Glowing Orbs released in formation, Massachusetts, 14/01/15

This look pretty inexplicable in terms of a 'natural' explanation and doesn't look faked to me. Apparently filmed 2 days ago in Massachusetts, USA:

_https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kp4jxRPCaz8
 
Zenith said:
This look pretty inexplicable in terms of a 'natural' explanation and doesn't look faked to me. Apparently filmed 2 days ago in Massachusetts, USA:

_https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kp4jxRPCaz8
That's pretty amazing. Listening to the people in the background, I will say it was definitely filmed in Massachusetts!
 
I wish the uploader had included notes on precisely where & when. I recall reading that there was a UFO flap out in/near Springfield, MA, some decades back. On the off chance that the aforementioned flap was due to some sort of naturally re-occuring 'portal', I wonder if it has 're-opened'...
 
Looks like the real deal. The spectator reactions appear authentic too.
 
At 1:15 we can see that this video has likely been recorded off a screen (left black border). This fact doesn't mean anything, but it would be interesting to see the original video.
 
hiker said:
Looks like the real deal. The spectator reactions appear authentic too.

That's what I thought too. The only thing that bugs me is that these orbs are pretty damn large. They appear to be off the coast and over the sea and am surprised that there are no other videos posted, taken by others/from another angle etc. I guess it may have been the dead of the night or something. Still, very interesting video. Also, as Data says, where's the original?

Just noticed, the same video has already been published on SOTT:

http://www.sott.net/article/291448-UFO-releasing-glowing-orbs-into-a-formation-in-Western-Massachusetts
 
Data said:
At 1:15 we can see that this video has likely been recorded off a screen (left black border). This fact doesn't mean anything, but it would be interesting to see the original video.

That's a good catch. The video has been uploaded to Youtube by "Strangeness Video": they seem to have 21 other videos on Youtube, and at least the few I had a look at appear to be fakes.

Perhaps this time they had a chance to film the genuine article being played on someone's tv/ monitor. Or perhaps they are getting better at forgery!
 
hiker said:
Data said:
At 1:15 we can see that this video has likely been recorded off a screen (left black border). This fact doesn't mean anything, but it would be interesting to see the original video.

That's a good catch. The video has been uploaded to Youtube by "Strangeness Video": they seem to have 21 other videos on Youtube, and at least the few I had a look at appear to be fakes.

Perhaps this time they had a chance to film the genuine article being played on someone's tv/ monitor. Or perhaps they are getting better at forgery!

Yes, well spotted. The responses certainly had an authentic OMG element to them :) It sure looks very bizarre! I am surprised there somebody else watching didn't record it though.

Just checked the uploaders listings, and the latest is apparently showing a convoy of military trucks in Western Massachusetts driving down Route 91 South on 1/16/2015. Coincidence?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iwBdD2syBLc

On of the comments from 10 hours was:
Going after those orbs that descended into western Mass couple days ago...saw something on Fox News about it this morning!

Just looked at foxnews website and couldn't see anything.
 
Zenith said:
The only thing that bugs me is that these orbs are pretty damn large. They appear to be off the coast and over the sea and am surprised that there are no other videos posted, taken by others/from another angle etc. I guess it may have been the dead of the night or something.

A good point. I remember John Keel mentioning in his books, that sometimes the phenomenon was only observed by certain people. If I remember correctly, there was a case where the person standing next to the observer couldn't see anything. If a genuine case, perhaps that is what happened here? I guess the "paranormal nature" of the UFO phenomenon can play tricks in this way.

Although not as impressive as the Massachusetts video, I recalled a video filmed a few years back in Dundee Scotland, where a single largish orb/ sphere flies rather low above a residential area. The spectator reactions are again quite convincing, and in an impressive Scottish accent to boot :)

_https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dX0i3Q9SwT4
 
Circular Glowing UFOs Perform Odd Maneuvers Above Massachusetts (VIDEO)
Posted: 01/17/2015 9:27 am EST Updated: 01/17/2015 10:59 am EST

This video will finally make you believe -- that video editing software has come a long way.

There are a slew of inconsistencies in this UFO video, reportedly shot in Massachusetts. It's unclear exactly when, where and by whom it was created. Shortly after the original video was posted, it was removed from YouTube "due to a copyright claim by Die Hoaxer."

It all started with a YouTuber named Bobby Johnson, who wrote on his page that he videotaped UFOs from a rooftop in western Massachusetts. It shows a large, circular glowing orb hovering above street lights, homes and traffic.

As the video progresses, one by one, the large orb seems to drop or release smaller versions of itself down toward the ground. But, instead of hitting the ground, each of the small orbs stops, hovers and then moves to the left or the right, taking up positions in the sky until a total of six objects are just sitting there.

The two end objects move horizontally left and right away from the others, leaving three smaller orbs, hovering in the air below the initial still-hovering large light. Then, the two remaining end orbs move slowly away, with just one small glowing object hanging in the air underneath the larger one. Finally, the large UFO moves slowly down and merges with the small one.

The video ends with the large object growing larger in its glow until it finally, simply, vanishes, turns off, gone (see composite photo below).



And then there's the accompanying audio track of the video. We hear voices of several people, but if you listen carefully, they don't always seem to react to what we're seeing on the screen -- almost as if the audio portion of the video comes from another UFO case and was added to the video at a later point.

If this is a video of an actual occurrence in the air, it's also a bit odd that the videographer himself doesn't seem excited in the least at what he supposedly is capturing on tape.

Further convoluting the whole issue is that earlier on Thursday, a YouTube video appeared, posted by someone named HOAXKiller1, outlining in detail why the UFO video is a complete fabrication. As the day progressed, HOAXKiller1's video was removed from YouTube, with the following message: "This video is no longer available due to a copyright claim by richard simmons."

We're already tired of these orbs.

HuffPost reached out to Marc Dantonio and Ben Hansen, two guys who have spent years analyzing UFO images and videos and often share their opinions of UFO cases with us.

"When you take a scene at night, like this, of point lights, and you are hand-held, as this is purporting to be, then distant light sources and street lights might/should be occluded at one point or another by other objects, such as a tree branch," Dantonio told HuffPost in an email.

"Even if you are on a tripod taking imagery of this many lights, you would expect some variation in the lighting because that is the reality of capturing video through any air mass at all. You always see lights that will scintillate, especially the farther away they are."

That probably explains why no traffic movement is noticeable in the UFO video.

Hansen, a former FBI special agent and current night vision optics specialist, agrees with Dantonio.

"The video was most likely created on computer software and then filmed off the computer or a TV monitor," Hansen told HuffPost.

"Some hoaxers will do this because it's an easy way to simulate camera shake and to cause the camera to adjust focus in a more natural way as you would expect if this really happened on camera."

"It's evident the audio was ripped from other sources as demonstrated by the reaction of the woman toward the end who exclaims, 'It's orange! It's orange!' Never at any time did the UFO objects in question turn any shade of orange. They remained bright white throughout the sighting. In law enforcement, we call this a clue."

You'd think, by now, that when someone decides to post their photo gems to YouTube, they would automatically offer basic information to help solicit more videos or photos taken by others from different vantage points or perspectives. All in the name of trying to confirm the credibility of the images and stories in question.

That's mostly wishful thinking.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/01/17/circular-ufos-form-patterns-over-massachusetts_n_6481772.html

I don't know anything of video editing, but on the basis of the aforementioned inconsistencies, the video does appear to be a hoax. But I do wonder if this was a deliberate preemptive propaganda strike - specifically for plasma type 'high strangeness'. Just as the SOTT editor commented on the recent CIA confession on decades old UFO sightings (below) - which probably planted the, UFO = CIA seed in most people's minds.


But now, in the age of iphones and dashcams, a more sophisticated excuse must be fabricated, including taking care of history. One can also wonder, with all the increased meteorite and UFO activity, if CIA isn't preparing the ground for future damage control.

http://www.sott.net/article/290815-It-was-us-CIA-fesses-up-on-UFO-sightings-in-1950-60s
 

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