Inexplicable, yet a Fact
Inexplicable, yet a Fact was a popular TV show on TNT.
Content
Video
Videographically, the TV show features a roughly even blend of footage recorded originally and short sequences of shots from motion pictures. For this reason, Inexplicable, yet a Fact has featured a large number of films from experimental to mainstream, with the heavier inclusion of the Qatsi trilogy, Mondo cane, and BBC documentaries.
Stills showcasing themes of narration are also present.
Audio
Inexplicable, yet a Fact features a bed of a roughly even blend of popular music and tracks from production music libraries.
Release
The anthology television series Inexplicable, yet a Fact was shown on Russian TV channel TNT.
The title was translated as Inexplicable, but Factual at the Stalker Human Rights Film Festival in 2009.
Impact
Inexplicable, yet a Fact is among the earliest pseudo-documentary projects on the Russian television and has influenced several similar projects on other Russian TV channels: Fantastical Stories, Cannot Be!, X Files, and others. The series has begun shortly after Syfy's Ghost Hunters, possibly influenced by the success of the series, and before Discovery Channel's A Haunting. Inexplicable, yet a Fact, as well as the aforementioned pseudo-documentaries, root in Chariots of the Gods (film), with Inexplicable, yet a Fact heavily using the footage and ideas from the film in several episodes.
Criticism
The TV show has spread irrational, superstitious, and pseudoscientific belief in alien abductions, extrasensory perception, astrology, spiritism, numerology, palmistry, and related areas of human activity to the TNT viewers.
Comicality
The active fan-community of the program exists on VK (social network), titled We are laughing at Inexplicable, yet a Fact, which, together with TNT's mostly comic content and comic promotional videos, suggests that Inexplicable, yet a Fact is a parody of related television projects about mysticism, although the show presents itself in a grave, serious manner.