Audio track of the "sixth Jerusalem UFO video" contains evidence of sloppy home studio post-production, much like the "video 4". This proves the audio wasn't genuinely recorded on the scene, but pieced together with audio production software. In other words the video is a hoax (if someone had doubts). Audible "breaks"The first thing you notice is that there are sudden changes in the ambient noise at various spots. Often the noise characteristics abruptly change a moment before someone says something. Typically this means a noisy sound clip with the speech was inserted at that spot. The actor(s) recorded their "lines" one by one, and they were inserted at appropriate moments on the video. One example is at about 25 seconds from the start. To make it clearer, I've used a frequency equalizer.
There is clearly a sudden increase in the noise level just before the shout. Another example is at the end part, about one minute from the start. The level of noise suddenly goes down for a fraction of a second. This kind of effect typically results when an audio clip is appended in the end of existing audio. The default setting is often to crossfade the clips in order to create a smooth transition. The end of the original clip is faded out, and the beginning of the new clip is faded in. In the middle there can be an audible drop in the output level. More about this "end clip" below. Repeating identical clip
The most conclusive proof is that the end clip starting at the above mentioned "break" is repeated identically near the beginning, about 10 seconds from the start. The repeated audio clip contains noise, but with some recognizable features: a 6khz beep and a series of clicks. You can hear some difference because the audio is cut'n'pasted from several clips and there is another track of noise in the background. However they clearly share a common component. ProofIt's possible to prove that the beep and clicks are an identical, common component of the two clips. The simplest way is to subtract the second audio clip from the first. If there is an identical component, it will cancel out, i.e. disappear from the resulting audio. What remains is the original background, on which the beep-click clip was pasted on. So here is what happens if we subtract the end part clip from the beginning (at the exactly right offset, level adjusted). The 6 kHz beep and clicks disappear. The only way two sounds can cancel each others out is that they are identical - not similar, but exactly identical. This could never happen with two "naturally produced", different sounds.
This is conclusive proof that the audio track was
pieced together from separate clips in a home studio, and at least one of the clips was used twice.
(c) 2011/04/16 pouko(at)touko.cjb.net |