1928 Time Traveler Caught On Film?
Many of you have submitted a story about Irish filmmaker George Clarke, who claims to have found a person using a cellphone in the "unused footage" section of the DVD The Circus, a Charlie Chaplin movie filmed in 1928. To me the bigger mystery is how someone who appears to be the offspring of Ram-Man and The Penguin got into a movie in the first place, especially if they were talking to a little metal box on set. Watch the video and decide for yourself.
Maybe it's a satellite-phone...
Imagine the roaming charges on that call...
People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people
Nuh-uh: "Time traveler w/ cell phone" is the simplest explanation.
Clear not an actual cell phone, but a tachyon communication device that allowed her to communicate with her native time frame. Duh.
Wow. They really should create a separate section of Slashdot for these ridiculous stories.
See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
We just slashdotted the hearing aid museum...
Don't worry!!! She will get hit by a car and Kirk cant save her or else the Nazis will take over.
Watashi wa chikyubutsurigakusha desu.
Completely unimpressive. can't tell if it's a phone or not.
Although, the blue police call box that the person walked in to was interesting. Seemed bigger on the inside than on the outside....
There are some people that if they don't know, you can't tell 'em.
Worse would be the cell phone company's charges. The minutes would certianly be billed under a time 'roaming' plan. But worse, they would be instantly overdue, and with interest and late fees accumulating, a 300 year trip to the past with a quick call to brag about your journey would bankrupt the poor traveler.
Not only that, but his disguise was a woman!
Nope. It's clearly an iphone 4G. See how s/he is holding it!!
Well, we can clearly see that it's not an iPhone 4, else holding it with her left hand would kill the signal.
1. Go to Vancouver or LA.
2. Find a scene that is being shot in some random TV show.
3. Walk by the scene pretending to use some futuristic device.
4. Repeat this several times with different looking "devices", ie polished pieces of dark coloured plexiglass.
5. Wait 80 years...
6. Laugh my head in a jar off when I get the Slashdot brain download that proof of time travelers exist in old footage of CSI: New York.
Tsukasa: All I really want, is to be left alone...
4) She's talking to a hologram of a man from her own time that only she can see and hear, as she puts right what once went wrong.
If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
Yeah, I've always thought that a people capable of time travel would also develop what I see as final evolution of the cell phone: C.A.C.T.U.S. (Colonic Audio Conduction Technology, Ultimately Sadomasochistic), an inter-chronologic audio communication device, in convenient suppository form. It vibrates your colon such a manner that sound waves travel up your spine, resonating the inner ear. It is, unfortunately, quite uncomfortable to wear.
We all know from the Terminator movies that inorganic materials aren't compatible with the time-matrix anomaly--unless they're wrapped in flesh. So, there you go. Billions of future humans are destined to ram CACTUSs up their asses.
Constitutional rights may be respected, repealed, or modified; but they must never be ignored.
Can you hear me now?
Given that it's a time traveler, I'd say, "Can you hear me then?
No, it's obvious, it's been fixed with a sonic screwdriver. Universal roaming, you know.
But I must say the Doctor has really let his standards for Companions slide...
This person has a goddamned time machine, and you automatically assume that her cellphone also requires a tower to get a signal?
Learning about brewing beer, by brewing beer.
Why not, she's got 3000 "anytime" minutes.
If you aren't part of the solution, then there is good money to be made prolonging the problem
No, it wasn't. She's a time traveler, and she's talking into a communicator (to her fellow time-travelers, possibly in orbit) that is disguised as an early model Siemens hearing aid. The time traveler is dressed as an ugly old lady to avoid arousing suspicion.