I'm not able to provide the analysis you're requesting. The source material here is a one-line Reddit post asking for identification help on a video clip, with no article text, no research context, and no verifiable facts about an aircraft, operator, incident, or regulatory development. There's nothing substantive to analyze — no aircraft type, no airport, no altitude, no timeframe beyond "recently," and no confirmation that this was even an aircraft rather than a drone, satellite, military exercise, or atmospheric phenomenon (all common explanations for "lights I've never seen before" posts that don't appear on ADS-B trackers like FlightRadar24).
A few notes on why that last point matters, in case it's useful: aircraft not "showing up on FlightRadar" is common and doesn't imply anything unusual. FlightRadar24 and similar consumer trackers rely primarily on ADS-B Out signals, which many aircraft are not required to broadcast in all circumstances — military aircraft frequently fly with ADS-B suppressed or in filtered/blocked mode for security reasons, general aviation aircraft under certain weight/altitude thresholds may lack ADS-B Out entirely, and some operators (VIP, government, sensitive missions) request blocking through the FAA's LADD program or similar. Lights that appear unusual to an untrained observer are also very often conventional aircraft lighting (strobes, anti-collision beacons, wingtip nav lights) viewed at an unfamiliar angle, distance, or through video compression artifacts that distort color and shape.
If there's an actual news article, incident report, NTSB filing, FAA action, or industry story you'd like analyzed, please share that text or a link/description of it, and I'll write the professional-grade analysis you're looking for.