EDIT: Mark Rober just admitted that some of the footage was inauthentic and the bait package was picked up by friends-of-friends, in exchange for money. This is why I labored the point at how much these people look like regular people. Read More: https://www.toyotatruckclub.com/forum/threads/glitter-bomb-video-footage-faked-video-edited.356007/
Like so many people in this day and age I'm the victim of petty theft. That's why I, along with millions of other people find the "Package Thief vs. Glitter Bomb Trap" video to be very satisfying to say the least. Finally we can feel like we're getting back at these people who have stolen our belongings.
However, just what type of person is this?
I watched the video very carefully and in slow-motion several times to see what we can learn about the people depicted in this video. Honestly, they look just like you and me, just have apparently decided to go down the path of stealing other people's property. Pretty sad.
The faces are blurred, but are there other clues that can help us understand who these people are? Looking at the scene when the woman who tosses the package into the garbage ... which she very arrogantly demands the package get out of her house (who brought it in?) ... there's a very interesting observation on the side of the one of the trash bins and written on the front of another, that unfortunately gives the location of this recording away.
Look at the Trash Bins!
On one of the trash bins, there is an identification mark and phone number that plots this house in Pittsburgh, California. This is a huge break as it takes a state of nearly 40 million people and instead gives us a target of a small city of 60k people. This is where we can can start here to enter their world. Then, if you look at the bin in the background, her house address numbers are written on it in white ink or chalk. What? Really? The video shows the address that she's at, which she claimed was her house?
Pause the video at 7:50 to see. The house address number is written in white lettering on the trash bin in the back ground. Do a simple google search and you'll find the house.
I didn't post the video, and I'm not posting the address. I don't know who lives in the house, who owns the house, if this person is a renter or a homeowner or just a visitor (although she does say that it's "my house" when she goes to throw out the device). I'm just pointing out that the people in this video are people just like you and me and might live next door to us.
Like so many people in this day and age I'm the victim of petty theft. That's why I, along with millions of other people find the "Package Thief vs. Glitter Bomb Trap" video to be very satisfying to say the least. Finally we can feel like we're getting back at these people who have stolen our belongings.
However, just what type of person is this?
I watched the video very carefully and in slow-motion several times to see what we can learn about the people depicted in this video. Honestly, they look just like you and me, just have apparently decided to go down the path of stealing other people's property. Pretty sad.
The faces are blurred, but are there other clues that can help us understand who these people are? Looking at the scene when the woman who tosses the package into the garbage ... which she very arrogantly demands the package get out of her house (who brought it in?) ... there's a very interesting observation on the side of the one of the trash bins and written on the front of another, that unfortunately gives the location of this recording away.
Look at the Trash Bins!
On one of the trash bins, there is an identification mark and phone number that plots this house in Pittsburgh, California. This is a huge break as it takes a state of nearly 40 million people and instead gives us a target of a small city of 60k people. This is where we can can start here to enter their world. Then, if you look at the bin in the background, her house address numbers are written on it in white ink or chalk. What? Really? The video shows the address that she's at, which she claimed was her house?
Pause the video at 7:50 to see. The house address number is written in white lettering on the trash bin in the back ground. Do a simple google search and you'll find the house.
I didn't post the video, and I'm not posting the address. I don't know who lives in the house, who owns the house, if this person is a renter or a homeowner or just a visitor (although she does say that it's "my house" when she goes to throw out the device). I'm just pointing out that the people in this video are people just like you and me and might live next door to us.