Some stories refuse to stay buried.
Roswell is one of them.
Not because of what we think happened—but because of how the story itself has behaved ever since.
In 1947, the U.S. military first announced the recovery of a “flying disc,” only to immediately walk it back and call it a weather balloon. Over the decades, the explanation kept changing: Project Mogul, crash test dummies, misremembered events. But instead of clarifying the truth, each version only made the story messier.
And that’s the part that matters.
Roswell isn’t just about what may have crashed.
It’s about how institutions respond when they lose control of a narrative.
Rapid military involvement.
Sudden reversals.
Classified projects.
Witnesses who never stopped talking.
Roswell became the template—not for UFOs, but for how UFO stories are handled.
Out here in Joshua Tree, we tell these stories the way they were always meant to be told—like campfire stories. Not to prove anything. Not to debunk anything. But to sit with the mystery, the patterns, and the questions that won’t go away.
Because some stories don’t want to be solved.
They want to be remembered.
⬇️ Watch the full Joshua Tree Encounters long-form episode below.
Joshua Tree Encounters tells the stories of UFOs, high strangeness, and the things that refuse to stay buried.
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