Ah, now this is fun. I'm definitely spending more time on this than I should be.
Yvette Fielding and "sceptic" Glen Hunt discuss the footage
here. Their claim is that it cannot be faked as it's the raw footage from the camera, taken straight off the card.
A couple of things stand out to me. Firstly, when they open the footage in VLC, it appears that this particular bit of footage is 4 minutes something. That seems suspicious if you've just got real footage of a ghost and want to see if you can get more. Wouldn't you keep rolling? Isn't "keep rolling" the first rule for a video journalist?
Secondly, although the file itself appears to have been last modified at the same time as the folders containing the other files, the folder in which the file is located appears to have been last modified 5 days earlier, as far as can be told from the poor-quality video. Perhaps they altered the "last modified" attribute of the file (using something like
Bulk File Changer) after editing, but forgot to do the same to the folder?
I have to say, though, that I'm digging the explanation they're giving - stone tape theory. Firstly, I love the fact that it's the Ur-example of people hearing something and thinking "yes, that makes narrative sense" without stopping to think about whether or not it makes any
actual sense.
Secondly, I love the fact that they're offering this explanation because it's obvious, to them, that it's one of the presenters. So they're pre-empting that criticism by saying "yes, we think it's one of the presenters, too! It must be a recording of him, thus validating the stone tape theory!"
Thirdly, I love that they're saying that the fact that it's obviously one of the presenters (I have no idea if regular viewers would find it obvious, but it's certainly not to me, given that I don't watch the programme) makes it
less likely to be fake because if they'd faked it, wouldn't they have faked someone other than the presenter?
It's extraordinary.