There is a ton of footage. To the Skeptic they will never believe it though.
Some more weird stuff not sure what it is.
Thanks again for the videos. The first one wasn't at all convincing. Horribly pixellated images made it difficult to discern anything confidently. It never ceases to amaze me that people who publish these allegedly impressive images are invariably using 2MP cameras, and seem to all be epileptics LOL. No telephoto lenses? No tripods? No 24MP cameras?
Incidentally, the white "USO" in the water was obviously a circular 12" diameter polystyrene float caught on a trawling line by its tether. They're used by fishermen the world over to mark their nets.
The second video was also pretty unconvincing. When viewing footage of multiple lights in the sky at night, as in the first part, one has to dismiss all the possibilities before blindly accepting it as evidence of UFO activity. The couple in the car did not do this even at a basic level: she just immediately screamed out that she didn't know what the lights were. Also interesting that none of the other vehicles passing by bothered to stop, probably because they knew they were landing lights mounted on a small fleet of helicopters (military?) flying in loose formation.
The second part was also unconvincing. The two alleged "lights" in the sky looked like silvered weather balloons at different distances from the cameraman. This is a more than common error of observation, particularly amongst people who've never seen a weather balloon before. Note also that neither "light" moved relative to the horizon. It was only when the cameraman zooms upwards towards a clear sky that they started to "move" (and we couldn't see the horizon for reference). This is exactly the effect you get when you pan the camera. I'd even say this is probably a deliberate fraud.
The third part of the video showed—at various zoom ratios—another silvered and largely deflated weather balloon descending to earth on atmospheric thermals. As they commonly do. The nearly-empty, distorted balloon is also rotating slowly on its vertical axis due to the weight of its equipment tether at its base.
So..... as a skeptic, I'm gonna need one hell of a lot more convincing for me to take these sorts of videos seriously.
Incidentally, the first video's take-off of the old
Twilight Zone TV series was a total wank, and only served to weaken the claims it was making. Stupid, and hardly scientific LOL.
[EDIT: 12' diameter changed to 12" duh]