Clowns Caught Faking The Final Experiment
Right angle seams detected in the alleged 24-hour time-lapse of the sun in Antarctica indicates that the supposed time-lapse of the sun was actually a fake video rendering.
In a previous post titled The Final Experiment Is Not So Final I explained how an expedition called “The Final Experiment” was sent to Antarctica in December 2024 with the stated objective of proving there is a 24-hour sun in Antarctica. The hope of the expedition leader, Will Duffy, was that establishing that there is a 24-hour sun in Antarctica would disprove the flat earth and in turn prove the earth is a spinning globe. A team of flat earth shills and globe proponents allegedly succeeded in proving there is a 24-hour sun in Antarctica. I revealed in my last article that there was telltale evidence of video manipulation. The Final Experiment was a massive fraud. I write now to bring more evidence of video fakery during The Final Experiment.
The person running a YouTube channel under the nom de plume of Winter Patriot45, discovered a right-angle seam in the 24-hour sun video posted by The Final Experiment, which suggested screen panels forming the corner of a room. Below is what Winter Patriot45 discovered.
I pulled up the same video, but I could not find the seams discovered by WintetPatriot45. Winter Patriot45 and Level Earth Observer discovered that after the seams were publically revealed, the video was altered to remove the seam lines. That explains why I could not see the seam stitches in the video.
Some have claimed that the seams seen by WinterPatriot were the stitching of the two sides of the Insta360 camera used to film the alleged 24-hour sun. If the seam stitches are artifacts from the 360 camera, then the seam stitches are explainable and should have been left alone. If, however, the seam stitches are NOT artifacts from the 360 camera, then there would be a very good reason to alter the video to remove them. If that is what has been done, that suggests that the seams are not stitches but rather reveal something that the perpetrators want concealed. It also indicates that the video is subject to undetectable alteration. That means the video is likely altered and partly a post-production work of art.
When they removed the seams from the video, I got suspicious and decided to do some more investigation. I did my own examination of the video, and I found seams in the blue sky in other parts of the video that they did not remove. Below are screenshots of two glitches in the sky in the video of the alleged 24-hour sun in Antarctica posted by Austin Witsit.
Below is a screenshot enhanced using Corel Photopaint by adjusting the shadow and contrast, so you can see more clearly the corner seam.
Those seams could not be, as some claim, stitched seams caused by the use of the Insta 360 camera because Insta 360 stitched seams are only vertical. The seams in the video are both vertical and horizontal and converge to form a corner, as though the video is being projected from screens within some kind of square facility. It is also possible that the seams could be from software used to create the artificial sky.
In addition, the Insta 360 camera stitch seams should only appear at the joinder of the two videos at the periphery of the lenses. The Insta 360 camera in Antarctica was pointed south toward the mountains. That was the key thing that The Final Experiment clowns wanted in the video. They had one of the two camera lenses pointed south at the mountains. Insta 360 cameras do not put seams in the center of the lens’s field of view.
Will Duffy walked up and looked directly into the camera lens, pointing south. Thus the seams could not be the peripheral stitching from the Insta 360 camera. The seam can be seen cutting across his face. The corner seams cannot be explained as a simple artifact of using an Insta 360 camera.
Software to create an artificial sun, clouds, and shadows in a video is commonplace. For example, Flexclip advertises that “There are several ways you can create a shadow effect to your footage and the most obvious way is using the sun to cast a shadow onto your composition. However, natural sunlights are unpredictable, so the best option is to use shadow overlays for post-production. Here we’ll offer you a simple and quick [for] you to achieve this shadow effect using an online video editor. Let’s dive in!” There are dozens of powerful software programs within reach of everyone to create a fake sun with fake shadows.
Autodesk Autocad offers a sun simulator. “A special light is available to simulate the effect of sunlight or moonlight. It can be used in conjunction with sky simulation to provide a dramatic background and show how the shadows cast by a structure affect the surrounding area.”
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Creating a real-looking artificial sun and sky complete with shadows is child’s play with the software available today.
That software can be used to project a scene in massive LED screen studios.







Great finds! Thanks, Edward!!