Krystal Washington added her entire video clip on YouTube of the cloudy guy-figure walking in the clouds. The evidence is clear: the show's production added the walking "shadow man": Krystal never filmed horizontally, nor did she use the zoom. Her full video shows nothing at all walking on the clouds. When the production enhanced the video, they not only turned it horizontally, they also zoomed and added a blurry walking cloud man.
A woman presents a clip of a cloudy dark figure of a man seemingly walking in the clouds. A similar figure appears to be disappearing into the clouds' thicket, to the right, when the clip starts, like a pattern that was configured in length not spread wide enough, and repeated itself onto the final print.
Thermal imaging cameras prove nothing: blurry shapes on a camera are no proof that anything appeared in real life, since their so-called apparition is---this time---invisible to the naked eye, and no objects are moving either.
In U.K., a peculiar clothing rack in someone's backyard is seen moving wildly with no apparent wind. The thing is on a metal pole, which is buried in the dirt. A mole or other underground critter is evidently burrowing under there. Yet the so-called experts are quick to decry that, without offering any logic for their words, nor any concrete evidence.
There's no such thing as a dybbuk box in Jewish folklore. It was made up with a viral eBay listing in 2003.