FIREBALLS ARE LIGHTING UP THE SKIES
OVER TEXAS AND CALIFORNIA AGAIN


Austin. Los Angeles. And beyond.
Reports flooding in right now.
Blazing streaks across the sky.
Objects breaking apart mid air.
Sonic booms rattling windows.
This is not a shooting star.
A shooting star is a tiny piece
of dust burning up in seconds.
This is a fireball.
A large space rock hitting
Earth’s atmosphere at speeds
of up to 45,000 miles per hour.
The friction so intense.
The heat so extreme.
The pressure so immense…
It breaks apart before it reaches
the ground.
And March 2026 has produced more
visible fireball events over America
than anyone can remember.
Ohio. Three times in eight days.
Texas. Twice in one week.
California. 200 witnesses.
Detroit. Oregon. Louisiana.
And now Texas and California again.
The sky is not slowing down.
Drop your location below.


THIS ERUPTION JUST LEFT THE SUN… AND IT’S HEADED OUR WAY
Something just broke loose from the Sun…
Less than 24 hours ago, a large coronal mass ejection blasted into space — and early tracking shows it could be on a path toward Earth.
This wasn’t a minor release.
It was a full-scale eruption — energy lifting off the surface and expanding outward into space.
Current projections suggest a possible arrival within the next 48 hours.
What matters now…
If this connects with Earth’s magnetic field, it could trigger:
• Geomagnetic instability
• Sudden shifts in aurora activity
• Interference with radio and GPS signals
Data is still being refined — but the structure and size of this event are what stand out.

On April 1, NASA is preparing to launch Artemis II — the first crewed mission to travel around the Moon in more than 50 years.
At the core of this historic mission is the Space Launch System (SLS), NASA’s most powerful rocket ever built, engineered to carry humans deeper into space than ever before. Riding on top is the Orion spacecraft — a next-generation capsule designed to safely take astronauts beyond Earth’s orbit and bring them back home.
Artemis II will send four astronauts on a journey around the Moon, putting every critical system to the test for future lunar landings — without actually touching down. It’s a vital step toward humanity’s return to the lunar surface.
• Reid Wiseman
• Victor Glover
• Christina Koch
• Jeremy Hansen
This mission isn’t just another test — it’s history in the making. Humans haven’t traveled this far from Earth since the Apollo era over five decades ago.
Now, we’re going back. Not just to visit — but to stay, explore, and push the boundaries of space exploration.
Because this time, we’re not just looking at the Moon…
We’re going back.

