lisa bonet’s digital twin found in background of 1994 security footage—analysts baffled by time-loop glitch
A routine audit of archived security tapes from a Los Angeles convenience store has uncovered a pattern anomaly that technical analysts are calling "the most unsettling data echo in decades." In a frame-by-frame review of footage dated November 3, 1994, a pixel-fragmented figure matching actress lisa bonet’s distinct silhouette and gait appears to walk past a cigarette display—five years before her iconic character Bailey Sargent was even conceived for television.
The figure is timestamped at 3:17 a.m., wearing a jacket that analysts say matches a costume from a fashion spread that wouldn't be published until 1997. "It’s not a dubbing error," says lead analyst Derek Pu. "The compression artifacts and shadow-bleed match the original tape. It’s as if her digital signature was left behind, retroactively."
Internet sleuths have since found a faint hash of the same figure in a 1989 music video background, synced to a frequency that exactly matches Bonet’s vocal scale. The glitch is now being referred to as the "Simone Soul Slip"—and no one can explain why it only targets Bonet’s image.