As the article points out the evocative "pyramid shaped" wording is the phrasing of the UFO enthusiast to describe what most people would call "triangular" or even "stealth bomber shaped".
Whatever it is it's not likely being flown by Ancient Egyptians, or coming from Atlantis or anything.
mick west posted a pretty convincing case for this being "bokeh balls" created by presumed (but unproven) tape anti-glare measures on the front on the lens.
The exact quote is “The two shapes are basically the same”, and to me “shape” is isomorphism, not orientation. But I guess it could simply be a matter of interpretation.
> You can see that the orientation also appears the same.
I think you misunderstand me. I agree with this. I just said that the video did not explicitly mention orientation, which would have, I thought, strengthened its point even more.
INTRO. As a 'construct' the UFO, AAV, UAP is well met in our current media culture. You're lucky to get one image, of low quality, for only a few seconds/frames, and it begs of us to believe the most outlandish claim.
BACKGROUND. Artists who are real craftsmen (craftspeople) develop techniques which are extensions of their repetitive work and practice. Like a master baker who rolls the squishy dough into a croissant shape before baking. For the artist, mistakes are an expression of the form. The measure of the artist is their ability to "speak" to others through the language of their medium.
In contrast the scientists among us apply rigor, repetition, and skepticism over the foundations of the scientific method--ideas are true and remain true only so long as they are not demonstrated false.
SIDEBAR. Recall the recent historical/procedural flick Grayhound (2020) depicting US Navy confronting German U-Boats during the Battle of The Atlantic (1939-1945). More than once we are reminded visually, viscerally, to 'remember your training'.
SCENE. Lacking the focus of life or death, I imagine a young Navy crewman all of 18 repetitively performing their duties, and quite unexpectedly "discovering" the "bokeh balls" effect on their own. Now a master artist needs to recreate the image again and again, but a bored seaman? He only needs to capture lightening in a bottle once. A-HA. And put this footage in the hands of a social media savvy youtuber, and you have a conspiracy theory or internet-meme. haha.
EPILOGUE. And in the hands of the artists and scientists again, you have debunking videos. And finally, after all this explication, a you-th might be inspired to create new forms of entertainment special effects. True memetics.
Whatever it is it's not likely being flown by Ancient Egyptians, or coming from Atlantis or anything.