In this BBC News clip, a child seems to materialize just behind the woman speaking. WTF. Unfortunately this isn't likely a fun glitch in our simulated reality but rather something with much more insidious potential. From WAXY:
If you watch the woman’s face at the same time the boy appears, you can see her expression morph into a smile.
This technique is known as a Morph Cut, a feature added to Adobe Premiere Pro in 2015, intended to smooth transitions in interview footage, removing unwanted pauses, stutters, and filler words (“like,” “um,” and “uh”) without hard splices and cuts.
The results, when used appropriately in interview footage without a changing background, can be nearly seamless.
It’s likely that BBC News used a morph cut in the clip above to tighten up the interview without changing its meaning. But it’s also ripe for abuse and fully capable of altering the meaning of an interview, and in many cases, undetectable.
Another demonstration of the technology:
Friday, 14 December 2018
Popular Posts
-
Looking for something to illustrate a post about crunch-time in game development, I ran into this video depicting many forms of footwear (...
-
The guest this week on my Cool Tools show is Madeline Ashby . Madeline is a science fiction writer and futurist living in Toronto. Her mos...
-
The Sound Archive posted a 1930s-era recording of a conversation in a British pharmacy . The received-pronunciation chatter isn't quite ...
-
"Come and play with us, Danny... for ever, and ever, and ever." The bigscreen adaptation of Doctor Sleep , Stephen King's 201...
-
Kosmic is the first human to beat Super Mario Bros in 4 minutes and 55 seconds , a time so good it is less than a second slower than the b...
-
Writing in Marker, David Gauvey Herbert gives us an extended-play version of China's legendary bank-robber, Ren Xiaofeng, a bank officia...
-
Created as a stop-gap to save undocumented migrants from getting killed by cars on Interstate 5 near the San Diego area border with Mexico,...
-
Christopher Ferguson, an off-duty cop in Algood, Tenn., going 20 miles over the speed limit, will not be inconvenienced after ramming into ...
-
Martin from Antique Typewriters writes, "The Alexis typewriter is the result of a small town inventor with the desire to design and m...
-
In the course of any day, we encounter many different audio environments. If you are wearing earbuds, the ambient noise level can affect you...
Powered by Blogger.