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RB 70
Nature on PBS
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Comments by "RB 70" (@RB-bd5tz) on "Nature on PBS" channel.
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That is not a theory; it's a fantasy.
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The video is completely fake.
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It's all staged. Watch it closely and you'll see the seafloor keep changing, as well as the distance of the spy octopus to the real one in the tube. The most obvious clue is the suckers sticking to the glass at 2:57.
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You can stop crying, and get angry instead because these documentary producers are lying to you. This video is a bunch of clips stitched together according to a script. Much, if not all, is filmed in an aquarium (see the seafloor keep changing, and the suckers stick to the glass at 2:57).
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Relax; it's in an aquarium - check out how the seafloor keeps changing, and especially how the suckers stick to the glass wall at 2:57.
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There is a ton of evidence in this video that it was, indeed, created - according to a script. But the video creator wasn't perfect, though, because if you look carefully and think critically, the fakery is quite obvious. (By the way, I know what you really mean.)
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It's a robot.
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They're "interfering" in the sense that the whole video and story are set up according to a script. At least some of it is filmed in an aquarium.
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Correct. You shouldn't believe it, because it's fake.
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Sorry; this video is staged. The octopus that brought the coconut is a robot, and the whole video is various footage edited together according to a script.
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Sorry; octopuses don't hug. It was an exploratory gesture. The whole video and story is fake. You can see at 2:57 that the octopus is in an aquarium; its suckers stick to the glass.
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It didn't; it's all staged. Some of this is inside an aquarium. Note how the seafloor changes all the time, how the spy octopus is suddenly far away from, and then near, the real octopus in the tube, and how the suckers on the real octopus's nearest tentacle stick to the glass at 2:57.
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Then it's a very, very good spy octopus. (Hint: it's a robot.)
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They're not interfering with nature; this video was faked in an aquarium.
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Octopuses don't understand "thanks." It was an investigative gesture.
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Relax. There's evidence throughout the video that it's fake. The seafloor randomly changes, the robot octopus keeps changing distance to the real one, and the real octopus's suckers stick to the aquarium glass at 2:57.
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