Meteor Boston Disappears into Thin Air, But a Ghostly Glitch in Weather Radar Data Suggests It Never Existed
Just after midnight on Wednesday, a fireball streaked across the skies of New England, initially pegged by eye-witnesses as a standard meteor—but the data tells a chillingly different story. Analyzing the Doppler radar loop from Boston’s Logan Airport, I found a 1.2-second anomaly where the meteor’s thermal signature should have been present, yet the system recorded a static 'null value' right over Fenway Park. Simultaneously, traffic cameras along the Mass Pike captured the event, but immediately after the flash, the footage in a 0.3-mile radius shows an unexplainable 4-frame flicker where every license plate reads "000-XXX." The most disturbing part? Cross-referencing the USGS earthquake monitors, there was zero seismic impact from an object of this size—a physical impossibility for a meteor that size, unless it was a hologram or a digital ghost. A local programmer claims he found the same glitch pattern in the city’s 911 call log from the same second. The question isn’t where the meteor went—it’s why the matrix tried to erase it.