A lot of the alleged CCTV disappearing animals and people has to do with the type of cameras used. Some cameras have a time delay of a few seconds, where the camera records for a bit then pauses for a couple seconds. When playing back, it appears seamless but the skipping will cause moving targets (people, animals) to seem to disappear when they are simply being obliterated out of vision. Looking closely, the animals outlines can often be seen after they seem to have disappeared, and if the entire clip was played, they would then seem to "reappear". The same is true of CCTVs used in Japan and showing people disappearing in telephone booths etc.
More and more, this production is featuring the same handful of ghost hunters who allegedly are not part of the cast. Week after week, the same contributors are interviewed for 20 minutes at a time while they repeatedly show their footage which does not feature anything paranormal; those people are not sharing video of ghosts, entities or invisible activity, but simply start screaming that they're being attacked by an invisible ghost, and somehow this has become good enough for the production to present to its docile and non-objecting audience.
Many of this show's shared videos have been debunked in Strange Evidence, the TV show of the Science Channel. On Tuesday September 5th 2023 they debunked the video of the woman in England who claimed her dead black cat appeared on her couch seemingly out of nowhere; this was recreated by scientists who proved that it was the change from night vision to regular daytime filming that caused this seeming apparition caused by whatever stuffed toy she had on her couch. Furthermore, the woman was not even looking at the couch when she walked in, and the armrest would have blocked her view.
This show appears to have quit production of new episodes of as of 2022, since there were no new shows filmed in 2023 nor beyond. In fact, the entire Travel Channel seems to be earning subscribers' and advertisers' money out of nothing but reruns: they seemingly have paused production of all shows, and are only presenting reruns of old episodes, week after week, over and over again. Those in charge of programming appear to be saving money by selecting the same dozen or so episodes of the same shows, and present them on a loop, such as is the case mornings with Mysteries at the Museum.
A man presents footage of a small, humanoid-like figure that looks like a projection image, climbing a wall in a cave, which he says he filmed abroad, on vacation. The team at True Paranormal: Fact or Faked debunked it in "Mysterious Saucers and Flying Rods". It was a bat. That cast films a species of bat climbing up a net, and its back looks exactly the same as that man's "figure". Its climbing pattern and movements are also exactly the same as that bat. (That show is dedicated to debunking "paranormal" videos.)