Now these are the most fascinating ones to me. There are some very un-explainable light streaks occuring in otherwise very innocuous video. Or are they un-explained? These are called the Rods. And they are quite fake.
That is some girl's tooth being ejected in a Cheer leading accident.
http://www.amsky.com/ufos/rods/
This One's Not a Bug
In this frame, from a scene on
The Worlds Most Amazing Videos, we see the aftermath of an accident at a cheerleading competition. During a throwing maneuver one girl's elbow hit another in the mouth. This "rod" is a tooth belonging to the girl on the receiving end of the elbow (she finished the competition, her team placed third and she has fully recovered).
This photograph plainly shows that, contrary to Jose Escamilla's assertion, fast-moving objects do elongate on video frames.
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This all started with bugs flying across a cave entrance. It is an artifact of focal distance and lens effects.
As the author states:
Another factor plainly visible in the videos is, if you take the images of a rod from frame to frame and superimpose them on a single frame, the images from successive frames appear to line up end-to-end except for a short gap attributable to vertical blanking and scan delay. The only exception is that images of very-slow-moving "rods" overlap due to blur. This is also consistent with lengthening due to movement across the field during the exposure of the photograph.
I will answer your personal attacks with the following two challenges:
I challenge anyone to demonstrate that the majority of the legitimate scientific community* believes that "rods" are anything other than photographic artifacts.
I also challenge anyone to prove that "rods" are not artifacts of the photographic process (this proof must be capable of withstanding peer review in the legitimate scientific community).