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Posts Tagged ‘australia’

Russell Crowe Photographs a UFO

March 9th, 2013 No comments

The big news this week is this story about Russell Crow filming a UFO. We’ve done tons of stories of celebrities seeing ghosts or UFOs, and now we can add Russell Crowe to the mix. Unfortunately, this “ship” seems to have a much more earthly explanation…

Making (UFO) movies, making songs, and fightin' round the world!

Making (UFO) movies, making songs, and fightin’ round the world!

A short video clip recently taken by actor Russell Crowe was uploaded to YouTube earlier this week and has many wondering if he might have recorded a UFO from his apartment overlooking a marina in Sydney, Australia.

Crowe tweeted, “A friend and I set camera to capture fruit bats rising from Botanic Gardens. This was a big surprise.”

The big surprise wasn’t bats but instead two mysterious, glowing red or yellow rodlike objects (or streaks), one above the other, moving in tandem from right to left in increments over the course of three photographs. The top image in the sky seems to be casting a light directly downward, though curiously the light does not seem to be reflected by any of the trees or leaves nearby.

Of course any time anyone connected with Hollywood or the entertainment business captures anything weird on video — whether it be a Bigfoot, a ghost, or a UFO — the suspicion often turns to a hoax created for publicity. Indeed, several videos in recent years have been revealed as computer-generated hoaxes. Sometimes the intent is to stir up publicity for an upcoming science-fiction film, though in one case last year a viral video of an eagle snatching a baby in a park turned out to be a student project for a Canadian art school. In this case, however, there seems little motivation for Crowe to hoax a UFO video; his new film, “Broken City,” is about a crime drama, not aliens.

Though Crowe’s UFO video is claimed to be a time-lapse video, it is not. A time-lapse video typically compresses an extended recording of an image (typically a static shot taken over the course of hours, days, or even weeks) into a few seconds or a few minutes. What Crowe allegedly recorded is closer to a timed exposure, which is a single photograph (or series of photos) taken over a long period of time. Timed exposures are often used in low light or at night, and are used to help pick up poorly lit images in the frame (such as the flying bats that Crowe was attempting to photograph).

However the same process that allows poorly lit images to be recorded also overcompensates for brightly lit objects, such as electric lights. This results in the well-known effect of light streaks of moving cars seen on nighttime highways, or photos of fireworks. Indeed this exact effect can be seen in Crowe’s images, which appear large because they were taken with a telephoto lens.

One person has posted a fairly convincing analysis of the video, showing that the image is almost certainly a passing sailboat whose lights were accidentally captured by Crowe’s camera. Perhaps the biggest clue that the UFO existed only in Crowe’s camera (and not over Sydney, Australia’s most populous city) is that no one else saw it or recorded it. Surely if such a brightly lit, mysterious object was hovering over Sydney’s Botanical Gardens, it would have been seen by hundreds or thousands of other people — and likely recorded on at least a few smart phones.

Crowe, of course, isn’t alone in his sighting. Several film stars, celebrities and politicians have reported seeing UFOs; President Jimmy Carter was said to have seen a UFO, as have Nation of Islam founder Louis Farrakhan, Congressman Dennis Kucinich,John Lennon, and others.

Of course, as Crowe’s photos show, all it takes to create a UFO sighting is to see or record something unidentified flying or floating in the sky — and not everything unidentified is unidentifiable.

On first look, you can tell that this is a times exposure photo, so what is on the pictures is not a disc-shaped object, but a streak of something moving. Check out the video below for a much better explanation than what I can give…

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The Shipwreck Cemetery

February 18th, 2013 No comments

Sandwood Bay, and its famed sea stack Am Buachaille, is situated a few miles from Cape Wrath, Sutherland in the Scottish Highlands. To reach it, you have to walk four miles along a track from the Blairmore car park, the nearest you will get a car. Lying at the end of the path is one of the cleanest beaches in the British Isles, facing onto the Atlantic Ocean. Just behind the dunes, you will find Loch Sandwood and the ruined Sandwood Cottage.

Shipwreck Cemetary Sandwood Bay Cape WrathThe place has a sad history. Prior to the construction of the Cape Wrath Lighthouse in 1828, several ships were wrecked on the rocks of the bay during bad weather, resulting in a huge loss of life. Today, the remains of the shipwrecks are believed to lie beneath the sand of the beach. Unsurprisingly, this has also given rise to a number of ghost stories associated with the area. These are primarily centred on an unearthly sailor roaming the dunes. The description of the sailor varies from each tale, and there are so many tales of origin, it seems plausible that if ghostly sailors walk here, there is more than one.

Sandwood Cottage features in the best known of these tales. The legend is that on stormy nights, the ghost of a sailor would knock on the cottage windows. This bears out in the tale of one old fisherman who spent the night in the cottage after spending a day helping in the gathering of a friend’s sheep from the bay. Prior to it becoming a wreck, the cottage was frequently used as a bothy for men working in the area. The fisherman was awoken at midnight by the sound of his dog barking. He heard the sound of footsteps approaching the cottage followed by a knock at the window. Looking up, he saw the bearded visage of an old sea salt peering in. The fisherman went to the door to see who it was and what they wanted. Only, upon opening the door, the mysterious figure had vanished. The last straw for the fisherman happened not long after during another stay at the cottage, when he woke up to feel an ominous presence in the room with him.

A shepherd passing the night in the cottage after a hard day’s work was perplexed when he heard the sounds of heavy footsteps in the room below just after he had gone to bed. He got up, dressed and went downstairs to see whom it was; puzzled as he had been convinced he was alone. However, a full investigation revealed there was no one there. Campers taking shelter in the ruined cottage in later years have reported subsequent experiences. Two were kept awake all night by the sound of stampeding horses. Some of these hauntings have been linked to the spirit of an old Australian who had fallen in love with the cottage after spending a fishing holiday there. Following this, he returned as often as he could, taking his final trip a short time before his death in Australia. Locals believed that his deep love of the cottage caused his spirit to return after he died. The Australian had a predilection for wearing sailing clothing and clomping around in heavy boots, which was used to explain the heavy footsteps heard by the shepherd after he went to bed.

In 1967, two English tourists were looking at Sandwood Bay through their binoculars, when they saw a tall man standing just outside the cottage. The two women started walking towards him, but by time they got there, the figure had vanished. Curiously enough, Andrew Green described the ghost as being an impressively tall six feet six inches tall in one of his guides to haunted Britain – just a little taller than the average Scotsman is!

Other stories explaining the appearances of a ghostly sailor range from it being the spirit of a Polish sailor who died in a shipwreck, to a Spanish sailor from an Armada wreck. This certainly fits in with the varying descriptions of what the apparitions wear. Some have seen a man in a tricorn hat, others, a man in a reefer jacket. It all makes Sandwood Bay seem a little like an ethereal sailors’ retirement home. There are many reports of the apparitions being encountered away from the cottage. Several decades ago, a fishing party from Kinlochbervie, nearby town, were sailing in the bay when they saw a large figure standing on the dunes of the beach. A ghillie went to investigate, thinking it was a poacher, but found the area empty, with no signs of footprints nor any other evidence that someone had been there.

Perhaps the most eerie experience occurred when a father and son ventured further than usual with their trusty old mare to collect firewood for their croft, and spent a day gathering up driftwood in Sandwood Bay. It was getting dark, so the pair were about to head for home when they noticed their normally placid horse was incredibly unsettled. Out of nowhere, a large sailor, resplendent in a beard, appeared on the beach beside them. Both men were agape as the irate sailor ordered them to take their hands off what didn’t belong to them and leave his property. The men dropped everything and ran.

Therefore, if you ever find yourself in Sandwood Bay, it may be wise to heed the ghost’s wishes and treat the place with the respect it deserves.

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Car Accident Caused by UFO…?

January 31st, 2013 No comments

First it was the guy who claimed a ghost was responsible for stolen items appearing in his basement, then the dude who said that a ghost beat his wife, now it’s this. Two men in Australia are saying that their car accident happened as a direct result of chasing a UFO. Is there a checkbox for “chasing UFOs” on the insurance claim? So, they were driving around in the woods, crashed their car, and claimed to be chasing aliens. Surely they must’ve been completely clean and sober to make such astounding claims, right? Let’s read and find out…

australian car crash caused by UFO

My artistic rendition of what the entire scene must’ve looked like.

Two men, who walked away from a car crash on the back roads around Wivenhoe Dam, claimed to be chasing an alien space craft when found by police.

Police and the driver’s insurance company received several sketchy phone calls from the men, who appeared to be convinced “something paranormal” caused the crash west of Brisbane.

Police received the first call from the men at 2.25am Friday, saying they had been in an accident at Split Yard Creek and asked for the RAAF to attend.

The men continued to “freak out” in series of calls, in one instance telling RACQ Insurance they were about to disappear and referred to the area as the Bermuda Triangle, according to police.

When police arrived and discovered the men armed with knives about 4.10am, the car’s driver was breath-tested and was allegedly over the limit so was and given a notice to appear in court.

Oh. Guess not.

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Supernatural Supermarket: Prices so low, they’re six feet under!

March 29th, 2012 No comments
scary groceries

Picture by Federico Chiesa

Residual energy of dissatisfied shoppers long past, aisle 4.

One IGA supermarket in Brompton, Australia is feeling the cold chills this week after capturing what they feel is paranormal activity on three of the store’s surveillance cameras.

VooJuice

VooJuice: A tropical witch-doctor who loves to put curses on his prey. The TV ads in the UK & down under for Fruit Winders (roll ups) showed a fruit with a face being "winded" by a villain.

The footage shows a box of fruit roll ups being flung from one aisle over, through the bow tie pasta, into its neighboring aisle. This occurrence is purported to have happened at 11:30PM after the store has closed and is not the first of its kind. A similar incident supposedly occurred with a pack of digestive biscuits. Shoppers at the store also report a heavy atmosphere in the store.

My guess is that it’s just the spirit of crazy old VooJuice all bent out of shape cause he couldn’t find the roll ups with the tongue tattoos. Either that or he was mad because all they had in stock was strawberry flavor, which cuts up your tongue like Sour Patch Kids if you suck on them too long. I could be wrong though.

The current owner of the store was warned when he bought the store a little over a year ago that it was haunted. Some speculate that these mysterious events could be linked to the death of world-famous boxer Bora Altintas, who was shot in front of the store in 1998. A bullet hole from the attack is still visible inside the phone booth where Altintas was shot. Others claim that the video is a fake, generated to publicize the supermarket and drum up business. Whatever the case, with 90,000+ views, IGA’s security footage has gone viral and viewers are eager to believe.

The Adelaide Paranormal Detectives have been called in to verify the footage and investigate the store. At this time, the team believes the video to be genuine and thinks they may have gotten some EVP phenomena, but in the absence of definitive proof their search is still classified as an ongoing investigation. They have not yet been able to recreate the video, claiming that the box bounces in the video where as they can only get it to land flat.

To read the full story click here.

 

 

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An Awkwardly Obvious Hoax Published in the Local News

December 1st, 2011 No comments

Oh my. What happens when a family wants some media attention, and mixes a psychic who also wants media attention? This hot mess. A clearly faked photo, sleep paralysis being confused for paranormal activity, a small child who sees Santa, and a psychic who declares without a doubt there is a portal in the house where multiple spirits are freely entering? You betcha.

After playing with this picture in Photoshop, I'm pretty sure it's the ghost of Napoleon up there.

WHEN Lavinia Heremaia moved into her home in Point Vernon in the middle of 2009 she knew immediately something wasn’t right.

Despite her feelings she decided to stay in the house and that is now a decision she has come to regret.

It started with Chase telling her about a man he called “Santa” who sometimes came to play with him.

Lavinia didn’t know what to believe – until early one morning she said the supernatural being paid a visit to her room.

The next thing she knew she was lying on her bed, totally paralysed. She could see and hear but was unable to move a single part of her body, except for her eyes.

The psychic medium told the family there was a porthole in Jacob’s room releasing spirits into the home.

Accompanying the poorly written article (where each paragraph comprises of one sentence of what ends up being a disjointed story – disjointed because each sentence is given its own paragraph) is a photo that was apparently taken with a camera phone. But don’t worry – there’s an app for that.

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