Stirs in dreadful sleep, turns over and keeps sleepingStirs again, wakes up with a deafening roarWho dares awaken me? Who dares to face my wrath?!Ah, it's you. Hi folks!
Bursts into laughter, then calms downSorry to disappoint you, ladies, but that's a hoax. Firstly, the closest approach between Mars and Earth in millennia was in August 2003, so this is a kind of zombie news. But chiefly Mars can never be as big in the skies as our moon: Luna has a diameter of 3.476 km, Mars of 6.788 km - only about twice as big as our moon. But while our moon is only 384.000 km distant on average, Mars always keeps a distance of at least 56 millions of kilometres. So there's no chance ever to see Mars larger than a spot in the sky by the naked eye, distinguishable from the stars only by its brightness, colour and motion.
To top it all, Mars is invisible right now, standing on the other side of the sun.
Cheers, anyway!
Markus Astronomicus