View Full Version : UFO hit by lightning
Did You See Them
19th February 2017, 09:44
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Mark (Star Mariner)
20th February 2017, 15:45
Interesting, yet I often wonder with these sorts of clips why the person was out randomly filming late at night in the first place. Also, to catch the alleged anomaly by miraculous chance right in the middle of the frame.
Sunny-side-up
20th February 2017, 20:21
Interesting, yet I often wonder with these sorts of clips why the person was out randomly filming late at night in the first place. Also, to catch the alleged anomaly by miraculous chance right in the middle of the frame.
Well it looked like a real flash going by the ground being illuminated.
After seeing great lighten I have rushed off for my camera trying to catch a good flash many times. pointing the camera at the sky and waiting, waiting only to have it flash off screen :(
Intuition can really work though, especially with UFO's
Maybe have wanted to be filmed.
Extra: That disk shape UFO at that distance, is just about the same size as the last UFO I witnessed. It was massive.
DeDukshyn
20th February 2017, 20:52
It looks impressive. One of the first things I look for in UFO videos is camera tracking issues - very difficult to add 3D or make a composition look fully real without 100% perfect camera tracking - something which becomes more difficult the more shaky or the more / type of movement of the camera (depends on what is in the background).
However a good way around this is to record video with a still camera (with a tripod) - then you have a perfectly still camera to do your 3D / composition overlay with perfect camera tracking, then you add camera shake to the whole thing afterward to give it "legitimacy" -- perfectly tracked very shaky video.
The camera shake looks artificial to me -- too much rolling right and left - if the camera is being held by hand, this level of roll generally does not occur at a perceptible amount (I do some handheld camera work so I would know; natural camera shake is primarily up/down, left/right with no roll). The roll might be created by applying a noise modifier to an artificial camera inside of software equally in all directions, and in the video above it is very strong - to the point that I am suspicious -- coupled with no other cues that would tell me that the camera is not on a tripod.
This could have been faked by someone with a decent knowledge of what issues to address when making such a video ... but I can't be 100% sure, all I am saying is there is no cues that tells me this isn't, or is unlikely to be, a project of someones.
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