Menu

angle_3

Fact check: Did Morocco really honor Yassine Bounou with a drone show?

A drone tribute celebrating goalkeeper Yassine Bounou after Morocco's World Cup campaign has been widely shared online. But what does a closer look reveal?

Publié Temps de lecture: 2'
Fact check: Did Morocco really honor Yassine Bounou with a drone show?
DR

Since this weekend, videos showing a spectacular drone light show honoring Morocco's goalkeeper, Yassine Bounou, after the Atlas Lions' World Cup campaign have flooded social media. The footage shows hundreds of people gathered near the coast, phones raised to the sky as dozens of drones recreate Bounou's portrait alongside the words «Thank you».

The videos quickly spread across social media and were relayed by several Arabic news outlets. They were even shared by Moroccan media, with Le Matin posting the footage on its social media accounts under the caption: «Fans pay a vibrant tribute to Yassine Bounou».

At first glance, everything seems perfectly plausible. But a closer look begins to tell a different story.

The first inconsistency lies in the video's supposed location. The earliest versions claimed the drone show took place in Rabat to welcome the Atlas Lions after their return from the World Cup. Soon afterwards, identical footage began circulating with captions placing the event in Safi, before another version relocated the same spectacle to Casablanca, complete with the Hassan II Mosque in the background.

Three different cities. Three different locations. Three supposedly different events. Yet despite these changing settings, the footage itself never changes.

The clues hidden in plain sight

The crowd remains exactly the same from one version to another. Hundreds of spectators hold their phones at precisely the same angle, while every phone screen displays the exact same frame of the drone show from the exact same perspective. If these were separate events, or even different recordings of the same event, the crowd's movements and the images visible on the phones would naturally vary. Instead, they appear to have been duplicated.

The drone show itself also bears several hallmarks of AI-generated content. Rather than displaying the slight imperfections normally seen in real drone light shows, the drones move with an unusually smooth and perfectly synchronized motion, giving the sequence the appearance of a computer-generated animation rather than a live aerial performance.

The videos' duration provides another clue. Almost every version circulating online lasts exactly 15 seconds. That is not insignificant: many AI video-generation platforms limit free users to clips of up to 15 seconds before requiring a paid subscription for longer videos.

Finally, perhaps the most telling detail is what is missing. Despite the hundreds of people supposedly gathered to witness the drone show, only a single sequence of the spectacle is circulating online. No alternative recordings from different spectators, angles or distances have surfaced. For an event of that scale, attended by a crowd with hundreds of phones raised in the air, the absence of any independent footage is highly unusual.

Taken together, the spectacular drone tribute to Yassine Bounou never lit up the skies over Morocco. It existed only on screens.

Soyez le premier à donner votre avis...