The second week of this new show kicks of with videos of two UFOs crashing together (possible Israeli missile strike), an "angel" at a crash scene (possible lens/film problem), and a Gettysburg ghost in the woods (possible optical trickery). They settle on the Fresno "Night Crawler" video, a stick-like figure walking by a surveillance camera, (looks like a marionettes to me, and no original tape exists; fuzzy tapes hide a multitude of fakes.) and a Lake Havasu flying saucer (looks like the Balloon Boy balloon to me).
They interview the witness in Fresno, check out the scene, and try to recreate the video using a kid in a costume and a mechanical puppet on a pulley, once showing the armature and the second time covered by a sheet. Then they try it by walking the puppet across using a pole and removing the operator with special effects. They then investigate some local woods -- at night of course -- wondering if the "crawler" could be something living. They experience the same battery problems endemic to paranormal investigation shows - and naturally speculate about this being caused by "creatures." Their thermal camera picks up some mysterious movement (probably animals). Their voice analysis of the witness suggests truth telling (though Im not sure I buy their use of this technology, nor their conclusion, as nervous shaking often indicates lying, "not" truth telling). I have to say, Im not impressed with either the skepticism or the investigative technique in this segment. For one thing, this is the same team that declared the lights in last weeks show "real." For another, to me the crawler footage looks similar to the "walking gnome" video that made the internet rounds last year - and was proved to be a puppet (as I recall). Finally, I believe that I could create a very similar "creature" using a "flying ghost" that I had in our yard several years ago. A good mechanic, or stage magician could make it even more convincing.
The second team goes to Lake Havasu and interviews the witnesses. Here, we get a bit more context for the footage, though still -- annoyingly -- not the complete clip. They start by trying a "reflection in glass" trick, similar to one they did last week, but this time with a model UFO rather than lasers; no dice. They then decide to launch a huge silver UFO balloon (found on the internet) from the state park, run it up to 1000 feet and see how it compares. In the words of the team, "It looks just like the video." If untethered and left to float, it seems sure to have the same flight characteristics as the object in the video. They then go looking for people who have seen the UFO at the time reported, and also saw it as a balloon. Sure enough, they turn up a park ranger who actually saw the balloon shortly after the launch. It might have been associated with a movie being shot in the area. Great flying saucer footage, but declared "fake." Case closed; well investigated.
So, again, one "real" and one fake. As I said in the previous review, I fear this may be a trend. And the "real" investigation really stopped short once they got close to an explanation. In future, I suggest that the show may want to add a professional magician to the team and adopt an "If I really wanted to do this, how would I achieve that effect?" attitude with each video. They should also add a professional hunter/tracker, so animals on a thermal camera at night dont become mysterious "creatures." And while theyre making personnel changes, dumping a few "believers" from the production/marketing staff might help this show become truly useful for paranormal investigation, rather than useful about half the time.
Source: umad-mysteries.blogspot.com
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