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Culture of Contact did the impossible, garnering positive mainstream coverage with its 1st annual festival in 2007. We look forward to more of the same this year!
2007 UPI Nod
First UFO multimedia festival in N.Y.
The three-day UFOs: The Culture of Contact Multi-Media Festival kicks of Friday night and is scheduled to coincide with the 60th anniversary of the Roswell, N.M. incident, in which some believe that the U.S. government recovered a crashed unidentified flying object and its occupants.
The festival, which was launched by Jeremy Vaeni, will feature music, theater and alleged abductees' art and hopes to reconnect the topic of extraterrestrials with mainstream audiences, The New York Sun said Friday.
"We need to make the whole subject hip again," explained Vaeni, who said he's been abducted by a UFO. "Not that long ago, it had seeped in to the pop culture; you even had aliens in Kodak commercials. It made it so people just sort of took it for granted that these things exist. I think the whole movement lost its edge and now it's harder to get new people into it."
Vaeni also told the Sun that through his encounters with the unexplained he has come to possess a unique energy that offers him a "psychic awakening" to other dimensions and states of consciousness.
2007 Time Out New York Article
Time Out New York named us their pick for best thing to do on Friday and ran the following article....
Visitation rites
UFO festival director (and alien abductee) Jeremy Vaeni makes first contact.

SAUCER EYED Vaeni hopes the Culture of Contact festival galvanizes New York’s abductee community.
Photograph: Mardi Miskit
It was June 24, 1947, when pilot Kenneth Arnold saw a series of unidentified objects soaring through the midday skies near Mount Rainier in Washington state. Press accounts referred to the ships as flying discs—or “saucers”—and sparked the modern era of UFO study. Kicking off Friday 22, “UFOs: The Culture of Contact Multimedia Festival” marks the 60th anniversary of Arnold’s sighting— and celebrates human-extraterrestrial encounters of every variety—with a film festival at the Pioneer Theater, live music at Lit, and panel discussions and a “Close Encounters of the Art Kind” gallery show at P.S. 63. We probed Jeremy Vaeni, the festival’s founder (and director of No One’s Watching: An Alien Abductee’s Story) to find out if the truth really is out there.
What was your first encounter with aliens like?
It was in eighth grade. I was riding in the car with my mom and sister, heading to my grandparents’ house. There was an oval-shaped object with red and blue blinking lights in the sky. My mother saw it too, but my sister couldn’t be bothered to look up.
But that was just the beginning for you, right?
I had a few years of strange dreams, which could have been nothing. But eventually something walked right into my room, right here in Queens. They were little gray people wearing tunics. It sounds ridiculous! It happened several times in the past few years—there’s a portal they’re coming through. There’s been some sort of…I don’t want to use the word possession, but a cohabitation with a kind of energy that makes my body do what looks like tai chi.
Are you very open about your experiences?
I don’t bring it up a lot, because I don’t want to be “that guy”—even though I am that guy. I made No One’s Watching because we never hear what the guys around somebody who says this happened think. The reaction in my family seems to be, “we don’t care,” and beyond that, “we don’t believe you.” But mostly it doesn’t interest them. And from talking to other abductees, there’s not a consensus that we’re particularly special. I don’t feel special.
Alien visitations are usually associated with the Midwest. Are there any well-documented New York City abductions?
In 1989, a woman named Linda Cortile was abducted from her home on the Lower East Side—through a closed window, actually. And this was witnessed by a very famous politician and his bodyguards. The agents went nuts over this and started stalking Linda and writing letters. It turned out one of them had been an abductee too.
Who was the politician?
Um…he worked at the U.N. for a while. I don’t want to say any more because we hope he’ll come forward on his own. Part of the whole thing is getting famous people to “come out of the closet” about having been abducted. We want our Rosie O’Donnell, so to speak.
What kind of experts are speaking this weekend?
Some of the bigger names include Budd Hopkins, an alien abduction researcher who coined the phrase missing time, and Steve Bassett, the only registered lobbyist working for government disclosure on what they know about ETs and UFOs. Farah Yurdozu is a famous psychic—she’ll be talking about the Turkish perspective. If people from different countries are seeing different things, does that mean it’s all in our heads, that we’re seeing different groups of aliens or that it’s just a cultural interpretation? If it’s a Rorschach test, what’s the object we’re all looking at?
You’re not shying away from unserious pop-culture stuff, either. The film screenings include Starman and Earth vs. The Flying Saucers.
A lot of the films are fictional, but we embrace that. It’s part of the culture. In some ways, people have already made up their minds, so I don’t think shoving documentaries down their throats and saying, “Just believe us” is going to do the trick.
So is this about entertaining or education?
“Edutainment,” as KRS-One might say. It’s a little of both.
2007 Glitterati Gossip Article
UFO's: Culture of Contact Multi-Media Festival
The first annual Culture of Contact Multi-Media Festival kicks off in New York's East Village tonight and goes all weekend through Sunday.
The three-day festival just happens to be at the same time has the 60th anniversary of the Roswell, New Mexico UFO incident, at which time many believe the U.S. government recovered a crashed UFO and it's alien space riders.
The festival, which was launched by Jeremy Vaeni (who says he's a UFO abductee), is scheduled to feature music, theater and alleged abductees' art. Vaeni says he hopes to reconnect the topic of extraterrestrials with mainstream audiences.
"We need to make the whole subject hip again. Not that long ago, it had seeped in to the pop culture; you even had aliens in Kodak commercials. It made it so people just sort of took it for granted that these things exist. I think the whole movement lost its edge and now it's harder to get new people into it."
Vaeni also told the NY Sun that through his encounters with the unexplained he's come to possess a unique energy that offers him a "psychic awakening" to other dimensions and states of consciousness.
2007 1010 Wins Article
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Posted: Friday, 22 June 2007 5:09PM
UFOs Invade 'The Big Apple' in First Alien Convention
NEW YORK (1010 WINS) -- Roswell has nothing on the Lower East Side this weekend. The first "UFOs: The Culture of Contact Multi-Media Festival" is being held in the city through June 24th.
Planned for the terresial E.T. lovers will be movies at the Pioneer Theater, artwork at P.S. 63, music at Lit Lounge and various speakers at the movies and the school.
The festival, sponsored by 'UFO Magazine' and JayVay Productions, marks the 60th anniversary of the alleged crash landing of a spaceship in Roswell, New Mexico.
2007 The Reeler Article
June 21, 2007
The Weekend We Made Contact
NYC conference and arts festival spotlights the best, worst and weirdest of 60 years of UFO cinema
By S.T. VanAirsdale
Saucer Painting 2, one of artist Alex Rohr's UFO-themed works exhibited as part of the weekend's UFO's: The Culture of Contact series in the East Village (Photo: Pioneer Theater)
Jeremy Vaeni, who estimates his first abduction by aliens occurred some time around age 3, acknowledged he doesn't have a lot to prove at this weekend's UFO's: The Culture of Contact conference and screening series at the Pioneer Theater. He's not presenting his own documentary, and he's not planning to convince you to believe him. And neither, he said, are the other abductees, researchers and experts who will discuss UFO phenomena between showings of films like Invaders From Mars, Earth vs. the Flying Saucers, Starman and Contact.
"I guess the basic message is that for whatever reason it's time to come out of the closet, as it were," Vaeni, 33, told The Reeler in an interview this week. "Let's make this legit. Let's see what happens if this becomes less of a fringe thing. Does that promote open contact in some way? I don't know. I really didn't want a bunch of kids in Spock ears there. I really want to attract mainstream, sort of semi-sane people, so I'd much rather go for the movies that connect with people that way."
The result is a three-day multi-media festival combining lectures and films at the Pioneer with live music at the Lit Lounge (complete with a "psychic brainwave" light show), staged play readings, art exhibits and other events around the East Village. Timed to coincide with the 60th anniversary of Kenneth Arnold's UFO sightings in Washington state on June 22, 1947 -- the first widely publicized events of their kind and collectively the source of the term "flying saucer" -- The Culture of Contact is as much a celebration as it is an inquiry, perhaps even more so. After all, as Vaeni added, the beings with which he's interacted for most of his life reach out in abstract ways; an equally abstract art fest seemed like a reliably sensible way to reach back.
But Vaeni said it's also a means of reclaiming UFO culture from a skeptical mainstream, one that marginalizes its proponents as victims hiding in shadow and deferring to therapists or, worse yet, a gang of freaks drunk on space mythology. Cinema has been notoriously inconsistent in its depictions of ufology and abductee experience. For starters, don't look for Fire in the Sky, the 1993 adaptation of Travis Walton's famous book about his own abduction, in the Pioneer program. "That movie was a lie that had nothing to do with the reality of his experiences," Vaeni said. "It's just that the producers thought that fear sells, so they went with a fictionalized account with these little monster beings that had nothing to do with what he really saw and experienced."
By the same token, that overlap (and appeal) of fact versus fiction is one of the weekend's most compelling themes. "This is a much more interesting situation than when people talk about mockumentaries," said Pioneer programmer Ray Privett, who first worked with Vaeni on a screening of his film No One's Watching in 2006. "Or the blending world between documentary and fiction features, where the idea of fiction is truly in the minds and experiences of the viewer in a much more profound way than normal. And listen: They're human, too -- or at least I think they're human -- and a lot of these guys seem to enjoy silly and not-so-silly UFO films. There's a camp aspect to it. But there's also this unique approach to the question of fiction and nonfiction in the presentation of the films."
Indeed, said UFO Magazine publisher William J. Birnes, to the three generations that have come of age since the Arnold sightings and the infamous UFO crash alleged to have occurred in Roswell, N.M., the legends perpetuated in movies function as a buffer against more authentic inquiry. "A spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down," said Birnes, who will deliver a lecture Friday night about the latest evidence proving high-ranking officers recovered a flying saucer and its passengers near the Roswell Army Air Field in July, 1947. "There's kind of an 'Oh, yawn' attitude to a lot of this stuff, and Roswell has an 'Oh, yawn' attitude to it -- (despite) the fact it's like one of these paradigm-shift moment in human history, because it was here that human beings actually came into contact with objects from another world and creatures from another world. All the witnesses who talked about it for 60 years have been dismissed, derided, humiliated, insulted and threatened with death while the government keeps this thing as much of a secret as it could. But it's an open secret; everybody knows about Roswell. To most people, the fiction of ufology is more important than the fact of ufology."
Vaeni trusts his own conclusions on the basis of having little choice; three years after his last abduction, he said, a recent electroencephalogram (EEG) measured highly abnormal, deep-sleep brain waves from an energy that makes his body "do weird things" mimicking tai chi rituals. ("I'm a fat white guy," he told me. "I have no real interest in that kind of stuff.") The most he said he can prove to himself is that he isn't lying or crazy; his (and others') efforts to adapt and live with the knowledge is the focus of both his documentary and his book I Know Why the Aliens Don't Land!, and he'll discuss his experience with other purported abductees during panels convening Friday night at the Pioneer and Sunday at P.S. 63. Renowned alien abduction researcher Budd Hopkins will be at the theater Saturday at 5 p.m for a lecture of his own.
"We're not going to win the hearts and minds of people," Vaeni said. "We just want to do something kind of cool and fun, and if people are informed in the process, great. But mostly, we just want to have a good time with it. But we do definitely want to have a look back on Sunday and make a cohesive picture out of our experiences -- where we can dump what doesn't work and keep what does."
And of course skeptics are welcome. "For me, I'm not a believer," Privett said. "But I'm curious to hear what they have to say. And also, I admit I'll probably be entertained by it. And who knows? Maybe I'll learn something."



