Cannabis. Culture. Conspiracy. Welcome to the New Frontier.
ROSWELL, NEW MEXICO — Weird Magazine is officially expanding distribution into the Roswell and Pecos Valley region, bringing its signature blend of cannabis news, paranormal investigation, and ufology to one of the most iconic destinations in American mystery culture.
Known worldwide as the epicenter of the 1947 UFO incident, Roswell is a natural fit for the next phase of Weird Magazine’s evolution. With deep roots in alternative media, counterculture publishing, and fringe journalism, the magazine is positioning itself at the crossroads of truth-seeking, storytelling, and emerging cannabis markets in southeastern New Mexico.
RADIO SHOW IN PECOS VALLEY:
Dowden has contracted with Pecos Broadcasting to air his “Cosmic Cowboy” paranormal radio show Weird Weekly News to go along with his alternative magazines. The 2 Station project will begin in late May 2026 profiling paranormal topics and alternative new every Wednesday from 9pm-11pm leading right into the Coast to Coast AM Audience right from the New Mexico desert! “Live from Roswell with Weird Weekly News doesn’t get any Weirder that that” said Dowden. Thomas Beard the General Sales Manager for Pecos Valley Broadcasting Company is “excited to partner with Dowden, who also has a news and sports background in his extensive radio career.”
A Perfect Match: Cannabis Meets Cosmic Curiosity
As New Mexico’s cannabis industry continues to grow, the Pecos Valley region has become a hot-spot for new dispensaries, entrepreneurs, and consumers. Weird Magazine aims to spotlight:
Local cannabis businesses and brands, Industry developments and legal updates, Culture, lifestyle, and product features. But unlike traditional cannabis publications, Weird brings something extra—a cosmic twist.
From Hemp Fields to Flying Saucers
Roswell isn’t just a city—it’s a symbol. And Weird Magazine leans all the way in. Readers can expect expanded coverage on: UFO sightings and disclosure developments; Historic and modern investigations into extraterrestrial phenomena, deep dives into government secrecy and classified programs. Profiles of researchers, witnesses, and experiencers, from the desert skies to underground theories, Weird connects the dots between what we see, what we’re told, and what might be hidden in between.
The Return of Alternative Media
Publisher Russell Dowden, a veteran of underground publishing and paranormal radio, sees this move as a return to form.
“Roswell is ground zero for everything Weird Magazine stands for—mystery, truth, and questioning the official story. Expanding into this region just makes sense. This is our audience.”
Print Lives On
Weird Magazine will be available in select: Smoke shops. Dispensaries, local businesses throughout Roswell and the Pecos Valley. With its bold covers and unapologetic editorial voice, the publication continues to prove that print media—when done right—is still powerful. Weird Magazine: Where Cannabis, Culture & Conspiracy Collide
From Texas to New Mexico, the mission remains the same:
Question everything. Print the truth. Stay Weird.
Contact us Today to reserve your June/July Edition Advertisement • weirdmagazine@gmail.com
Is This the Disclosure Moment? Trump Orders Review and Release of UAP/UFO Files
In a dramatic announcement that has reignited public fascination and decades of secrecy surrounding unidentified aerial phenomena, extraterrestrial life, and classified government files, President Donald J. Trump has directed senior Defense Department officials — including the Secretary of War and top Pentagon agencies — to begin identifying and **release U.S. files related to UFOs, UAP (Unidentified Aerial Phenomena), “alien and extraterrestrial life,” and other related government records.
In a Truth Social post this week, Trump said he is acting in response to what he called “tremendous interest” from the American public. He instructed federal agencies to start the process of locating relevant documents and making them available — but critically, experts caution that the order doesn’t necessarily declassify all material immediately, meaning the most sensitive files could remain shielded from view.
What Trump Said
Trump wrote he wants government records tied to UAP, extraterrestrial signals, and unidentified flying objects released “to the greatest extent possible,” and that federal agencies should begin identifying such material for public release. He cited broad public interest and also took aim at a recent comment by former president Barack Obama about the possibility of alien life, suggesting Obama might have inadvertently divulged classified information.
However, Trump also admitted publicly he has no personal evidence confirming the existence of aliens, saying, “I don’t know if they’re real or not,” while pointing to the ongoing public fascination as a justification for transparency.
Reaction: Hope, Skepticism, and Political Punchlines
Disclosure advocates and former government officials who have lobbied for years for public access to UFO material expressed cautious optimism — but warned that without full formal declassification, files might still be redacted or withheld behind national security excuses.
On the political front, Republican Congressman Thomas Massie mocked the announcement, tweeting that it could serve as a “weapon of mass distraction” amid other controversies, suggesting that the focus on “alien files” might divert attention from unrelated political issues.
Where These Files Come From
Federal UFO and UAP investigations date back decades. Most recently, the Department of Defense’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) has been tasked with collecting reports and analyses of unexplained aerial sightings, though its own reports have found no confirmed evidence of extraterrestrial spacecraft or technology.
In April 2025, the U.S. National Archives opened a collection of UAP records — fulfilling long-standing transparency requirements in federal law — but many classified materials have remained out of public reach.
What This Means — and What It Doesn’t
Right now, the directive appears to set in motion a process of identifying and preparing files for release — not an immediate ocean of alien secrets hitting the internet.
Legal analysts caution that unless documents are formally declassified, they could be released in heavily redacted form… or quietly remain locked away under the familiar shield of “national security.”
That’s the official track.
But online? It’s a different story.
Rumors are engulfing Facebook, YouTube, TikTok and every corner of the digital sphere, claiming a coordinated leak strategy is already underway — a slow build toward “full disclosure” by 2027, culminating in confirmation that alien life has visited — or is approaching — Earth.
UFO insiders have long whispered that when President Trump created the U.S. Space Force in 2017, a ten-year disclosure timeline was quietly set in motion. According to that theory, the public would be gradually acclimated through terminology shifts, congressional hearings, and carefully managed document releases — leading to a formal acknowledgment around 2027.
Grab your popcorn.
Since then, we’ve watched the language evolve. “UFO” faded. “UAP” —
Unidentified Aerial Phenomena — entered the lexicon. A sterile rebrand for a topic once confined to late-night AM radio and 1950s flying saucer headlines.
Our publisher has studied this phenomenon for more than 35 years.
The late Dallas journalist and author Jim Marrs often described the process as a “slow drip” — the metered release of tidbits, technology hints, and whistleblower testimony that would eventually pave the way for an official version of Contact.
Coincidence or choreography?
As if on cue, filmmaker Steven Spielberg — the king of cinematic contact — is set to release what many speculate could be his final alien epic, Disclosure Day, in the summer of 2026.
Government file releases.
Terminology shifts.
Hollywood priming the public imagination.
Is your candy and soda pop ready?
I adjust my tinfoil hat and double-check my bug-out bag.
Because whether you believe this is organic transparency or a carefully managed psychological operation, one thing is certain:
Whatever version of “Disclosure” emerges will serve someone’s agenda.
That’s why we’re going back to the beginning.
Roswell.
Early War Department files.
The origins of secrecy.
Weird Magazine began publishing on this subject in 2002, after our 38th Annual National UFO Conference was canceled the week of September 11th at the Alamo Drafthouse. First through Austin Para Times, and later under the Weird banner, we’ve chronicled the slow drip ever since.
So keep reading Weird Magazine as this story develops.
We’ll be digging through every document, every declassification, every contradiction — searching not just for proof of the extraordinary…