Comics Legend Jack Kirby Worried that our Attempts to Contact Aliens Might Attract a Tiger

nivek

As Above So Below
Comics Legend Jack Kirby Worried that our Attempts to Contact Aliens Might Attract a ‘Tiger’

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(Excerpt)

In 1972 and 1973, NASA launched the Pioneer 10 and 11 space probes. Placed aboard each were gold-anodized aluminium plaques – now referred to as the ‘Pioneer plaques‘ – which featured a pictorial message to any extraterrestrial species that might intercept the probes. The plaque imagery depicted a human male and female, as well as a series of lines emanating from a point, intended to act as a guide to our Sun’s location in the cosmos (the lines represented the Earth’s distance and position from pulsars, allowing aliens to triangulate our position). For even more detail, an illustration showing our position within our Solar System was also included.

The idea for the plaques was championed by 1970s science celebrity and educator Carl Sagan, and it was he, along with SETI pioneer (no pun intended) Frank Drake, who designed the content of the pictogram.


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But not everyone was happy about this decision being made without public consultation.

Comics legend Jack Kirby – who just six years previous had created the comic-book character of Galactus, an alien that devoured planets – denounced Sagan’s move. Kirby’s thoughts were outlined in a response to the Los Angeles Times, which in 1972 had approached a number of artists, including Kirby, asking for their own ideas on what should have been included on the plaque. Kirby made clear that he thought providing a map of our location was a dangerous move, as we can’t predict that actions of any alien civilisation that might find it:
I would have included no further information than a rough image of the Earth and its one moon. I see no wisdom in the eagerness to be found and approached by any intelligence with the ability to accomplish it from any sector of space. In the meetings between ‘discoverers’ and ‘discoverees,’ history has always given the advantage to the finders. In the case of the Jupiter (Pioneer) plaque, I feel that a tremendous issue was thoughtlessly taken out of the world forum by a few individuals who have marked a clear trail to our door.
My point is, who will come a-knocking – the trader or the tiger?
So what content would Jack Kirby have put on the Pioneer Plaques and sent out into space to represent the Earth? The diagram he provided to the Los Angeles Times is simple, and as promised, has no ‘location data’ for interested aliens. Instead, it shows idealised illustrations of man and woman, greeting any aliens who might be looking at it simply with a friendly smile and wave. Kirby explained:
It appears to me that man’s self image has always spoken far more about him than does his reality-figure. My vision of the plaque would have revealed the exuberant, self-confident super visions with which we’ve clothed ourselves since time immemorial. The comic strip super-heroes and heroines, in my belief, personify humanity’s innate idealism and drive.
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nivek

As Above So Below
I like Jack Kirby's plaque better, a show of strength as well as kindness lol...

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nivek

As Above So Below
I remember buying Fantastic Four #49 and being blown away. Is this what an extraterrestrial (Galactus) looked like?


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I have a digital collection of comics totaling more than 2400 and I do have that comic and all the Fantastic Four comics up to number 413...I think I'll read this one you posted #49...

Here's my collection in folders:

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Standingstones

Celestial
I was thinking about the story arc that took place with Fantastic Four. There was about a year and a half worth of stories that Lee and Kirby knocked out of the park. From about FF #38 to FF #55 you have some of the best tales that were written in my mind.

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