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Originally posted by THENEO
you and ZZub and whoever would be the ignorants here, right?
you DO NOT HAVE THE RIGHT to label others as idiots for having an open mind.
Originally posted by William One Sac
Here is a link to someone who tried photographing various types of flying critters. Read his evaluation for yourself and make up your own mind, but its an interesting read nonetheless...
www.forteantimes.com...
Originally posted by Zzub
Originally posted by THENEO
you and ZZub and whoever would be the ignorants here, right?
you DO NOT HAVE THE RIGHT to label others as idiots for having an open mind.
Hey, please show me where I called somebody an idiot. I work with video and I've seen this effect many, many times. I was merely stating my opinion from my experience.
And, if you read my original post, I even mention a segment of the file that I think is interesting and different from the rest of the film. Nobody bothered to reply to my point.
THENEO, I'd like to hear your reply to this. I think you have unfairly labeled me here.
Originally posted by Zzub
This effect is easy to reproduce. i've been accidentally seeing these for years.
Catching one of these would be very very easy, as soon as a scientist catches one of these, I will believe in them. Until then, they will remain tricks of the film to me.
$0.02
Originally posted by Zzub
Ha ha ha ha. This is just silly. Work with cameras for ten minutes and you will recognise this effect.
There is the one interesting moment in the whole video, at 2:40.
This seems different, it's not the same as the rest. Interesting.
Originally posted by Voidmaster
In my opinion, we won't be able to know if Rods are insects or not so there isn't any reason in picking a side.
If we can't see them, and the camera's can, I think that would be a reason TO believe in them. If they obviously skip human eyesight, but show up on camera's that take images at the same frame rate, then the image is being messed up before they reach us.
On 8th and 9th August 2005, China Central Television (CCTV) aired a two-part documentary about flying rods in China. It reported an incident which happened from May to June of the same year at Tonghua Zhenguo Pharmaceutical Company in Tonghua City, Jilin Province, which debunked the flying rods. ([3]) Surveillance cameras in the facility's compound captured video footage of flying rods identical to those shown in Jose Escamilla's video. Getting no satisfactory answer to the phenomenon, the curious research staff of the facility, being scientists, decided that they would try to solve the mystery by attempting to catch these airborne creatures. Huge nets were set up and the same surveillance cameras captured rods flying into the trap. When the nets were inspected, the "rods" were no more than regular moths and other ordinary flying insects. Subsequent investigations proved that the appearance of flying rods on video was an optical illusion created by the slower recording speed of the camera (done to save video space). This is the empirical evidence, showing that the "rods" themselves can be captured, and that they do indeed prove to be ordinary animals.