Hey DeathRayDesigner, the YTube link you included with the Michael Hezarkhani video clip is the same video as OP posted. Turn the speed down to .25 and open it up to full screen (I have a 27-inch 4k monitor) and it indeed shows the same situation where the wing disappears behind the far building, confirming that it is a hologram or CGI.
Better yet, it turns out that the building is actually between the camera and the plane, so the wing was actually behind the building. As debunked by an otherwise sympathetic observer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUdMKimP0S8
Not a hologram or a CGI. (It could never have been a hologram.)
Did you view the debunk video? The building was between the camera and the plane, so the wing actually did pass behind the building. You have to realize that when you are viewing things photographed at a far distance, there will be no perceptible distance dimensionality (telephoto lens effect). It will seem like everything is all at the same distance. I used to marvel at this effect when I was a little kid watching football games on television.
Hey DeathRayDesigner, the YTube link you included with the Michael Hezarkhani video clip is the same video as OP posted. Turn the speed down to .25 and open it up to full screen (I have a 27-inch 4k monitor) and it indeed shows the same situation where the wing disappears behind the far building, confirming that it is a hologram or CGI.
Better yet, it turns out that the building is actually between the camera and the plane, so the wing was actually behind the building. As debunked by an otherwise sympathetic observer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUdMKimP0S8 Not a hologram or a CGI. (It could never have been a hologram.)
You aren't serious are you??
Did you view the debunk video? The building was between the camera and the plane, so the wing actually did pass behind the building. You have to realize that when you are viewing things photographed at a far distance, there will be no perceptible distance dimensionality (telephoto lens effect). It will seem like everything is all at the same distance. I used to marvel at this effect when I was a little kid watching football games on television.
Yeah, I'm still not convinced by this video...
Thanks for linking it.