The Shrike
Philosopher
Wow, that's really embarrassing.
pssst! Its film, not video... Portable cameras with systems such as VHS and Betamax are quite younger.Exactly Correa....so for the time of the PGF, was that quality of video the best available? Did the technology exist then to alter it? Did the scientific community back then just assume that it was a suit or is there a record for analysis in trying to establish the provenance? I'm just wondering why no one took it seriously back then since that is the best footage( bad pun intended) to date.
Oh really?But is it the right explanation? I really think if it was hoaxed we wouldn't even be discussing it 45 years later like this.
snowy egret, photographed by me yesterday (used a circular polarizer). One of the more entertaining birds. Unlike some predators, they don't rely on stealth. They stomp around, stirring up the prey, then nabbing it. Hunted to dangerously low numbers by man for their plumage, they are now common.
I pretty much ruled out a hoaxer in a snowy egret suit. I am less certain about an image of a purported California ground squirrel and another of some pelicans, so I am not posting them until a costume designer can review them.
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/picture.php?albumid=491&pictureid=6264[/qimg]
pssst! Its film, not video... Portable cameras with systems such as VHS and Betamax are quite younger.
Quality: Film image quality and resolution depend on emulsion, optics, exposure, aperture, focus and steadiness. PGF has exposure issues and is shaky. Yes, it could be better, way better, even if the Patty-camera distance were the same. A steady camera, propper shutter speed and aperture would improve the image quality and resolution. My 2 cents? With better image quality, even those who wish to believe would notice its a costume and a rather ordinary one.
Techology to alter it: A number of FX tricks were available even back then and are still being used. Forced perspective, collages, montages, filmed projections and splicing are the the ones that came to my mind. Montages and collages would be easy to spot, quite possibly even in copies. Splicing, obvious in the originals. Same is valid for filmed projections. Forced perspective would be harder to notice and I suspect its the cause of some extreme height estimates (not that P & G deliberately used it, its belief-induced bias).
Academic reaction: IIRC what people who know better its history wrote, the film was indeed shown to selected academics, but they had to sign some sort of agreement regarding exposing their opinions. Again IIRC, few were impressed. As for the provenance, think about this: You've been introduced to a film supposed to be of "Amerca's abominable snowman". The film actually shows something that can be a guy in a gorilla costume (actually looks a lot like it). The film was shot by a rather shady guy. The film becomes a circus attraction and more rather shady guys are making money out of it. Oh, the film's backstory is quite fishy too.
Do you still wonder why no one took it seriously back then?
Just that?
The shady and fishy background of the film and its makers and managers would not count?
The fact that it looks like a guy in a gorilla costume would not count?
Correa, on the anatomy of Patty, it's either a shaggy suit or a frumpy old hairy naked woman. I'm not able to see much difference when delving into the details of the image, they both look the same to me.
Nice Egret pic there Parn !
WARNING:I don't know that they were aware of the shady background before hand were they? I'm just putting myself in the academics position at the time. If someone asked me to sign anything I wouldn't bother with it.
If I were the one with the video, and I wanted academics to view it for their opinion on it's authenticity, it would never occur to me to ask them to sign a non disclosure agreement about what they thought. It defeats the purpose of trying to establish provenance so my only guess is they were going to cherrry pick the positive opinions to boost marketing the film.
Correa, on the anatomy of Patty, it's either a shaggy suit or a frumpy old hairy naked woman. I'm not able to see much difference when delving into the details of the image, they both look the same to me.
thanks, I have some pretty good gear that I haven't been using, but I am planning a photo expedition in the fall during the elk rut. Hope I don't get shot!!
Getting pretty steamy in here with all this talk of rutting.
What's so steamy about being in a rut?![]()
...males oftenrub their antlers or hornspee on trees or shrubs, fight with each other, wallow in mud or dust, and herd estrus females together.
The rut is the mating season of ruminant animals such as deer, sheep, elk, moose, caribou, ibex, goats, pronghorn and Asian and African antelope.
During the rut (also known as the rutting period, and in sheep sometimes as tupping), males often rub their antlers or horns on trees or shrubs, fight with each other, wallow in mud or dust, and herd estrus females together.
Most scientists wouldn't trust something like the pgf. The most logical explanation would of course be a man in a suit.
But is it the right explanation? I really think if it was hoaxed we wouldn't even be discussing it 45 years later like this. The film would at best be around the level of what Ivan Marx made
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ovL1mT6443M
OntarioSquatch @ BFF said:Posted Yesterday, 01:02 PM
plussed! It looks like something humanoid. I'd say this is possibly the real deal.
Says the person who thinks this may be a real bigfoot.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=aLH2AimUXP8
OS - I have question for a proponent, or anyone that can answer. Why do you think no one from the scientific community took the PGF serious and descended on the site to look for this creature?
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