What exactly do you think needs explaining, Mr O'Meara?
Back in the day you believed the "impossible shadow" was put there to cover up Bill Shelley and you very deceptively used shaky frames from Wiegman to show Shelley was stood behind Lovelady when it was just a double exposure of Lovelady's head.
Then you changed your tune.
In Reply #66 you insisted it was Carolyn Arnold who was being "erased from history" and that her arm could be seen in Altgens 6 shielding her eyes.
"
My proposed solution:
Who does Mr Lovelady point to in the Altgens photograph when he tells Mr Bonafede: "That lady shielding her eyes works here on the second floor"? Why, Ms Carolyn Arnold----------------
Where in the Altgens photograph is she? Why, just below him, shielding her eyes------------------
She's the reason for that ludicrous, physically impossible shadow artificially added down Mr Lovelady's side in the Wiegman film------"You then change your tune again.
This time the shadow is there to cover up the fact Lovelady is wearing long sleeves (Reply #331):
"1. The original Wiegman film showed Mr Lovelady wearing his shirt sleeves rolled down
2. The Darnell film------------which was already out in circulation in the public sphere and so couldn't be messed with--------------showed a man resembling two male Depository employees = a man with his sleeves rolled up, standing on his own near the west wall of the entranceway (=the man we know as Prayer Man)
3. The 'investigating' authorities knew that this man could not be Mr Lovelady; in fact they knew he was none other than Mr Oswald (the suspect who had clearly stated that he had gone outside to watch the Presidential parade)
4. There was only one thing for it: to take out insurance cover for the day someone noticed sleeves-rolled-up-man and said 'Hey, maybe that's Oswald!': turn Mr Lovelady into a credible candidate for sleeves-rolled-up-man (i.e. Prayer Man) by covering up his right arm in the Wiegman film (and getting him to pretend he had worn a short-sleeved shirt that day)"
So here we have Lovelady's arm blacked out so he could be confused with Oswald/Prayer Man (how this could happen when both Lovelady and PM are shown in the same frame you never quite explain).
Then you change your tune again.
Instead of covering up Lovelady's sleeve to confuse him with PM, his sleeve is now blocked out for a very different reason:
"I am suggesting that Mr Lovelady's sleeved right arm needed to be blackened out in Wiegman because they needed folks to believe that they were seeing his unsleeved left arm in Altgens---------when in fact that 'unsleeved left arm' of Mr Lovelady in Altgmens was something else entirely:"So what is this "something else entirely"?
"In a nutshell, I believe this is the right arm (and coke) of Prayer Man"So the arm in Altgens has, according to you, gone from belonging to Carolyn Arnold shielding her eyes to Oswald enjoying a coke!
"What exactly do you think needs explaining, Mr O'Meara?"To use someone elses phrase - this is what needs a 'log of 'splainin':
You have insisted the arm in Altgens 6 was Arnold's and then Oswald's arm holding a coke. How, then, can you explain that the arm in question has the check pattern on it we see on the rest of Lovelady's shirt:

A mundane explanation of this would be that its the sleeve of Lovelady's shirt. That's why it seems to be connected to his shoulder and is the same pattern as the rest of his shirt.
I can't wait to hear what your explanation is
