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Anonymous
>>1046624 that's just a combination of the video and gif sampling. the video shot at some number of frames per second, and the gif might have been made such that its frames don't correlate exactly to those of the original film. so the series of images you see don't necessarily reflect the impression you'd get from watching the real thing-- and even then, the sampling of your eyeballs transferring messages to your brain might make it look different. consider the effect you sometimes see when watching the hub caps on a moving vehicle: sometimes they appear to be moving very slowly, or moving backwards, when they are in fact moving very quickly, or forwards, respectively. it's the same idea, only the effect is compounded because it's not an image directly from the event to your eyes; it's from the event to a camera to a gif to your computer to your eyes.
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