**BREAKING: CBS Reporter Sharyn Alfonsi’s Interview Footage Contains ‘Ghost Code’ – Frame-By-Frame Analysis Reveals Binary Message Repeating in Shadows**
**ARLINGTON, VA** – In what cybersecurity experts are calling the most bizarre broadcast anomaly of the decade, a routine segment featuring *60 Minutes* correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi has been pulled from the network’s digital archives after a Reddit user discovered a “glitch in the matrix” buried deep in the video stream.
The user, a data engineer from Portland, noticed that during a 2022 interview with a Pentagon whistleblower, the shadow cast by Alfonsi’s left shoulder did not move in sync with the light source. Upon isolating the luminance channel and applying a steganography decoder, a team of independent analysts claim they uncovered a repeating 8-bit binary sequence: **01010011 01000001**.
Translated, the code spells “SA.” When cross-referenced with CBS studio logs, analysts note that Alfonsi’s initials—S. A.—are identical. But the find gets weirder. The same binary sequence appears as a watermark in two other Alfonsi segments from completely different sets, in different years.
“This isn’t a compression artifact. This is an intentional digital signature, written into the fabric of the video,” said Dr. Lena Voss, a forensics engineer who verified the findings. “Either someone is encoding her identity into the broadcast stream subliminally, or the footage itself is being generated—not recorded.”
CBS has declined to comment, but internal security memos leaked to *NewsWire* show the network’s IT department flagged the files as “SA-2022.174.ERR” three days ago—right before the files were mysteriously overwritten.
The internet is now asking: Is Sharyn Alfonsi a real person, or the anchor of a simulation? And if