Overview
Day 1
Day 2
Day 3
Observation period: 2 days
Start Date: 2026.04.14
End Date: 2026.04.16
Record: 2 times
| Zone | Element | Observation |
|---|---|---|
| A (Exterior) | Dimensions | Rectangular form factor, approximately 30cm × 15cm |
| B (Surface) | Material | Hard plastic outer sleeve, condition suggests protective housing |
| C (Cover Text) | Inscription | Gold lettering: "Candida than have to have point that‘s why is candy" |
| D (Interior) | Core Media | Charlie and the Chocolate Factory DVD |
| E (Contents) | Attachment | "Golden Ticket" insert (Status: Extracted from casing after Day 1) |
Over a two-day observation period, we documented the initial discovery and subsequent spatial alteration of a media storage artifact found in the 1111 Building (3rd floor, Room 304). At initial acquisition, the specimen was deliberately positioned vertically on the whiteboard marker tray, indicating an intentional display. The artifact features a pseudo-English gold inscription on its plastic casing. During the second recorded observation, it was noted that the core thematic insert—the "Golden Ticket"—had been extracted and removed from the site. The primary plastic housing remains, but the original owner has not been identified.
The specimen was discovered during a studio session in Room 304, 3rd floor, Building 1111 — positioned vertically against the whiteboard marker tray as though placed with intent. No owner was present. Documentation was approached with care, given the possibility that the owner remained nearby. During the attempt to photograph the artifact, the vibration of the approach proved sufficient to disturb its balance; the specimen fell and came to rest on the floor. This unintended displacement established a new positional baseline. Any subsequent disturbance to this resting state will constitute evidence of external intervention. The specimen has been left in situ.
On Day 2, noting that the artifact remained unclaimed, a more intrusive examination protocol was initiated. Exercising a higher degree of intervention, the observer directly interacted with the specimen, manually inverting it to assess its surface features and reverse side. This physical inspection conclusively identified the object as a media casing for the franchise Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
Following external verification, the casing was unsealed to conduct an internal audit of its contents. Inside, two distinct components were discovered: a standard optical disc and a thematic paper insert replicating a "Golden Ticket." Post-examination, all contents were strictly preserved — the insert and disc were re-inserted, and the casing closed. The specimen was meticulously restored to its exact fallen position from Day 1, with the explicit intent of allowing the original owner to retrieve the item fully intact.
Upon returning to the site on Day 3, the observer noted an immediate deviation from the established baseline. The specimen had shifted from its restored fallen position: the casing now lay fully open on the floor, its contents partially exposed. Preliminary visual assessment indicated a disturbance consistent with deliberate human intervention.
On arrival, the casing was found displaced from its baseline position — fallen, partially open, contents exposed. Upon inspection, the Golden Ticket was absent. The disc remained. It is unclear when the removal occurred or by whom. The observation is hereby concluded.