HISTORY LOVERS - before you comment, be sure to subscribe to this KZbin channel and ring the notification bell so you never miss a future upload!
@SweetChicagoGator4 ай бұрын
Already subscribed. Beautiful story !! 🤠
@JMG05904 ай бұрын
What a great man to listen to
@Loiyaboy4 ай бұрын
What an intelligent, interesting, grounded and articulate man he is, to say nothing of his accomplishments. Just a joy to listen to and know he and people like him exist. I wish we all had those qualities
@Jedward1084 ай бұрын
Amazing how vital this guy is! He was like 88 years old when this was recorded!
@rebeccacorbin15903 ай бұрын
I'm 63 and am older than he is in this video.
@gecko-sb1kp4 ай бұрын
I've always loved 'Rusty' as an Apollo astronaut. I think he got a raw deal. I love Apollo 9 and the fact that he backed out the hatch and tested the ladder and the Apollo moon suit above earth. NASA had a lot of astronauts to get onto flights back then. But I think 'Rusty' should have flown again on Skylab at least...
@johnkem26304 ай бұрын
Rusty is a hero to humanity. Thank you for your contributions to the military & Apollo missions.
@brodricj30234 ай бұрын
What a great interview. I found his comments about Apollo 8 being more historically important than Apollo 11 very interesting.
@ShawnKirch3 ай бұрын
Chris Kraft said the same thing in his book years ago. Despite the significance of Apollo 11, Apollo 8 broke MUCH more ground especially considering it was the FIRST time that people flew aboard the Saturn V
@stephenpage-murray72263 ай бұрын
Agree with him.
@Nghilifa4 ай бұрын
Fantastic interview, Russell "Rusty" Schweickart is a remarkable individual indeed. Thank you so much for sharing this with us.
@jgrokoest24194 ай бұрын
Just learned Jim Lovell of Apollo 8 & 13 is on assisted living home at age 94 (?). His wife, Marilyn, passed about a year ago. Fun guy!!!
@marcom.19193 ай бұрын
I could listen to Rusty all day! I love this man!
@eb-pe8xg4 ай бұрын
This is an amazing interview and long over due. Rusty Schweickart giving praise to the crew and accomplishments of Apollo 8 speaks volumes to his character.
@bernhardkaltenboeck98943 ай бұрын
Absolutely astounding profound interview. Rusty’s lucidity at 88 years of age is amazing. Very few in their 50s or so would come close in the depth of thought.
@shirleybewley66464 ай бұрын
Wow! Loved this interview. What an awesome man! Glad he shared!
@dahawk85744 ай бұрын
One of the most profound astronaut experiences ever. I am glad that From The Earth To The Moon portrayed Rusty's epiphany in a way that feels so in line to this story directly from him. The actor they cast did an excellent job of capturing Rusty's look, and more importantly his humility. Finding a fighter pilot who is humble is said to be near impossible. Rusty is a role model. Rusty sent his daughter to the Waldorf School in Sacramento, Ca. Go visit that campus on the edge of the American River to get a more complete sense of just how unique Rusty Schweickart is. Then take another look at his official Apollo portrait in how he grew his hair out freely, while others kept their crewcuts. Rusty is a Free Spirit. And he was the perfect representative of the human race... or as he so eloquently explains here, representative of all life on Earth, all consciousness on our planet, to have those precious 5 minutes. Along with the rest of the awe inspiring EVA, and other profound moments from his one and only spaceflight. Rusty is not like any of the other astronauts. Another place you can visit to get a much more complete sense of just how different he is... you can go visit Esalen. Esalen is a place that can be understood as a capital for the most enlightened human beings among us. Also in California. Also adjacent to serene water. The Pacific Ocean. Rusty was an instructor there. He is a person who has developed his full potential in so many dimensions. One of the greatest astronauts ever. One of the greatest human beings ever. And a key aspect to that greatness is the completeness of his humility. It keeps so many from recognizing just how special Rusty Schweickart is. Thank you for posting this profound interview. I fully agree that the most historic event was Apollo 8. The highlight most everyone thinks of is Earthrise. But the singular moment of that mission in my mind was early on, not long after TLI when they were able to look back on Earth to see it as a whole sphere. They were the very first human beings to ever go beyond Low Earth Orbit. The first of only 24. Throughout all the hundreds of thousands of years of human existence. Only 24. But the real jewel all along is Earth. So he probably knows that he had the best seat in the house. The only astronaut to do an EVA around Earth during Apollo.
@dahawk85744 ай бұрын
@@thejerseyj5479 3 x 9 = 27 The number of seats is exactly correct. And my number of 24 human beings filling those seats is also exactly correct. A conclusion that 27 different men filled those seats is an error. The obvious explanation as to why is because 3 of them went twice. Lovell, Young, Cernan. 8&13, 10&16, 10&17. Now of the 24, there are three of them who did something special as well. A grand total of 3 astronauts have ever done a Deep Space EVA. A spacewalk where you could see the whole Earth, turn your head, and see the whole Moon. These were: Worden, Mattingly, Evans on 15, 16, 17. The LMP was designated as safety observer. And this could be seen as the better job. No tasks to do, you could sightsee the entire time. They only poked their torso out of the CSM, never leaving it entirely. These were: Irwin, Duke, Schmitt. These last 6 had one of the most unique experiences ever. I have never heard it described with the magnitude that Rusty describes his EVA experience. In my imagination, it must be far more powerful. Or maybe it was felt as extremely scary. Was it an eerie surrounding of blackness? Or gloriously surrounded by stars? I've never heard any of the six describe the event with a richness of detail sufficient for me to imagine being there myself.
@dahawk85744 ай бұрын
@@thejerseyj5479, Now I will quibble with you for saying _"ONE OF THE_ world's most exclusive clubs." Hah. If anyone can let me know of a more exclusive club, then I'm all ears. Raquel Welch's husbands? Hmm, only 4 there.
@bobcastro93863 ай бұрын
@@dahawk8574 I got to interview Ken Mattingly by telephone and his description of the intensity of the blackness of space contrasted with the infinite (in human terms) brightness of the sunlight co-existing within the same volume of space was truly unforgettable. I will dig out my handwritten notes to refresh my memories.
@anlerden48514 ай бұрын
Thank You so much for your service and lovely dedications to Our Beautiful USA Dear Older American Sir.🙏
@cshubs3 ай бұрын
This is arguably the most important page on YT.
@johnnyallred37534 ай бұрын
Cool interview with Russell "Rusty" Schwickart Apollo 9 Lunar Module Pilot.
@southend263 ай бұрын
I could listen to Rusty a long, long time. Really proud to be an American like him.
@soukainalaoui2 ай бұрын
😂
@donb11833 ай бұрын
Wonderful interview from a great man. Apollo 9 had one of the best Apollo crews, a tight knit group. Rusty, may you live longer and prosper
@LilYeshua4 ай бұрын
As a boy during WW2 my dad carved wooden bombers out of cedar with sewing pins for machine gun barrels and hinged bombay doors made of tin and rotating propellers of carved cedar as they flew practice maneuvers overhead. As a boy during Vietnam A4s would buzz my parents house. Very exciting.
@michaelbrown19594 ай бұрын
Stunning!
@robertbudnik33183 ай бұрын
What a magnificent man!
@AvengerII4 ай бұрын
I remember looking at pictures of Apollo 9's mission in a book I read a long time ago -- when I was really into the US space program. I always felt Apollo 9 had some of the most spectacular shots of the entire program. There were shots of David Scott and Schweickart performing EVAs but the single most impressive shot was of the Lunar Module -- "Spider" -- inverted like it was going to dive to Earth! Schweickart didn't mention this (that I heard) but Apollo 9 was the first mission since Gemini 3 (christened Molly Brown for dark humor reasons) were the vehicles had nicknames. They had to do this because you couldn't call both vehicles Apollo 9 and make it understood which vehicle NASA was communicating with! I regret bringing this up "Gumdrop" and "Spider" sound like names a 5-year-old would come up with! LOL
@hugolindum77284 ай бұрын
I’m not sure the hatch was the main problem. At that time they used an 100% oxygen environment with flammable materials. Any spark would lead to the whole thing being an inferno in seconds.
@jefreagan4 ай бұрын
We can’t even get to orbit properly these days. The MAIN reason we succeeded in the 60s - 70s is because of these extraordinary, talented and steadfast men. They overcame problems that we don’t know anything about to make those missions successful. We would be hard pressed to find men like these in today’s society.
@nicholasrice86934 ай бұрын
You have no clue what you are talking about… we throw stuff up there every damn day.. guys like this are still around. Quit letting people convince you that everything is awful now.
@StefanMochnacki4 ай бұрын
@@nicholasrice8693 You are right, but what Rusty is talking about was done getting on for sixty years ago. It was accomplished quickly and effectively without the fantastic tools we have now. As for Apollo 8, not only was it the first human excursion into space beyond low Earth orbit, it was incredibly bold (first manned flight atop Saturn 5, first human flight to the Moon, only the second spacecraft to return to Earth after going around the Moon, first to return after closed Lunar orbits). This truly was a "space race" which Apollo won. The Soviets were having trouble with the Proton rocket and the Soyuz 7K-L1 spaceraft (N-1 was way behind). Zond 5 (14-21 Sept. 1968), was meant to be crewed, but carried tortoises. It successfully looped around the moon, and despite various problems, it landed and was retrieved from the Indian Ocean. Another uncrewed test, Zond 6 (Nov. 10-16), crashed on landing and killed its payload of turtles. The cosmonauts, led by Alexei Leonov, tried very hard for the next flight to be crewed, but the cautious Soviet leadership opted for another test, Zond 7 (Aug. 7-14, 1969), which was fully successful, but again carried turtles and performed photography. Of course, by then Apollo 11 had landed on the Moon. The CIA knew what the Soviets were doing, and this apparently strongly influenced the decision to send Apollo 8 to the Moon when it became obvious that the the LEM was not ready for its first tests in LEO (carried out later by Apollo 9, on which Rusty flew). Had the Soviets been better organised, perhaps if Korolev had not died earlier, Alexei Leonov would be remembered as the first to command a spaceship beyond Earth and not Frank Borman. It would have been a stretch, and Proton never did fly humans (just as well!). But then "Earthrise" would not be a Bill Anders photograph but an Alexei Leonov painting ;-)
@josephmarkey90963 ай бұрын
@@StefanMochnacki Agreed. Even on todays terms its daunting what was achieved. The Russians at that time were no less sophisticated or competent in many ways. They were just not good enough!.
@ebkjug3 ай бұрын
Cap weve never been out of our atmosphere.
@wimkuijpers13423 ай бұрын
@@ebkjug What do you mean?
@Mike-bh7sh3 ай бұрын
I wish the American Veterans Center would do these as audio podcasts. I can't watch videos and work, but many times, I could listen.
@Paul1958R4 ай бұрын
Russell Schweickart is the youngest living flown Apollo astronaut. He is 88.
@philrabe9104 ай бұрын
11:15I was 7.. We lived across the state and all my friends dads were involved with the Cape, or Honeywell, GE, etc.. Best friend's dad worked on the Shuttle program almost till the first launch.
@65gtotrips4 ай бұрын
He looks remarkably like Clint Eastwood in some camera angles.
@williamblair95973 ай бұрын
This man's generation had some very exceptional individuals.
@1936StudebakerАй бұрын
Apollo 7,8 & 9 all need more love. Imagine being on Apollo 7, the next manned mission after your friends lost their lives, wondering if your redesigned command Module is going to light up like a roman candle. Apollo 9, flying the LM in space for the first time, would it even fly and remain stable? Apollo 8, what can you say, First manned Saturn V to be manned, no dress rehearsal in low earth orbit, straight to the moon hoping that physics was right and the moon would sling shot the command module around the moon and get them on a course back home, Ballsy stuff!
@davidg21224 ай бұрын
Wow, why haven't I ever heard this man before?
@jshepard1524 ай бұрын
Probably because he didn't make it to the moon and there were many Apollo guys who did.
@jgrokoest24194 ай бұрын
Oh by the bridge is a couple of blocks from North American on Imperial. LA Div is where we had the B-1 mock-up! Wonder if he is one of the astronauts who came to see it?
@hellskitchen100363 ай бұрын
From Neptune to the Moon !
@gerrittenberkdeboer77633 ай бұрын
very sympathic
@jgrokoest24194 ай бұрын
Love the North Anerican planes
@petersearls44433 ай бұрын
Yeah but they stole money from the employees in the IT department.
@Graptor914 ай бұрын
What can you say to someone who's already pierced the heavens and returned to us mortals?
@tuckerh5774 ай бұрын
God isn't real
@Jv95694 ай бұрын
@tuckerg9577 you certainly look like the type to believe so.
@Graptor914 ай бұрын
@@Jv9569 ease up on this guy, I'm sure Tucker here is just angy that his stream thot didn't thank him for his monthly dono
@tuckerh5774 ай бұрын
@@Jv9569 you can't even see me properly and how's that
@tuckerh5774 ай бұрын
@@Jv9569 "Do not judge, or you too will be judged" in Matthew 7:1
@b43xoit3 ай бұрын
Compared to the cosmos as a whole, the Moon is just a sliver of space away from Earth, and the Moon is about is far as the human species is ever likely to get.
@dks138274 ай бұрын
where was this interview ?? thanks.
@DamonHiner4 ай бұрын
What you talked about intergalactic future travel a century ago
@ARC1701A3 ай бұрын
"Planet Earth is blue...and there's nothing I can do...." - from Major Tom by David Bowie
@Goalsplus4 ай бұрын
First unemployed man in space!
@Biiri-oc8ti3 ай бұрын
Buzz Aldrin walked in space in Gemini.
@SatchPersaud-sm1gc4 ай бұрын
Is he the one who they kept telling to come back in over and over??
@jshepard1524 ай бұрын
You're probably thinking of Ed White on Gemini 4.
@jsfbr4 ай бұрын
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
@Sonic_fan19804 ай бұрын
I know so much and it was so bad and sad
@to88604 ай бұрын
Why would youtube put a warning on this video?
@FYMASMD4 ай бұрын
Blockhead moon landing and round earth deniers.
@sincereflowers32184 ай бұрын
Extra context in addition to throwing a speed bump in the way of misinformation.
@cyn78694 ай бұрын
@@sincereflowers3218If he isn’t espousing a flat earth theory then why bother? “Misinformation” is code for censorship and cowardice. If it’s factually wrong, then present your facts. It’s not rocket science.:)
@sincereflowers32184 ай бұрын
@@cyn7869 Exactly, that’s why they presented the Wikipedia article, which states the fact that the earth isn’t flat 😊because we know for a fact that it isn’t.
@MuddieRain4 ай бұрын
🤔🤔🤔
@1joshjosh13 ай бұрын
This guy wasn't the first to space walk anywhere. That was done by a Russian. Russia was first.
@petersearls44433 ай бұрын
It said he was the first Apollo astronaut to spacewalk and he was.
@davidbottles30353 ай бұрын
Rusty, it is quite simple. In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth and all living things.
@yomommaahotoo2644 ай бұрын
LOL - No one has gone beyond low earth orbit (a couple hundred miles up), as if well over half a century of no one going beyond low earth orbit isn't enough of a clue.
@jshepard1524 ай бұрын
This is the argument you make when you don't understand why we went to the moon in the first place.
@yomommaahotoo2644 ай бұрын
@@jshepard152 I KNOW we never went to the moon. You go ahead and believe your cartoon fairy tale anyway....everyone needs a religion.
@VenturaHighwayman4 ай бұрын
@@yomommaahotoo264and just what proof do you provide that every country ever put someone on the moon are all in on a crazy space conspiracy
@cardboard91244 ай бұрын
proof?
@yomommaahotoo2644 ай бұрын
@@cardboard9124 ENDLESS proof, one being there is ZERO independent evidence of humans breathing 5psi and under of pure O2 for days and weeks at a time. Next.....
@veramae40983 ай бұрын
I couldn't stand this.
@NoremacOktik3 ай бұрын
Apollo moon landings stages fools. Go to Apollo Detectives for 85 videos proving it.
@stephenpage-murray72263 ай бұрын
All absolutely stupid
@wimkuijpers13423 ай бұрын
They talk everything that is crooked into straight and vice versa.
@stephenpage-murray72263 ай бұрын
@@NoremacOktik Silliest nonsense on the internet.
@petersearls44433 ай бұрын
You need to look at little closer at the sources you are believing. It is an undisputed fact that we went to moon 6 times where men landed and returned.
@stephenpage-murray72263 ай бұрын
@@petersearls4443 And installed EASEP, ALSEP and LRRR.
@chapagawa4 ай бұрын
I thought you were in a studio. How can you do a space walk on the ground?
@jshepard1524 ай бұрын
You thought wrong.
@stephenpage-murray72263 ай бұрын
Utter stupidity
@toddrinchko78164 ай бұрын
Tell him to put his hand on the Bible and swear it happened
@dtmrstp21534 ай бұрын
Asks someone who beliefs in the biggest lie in history. Who are you to question this mans integrity anyway?
@bryanfrombuffalo76854 ай бұрын
They never went to space...and never will ...u cant
@bryanfrombuffalo76854 ай бұрын
@dtmrstp2153u can believe in space all u want ...u can believe they called bin laden as well...I seen a movie about it...must b true bro😂😂😂😂
@piratescoron4 ай бұрын
Anyone in 2024, thinks it didn't happen is frankly a blind idiot. How do you think today we have photographs in recent years of what was left on the moon from apollo. Take the blindfold off and look at the undisputed evidence
@xandervk23714 ай бұрын
What's so special about swearing on a Bible, and does a stack of Bibles work better than just one?
@the_flat_earth_warriorz3 ай бұрын
Sure 😂😂😂😂
@wimkuijpers13423 ай бұрын
Get lost with your stupid emojis and I think you have Anosognosia.
@GurzaDog4 ай бұрын
The earth is flat
@sincereflowers32184 ай бұрын
No one asked, but the laws of physics would immediately collapse a flat plane into a ball shape. All other planets are spheres for this reason.
@shanesmith7344 ай бұрын
Explain eclipses, time zones, why other planets are OBVIOUSLY round, and why gravity ALWAYS causes massive object to collapse into a BALL. Then again, you're a moron. And that's not up for debate.
@GurzaDog4 ай бұрын
@@sincereflowers3218 the other planets arnt real lol, nasa is just using their budget to project things onto the firmament
@GurzaDog4 ай бұрын
@@sincereflowers3218 lol there’s no such thing as “other planets” nasa is using their budget to project things onto the firmament
@GurzaDog4 ай бұрын
@@sincereflowers3218 and gravity isn’t real it’s literally because of density and earth moving up
@Leg-xx5md3 ай бұрын
What is worse than the devil's sellout puppets? the sheep who worship them.