Yesterday, they did something very interesting. Following a close downhill race, the reshowed it with both competitors going down the course at once. That way, you could compare their descents and see where one got the edge over the other- perhaps getting around a certain gate. And for much of the recasting, they overlapped each other, which isn't surprising since it was a very close race- the difference being measured in hundreds of a second.
I have tried to find a clip of these clever recreations but haven't succeeded. Apparently, they're not available online. But, in watching them, it reminded me of what I maintain was done in this footage.
The Lovelady figure was not there. He was filmed separately, and the clip of him was embedded into the original. It was the merging of two videos.
I don't say it was done the same way they did the video merging yesterday of the skiing. But, it was definitely done.
Nothing is right about that guy. His very presence doesn't make sense. He was just a warehouse worker who was brought there- with many others- to make a statement. And he had very little to say. He didn't claim to see anything. He heard some explosions which sounded like firecrackers to him, and that was about it. There is no way they would have placed him alone deep in the heart of the detectives' bureau.
It would have been very difficult for the big cop and Oswald to even get by him. They don't show how they did it. They would have had to go around him or jump over him, and it's preposterous to think he would have just sat there and done nothing to get out of the way. What I'm saying is that he would have realized that he was in the way, and he would have gotten up and gotten out of the way. It's only human nature to do that.
Look at this closeup with him taken out:
Can you see that there was no room for him? That his presence would have caused the whole procession to swing out to the left, that the whole line would have been disrupted, deviated, and displaced? It's just too crowded; too impossibly cramped. And wouldn't the cops have wondered what he was doing there? I should think that somebody would have asked him. And I damn sure think that somebody would have looked at him and synced on him for a moment. They would have had the thought: "What is this guy doing here?" and that thought would have been accompanied by a glance, a look, a momentary stare. But, it never happened. He just gets ignored. It's like he wasn't there. HE WASN'T!
Even his coloring isn't right. Look how the shadow overlaps the table. What's causing him to be so illuminated?
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