Archival research, source tracking, and public documentation

LOL SUPERMAN

A clean research hub for the alleged lost 9/11 media known online as “LOL SUPERMAN”, a disputed piece of World Trade Center plaza footage said to depict jumper impacts and related aftermath. This site documents the claim, the timeline, public leads, misidentifications, and community research without sensationalising the victims.

What is this?

LOL SUPERMAN is a long-running lost media claim connected to 9/11 internet history, shock-site rumours, archive gaps, and memories of footage that may have circulated briefly online.

The Claim

The alleged clip is commonly described as plaza-level footage from the World Trade Center during the September 11 attacks, reportedly showing extremely graphic scenes involving people who fell or jumped from the towers.

The Problem

No confirmed public copy has been authenticated. Many leads involve dead links, old forum posts, shock-site memories, mislabeled videos, repost chains, and clips that are similar but not definitive.

The Mission

This site exists to organise what is known, separate evidence from rumour, preserve research trails, and give newcomers a responsible place to understand the search.

Research without the fog machine

The search is not just about one missing file. It is about early internet archiving, broadcast custody, FOIA material, file-sharing culture, forum folklore, and how traumatic events mutate through memory.

Every lead should be handled with a paper trail: where it came from, who claimed it, what it shows, what it does not show, and whether it can be independently checked.

Suggested research sections

Track reported sightings, forum mentions, archive captures, uploads, deletions, and major community developments.

Collect FOIA records, broadcast references, old web leads, witness claims, and known misidentifications.

Document false leads, AI fakes, unrelated clips, and hoaxes so the same rabbit holes do not keep eating everyone’s boots.

Community links

Research guidelines

This topic involves real people, real deaths, and living families. Keep the work sharp, but keep it human.

  • Do not contact victims, families, witnesses, survivors, or private individuals to pressure them for information.
  • Do not present rumours, memories, or anonymous claims as confirmed evidence.
  • Do not upload, fabricate, enhance, or circulate fake “finds” for attention.
  • When discussing graphic material, use warnings and avoid sensational language.
  • Credit researchers, preserve source links, and clearly label speculation.

Help document the trail responsibly.

Found an old reference, forum post, archive capture, broadcast lead, or correction? Submit it with context, dates, links, screenshots, and what you think it proves or does not prove.