>>Cooper also claimed that a flying saucer landed at Edwards Air Force Base in California in the late 1950s, and that there was video evidence of it. The film was quickly, and quietly, whisked away to Washington, where it disappeared,
While it is POSSIBLE that there was “video” evidence of it, I am more inclined to believe that it would have been on film.
Oldest surviving color videotape recording..WRC-TV dedication May 22, 1958
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4vBEMGTdDYc
You mean you don’t “film” with your iPhone?
Me either.
Something strange and exotic landing at Edwards ... gee, Gordo, could it be a test aircraft about which you had no knowledge? Occam’s razor. Just sayin’.
I have long contended that a more likely source of these “visitors” would be anthropologists from our distant future. It makes sense that they would be interested in the early space program. Besides, we can take solace if this contention is really real that at least Erf has a distant future. I would love to see a correlation of these “visitors” with past events that proved to be seminal from a historical perspective.
Love, Cole
According to Wikipedia:
“In 1955 BCE demonstrated a broadcast-quality color recorder that operated at 100 inches per second and CBS ordered three of them.”
So it’s possible.
Me too. Young people today have no understanding of the difference between film and video. My brother and I experimented with very early consumer reel to reel black & white video tape recorders in the 1970s and I purchased my first video tape camera in '80s. Quite a novelty at the time, people often asked if my camera was a sound Super 8mm film camera.