Katie Corrado Misidentifying Planes as Drones, over New Jersey

She admits this one is a plane
 

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Whilst there are some who enjoy boisterous banter at the expense of those they feel intellectually superior too after an absolute howler has been made, MetaBunk isn't the place for it.

When you find the place for it, please let me know ;-)
 
Can anyone suggest threads here or elsewhere with guidelines on how best to record footage of a sightings like this for later analysis?

With these apparently repeating drone (or whatever) sightings near military bases it seems that there might be some amateur investigators willing to spend the time, effort and maybe some money to properly film the skies over these bases in order to more fully capture these events.

I'm imaging recommendations for cameras that work particularly well at night. Would it be reasonable to have two or more setup on tripods some known distance from one another in order to allow for later triangulation of recorded objects? And if so, how far apart would they need to be to get useful distance measurements?

If there isn't already, maybe we could crowd source the design for a kind of mobile security camera setup. Something portable for a couple hundred dollars that when setup could record the skies for hours to provide genuinely useful footage. Hopefully capturing the direction from which these lights first enter scene and later exit.

I feel as if these stories are now garnering enough attention in the media that someone with disposable money who lives near these bases would be able to solve this if given the proper advice on how to film it.
 
For most normal people use your phone don't zoom in, try to maintain context with the surroundings film for as long as you can, later on post the original unedited video from your phone to somewhere that does not strip metadata. Note the direction you were looking in or try to give that context in the video.

If you do use a camera that is not a phone, also take a phone picture at the same time as it will give time and location more accurately than any other source.
 
Can anyone suggest threads here or elsewhere with guidelines on how best to record footage of a sightings like this for later analysis?

With these apparently repeating drone (or whatever) sightings near military bases it seems that there might be some amateur investigators willing to spend the time, effort and maybe some money to properly film the skies over these bases in order to more fully capture these events.

I'm imaging recommendations for cameras that work particularly well at night. Would it be reasonable to have two or more setup on tripods some known distance from one another in order to allow for later triangulation of recorded objects? And if so, how far apart would they need to be to get useful distance measurements?

If there isn't already, maybe we could crowd source the design for a kind of mobile security camera setup. Something portable for a couple hundred dollars that when setup could record the skies for hours to provide genuinely useful footage. Hopefully capturing the direction from which these lights first enter scene and later exit.

I feel as if these stories are now garnering enough attention in the media that someone with disposable money who lives near these bases would be able to solve this if given the proper advice on how to film it.
It did occur to me that some people might have decided the best way to get footage of these drones would be by flying their own drones, turning into some sort of drone-ception.

That said, I wonder how setting up a video surveillance system to record activity at a military base will go over with the authorities. (Though you have places like Cabrillo Point in San Diego that give you an aerial view of the entirety of NAS North Island and whenever I visit I ponder how often foreign spies visit to peek at the base.)
 
It did occur to me that some people might have decided the best way to get footage of these drones would be by flying their own drones, turning into some sort of drone-ception.
Also, as we saw in the "Creepy Clown Flap of 2016," see below, reports of creepy clowns lurking about eventually led people to dress up as clowns and go out to act creepy -- it would not be surprising if reports of mysterious drones lurking about might induce some to join in the fun and go fly their drones around.

So you get a drone or two, or something else mistaken for a drone, getting reported to law enforcement and the media which then prompts discussion in person or on social media leading to people going out to see if they can spot mysterious drones, with the sky full of planes and planets and meteors and, yes, drones, leading to more reports, leading to more people looking for and flying drones, leading to more media and social media coverage, and it snowballs until, eventually, it gets boring as nothing new and interesting happens, the media (social and otherwise) lose interest, people stop looking for drones (and, sigh, go back to interpreting stuff in the skies that they do not recognize as Alien spaceships)and the flap is over.


Info about clown flap:

External Quote:
There is an interesting pattern to clusters of creepy clown reports, which typically feature the following elements: A dramatic initial claim or rumor followed by saturation media coverage. Local residents begin to scrutinize their environment for evidence of this new threat, and begin to redefine ambiguous stimuli within their new stalking clown mind set. This gives rise to new media and social media reports, which in turn generate more publicity and anxiety. The subsequent anxiety and uncertainty are ideal for incubating rumors. A similar pattern is involved in generating sighting clusters of chupacabras, Bigfoot, and the Loch Ness Monster. That is why these subjects belong to the realm of folklore as they break out in waves, are unwittingly driven by journalists and social media—and proof of their existence is never found.
https://www.skeptic.com/reading_room/south-carolina-clown-panics/

External Quote:
Police have begun arresting people dressed as clowns on various charges. In Alabama, seven people are facing felonies for making a terrorist threat, while two more juveniles face lesser charges. In Middlesboro, Kentucky, a 20-year-old man was arrested for wearing a clown costume while hiding in a ditch. In Virginia, two teens were taken into custody for donning clown costumes and chasing children. And in recent days, the list has been growing.
https://www.rollingstone.com/cultur...-the-terrifying-hoax-sweeping-america-129505/
 
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