http://notthemunnsreport.com/page6a.html
I think it's time we all came clean here. It's obvious to any clear-seeing individual that the proportions and ambulatory mode in that video are perfectly human.
With this video as evidence, we can now say with the highest degree of certainty, "
It's a guy in a suit." In this post-mangler era, we need no longer hem and hedge about this conclusion.
This is not a single-frame skeleton or one-time generated figure, layered in over a single frame or two from the PG film; it's an unchanging figure-and-skeleton moving
with the frames of the PG film, animated in motile succession
inside the outer parameters of the PG figure we call "Patty".
Skepticism of this position is all well and good: "
Well, maybe
Patty is still a non-human primate that happens to have the exact proportions and ambulatory mode of a human being! You have to say 'maybe' or you're not being a true skeptic!"
Baloney. There is and there can be no non-human animal with precisely human proportions that walks exactly like a human. No species in the animal kingdom shares the precise proportions and gait of another species; it's part of what separates us, physiologically and genetically. Chimps and bonobos, very closely related species, both genus
Pan, locomote differently and have different proportions. (
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1571309/ http://www.bonobo.ca/loco.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonobo) Dogs and wolves, both genus
Canis, have different physiological characteristics and distinct gaits. (
https://knol.google.com/k/garry-jenkins/the-dog-its-origins-evolution/19tjln1ywaolr/5#) The list can go on.
In short, we now have definitive proof that "Patty" shares a visibly and measurably close range of proportions with a normal (if somewhat heroically formed) man, and that with a slight crouch that same normal man can match "her/its" unusual gait.*
It must be stated that proportionally, the mangler figure is not a precise match with "Patty". This is due to 1) the fact that a generic, statistically normal human male figure has been used in the animation, 2) that real human individuals vary somewhat, and 3) the features of what can now reasonably be identified as a suit.
If I had the capacity to generate a similar animation, I would shrink the human figure slightly and raise him up a bit from the ground plane. This shift in both size and position would allow a bit more padding around the figure; a slight excess of arm and leg length would be consistent with the fact-based theory of "suit".
Otherwise I applaud mangler, who has performed a service of considerable use to the skeptical community.
*
The gait has already been matched by at least one test, including one overseen by Jeff Meldrum, of which a video exists on youtube can can easily be found.