RACHEL, Nev. — I was 90 minutes north of Las Vegas, driving from the vast Mojave into the even wider expanse of the Great Basin Desert, when I was pulled over for speeding. The cop asked me where I was going, but he already knew the answer: Rachel, Nevada, the tiny town near area Area 51 where more than a thousand memelords, YouTubers, and extraterrestrial enthusiasts were gathering to celebrate alien lore.




As a joke Facebook event, “Storm Area 51, They Can’t Stop All of Us” captured the imagination of the world, with millions of users pledging to invade the highly classified military base on September 20. But it was impossible to gauge what the real-life gathering in Rachel would look like—especially because just days earlier, event creator Matty Roberts disavowed it as “a possible humanitarian disaster,” and urged people not to go.

About 50 miles from Rachel, the officer told me that police were patrolling the roads to make sure everyone was being safe. I asked how things looked closer to ground zero, and he said he’d heard reports of a surge of humanity coming into the area. “Things are going to get a little weird out there,” he told me before letting me off with a warning.

It was my first hint at what to expect as I neared the U.S. military’s worst-kept secret. By then, what had started as a gag on social media had become something much greater—a mass movement that police, local officials, and even the event’s creator seemed incapable of halting.

In the end, no one tried to take Area 51 by force. Instead, the spirit of Storm Area 51 itself was seized by a motley assortment of believers, seekers, and extremely online teens who descended on a lonely stretch of desert to make their meme dreams real.


“They can’t stop all of us”

The Storm Area 51 movement was born in the early hours of June 27, when Roberts, a 20-year-old college student, first created the event page on Facebook. “We will all meet up in Rural Nevada and coordinate our parties,” he wrote. “If we naruto run, we can move faster than their bullets. Lets see them aliens.”

That reference to the anime Naruto and the title character’s (extensively memed) running style was one of many obvious signs that the event was intended as a gag . Roberts has said he was partially inspired by “Go to Minnesota and steal their 11,842 Lakes,” a similarly prankish viral Facebook event, but over the course of two months, this one would blur the line between internet meme and reality.

It didn’t become an international sensation overnight. Roberts said that when he woke up the next morning the event had a few likes. The next day, several more. It wasn’t until he was driving to his job at a vape shop four days later that the deluge of notifications started flooding in. Within a few weeks, 2 million people had RSVPed to the event that essentially invited people to invade military property, prompting a military response. In July, an Air Force spokesperson told the Washington Post that Area 51 “is an open training range for the U.S. Air Force, and we would discourage anyone from trying to come into the area where we train American armed forces,” adding that the Air Force “always stands ready to protect America and its assets.”

That warning didn’t stop the joke event from evolving into a real one. Soon after the page went viral, 20-year-old college student Brock Daily, who has experience organizing EDM events in Arkansas, pitched Roberts the idea of putting on an alien-themed music festival, and in mid-August, the pair announced they were hosting Alienstock in Rachel. “They can’t stop us from gathering and celebrating aliens!” the Alienstock site read at the time. “This event is taking place whether we set up or not—it’s basically its own entity now.”



Alienstock immediately drew comparisons to the infamous Fyre Festival fiasco. The two college students had just over a month to plan a three-day event that was expected to draw thousands of people to a desert town with a population of 54 and no gas station or store. The only establishment in Rachel is the extraterrestrial tourist destination Little A’Le’Inn, which was set to be the center of the festivities. Connie West, the owner of the 10-room motel, obtained permits to hold the event and began procuring the necessary security, sanitation, and medical support.




Then, less than two weeks before the festival was scheduled to be held, Roberts and Daily called it off, blaming West in a statement on the website that said she did not share proof that the necessary provisions were in place. “We are officially disconnecting from Connie West, Rachel NV and AlienStocks affiliation with them,” the announcement read. “In short, the relationship has ended permanently, and AlienStock will be moving to a safe, clean secure area in Downtown Las Vegas as an alternative. We are not interested in, nor will we tolerate any involvement in a FYREFEST 2.0. We foresee a possible humanitarian disaster in the works, and we can’t participate in any capacity at this point.”

Roberts’ lawyers also sent West a cease-and-desist letter ordering her to stop using the name “Alienstock,” but she pushed forward, turning the website she had been operating to take payments for parking and camping—alienstockparking.com—into the “official” site for the Alienstock festival in Rachel. This set the stage for two dueling Alienstocks, a “safe” one sanctioned by the event’s creator and a renegade festival that seemed truer to his original vision, which, after inspiring millions, he could no longer control.

I wanted to experience both.

“We got a shitload of Bud Light”

When I arrived at the Downtown Las Vegas Events Center for the commercialized Alienstock, I was greeted by a sign reading, “Storm Area 51 Matty Roberts Autograph Session.” A few feet away, Roberts was standing between two Men in Black by a merch table and taking photos with a couple fans.

Ads for Bud Light were everywhere. The brand had fully embraced the Storm Area 51 phenomenon, releasing commemorative cans featured an alien flashing a peace sign. “Greetings space travelers,” read the can printed in black and neon green. “Earthlings enjoy the crisp taste and smooth drinkability of this light-bodied lager and we think you’ll be pleased, too. Take us to your leader… for drinks.”


Sage Armstrong at the Alienstock party in Las Vegas. Photo : Jennings Brown for Gizmodo

Anheuser-Busch seemed eager to attach itself to a sanctioned party that didn’t come with the baggage of actual proximity to Area 51. “They were piggybacking on the whole Area 51 thing on their own,” said Frank DiMaggio, a Las Vegas event planner, who joined Roberts late in the Alienstock planning process and claimed he was instrumental in pushing Roberts’ focus away from Rachel. “We didn’t know anything about it until we moved the venue to downtown Las Vegas and they became sponsors. Matty got a national brand to change their label for him, which is amazing. It’s a movement.”

The event was pure Vegas: back-to-back DJ sets, pulsating lights, free carnival rides including a 40-foot wide spinning saucer, and a green pool. The air in the outdoor venue was thick with the scent of fake fog and candy-flavored vape.

A lifeguard watches over a mostly empty pool at Alienstock in Las Vegas Photo : Jennings Brown for Gizmodo

“Thanks for coming to my party. My name is Matty and I love you guys,” Roberts said to the crowd between DJ sets. “We got a shitload of Bud Light.”




Later I saw him standing in a VIP lounge overlooking the crowd.

“We just want to take this global,” Roberts told me. “We want to bring Alienstock to every corner of the world. Let people just gather and celebrate the mysteries of the skies and party.”

DiMaggio and Roberts told me they’ve been fielding requests from venues “from Hawaii to New York” and will be announcing the next Alienstock event soon.

Photo : Jennings Brown for Gizmodo

Roberts said he wasn’t sure if he’d continue his current academic path. “This has changed my life dramatically. Three months ago I was a full-time petroleum engineering student and now I am basically professional party host,” he said. “It’s exciting that something I did garnered this much attention from the entire world. I’m loving everything that’s come my way so far.”




“It seems like there can be a lot of money in memes,” I said.



“That’s a fact right there!” Roberts replied.



I asked if he has any advice for people (like me) who were still planning on going to Rachel.

“Good luck,” he said. “Prepare for the worst.”

Photo : Jennings Brown ( Gizmodo )


“Stupid-ass people online—they’re my people”

The next morning, as I approached the Little A’Le’Inn, I pulled over at the iconic “Welcome To Rachel” sign (which cannot confirm or deny the town’s alien population) and was greeted by a man wearing an inflatable alien suit and another in an orange NASA jumpsuit flying a drone in the field. The friendly couple was a refreshing sight after a night spent in a crowded venue with Vegas ravers.



Photo : Jennings Brown for Gizmodo

I feared a bottleneck of traffic and chaos at the entrance, but I was able to easily pull off to the side of the road and set up camp. There were hundreds of cars, tents, campers, and RVs, but it seemed that the organizers had planned for thousands more, so everyone was spread out. People were mingling about, dressed up in otherworldly attire and alien costumes, donning tinfoil hats and shirts expressing their intention to storm Area 51.

Photo : Jennings Brown for Gizmodo

I approached a man dressed as Naruto who I spotted running around with his arms behind him, and I asked why he was there.




“Memes. We’re here to raid Area 51. See aliens. Clap the cheeks. That’s all we’re here for,” Schon Crawley from Albuquerque, New Mexico, told me. “Memes—that is about it, that’s the only reason we’re out here. Stupid-ass people online—they’re my people. Where I’m from, all my friends consider me the resident meme god. So it’s my obligation to be out here for them.”

Schon Crawley prepares to Naruto run. Photo : Jennings Brown for Gizmodo

Crawley said he believed Alienstock was the modern-day Woodstock, born of memes rather than peace and love. “The fact that it started from a joke and created this big ole actual festival. It’s a lot bigger that I thought it was going to be,” Crawley told me. “The millennial generation—we have no idea what the fuck we’re doing, so this is where we end up. It started when Harambe got shot and it snowballed into raiding a government compound.”

Crawley thought the festival lost momentum when the original Storm Area 51 meme god backed out. “I feel that it would be better perceived if [Roberts] had stuck with it rather than dropping out,” he said. “Taking the money and running I guess is what he did. Kind of a bitch move.”

Many others at Rachel’s Alienstock expressed disappointment in Roberts. “I think it was really mean. I think he’s really confused and doesn’t really know what’s good,” said Prymrr (pronounced “premier”), a 13-year-old rapper, dancer, and YouTuber who performed at Rachel.


Prymrr met Roberts when she interviewed him for her YouTube channel. It was right around the time he announced he was going to turn Storm Area 51 into a music festival. “And so my mom was like, okay, well, I should perform there.” Prymrr told me. “I’d seen a bunch of memes and stupid little videos on TikTok and Instagram. And going to this event is just super cool.”

Teen rapper and YouTuber Prymrr performed at Alienstock. Photo : Jennings Brown for Gizmodo

When I met Prymrr, her mom, Lisa LoBasso, was at a nearby RV selling wifi, trying to upload her daughter’s latest YouTube video, and telling someone on the phone that between the Rachel Alienstock and the Las Vegas Alienstock, this event won. There were so many members of the press and filmmakers here, LoBasso explained, this one will be remembered like Woodstock. LoBasso told me that no matter how big Prymrr gets, her daughter will be back to this Alienstock every year.

Prymrr did the Naruto run at the Area 51 gate. Screenshot : Prymrr ( TikTok )


While LoBasso seemed invested in the legacy of Alienstock, her daughter was more interested in the moment. “I do believe in aliens and I thought this would be really cool because I like going to festivals. Also I really wanted to get pictures for Instagram,” she told me.

Prymrr was one of many YouTubers I saw producing content, including Unicole Unicron, a self-described “pop star cult leader” who believes they are an alien consciousness born in a human body. After Unicole Unicron founded the spiritual community, Unicult, they realized they came from the Arcturus star system. Unicole Unicron connects with their followers through their “cam church” services livestreamed on YouTube.

I met Unicole Unicron right before they led a meditation to communicate with aliens. “We’re here to talk about disclosure—to say, ‘The government is lying.’ We all know it and we want to see the aliens,” they told me. “We believe the government is lying about it because they don’t want the systems to crumble. And a lot of these alien species are very benevolent and they’re here to help and the information that these aliens have would crumble the detrimental systems at hand.”

As the leader of a group that exists largely online, Unicole Unicron seemed attuned to the potential power of Storm Area 51.

Unicole Unicron guides a group meditation to communicate with aliens. Photo : Jennings Brown ( Gizmodo )


“This is a call. It’s almost a cry. But I wouldn’t use that word because this is born out of humor. It’s born out of memes,” Unicole Unicron told me. “So we have this really lighthearted energy that sustained it up until this point, and I really love that idea that memes and humor are actually creating sustainable change. Protests and anger are good and important but they’re exhausting everyone involved and I think we are learning here that we can actually create change through laughter.”



“I was part of history last night”

Of course, not every attendee was in Rachel because of the memes. There were plenty of paranormal researchers and alien aficionados who arrived with optimism about the renewed interest in what the military could be hiding within the secretive site.

One of them was Nathan Hendrickson, a semi-retired attorney from Muskogee, Oklahoma, who runs a medicinal marijuana grow farm called Conservatory 51. “Are there aliens over that hill? I don’t know,” he told me. “But I know that our pilots are seeing a lot of weird stuff in the sky.”

Hendrickson said he has been visiting Rachel and Area 51 regularly for the last couple years and is excited to see so many new people experiencing it this week. “Now they can feel what I feel,” he said.



I asked him if he had any interest in storming Area 51 to see the aliens. “You want to see aliens?” he said, before taking a drag of his cigarette. “Look around, brother. The aliens are right here. I see aliens every time I look in the mirror.”


Photo : Jennings Brown ( Gizmodo )

Many attendees, however, did want to have a close encounter with Area 51. Around 3 a.m. on Friday morning, the first batch of “stormers” approached the back gate of the military compound, and were greeted by several members of law enforcement who were friendly and accommodating. One person was detained and another was reportedly arrested for public urination, but the scene was not the disaster predicted. Some officers even joked with the visitors.



“It was history. This was the first of its kind as far as storming Area 51,” said Jeffrey Gonzalez, a paranormal investigator who was in the first wave, “We stormed it. Well...” Gonzalez then shrugged, acknowledging it wasn’t an actual storm since they didn’t make it through the gate, but said proudly, “I was part of history last night.”

A film crew interviews an Area 51 ashtray vendor. Photo : Jennings Brown for Gizmodo


After that first “storm,” word spread that authorities were allowing people to visit, and a steady stream of cars started trickling out to the gate. I heard that by late Saturday there was a consistent gathering of people at the entrance, taking photos and talking to the guards. It became the festival rite of passage. “Have you stormed it yet?” people would ask, eager to hear what it was like or share their experience.

Wily Savage plays on the main stage. Photo : Jennings Brown for Gizmodo

By Friday night, music filled every corner of the festival. Performers were playing in three different areas across the main field and a DJ was spinning in an RV that was casting a light show across another field. There, a few people stood seemingly high out of their gourds, entranced by the designs the lasers were tracing in the dirt.

I bounced around between acts for a while before feeling an urge to do my own late-night storm of Area 51. I followed the vague directions another attendee gave me: turn on that dirt road, take a left at the stop sign and take that dirt road for about 15 miles until you see the lights.

On the way out the festival, I passed a house with a sign reading “GO HOME. NO ALIENSTOCK,” and ten minutes later I worried I was going the wrong way and might end up somewhere I should n’t be . But then I spotted lights and pressed on through clouds of dust.


A group of “stormers” at the back gate of Area 51. Photo : Jennings Brown ( Gizmodo )

A pair of floodlights beamed in the distance, like glowing eyes. I parked and approached two police officers who had blocked the road with their cars. They told me I could keep going, and I walked the last hundred yards to Area 51's back gate, where I found a gaggle of stormers talking to the guards and taking photos.

Photo : Jennings Brown for Gizmodo

On the surface, this seemed like an olive branch: they let the weirdos have some fun. More likely this was a strategic move—to neutralize any efforts trespass by allowing people to take staged “storm” photos. If so, it was effective. But it was still a heady experience, taking a lonely drive deep into the darkness and coming upon the high holy site of conspiracy theorists and UFO researchers, like the end of a paranormal pilgrimage.


It wasn’t the promise of seeing aliens that made my visit to Area 51 so enchanting. Here, on a desolate road by one of the most mythologized places on Earth, the cops and oddballs had come together to share this strange moment.

There’s no way to know now whether Alienstock will become an international party brand, another annual music festival, or something entirely different in the future. But last weekend, the Area 51 stormers successfully brought the internet into the real world by committing to an idea that was silly, mostly harmless, and too weird to die.