and hope for the best.Survival Lessons? Bullets don't always cut it. They might come back. Don't trust the official story, especially if it involves "owls". And maybe invest in something heavier than a .22 next time. Like a flamethrower. Or holy water.The description of these creatures has influenced pop culture, from Close Encounters to Gremlins. And yes, the town of Kelly, Kentucky, now has a "Little Green Men Days Festival". Talk about turning lemons into radioactive lemonade.So there you have it. The night Kentucky became ground zero for a goblin siege. Were they aliens? Cryptids? Drunk owls in tiny battle armor? The government sure hell doesn't want you to know. But the Sutton family knew. They faced the impossible, guns blazing, and lived to tell the tale – even if nobody wanted to believe them. Makes you wonder... what else is lurking just outside the farmhouse door, waiting for the lights to go out?Stay paranoid, folks.#KentuckyGoblins #HopkinsvilleGoblins #UFO #AlienEncounter #ProjectBlueBook #Conspiracy #HighStrangeness #Paranormal #CoverUp #TrueAliensShow #1955UFO #Cryptid #AlienSiege #WitnessTestimony #UnidentifiedFlyingObject This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit truealiens.substack.com/subscribe