YouTube video

Are aliens fame hungry? UFOs spotted over BBC building

If aliens exist and UFO sightings over the years are to be believed, perhaps our extraterritorial visitors are getting less-camera shy now.

Weird! Woman gets 152 Facebook friends tattooed on arm

Tattoos last forever, but friends might not, at least Facebook friends. Well, a woman from the Netherlands seems to be ignorant of the fact.

Amateur astronomer finds mysterious object on Mars

Just days after NASA ceased all communication with Mars rover Spirit, an amateur astronomer claims to have discovered a strange rectangular structure on the red planet's surface.

German pranksters slap Windows logo on Apple store

Apple and Microsoft come together? Well, what the two technology giants might not have thought in their weirdest dreams was seen in real, at least for a short span of time, all thanks to the German pranksters.

YouTube video of dead alien in Russia creates stir

Just weeks after FBI Vault's disclosure of proofs that suggested aliens landing in 1947, a frozen body of a so-called alien has been found in in Irkutsk, Siberia.

Fla. city mulls 'Muck Monster' profits

West Palm Beach, Fla. -- A West Palm Beach, Fla., official is suggesting the city cash in on reports of a "Muck Monster" in the Lake Worth Lagoon.

Commissioner Bill Moss said the creature, which has only a YouTube video of unexplained wake as evidence for its existence, could prove a financial boon to the city with pay-by-the quarter telescopes and a feeding area, the Palm Beach (Fla.) Post reported Tuesday.

Experts disagree on YouTube organism ID

Raleigh, N.C. -- Experts said a popular YouTube video of a moving, slimy mass in a Raleigh, N.C., sewer depicts a colony of tubifex
worms or invertebrates called byrozoan.

Ed Buchan, an environmental coordinator with the Raleigh Public Utilities Department, said the video, which was posted to YouTube in April and was
chosen Wednesday as the top viral video on the Internet by TV Week, depicts a colony of tubifex worms, which can form clusters of up to 1 inch in diameter, WRAL-TV, Raleigh, reported Thursday.

However, Thomas Kwak, a biology professor at North Carolina State University's Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, identified the creatures as a cluster of byrozoan, invertebrates found in both fresh and salt water.