And is it worth your time and energy to dissect ISS videos minute by minute to figure out which ones are true and which ones are fake? And do you also consider the slightest possibility that your assessment (or some of them) could be wrong?
Thanks. I hear this one in relation my study of the Apollo record. I don't think it is a waste of time, to me, researching a subject, any subject it worth it you never know what you'll discover! Also, to me, research is simply another way of asking the universe, you put the effort in, the universe answers, you don't have to ask directly, I usually get an answer within a few months.
I don't spend much time on these videos, as a medic I'm a trained observer and certain things stick out, once you have a baseline you can research accordingly. Archaeologists spend years sifting through dirt then one finds something seemingly insignificant that changes the whole narrative. That in itself is informative enough but the reactions of vested interests are quite telling.
Since I began studying the Apollo and other space videos I've been attacked, the typical human based attacks online as per usual but it's the attacks I experience at 3-4 in the morning are most telling. Often happens whenever I'm preparing an observation to post online for discussion or sending an email containing my observations to a researcher for further scrutiny. I wake up to an oppressive, negative and draining presence in my room, it lifts soon after I awake but the effect lingers for one or two days afterwards, feels awful. I'm very familiar with this, it's happened all my life but these ones have a slightly different character, saw my first MIB during an episode in December. Seems that someone doesn't like me posting on such matters, never expected it and though debilitating I don't really mind them as they are educational and good training when resisting future attacks.
Anybody else thinking that the background is a set? I mean her hair, earrings and the things that she's directly handling in the foreground seem to be under the effect of a gravity free field, but the cords to the electrical equipment etc in the background don't seem to be.
Yes, I think it is a set, constructed of real 3D props, there's a circular window on the airlock behind her, you can see her reflection in it sometimes. The way she moves indicates she's in the vomit comet, the zero-G simulating aircraft and not a space station orbiting at a steady speed and trajectory. Don't know how they achieved the earrings and necklace effect, CGI or diamagnetics perhaps but there is no reason for her to suddenly rise up and then go sideways, hanging on for dear life! Look at the tendons and muscles in her right hand and arm! When the ISS moves, it does so only gently, it'd break apart if didn't. That being said I think some footage is filmed in orbit and some elsewhere.
Well, I think the hair is due to the weightlessness in the ISS. Having anything but a butch cut and it will stand up all over just like that. Don't know how long she's been there, but maybe she started short and it is just growing out?
She might have started with a bob or shoulder length hair, her mission lasted for six months. In the the armed forces and emergency services men must keep their hair short. Women with long hair are expected to keep their hair in a bun or tight pony tail, with good reason too as it's a safety issue. I don't know why it doesn't apply in orbit where help is not readily at hand if an emergency should arise. Also, humans constantly shed hair that can clog equipment and can be a vector for disease, should be kept under wraps. Her hair, if clean (she says it is) should behave in similar fashion as if she was under water and wave around, her hair appears to move as a single entity.
Here she is
presenting a tour on the ISS she has the same stiff hairstyle, it bounces back into the same arrangement no matter how much she moves her head, right down to the last curled strand. It's rigid enough that the stiff black cable has little effect on it as it catches in her curls, they just flick back into their original position. Don't have to watch it all just from 5:15, her hair is rigid enough to push the storage bag away, everything is weightless in orbit but they still possess mass. Her hair should flatten and yield before moving the bag. As she approaches the camera the black cable is caught on a curl which has enough rigidity to tension it as she moves. All of a sudden the cable is released and it flicks down to her shoulder and the curl flicks up, looks like it's been lacquered.
Here she is on the
Vomit Comet.
Her terrestrial hair style @ 1G.
Thanks for the replies, I'll let you know if I can find a lip reader who'll do it, stay safe in these insane times!