Did You See It? Because Ohio Did… Again
Last week, a meteor lit up the sky over Ohio and made enough noise to get everyone’s attention. It streaked across the daytime sky, broke apart, and left people talking about it for days.
That should have been it.
Then Monday night, it happened again.

TOLEDO, Ohio — A fireball meteor was sighted streaking across the night sky on Monday, the second in roughly a week.
The meteor entered Earth’s atmosphere at about 9:30 p.m. Monday in southern Wisconsin and could be seen passing over half a dozen states, including all of southern Michigan and northwest Ohio. This marks the second meteor spotted over Ohio skies, the first capturing the nation’s attention on March 17 after it fragmented across Medina County. – WKYC.com
Another meteor, this one visible across multiple states, moving over Wisconsin, Michigan, and Ohio before burning out. Same idea, same explanation, just a few days later.
Two in a week.
Now, the explanation is straightforward. Small rocks and debris hit the Earth’s atmosphere all the time, and most of them burn up before anyone notices. Every now and then, one is big enough to light up the sky and, if it’s moving fast enough, deliver a boom on the way through.
That’s what this was.
Alright.
But at what point do we at least pause and ask a very simple question.
Who keeps throwing pebbles at Earth?
Meanwhile, the government quietly rolled out something called alien.gov. Try visiting it—you’ll get an error message. Apparently though, it’s still a real thing.
There is something about the timing here that is hard to ignore. One meteor gets everyone’s attention, and before that even settles, another one crosses half the Midwest like it’s part of a schedule.
Experts say it’s not rare, just uncommon to see them over populated areas. Fair enough.
Still, seeing it happen twice in quick succession doesn’t feel like something people just shrug off without at least noticing the pattern.
Now add in a government “alien” website that you can’t actually visit, and the whole thing starts to line up in a way that’s hard not to side-eye, even if the explanation itself is perfectly reasonable.
The federal government just purchased the URL “Aliens. gov” https://t.co/VWBFeOKdBh
— Not the Bee (@Not_the_Bee) March 22, 2026
To be clear, this is almost certainly exactly what they say it is. Meteors happen. Sometimes they make a scene, most of the time they don’t.
But when you get two in a week, both visible across multiple states, and a conveniently named website floating around that disappears when you try to open it, it does make the whole thing feel a little less routine than it sounds on paper.
Not alarming. Not mysterious. Just… enough to notice.
Meteor. Sure.
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