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Octopus Snatches Diver's Camera For Home Movie

Posted April 19, 2010 10:11 AM

From Gizmodo:

Octopuses, it is generally agreed, are the sneakiest, most awesome animals in existence. They have magical camouflaging abilities and can squeeze through teeny holes. The latest octopus rascality: stealing a diver's video camera and shooting an undersea home movie. Updated In this case, the inspired cephalopod borrowed the camera from New Zealand free diver Victor Huang. After a short chase, Huang managed to wrest his camera back from the octopus's suction cup grip and salvage the creature's directorial debut. The octopus joins the likes of Kevin Smith and Quentin Tarantino as filmmakers who learned the craft just from watching some movies on their own, and its film has already become a minor YouTube sensation. Unfortunately, as is the case with many directors, the fame has given it something of a big head. [Animals Don't Think] Update: Victor got in touch with me to clear up that he was free diving, not scuba diving. This is an important distinction for two reasons. 1. Spearfishing while free diving is generally considered to be cool, whereas spearfishing with scuba equipment is not. And 2. He was holding his breath this entire time! I can hardly make it across a pool (the short way) with one big breath; Victor spotted the octopus, chased it down, yanked his camera away, and lived to tell the tale (and upload the incredible footage to YouTube). It just serves to make this great story all the better.Octopuses, it is generally agreed, are the sneakiest, most awesome animals in existence. They have magical camouflaging abilities and can squeeze through teeny holes. The latest octopus rascality: stealing a diver's video camera and shooting an undersea home movie. Updated In this case, the inspired cephalopod borrowed the camera from New Zealand free diver Victor Huang. After a short chase, Huang managed to wrest his camera back from the octopus's suction cup grip and salvage the creature's directorial debut. The octopus joins the likes of Kevin Smith and Quentin Tarantino as filmmakers who learned the craft just from watching some movies on their own, and its film has already become a minor YouTube sensation. Unfortunately, as is the case with many directors, the fame has given it something of a big head. Update: Victor got in touch with me to clear up that he was free diving, not scuba diving. This is an important distinction for two reasons. 1. Spearfishing while free diving is generally considered to be cool, whereas spearfishing with scuba equipment is not. And 2. He was holding his breath this entire time! I can hardly make it across a pool (the short way) with one big breath; Victor spotted the octopus, chased it down, yanked his camera away, and lived to tell the tale (and upload the incredible footage to YouTube). It just serves to make this great story all the better.

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Anonymous Poster
#1

Re: Octopus Snatches Diver's Camera For Home Movie

04/20/2010 9:25 AM

How 'bout THIS:

Octopuses, it is generally agreed, are the sneakiest, most awesome animals in existence. They have magical camouflaging abilities and can squeeze through teeny holes. The latest octopus rascality: stealing a diver's video camera and shooting an undersea home movie...!

Read the whole article

OTHERWISE ... we already DID read the whole article.

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Guru
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#2
In reply to #1

Re: Octopus Snatches Diver's Camera For Home Movie

04/20/2010 10:11 AM

Dear Guest,

I did post all of the text that this article contained, however by clicking "read full story" you got to see a sweet video. I don't see what the hard feelings are for.

-bax

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