Article  The rise and fall of parapsychology

#11
Syne Offline
(8 hours ago)Magical Realist Wrote:
Quote:No, you're still just that gullible. I didn't say "fictional," I said "more fiction." Learn to read.

Learn to quit lying. There is no "more fiction" in documentaries. It's all based on facts (eg non-fiction). You're done.

Like I said, gullible. Filmmaker bias obviously does make the presentation of some topics less factual (e.g. more fiction).
I'm really not surprised you can't understand such a simple fact.

Several acclaimed documentaries have been proven false, misleading, or heavily staged, often by withholding data or fabricating scenes to support a narrative. Key examples include "Super Size Me" (hidden alcoholism), "Mermaids: The Body Found" (mockumentary), and "2,000 Mules" (debunked by investigation).
- Google AI

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#12
Magical Realist Offline
Spinning the narrative doesn't make a documentary fictional. That's true for all presentations, even the evening news. Take Blackfish for example, which presented the horrible conditions and treatment of orcas in Seaworld. It promoted a compelling moral position yet it was still all facts and not fiction. Documentaries are always based on facts and are not fictional.
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#13
Syne Offline
I gave you examples. If you still can't comprehend, that's on you.
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#14
Magical Realist Offline
Documentaries are always based on facts and are not fictional.
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#16
Magical Realist Offline
Documentaries are always based on facts and are not fictional.
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#17
Syne Offline
Yes, keep telling yourself that.
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