*snip*
What's interesting is that I filmed a documentary in a "haunted" house a year and a half ago. The guy has had his house (it's a haunted house attraction) on lots of shows - local, national, and international. He said that every camera crew had their batteries drain in the house. Even some local kid filmed an interview with him and had problems.
Uhh, this guy is running a show. No matter how much he calls himself a skeptic (and if I had a buck for each woowoo who has called himself a skeptic.....), he has a vested interest in perpetuating the myth that something strange is going on in that house.
Mine didn't. He was surprised and said that I was the first person to film in the house to not have any problems at all.
Yeah, he couldn't very well claim that your battery ran out when it didn't, doh!
I dismissed him at first because I didn't know him, but after having remained in contact with him since that documentary I have come to realize that he is very, very skeptical about the things that people tell him about the house or what he himself experiences in the house.
No, he TELLS you he is skeptic, but he still tells those stories.
He thinks that some kind of electrical interference or something like that is the cause of the batteries draining (not anything paranormal.)
No apart from the very powerful transmitter mentioned, no electrical field could do this. AND, where are the hot batteries?
Which is why I asked.
Which is why I answered.