His middle term memory must be getting really bad, he just posted it again:
http://planet.infowars.com/science/moon-hoax-it-is-now-a-fact-video-you-must-see
The very first clip in that movie might be a copyright infringement of the work of Producer/Director Al Reinert, because it looks like it is taken from his movie,
For All Mankind. I can't tell for certain because I can't view both Wintzer's and Reinert's movies side-by-side at the same time, but someone else might be able to do so. The clip in
For All Mankind occurs near the end of Chapter 12, at 0:48:48 on the Criterion Collection DVD I have, thanks to fellow member AJV.
Reinert used the video of Neil Armstrong jumping down to the footpad and then added his "one small step" words immediately after. The real event didn't happen that way. Neil jumped down to the footpad, described what he saw, and then stepped off.
So maybe someone could use this in their discussions with our "old friend," because copyright infringement is a serious offence. I'm sure many of us here wouldn't want him being compelled to answer to the American courts. Furthermore, if it did happen, he would probably blame Phil Plait and JayUtah, which would be a tragedy, a travesty, and just plain wrong. I doubt very much that those gentlemen would wish to get him into trouble when it is so well-known that he has all the talents and abilities required to do it to himself.
Funnily enough, I mentioned Reinert's clip on a New Zealand message board just a week ago when showing people where to see photos of New Zealand's moon rocks from Apollo 11 and Apollo 17. Excerpt below.
Rock from Apollo 11, four tiny slices:
http://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/object/64368 Rock from Apollo 17, one much bigger rock:
http://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/object/64372 Neil Armstrong -- first man to step onto the moon.
Gene Cernan -- last man to step off it.
Jack Schmitt was the last man to step onto the moon and second-to-last to step off it. He and Gene will lose their titles sometime but Armstrong will keep his forever.
Has anyone noticed that news on TV sometimes shows the wrong clip of Armstrong stepping onto the moon? They have pinched a clip from the movie "For All Mankind" which is a highly-edited "single trip to the moon" made up of all the very best TV and movie images, and even mixes the voices of the astronauts. It is a work of art, not a documentary, and shows Armstrong jumping down to the footpad and then saying "that was one small step..." He stayed on the footpad for a while and described what he could see before stepping off.
When he actually stepped off we only saw him from about upper thighs up, and it was just a small motion forward toward the camera, and a tiny bit down.
What most people don't notice is that he was clinging on to a rope for some time afterward in case he plunged through the top of a lava tube just below the surface, which could have killed him. Eventually it proved that the lunar surface was quite capable of holding up all the astronauts, but there could still be dangerous tubes elsewhere.
Any corrections are welcome. There's a small error on the second Te Papa web page about three astronauts on the moon which I'll point out, and will give them the New Zealand times of the events because many people don't know them and there are plenty who say, "I watched the moonlanding live on TV at school..." Meaning on the 20th of July 1969.
No they didn't if they were in New Zealand. There was no satellite TV connection from overseas to New Zealand in July 1969, and the landing and EVA occurred on Monday 21 July 1969, NZST. That's why they were at school. Video of the EVA was flown from Sydney, Australia in a Canberra bomber to Wellington, and broadcast on the 7pm news that night on our one and only TV channel.