Unless I?ve missed something, all replies to this thread concern black holes hat are not rotating. I may be mistaken, but I believe all stars rotate. When collapsing into a black hole, a star must maintain its angular momentum and in doing so the rotational velocity would be very great, probable in the order of hundreds of RPM?s. The consequence of that would cause the event horizon and the physical boundary of the black hole to be the same at the polar regions, and the event horizon a much greater diameter at the equatorial regions. If one watches someone fall toward a black hole, that person would be dragged along by the holes rotation and begin a long spiraling path towards the event horizon. His velocity would eventually be a good fraction of the speed of light as he whizzes past the observer many times while spiraling inward. At some time he will enter the region where photons are in orbit around the black hole and just outside the event horizon. This region will be very bright, so it is unlikely the person would be visible amid the brilliance of the background. If he could be seen, just before he reaches the event horizon, he will seem to be frozen in orbit and will be visible forever. Space-time, just outside the event horizon, is so distorted seconds will appear as eons to the distant observer. Actually, the person could not be seen as the photons reflected from his body would be so red-shifted by the gravitational force, they will be well within the radio spectrum. You might say he could be heard but not seen.
If one observes an object that is behind the black hole, the photons from that object will acquire energy from the black hole as they move toward it and will be blue shifted. As they pass the hole, they may be sucked in, go into orbit, or lose energy as they pass by. In losing energy, they will be red-shifted. Recall that a photon, unlike a particle having mass, cannot be accelerated or de-accelerated, it always must travel at the speed of light. It can only lose or gain energy.
Due to the black-holes rotation, it?s been mathematically shown that if a star collapses into a black hole it will not be a sphere, but a ring (toroidal) shaped object. It allows the possibility of passing through the center (wormhole).
In regards to the universe not expanding, but collapsing into a singularity: Just the fact that all light from objects at cosmic distances is red-shifted belies that theory.