The Last Moon Landing: Why Did We Stop Going To The Moon? | Apollo 17 | Spark

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Spark

Spark

Күн бұрын

The remarkable story of the determination and courage of a generation. A tribute to three brave astronauts and the thousands of men and women behind them during the final days of NASA's Apollo program.
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Пікірлер: 8 400
@dtmjax5612
@dtmjax5612 3 жыл бұрын
I was living and growing up on the Space Coast during the Apollo program. An Air Force brat, my father was stationed at Patrick AFB just south of Cocoa Beach. I remember watching Apollo 11 lift off with my Mom standing in our front yard. A couple years later for 17 we had a car pass to get out on “Three Mile Road” to watch the night launch up close and personal. After several delays and us beginning to doubt it actually going up...they finally lit the candle just around midnight. The brilliance of that miniature sun that Saturn 5 emanated when it lit was phenomenal. Forever emblazoned in my minds eye. What an incredible few years to be a middle schooler growing up when and where I did.
@gulliblemuppetsheep135
@gulliblemuppetsheep135 3 жыл бұрын
Wow that is amazing, I don't think there is one single Utd fan that is from Manchester.
@carolynedwards2689
@carolynedwards2689 3 жыл бұрын
Then, why did they tell that lie about, not having enough fuel to make it back to Earth. I was 17 years old then and when they were supposedly communicating back and forth, this is what one of, the Astronauts said. Why would he say that?.
@stuartmcgovern4466
@stuartmcgovern4466 3 жыл бұрын
@@carolynedwards2689 do elaborate?
@ArizonaJewell
@ArizonaJewell 3 жыл бұрын
Man, what I would give to see a Saturn V launch in person! The most powerful rocket ever made, and over 50 years later, NO currently operational rocket has surpassed its awesome power. I became a bit of a space nerd about a year back and I’ve watched livestreams of Falcon 9 launches, SpaceX’s Starship test flights, and me and my girlfriend watched the livestream of the Perseverance rover landing on Mars together. We were nearly crying when we heard “Touchdown confirmed, we’re safe on Mars.” With how amazing it was watching livestreams, I can’t even begin to imagine how amazing it would be to not only see a rocket launch in person, but to see a Saturn V launch.
@OverRun666
@OverRun666 3 жыл бұрын
@@gulliblemuppetsheep135 one right here, bless ya
@richardterhune3450
@richardterhune3450 27 күн бұрын
My father was one of the many engineers that worked on the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo projects, he worked on instrumentation and the rocket engines, testing the engines, and all of this while they were still writing the book and figuring out to make it all work.
@Deniszey
@Deniszey 3 жыл бұрын
For one priceless moment. All the people on this earth are truly one ☝️. That was the most powerful statement of the era.
@markbeames7852
@markbeames7852 3 жыл бұрын
Nixon. These days, Nixon looks benevolent compared to "The Former Guy."
@kayjay592
@kayjay592 4 күн бұрын
Yep! Yet they are lying trying to make you believe they never went back after 1972 because the public had no interest! First of all, and most importantly, the government has never in history required the public's interest to determine how they spend the federal budget. The public have never had that power, to vote on where funding goes. *NASA IS CLEARLY LYING ABOUT WHY WE HAVE NEVER BEEN BACK!*
@kayjay592
@kayjay592 4 күн бұрын
Yep, yet the government wants you to believe they stopped going because it wasn't in the publics interest!
@Emy53
@Emy53 Күн бұрын
Weren't we still in Vietnam? We were supposed to be doing so much for mankind, but we were still in Vietnam.
@RedShift112
@RedShift112 3 жыл бұрын
'we're all just on a big spaceship and we'd better get along'
@RamsesReturns
@RamsesReturns 2 ай бұрын
How do we all get along when we have evil controlling freaks with a goal to enslave humanity?
@guillermohoffmann8417
@guillermohoffmann8417 Ай бұрын
obviously the generation that came right after them and all the people up until now didn't give a damn to those inspirational words...
@terencejay8845
@terencejay8845 4 жыл бұрын
We were in Wales on holiday for the moon landing. Dad got us out of bed to watch it. Only a couple of other people in the hotel bothered to get up. Looking back, it was a major moment of my childhood. I also watched one of the last Space Shuttles take off from Cape Kennedy, another awe-inspiring sight, especially when the massive wall of sound hit you! They stopped going because it was diminishing returns at huge cost. It was said at the time that had the moon been made entirely of pure gold, it still wouldn't have been cost-effective to go and get it.
@thomaskositzki9424
@thomaskositzki9424 4 жыл бұрын
I wish I could have experienced the Apollo Program. Good thing Elon found a solution to the mentioned problem. ^^ Greetings from Germany
@mw8653
@mw8653 3 жыл бұрын
Two things I regret not doing taking a flight on Concorde and seeing a shuttle take off my girlfriend saw a shuttle launch and said it sounded incredible and made the ground shake must have been an awesome sight.
@terencejay8845
@terencejay8845 3 жыл бұрын
@@mw8653 My brother, who I watched the Space Shuttle launched with, was an RAF pilot, and he did a 'job-swap' with British Airways. He took a BA Captain up in a Harrier, and Steve got to take Concorde up past Mach 1. So he did both! (And he met John Lasseter, the Toy Story director, on the flight )
@mw8653
@mw8653 3 жыл бұрын
@@terencejay8845 What a lucky guy to experience that, my brother lived in Penzance round about 7:00pm most evenings you would hear a dull thud bit like distant thunder it was Concord breaking the sound barrier as it was speeding up to cross the Atlantic. I also remember as a teenager seeing a space shuttle flying piggy back on a jumbo jet, The jumbo was banked over so you could see the shuttle flying slow and quite low. I was on the beach in St Ives Cornwall am pretty sure if flew right around the UK coastline to show off the yet to fly Shuttle.
@terencejay8845
@terencejay8845 3 жыл бұрын
@@mw8653 I recall the Shuttle on the Jumbo! Flew over Stockport. What a sight.
@tuttt99
@tuttt99 3 жыл бұрын
I had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Cernan back in the late 80's. He had an office in a building I went to several times a week for my job. Very modest and unassuming. Always had a kind word or a friendly hello. RIP Captain. You will be missed.
@rockethead7
@rockethead7 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I met him a bunch of times also. He was the perfect speaker about Apollo. He was always able to fine-tune his answers for whatever person/people he was speaking with. And, he had a remarkable ability to read people, and intuitively knew exactly what level of detail to go into. For the people with less engineering knowledge, he would make the answers more simple. But, if you were a major techie, he could speak at a very deep engineering level about how everything worked. It's funny, a day or two ago, I was just looking at a photo of me, my wife, and Gene Cernan together. I was just laughing a bit because he had his arm around my wife in that photo, which was his personality also (he gravitated to the ladies as much as the ladies gravitated to him... but, yeah, in a friendly way, not creepy). Once upon a time, I very nearly bought his personal Corvette that he was selling. It was blue, and I believe it was a 1974 model, if I recall correctly. But, I already had a few Corvettes, one of which was a 1972, and didn't need another one so close in year/model. So, I passed up on the chance.
@TowGunner
@TowGunner 3 жыл бұрын
I never had the honor of meeting Gene Cernan but I have a fond memory of watching him, Frank Reynolds and Jules Bergman on WABC back in 1981 broadcasting the first launch of Space Shuttle Columbia. I distinctly remember Cernan’s awe-inspiring description of the sunrise seen from space.
@ilovecops6255
@ilovecops6255 3 жыл бұрын
HE IS A WORLD CLASS LIEAR!
@tuttt99
@tuttt99 3 жыл бұрын
@@ilovecops6255 Shut TF up, bootlicker!
@ilovecops6255
@ilovecops6255 3 жыл бұрын
@@tuttt99 LOL! The dont has Turbo Fan TF ENGINES. iTS IS A SOUPERSONIC NOZZLE. WHAT universityy did youe fluink out from...LOL!!!!!! Cernan = KING KONG seized LIARS just loike YOUE is! tuttt99 Highlighted reply tuttt99 18 hours ago @i love cops Shut TF up, bootlicker!
@CNSninja
@CNSninja 4 жыл бұрын
My mom has explained to me how literally unbelievable it was to be a kid and watch actual human beings walking around on the moon each night on TV, and I almost can't fathom what that was like for her, a child so full of wonder at the time. I can sense her sense of wonder about it, even after all these years, and I can enjoy it vicariously, through her, but to be a kid in the 70's and watch people actually walking on the very same moon we see in our sky each night is just so far outside of my grasp. What a profoundly, indescribably awesome thing that must've been to experience. I think, as someone who was born after all of the biggest moon missions, the moon landings are something that I kind of necessarily take for granted. I was never alive at a time when humans hadn't done that yet, and had only walked on one body in this solar system. I only hope that one day I'll get to experience a similar step in tech evolution, and get to watch people walk on Mars for the first time, so I can know what that sort of astonishment and wonder is like. I'll never get to do that as a kid, so it'll be a different experience for me than it was for her, but it's as close as I think I can probably get to what she described experiencing with the first moon landing.
@freddyferrillo9704
@freddyferrillo9704 4 жыл бұрын
Sorry you missed it. I'm sorry a lot of youngsters missed it. If they could've just been there at that moment; they would realise how spoiled-rotten and stupid they are in todays world. That's all I got to say. And nobody will ever change my mind.
@freddyferrillo9704
@freddyferrillo9704 4 жыл бұрын
@Steven Thompson : That's your opinion and your entitled to it. But I don't see nothing "clearly faked." Your just repeating what others say. You're being a parrot! I've been hearing people say that since the 80,s. But nobody can ever prove it. And they can't ever explain what part is fake. They try. But then there is always somebody with an explanation. I watched these moon missions live in 1972. I was 8. Nobody thought it was fake then! Not the Russians, not the Chineese and not The rest of the world. And Russia and China still never claimed that these missions are fake! Even today. You would think that these two powerful Countries would come up with evidence that PROOVES America faked the moon missions? But nope! Nothing! So actually; I think your foolish making a claim like that with 0 proof. Other than conspiracy! Pfft.
@supertramp6011
@supertramp6011 4 жыл бұрын
Nick C you will never see anyone walk on Mars. Or the moon. Unfortunately,neither did yoyr mum.
@trevorallen8514
@trevorallen8514 2 жыл бұрын
@@freddyferrillo9704 not saying I believe it was real or fake but if technology has advanced 100 times what it was in 1980s why can't we go to the moon now ? They say the technology they had at the time was somehow "lost" even if it was lost with the technology we have now we should easily be able to put man on the moon . What's your thoughts on that ?
@BeachcomberNZ
@BeachcomberNZ 2 жыл бұрын
@@trevorallen8514 They built atomic weapons in the 'primitive' 1940's, without even the tech of the Apollo era. Yet, even now, with all the tech and knowledge of the 21st century at their disposal, it's almost impossible for other countries to make atomic weapons of their own. The scientists and engineers of the Apollo era weren't uneducated, unskilled, thickos, they were the best of the best, which is why they were able to achieve what they did, especially since they had virtually unlimited funding and the backing of the whole of America's industrial and technological might behind them. Given the same circumstances, we could have gone back to the Moon easily, and probably gotten to Mars years ago, as well.
@blaviken7743
@blaviken7743 3 жыл бұрын
I can clearly see these guys had the most fun on the moon.
@markbeames7852
@markbeames7852 3 жыл бұрын
They were just jazzed about being there! 🖖
@bean5157
@bean5157 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I love how they were joking around, just having the time of their lives on the moon
@justinwallace8236
@justinwallace8236 2 жыл бұрын
@@markbeames7852 zq151tt¹
@jaypaint4855
@jaypaint4855 3 ай бұрын
John Young and Charlie Duke had quite a bit of fun too
@ahmetmutlu348
@ahmetmutlu348 Ай бұрын
​@@justinwallace8236Yeah fun without ewen caring if their spacesuit may damage from scratches or direct sunlight or whatewer. Todays spacesuits are fragile... and has no radiation protection for that place it seems and how happy they are knowing gas prices are cheap while today nasa wont ewen find the money for gas 😅😮😢 😂 i dont know if its sad or funny 😢😮😅😂
@stclairstclair
@stclairstclair 3 жыл бұрын
My aunt called me over to the TV and said pay attention to this, You're going to want to remember it, Man on the moon, I was born in 66, I don't remember what was on the screen but I'm glad she did that.
@chadunderwood5924
@chadunderwood5924 3 жыл бұрын
Me too also born in 66
@donnahudson2327
@donnahudson2327 3 жыл бұрын
Yes my dad made us watch the first moon landing. I was 8. So glad he made us watch it. Grateful.
@禁煙犬
@禁煙犬 3 ай бұрын
👽「Don't ever come here again.」
@jaceybenton
@jaceybenton 22 күн бұрын
I hope this is the real reason we didn't go back. The alternative hypothesis that we never went in the first place would break my heart if it were true.
@JohnRaeker-ty8uv
@JohnRaeker-ty8uv 14 күн бұрын
And pick up your trash before you leave 😇
@apersonyoudontknow3346
@apersonyoudontknow3346 7 күн бұрын
Lol😂
@bipolarspock6145
@bipolarspock6145 3 жыл бұрын
Can you imagine what could've been accomplished if spent money on important stuff, instead of the trillions on war? How far could we have furthered mankind ? I remember when I was young everything was supposed to change at the year 2000, for the better, shit has only got worse.
@watchwomanofthedragon8376
@watchwomanofthedragon8376 3 жыл бұрын
They did without us.
@robbarnes9047
@robbarnes9047 3 жыл бұрын
Who the hell told you things would change in the year 2000? Why? Just because if the arbitrary number on a calendar? You, as a now adult, are disappointed that it didn't work out?
@johnlannikk2701
@johnlannikk2701 3 жыл бұрын
@@robbarnes9047 Shit just got worse
@boldsonthongam9464
@boldsonthongam9464 3 жыл бұрын
@@robbarnes9047 He was naive. Aren't we all when we were young? He's just being honest. HOPE bruh! :)
@robbarnes9047
@robbarnes9047 3 жыл бұрын
@@boldsonthongam9464 I agree. I was too. I guess my question is, as an adult, does he not see that he was just being naive? From his post it appears that he is still upset about it. On the other hand, I could be misreading that. It's hard to tell these days.
@peterwiebewall5608
@peterwiebewall5608 Ай бұрын
Slice it any way you want, we simply didn't have the technology in 1969 to send man to the moon, land there and bring them back alive.
@rockethead7
@rockethead7 Ай бұрын
Really? Yet, you can't manage to name the exact technology they lacked? Sorry, saying "technology" as a blanket term just doesn't mean anything. What EXACT technology was lacking? And, why didn't any of the thousands of engineers working on it ever realize that they failed to build things that could do what they were designed to do?
@JohneeTruther
@JohneeTruther 11 күн бұрын
The ____ONLY attempt___ NASA made at putting a man in a vacuum chamber NEARLY killed the guy and the manmade vacuum was at LEAST a million times less than the moon's 1x10-12th TORR. No successful experiment was conducted here on earth under SUPERVISED conditions and yet we are "ready" to send men out into a much more harsh vacuum? Yah...NO!!!
@dannkiim392
@dannkiim392 3 жыл бұрын
That big beautiful blue marble sure looks round to me!! And I love our ROUND EARTH !
@jesusismyking2022
@jesusismyking2022 3 жыл бұрын
@Joseph McCormick aaaaaaàaaaaaaaaaaaàaaaaaaaa
@thegreatone11
@thegreatone11 3 жыл бұрын
It looks flat though.
@jacobfirst2365
@jacobfirst2365 3 жыл бұрын
There are flat earther's all a-round the Globe!
@hughmongous6613
@hughmongous6613 3 жыл бұрын
Tortilla shaped???? Just ask'in...
@TROYUSA1
@TROYUSA1 3 ай бұрын
It’s pear shaped
@papioscarw
@papioscarw 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for a great documentary, so much that I had missed. I was a small part of recovery team. I had fueled the Helo that recovered the men. I also was on the fire watch while the capsule was defueled of the hydrozene. I have met Gene a couple of times again at the Reno air races and he signed a couple of my pictures I had taken of the recovery. One of the high lights of my Navy time. RIP Gene we will miss you.
@eskee1
@eskee1 4 жыл бұрын
Wow that's awesome. Thx for your service.
@ViralVideoMalayalam
@ViralVideoMalayalam 4 жыл бұрын
great
@papioscarw
@papioscarw 4 жыл бұрын
@Mr. Sarcastic I beg to differ with you as I was on the recovery ship that picked up the astronauts. Apollo 17 was the last and July 1973 we were picking up the astronauts from Skylab. I looked for the video you reference and do not find it listed on KZbin. There is no Apollo 20 listed. The last three Apollo missions 18-20 were canceled, At one million dollars a minute played a large factor in their being canceled.
@raullruizz3883
@raullruizz3883 4 жыл бұрын
Its impossible for men to cross the "Van Allen radiation belt"....good night...
@DrMichaelMillerPhD
@DrMichaelMillerPhD 4 жыл бұрын
Robert if you do a little more research you will find out you picked up a “space capsule” 🚀 that was ejected / jettisoned from the back of a C-130 aircraft and had never achieved any time outside of earths atmosphere. I’m sorry Sir, you have been lied to.
@litltoosee
@litltoosee 4 жыл бұрын
I was 19 that year....Im 67 now, and I still get goose bumps when I watch these incredibly brave people who accepted Kennedy's challenge, and did what most thought impossible. I plan to still get goose bumps when American's walk on Mars, led by the vision and drive of Elon Musk, Spacex, and Nasa. What ever we have the vision, drive and bravery to attempt, we can achieve.
@ThomasKundera
@ThomasKundera 4 жыл бұрын
@Cam : Your ignorance is way more impressive.
@ThomasKundera
@ThomasKundera 4 жыл бұрын
@Cam : Tell me in which way I'm gullible. Thanks.
@tomjones239
@tomjones239 4 жыл бұрын
@Cam What`s your level of education?
@tomjones239
@tomjones239 4 жыл бұрын
@Cam My question to you, Professor Van Allen, is this. I have read that you have "denounced" the conspiracy theorists' claims that radiation in the Van Allen belts would have killed the astronauts. I have also seen a quote from you about what utter nonsense the Fox special was. Could you please, if possible, point me to any sources in print or on the web where you have been extensively quoted? If there are none that you know of, and it wouldn't be too much trouble, I would appreciate it if you could reply with a brief statement on the subject. In all my recent studies about the moon-conspiracy theories, the cornerstone of most arguments appears to be that radiation is what makes interplanetary space travel impossible. I feel that there is no person better qualified to debunk this absurd claim (and no one more likely to be taken seriously) than you. Of course, some conspiracists will say that you are in on the conspiracy yourself, but we can never hope actually to convince them. Professor Van Allen's response: Dear Mr. Lambert, In reply to your e-mail, I send you the following copy of a response that I wrote to another inquiry about 2 months ago -- * The radiation belts of the Earth do, indeed, pose important constraints on the safety of human space flight. * The very energetic (tens to hundreds of MeV) protons in the inner radiation belt are the most dangerous and most difficult to shield against. Specifically, prolonged flights (i.e., ones of many months' duration) of humans or other animals in orbits about the Earth must be conducted at altitudes less than about 250 miles in order to avoid significant radiation exposure. * A person in the cabin of a space shuttle in a circular equatorial orbit in the most intense region of the inner radiation belt, at an altitude of about 1000 miles, would be subjected to a fatal dosage of radiation in about one week. * However, the outbound and inbound trajectories of the Apollo spacecraft cut through the outer portions of the inner belt and because of their high speed spent only about 15 minutes in traversing the region and less than 2 hours in traversing the much less penetrating radiation in the outer radiation belt. The resulting radiation exposure for the round trip was less than 1% of a fatal dosage - a very minor risk among the far greater other risks of such flights. I made such estimates in the early 1960s and so informed NASA engineers who were planning the Apollo flights. These estimates are still reliable. * The recent Fox TV show, which I saw, is an ingenious and entertaining assemblage of nonsense. The claim that radiation exposure during the Apollo missions would have been fatal to the astronauts is only one example of such nonsense. James A. Van Allen
@raullruizz3883
@raullruizz3883 4 жыл бұрын
Its impossible for men to cross the "Van Allen radiation belt"....good night...
@Shipfixer
@Shipfixer 3 жыл бұрын
"I went to Europe last year. What did you do?" "I went to the moon and back". Outstanding video! Kind thanks for the memories of that truly wonderful event.
@watalooboy50
@watalooboy50 3 жыл бұрын
I was in space for three days over the weekend with Elan Musk.
@airforceoneye2663
@airforceoneye2663 3 жыл бұрын
July 16 1960 I came upon this world, and to this date I still remember even that some people don't but seeing history being made on a black and white TV. Furthermore to the publishers of Avation Week and Space Technology I got to see the blue marble as seen from Apollo 17 with all it's grandeur. Thank you for this video
@Cydonia2020
@Cydonia2020 4 жыл бұрын
I was only about 15 miles away from the Apollo seven team launch. I was in second grade and it was the most spectacular thing I have ever seen in my entire life. Nothing has ever come close. About 25 years later, I was able to talk to Gene Cernan about that event and how spectacular it was. He said that it was pretty spectacular from where he was sitting as well.
@bobwalton4630
@bobwalton4630 4 жыл бұрын
As great as the "Apollo 11" documentary was (I watched it three times this summer) I hope that this mission gets it's own IMAX treatment as well. This was the most extensive lunar mission of them all, with the astronauts spending three whole days on the moon's surface. The pictures are so much more high definition than the ones from Apollo 11 and they did way, way more research.
@godseye13k
@godseye13k Жыл бұрын
They havnt been the moon u fool. Sheep 🐑 🐏 🐑 🐏 🐑 🐏 🐑 🐏
@deoshivute7715
@deoshivute7715 3 жыл бұрын
All the food that I ate, the pain that I went through, the breathing, drinking etc. Life is great. There is no other thing like life. God bless everyone 🙏 ❤ you.
@michaelwalker-es6we
@michaelwalker-es6we 3 жыл бұрын
God bless
@michaelwalker-es6we
@michaelwalker-es6we 3 жыл бұрын
Or atheist Hindi jadism Buddhist monk Muslim. Pardon my ignorance
@maxttk97
@maxttk97 3 жыл бұрын
May God bless you to.
@dr_dave512
@dr_dave512 3 жыл бұрын
@@michaelwalker-es6we there is *only one God* the *Crhistian God*
@steveng1624
@steveng1624 4 жыл бұрын
I've been fascinated with NASA since around 1968 and actually watched the Apollo 11 from takeoff 'til splash down. I was so excited, but when they landed and walked on the moon is one of my most exciting days of my life. Love this kind of stuff, I could watch it all the time.
@steveng1624
@steveng1624 4 жыл бұрын
PS. I'm 62 years old this month "September" born in 1958
@yazzamx6380
@yazzamx6380 4 жыл бұрын
It's always a pleasure to read enthusiastic comments from those who appreciate this magnificent achievement. Thanks :-)
@markr.devereux2713
@markr.devereux2713 4 жыл бұрын
Everything you saw between the moment they left earth and splashed down was seen on a grainy television screen and narrated by newsmen that barely more believable than orson Welles war of the worlds radio drama.its called fiction sheeple
@steveng1624
@steveng1624 4 жыл бұрын
@@markr.devereux2713 It was more entertaining than watching you being born on live television, when you come out of an @sshole. Is that how your 'nickname' come about ?
@markr.devereux2713
@markr.devereux2713 4 жыл бұрын
@@steveng1624 you probably dream about being Harry Potter and stay in your parents basement. That's all I can conclude
@mikeytodd7
@mikeytodd7 3 жыл бұрын
5:45 When this man was hired it put a smile on his face and he never stopped smiling since.
@Passionate_Hater
@Passionate_Hater 3 жыл бұрын
🤣🤣😂👌🏽 That smile really stuck
@jeremyelford7926
@jeremyelford7926 3 жыл бұрын
That dude could eat an apple through a tennis racket...
@louisemagill8295
@louisemagill8295 2 жыл бұрын
Hired to be a moonraker with his teeth
@nortonnewmann3711
@nortonnewmann3711 3 жыл бұрын
I was 15 then, and remember following the entire moon landing project. It was an exciting time... there has been nothing to come close to matching that in the 50 years since! That's when "America was great"... We have nothing like that to offer kids today.
@cotati76
@cotati76 3 жыл бұрын
Now all we care about is money. But if people realized the return on investment the Apollo program had we would be on Mars today. Most people think there’s more to life than quarterly reports.
@rubybrady7051
@rubybrady7051 3 жыл бұрын
Apollo moon landing was made in the same studios as movie gone with the wind. 🎥😅😅😅😅🎥🎥🎥🎥🎥🎥🎥
@lupetrevino2505
@lupetrevino2505 3 жыл бұрын
Amen to that
@jjjackson3669
@jjjackson3669 3 жыл бұрын
You idiot
@djemaizerrouki5783
@djemaizerrouki5783 3 жыл бұрын
We are the same old ❗😃⏳
@ginoalvarado1068
@ginoalvarado1068 3 жыл бұрын
Mr. Cernan was a customer for many years of the ac company I worked for, got to meet his lovely wife and dogs, we were able to replace all 5 ac systems in his home, he was very nice but was a straight shooter he would let you know what and how he wanted things. Glad to have met him.
@bobwilson758
@bobwilson758 3 ай бұрын
Cool to have met the man -
@richk322
@richk322 3 жыл бұрын
LETS NOT FORGET HOW SPECIAL EARTH IS AND HOW SPECIAL WE ARE.
@donkeyearrs
@donkeyearrs 3 жыл бұрын
How special Earth is for sure. I can remember hoping that after we've seen up close images of the other rock piles in our solar system that we'd have a new appreciation for our beautiful planet. Unfortunately that hasn't happened in fact there's been massive environmental damage done in the fifty years since Apollo 11.
@HarryOrchard-hb5nx
@HarryOrchard-hb5nx 3 жыл бұрын
Especially it's shape... right, Ritchie? LOL!
@richk322
@richk322 3 жыл бұрын
@@HarryOrchard-hb5nx HaHaHa! That’s possible HAIRIE!!! LOL!
@stephanspeidel2611
@stephanspeidel2611 3 жыл бұрын
Thank You NASA and all the ASTRONAUTS I was there and seen all the Apollo blast offs am from Florida!.
@stephanspeidel2611
@stephanspeidel2611 3 жыл бұрын
@NIHAREEKA K Ya I lived in Fla all, over since 1965 to 1997 I came from Germany I use to live on the Atlantic coast Beach use to go to the CAP Kennedy Space Center many times NASA said the shuttle wasn't to get off the ground until 1999 in 1970 they had a big model of the shuttle on ground and the date when this project gets started in 1999 even from Orlando you can see and the Gulf Coast you can see it blast off from the Atlantic side that's 361 mi (582 km) away from Saint Peters-burg Fla on the Gulf side you could see the flames and smoke trails.But I was in 1969 I was about 3 miles away from the launch pad the whole ground shook like a earthquake I thought dam.
@bearlemley
@bearlemley 3 жыл бұрын
Mom woke us up early on the 16th of July 1969. I had forgotten that we had passes to view the liftoff at the new visitor center. But we didn’t plan for the enormous enthusiasm of the the entire population of the US and we did not make it even on the NASA causeway. We ended up watching off US1 in a neighborhood on the west side of the Indian river. We had seen launches before, but even at 12 years old, I knew how important this launch was. I had grabbed my grandmothers old tv out of the storeroom and had it set up in my bed room and four days later, I watch it all night long.
@minstrelofMir
@minstrelofMir 3 жыл бұрын
Thank the Germans that came from rocket projects after the war,and youll notice loads of english in the documentary too
@thataussieprickrebornl7453
@thataussieprickrebornl7453 3 жыл бұрын
That would have been amazing I just hope one day I’m lucky enough to see a space mission to the moon again to blast off
@SuperSinist
@SuperSinist 3 жыл бұрын
Almost made me tear up. Such bravery and stunning pictures amd video. The best i've watched so far.
@matthewsecrest9818
@matthewsecrest9818 3 жыл бұрын
almost made you tear up...until you realized how fake it was?
@mr.majestic2667
@mr.majestic2667 2 жыл бұрын
@@matthewsecrest9818 Nothing fake you idiot , USA spent billions in 10 years ..
@Sgt_Bill_T_Co
@Sgt_Bill_T_Co 2 жыл бұрын
I'm so happy I lived through the space age thus far, as a 15 year old at the time of Apollo 11, I just had to go into engineering, now retired but still as enthusiastic as ever about space travel. Just hoping I live long enough to see man travel out of earth's orbit again.
@jordannicholson8751
@jordannicholson8751 4 жыл бұрын
I so wish I had been alive during the time that all this was going on. I would have been all in to it. Still, I'm glad that there are these documentaries to show people like me what happened and how we did it. I can literally sit at the computer for hours at a time watching videos like this and I do. Thanks to all those at NASA who did all the work and put their lives and passion into achieving such a monumental goal.
@jppitman1
@jppitman1 4 жыл бұрын
With an awful war going on around the other side of the world we were involved in, the Apollo program was a positive achievement--one with which we could take a nice dollop of pride in having accomplished and something universally significant to future generations who choose to study our immediate environs. I can tell you this, it was indeed an exciting program to experience (even as only a kid)!
@forresthancock1939
@forresthancock1939 3 жыл бұрын
Hey,Jordan...like documentries? Try " a funny thing happened on the way to the moon" Then get back with "us".
@phantomwalker8251
@phantomwalker8251 3 жыл бұрын
heres some real history of space men. watch viper tv / dttv, on sumerian tablets..the earth was visited long before we came around. if these tablets are tru,they made us..''in there image'',.dna engineering..long vids,but a lot of info you wont find anywhere else..if you get into indian vedas,the earth was fought over by 3 races with nuke weapons. same that destroyed sodom & gomorrah..here in aus,at the parks observatory,its said they picked up a transcript,which nasa couldnt delete,,which said,,theres 3 huge ships,just sitting on the crater rim,,,beep..look that up..
@juliaread9115
@juliaread9115 3 жыл бұрын
What a lovely thing to say and so refreshing as so many young people have fallen for the hoax theory. I was very lucky and privileged to have witnessed this incredibly exciting time and watched the 1st moon landing in 1969 at school. Can't believe where those fifty years have gone.
@generalwasteman
@generalwasteman 3 жыл бұрын
Conversely you now have access to infinitely more information about it all than anyone back then could ever have dreamed of
@AaronSchwarz42
@AaronSchwarz42 3 жыл бұрын
"The most hazardous & dangerous & exciting adventure which man has ever embarked" said President John F Kennedy
@troyleenewgent9013
@troyleenewgent9013 3 жыл бұрын
@@sincerelandry2810 so why did you do that? A little insecure or some gut feeling telling you somethings not right?
@jackykong4970
@jackykong4970 3 жыл бұрын
Good documentary. The Saturn 5 lift off was the most unsettling, frightening, unnerving but awesome experience one could have. I was at the Cape for 17. The ground shook like a rockin and rolling M5 earthquake, the pulsing shock wave took your breath away, the ripping and tearing sound and spectacle overwhelmed your senses. I swear you could feel the heat a couple miles away. It was as bright as noon with a erie orangeish campfire like glow at midnight. You wanted to explode with pride. To this day, the Saturn 5 is the most energetic, powerful machine ever created by man rivaling a 30 second long atomic bomb blast. Something one cannot forget or begin to explain to someone who hasn't seen and experienced it for themselves...
@MakeMySanctuary
@MakeMySanctuary 3 жыл бұрын
That's a great description and story, i pray humans can learn to build together ships that carry humans across the universe instead of tearing eachother apart.
@JoyceCheeseman
@JoyceCheeseman 3 жыл бұрын
I think you did an excellent job of explaining your experience. Thank you for sharing. This sounds like something I wish I could put on my bucket list.
@meg3646
@meg3646 3 жыл бұрын
@@JoyceCheeseman '¡ „,0
@tomasmandujano6007
@tomasmandujano6007 3 жыл бұрын
@J squirrel damn if UR a squirrel I DEF want one for me!
@tomerbauer
@tomerbauer Жыл бұрын
Thanks to your description I got as close as one could get to experiencing it as you did. Thank you!
@erikt.5253
@erikt.5253 3 жыл бұрын
If I’m ever alive when we put the first person on Mars , I’ll come back to this comment. If not , Dear future, please don’t make the same mistakes we’ve made. Let your differences bring you all together for a greater good. Erik ❤️
@dusanninic9572
@dusanninic9572 3 жыл бұрын
Of course Erik that you'll live enough to see the first human footprints on Mars. Just a little patience. That will happend in this decade! Humanity will live even when the Sun destroy our planet. Human neocortex is a mirracle! Greetings from Serbia... 👋😉
@dawnnite4527
@dawnnite4527 3 жыл бұрын
@@dusanninic9572 no one cant escape the earths atmospher..all this apollo shit is lies
@shelbyesters5732
@shelbyesters5732 3 жыл бұрын
Shut up
@dawnnite4527
@dawnnite4527 3 жыл бұрын
@@shelbyesters5732 u shut up
@dawnnite4527
@dawnnite4527 3 жыл бұрын
Do not delude by illusion
@michaelmesolellaesq
@michaelmesolellaesq 4 жыл бұрын
The old America was stunning and a juggernaut of admiration. Wish I was around then.
@sirclarkmarz
@sirclarkmarz 4 жыл бұрын
I'm 64 years old and I got to tell you it was really something . and it still is otherwise people from all over the world want you risking their lives to get here . fight with your last dying breath to keep this a great country don't let the left poison you your mind and your children's Minds
@oiuhoindds924
@oiuhoindds924 4 жыл бұрын
Ah such admiration for the Vietnam war
@oiuhoindds924
@oiuhoindds924 4 жыл бұрын
@Voodoo Child criticism of this guys admiration of not such a great country during these times. Vietnam war is an example
@michaelmesolellaesq
@michaelmesolellaesq 4 жыл бұрын
It certainly isn't log ago, not long ago at all. In the grand timeline, it is nothing but a blip or speck on an otherwise immense line. That said, from retold stories of my grandparents, my grandfathers who were both Marines and moved several times across the country due to war time and economic issues, this country was something entirely different. The sense of love and pride of country that was profound from these men, and women, the selflessness, is something that is literally absent from society today. The respect, the reverence, the significance of not only our nations capital but simply our fellow neighbor - it all starts at home. We are capable of so much, and have done so much, and when we come together, achieve so much. Going back to as early as I personally can remember from the very early 80's and always always always being that pestering kid asking a question about every single thing I came across, I am thankful for every minute I was able to talk with my grandparents about what life was like "back then", the country, and the world, before our modernized revolution. My one surviving grandmother says right now is the worst of her memory. She is 96. Man, all you boomers immediately make things political. I did not make any reference nor inference that what I am saying has ANYTHING to do with a political viewpoint or party. It doesnt. Its an observation of the times. I am in no way saying things were just peachy back, in say, VIETNAM. But relax, not everything is political.
@michaelmesolellaesq
@michaelmesolellaesq 4 жыл бұрын
@@sirclarkmarz I respect you and you have a right to believe whatever you want. Try not to conflate what you believe with anything other than WHAT YOU BELIEVE. lol its not fact, it's not anything, its just your opinion, as what I wrote, IS MY OPINION. I wasnt alive for what obviously this video is showing, however, my comment was more about how this country, and its citizens, can achieve what was once impossible, come together, and be respected together as one nation. Was there dissent and derision. Probably if not definitely. But, I like to believe anything is possible. Humans everywhere working together towards a common goal. The possibilities are endless. There is no need to politicize, every, single, thing. Going to the moon or beyond is a mission for humanity, not a political party.
@suzannebrown2505
@suzannebrown2505 4 жыл бұрын
I was in my early 20s in the late 60s and watched the moon landings intently and loved all of it. Always interested in astronomy since I learned to read, I wanted to be an astronomer as a kid. However, I was not aware that excellence in physics and advanced mathematics were requirements that were beyond my abilities. My brain was geared toward high abilities in reading, English, history, music, sciences and creativity. I loved exploring and learning new things and still do, even in my 70s. I never learned, until the last few years, that the government hid so much from the public with the “ridiculous” idea that we couldn’t handle the knowledge! I saw UFOs high in the sky when I was 12 years old and in junior high. This site made an indelible mark in my brain that would only grow stronger over the next 50 years!
@alspencer3826
@alspencer3826 4 жыл бұрын
Could you tell us about your ufo experience? I find the subject absolutely fastinating, and I love hearing people's ufo experiences. Where did it take place?
@jeremysmith54565
@jeremysmith54565 3 жыл бұрын
@@alspencer3826 Me included :)
@petercarroll5858
@petercarroll5858 3 жыл бұрын
Welcome to Gboard clipboard, any text you copy will be saved here.Welcome to Gboard clipboard, any text you copy will be saved here.Welcome to Gboard clipboard, any text you copy will be saved here.Welcome to Gboard clipboard, any text you copy will be saved here.Welcome to Gboard clipboard, any text you copy will be saved here.
@philindeblanc
@philindeblanc 3 жыл бұрын
Such agencies do NOT need 3D thinking individuals that would question orders or be able to solve and process different ideas. They just need linear thinking math solving computer brains. Smart, not wise. That is what they need to keep their lies going, and the human ability to imagine and dream...Thats all....And so it went. How do you see the edu system now?
@dionysius1b870
@dionysius1b870 2 жыл бұрын
@@philindeblanc thank you ! For your comment probably the most underrated comment ever read on KZbin! You are correct I myself will fully educated when I was in high school sophomore year or doubted that I could do quantum physics and calculus, trigonometry etc etc.. but this was in the 90s and I was a very good athlete, so I received scholarships to be educated, at prestigious schools , some of the top schools in the whole world. Now I myself was more of a middle letter and always thought that I could not do anything besides read at a high level and right at a high level because it's my brain was more geared to that that was more my talent. But my teachers in professors would tell me no you can there's ways of meditate not to say meditating but making a brain concentrate and being taught to be able to do a high level of mathematics like you said this is a major difference between smart and being wise!! I feel bad for the somebody that's older; that's sold themselves short, doesn't think they have the brain the good Lord , God gave, to do anything in the world that has to be done we can learn anything! Anyone can be taught quantum and physic mathematics! This is just one of the secrets the amoxicillin elite keep from the world to keep you down!
@sasaipapzeeochea3695
@sasaipapzeeochea3695 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you AMERICA and to NASA Members for the Unforgettable Moon Landing history.. I wanted to be an Astronomer since I was a Kid but just only my ambition not anymore now.. Only to watch your Videos i am Happy enough😁👌
@armandoruiz8758
@armandoruiz8758 3 жыл бұрын
WE ARE U.S. CITIZENS. CITIZENS OF THE UNITED STATES. THE UNITED STATES IS A COUNTRY BUT AMERICA ITS NOT A COUNTRY AMERICA ITS A CONTINENT. THE WHOLE ENTIRE CONTINENT WAS NAME AMERICA 269 YEARS WAY BEFORE THE UNITED STATES BECAME A NATION.
@armandoruiz8758
@armandoruiz8758 3 жыл бұрын
@Dick Johnson I HAVE A FEW QUESTIONS? 1: WHERE OR HOW THE U.S. GOVERNMENT GOT THE NAME AMERICA FROM? 2: WHAT HAPPEN 1ST? THE AMERICAN CONTINENT OR THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA? 3: WHAT GOVERNMENT ADDED THE NORTH AMERICA, CENTRAL AMERICA AND SOUTH AMERICA TO THE AMERICAN CONTINENT?
@potatosniper5340
@potatosniper5340 2 жыл бұрын
I sincerely hope that I'm alive to witness the return to the moon and furthermore, Mars.
@phoebus
@phoebus 4 жыл бұрын
The men who landed on the Moon get all the glory but can you imagine being the guy in the Command Module circling the Moon alone for days 240,000 miles away from Earth, half the time on the far side not being able to see or contact our home planet? Wow, that's the ultimate in solitude and self reliance
@philindeblanc
@philindeblanc 3 жыл бұрын
LOL...if you are a simple observer and actually believe the moon missions of landing on the moon. LOL...really?
@damianhoratiu2287
@damianhoratiu2287 3 жыл бұрын
@@philindeblanc Yes, if you are not brain-dead, you doo.
@sheiladavis2304
@sheiladavis2304 3 жыл бұрын
How do you get to Carnegie hall? Practice!! Lol they had these guys training day and night so they could almost do it in their sleep.they would go over endless scenarios in trainer mock ups of the LRV as well as the lander. I dpoppopon’t see how anyone like the other commenter could think these missions were hoaxed? From all of the filming of the separation of the lander and flying back up to the LRV to the way the dust falls like gravel when they are hoping through it. That’s why a feather falls the same speed as a hammer up there. Same for the flag. Not blowing in the wind but swing like chain mail. Yes it would have been quite the long and lonely feeling going radio silent on the dark side. Especially if they were still hearing music like the other missions.
@philindeblanc
@philindeblanc 3 жыл бұрын
@@damianhoratiu2287 You first believe it, then you check the evidence and realize you were brain dead for believing it. Thats how understanding works.
@philindeblanc
@philindeblanc 3 жыл бұрын
@@sheiladavis2304 LOL... They told you they trained so hard for it...LOL...uhh, ya....I was able to do that hollywood film or more recently CGI stunt, that was filmed so well the general public couldnt tell it was fake...So they asked how did I do it..I trained so hard for it....AND YOU BOUGHT IT...I know its hard to allow yourself to be fooled. But you have been. Hook line and sinker for some of you. At least 65% of the population question it or dont buy it. With new filming techniques and all the mistakes in the past missions, even cgi artists and engineers would have a hard time to distinguish real and fake. But if for one minute you actually believe the LEM footage take off from the moon looks real....LOL...you probably believe in the toothfairy. Watch that clip of the LEM take off from the moon. And if you are not sure what the LEM is, then you have no business posting your contradictions. You should just be listening and learning. Did you know that the only place that the video transmission was broadcast was in Australia? The rest got a copy transmission. In the live footage, many reported to the news paper that there was a Coke can on the moon in one of the scenes. It was reported in the paper, and there were MULTIPLE reports of it. There is a documentary you can watch about a number of things that cannot happen, called "What Happened On The Way to The Moon" by David Percy. There is so much disinfo with this title that its not even easy to find. But its 4 hours long, and there are zero actors. The guy took the time to track down the actual people involved in the missions to make the film. Its 4 hours long, and I guarantee that most folks wont even bother watching Q&A between those involved in the missions vs what you saw on TV presented for you to believe. Its easy to fool someone than it is to convince them that they have been fooled. Around the time Nixon was involved and his conversation to the moon had no delays. There were some other matters and he is the one coined to say, "If the American people don't believe anything is real until the see it on television". Mind control is what government means in Latin, goverunare and mens or mentis. But this is just some crazy theory...riiiiight.
@kenpea6220
@kenpea6220 3 жыл бұрын
You know, I just watch this and realized that we don't do great things like this today! How sad it is that here we are Christmas Eve 2020 and not even come closed to even matching great things like we did then. We have prisoned ourselves, killed ourselves off for what, to get richer and fatter. We've let the great things slip through our fingers, what a shame! What a waste! What a shameful waste!
@rockethead7
@rockethead7 3 жыл бұрын
Yes, but this has happened repeatedly throughout history. After Magellan sailed around the globe, it wasn't repeated for 50 years. After the Egyptians built the great pyramids, nobody even attempted to make buildings that size/weight/height again for thousands of years. Hell, it's been almost 20 years since someone could buy a supersonic airliner ticket across the Atlantic. Yes, history is riddled with many such examples of extraordinary feats for a short while that don't get repeated for a long time.
@ankeshgaurav4080
@ankeshgaurav4080 3 жыл бұрын
@@rockethead7 very nicely put 👍👍
@newforestpixie5297
@newforestpixie5297 3 жыл бұрын
Same with Rock Music in my opinion. So much incredible weird and wonderful music was actively encouraged by major recording companies ( giving the bands as much time as well as money ) resulting in stuff which is played by even trendy 23yr olds nowadays ! Boundaries were there to be crossed which appears the opposite to the mainstream world they call “ diverse “ nowadays ! From English posh boys Genesis & Pink Floyd to Californian Freak Powered Frank Zappa & Co ) My Personal Experience of Apollo 11 was it being the first time I had been GOT OUT of bed instead of getting sent there - as a 5 yr old and at about 4in the morning ...👍🐢new forest pixies
@Nautilus1972
@Nautilus1972 3 жыл бұрын
@@rockethead7 China are on the moon. China are on Mars.
@rockethead7
@rockethead7 3 жыл бұрын
@@Nautilus1972 And, you know this, how?
@flyingcatsofthesalishsea.
@flyingcatsofthesalishsea. 4 жыл бұрын
Best memories of my childhood, the Apollo moon missions....thanks for taking me back again!
@sharpuslf
@sharpuslf 4 жыл бұрын
Sorry to burst your bubble, but they never went to the moon.
@brianstephen5392
@brianstephen5392 4 жыл бұрын
And it would appear you still haven't grown up if you still believe this shit!
@flyingcatsofthesalishsea.
@flyingcatsofthesalishsea. 4 жыл бұрын
@@sharpuslf hey troll, your wrong...not only did they go to the moon but they came back from it..
@sharpuslf
@sharpuslf 4 жыл бұрын
@@flyingcatsofthesalishsea. Christmas is coming soon...sorry to do this again, but Santa isnt real either. Idiot.
@flyingcatsofthesalishsea.
@flyingcatsofthesalishsea. 4 жыл бұрын
@@sharpuslf you say sorry alot..am just having coffee with elvis, he told me to tell you, you have no content and credibility and you should have stayed in school..and a job may help u..
@sfrrob
@sfrrob 3 жыл бұрын
I have watched this twice, and as I look out my window, I can see our moon. It's incredible that man has walked, hopped like a kangaroo, driven a rover (busted a fender) laughed and joked on that little rock. Can't wait for Spacex and Nasa to land back on our moon. I would LOVE to see artifacts from those previous journeys returned to Earth one day.
@greenmedicinetm299
@greenmedicinetm299 4 жыл бұрын
My great uncle John Glenn said to me.... "There are things alive in space" "not human at all"
@robbedontuesday
@robbedontuesday 4 жыл бұрын
Here on Earth surface, I tell you there are alive things, that are "not human at all" as well.
@greenmedicinetm299
@greenmedicinetm299 4 жыл бұрын
@@robbedontuesday Nephilim ;)
@greenmedicinetm299
@greenmedicinetm299 4 жыл бұрын
@John Blaze no a Astronaut lol before your time sonny lol
@greenmedicinetm299
@greenmedicinetm299 4 жыл бұрын
@John Blaze how many actors would see space? Are people who go to space actors lol. I'm sure this question lacks investigation on the subject matter.
@BROTHER-52
@BROTHER-52 4 жыл бұрын
@@greenmedicinetm299 ...was it J.G..who filmed the space snake... Or was it cooper...cannot remember who....????
@JoeSmith-ey2xp
@JoeSmith-ey2xp 4 жыл бұрын
I still feel the awe I felt as a kid watching this. The greatest human achievement in my book.
@arakort8005
@arakort8005 4 жыл бұрын
Just over 8 years from first man in space to landing on the moon is just amazing in terms of engineering and men and woman who made the machines to get the job done. Lets not forget that the USA government gave uncapped money to accomplish it. Project Apollo will always be the most extensive engineering wonder that men ever dreamed up.
@davidbreen4727
@davidbreen4727 4 жыл бұрын
indeed!!!!
@larrycarmody8325
@larrycarmody8325 3 жыл бұрын
I was flying an Amphibian G44 Widgen on the North Slope of Alaska when they went to the Moon.
@HarryOrchard-hb5nx
@HarryOrchard-hb5nx 3 жыл бұрын
@Common Sense Realist Yes, isn't it? And isn't it amazing, too, that everyone is so very succinct on this thread mentioning just where it is we're supposed to have gone! LOL!
@lenafranklin7262
@lenafranklin7262 4 жыл бұрын
This is lovely...not being alive when this happened is to look back at those who came before us with respect and reverence. I thank all nations for the lessons they bring to the current earth civilization
@ZenZaBill
@ZenZaBill 4 жыл бұрын
Having watched it all unfold on TV, newspapers , books and magazines of how we went from Mercury to Gemini and then Apollo, I can tell you it was an exciting time of hope and exploration in the uncertain age of an endless and pointless war in Vietnam, street protests, and the ever-present threat of going up in a nuclear fireball in a war with the Soviets. Even with today's insipid news mongering over presidential phone calls, cancel culture and "social" media, those were mighty uncertain times compared to now. But NASA was always there with more triumphs than tragedies, and they did it in the open (for the most part) -- unlike the USSR's space program, which only reported their triumphs and space exploration firsts, of which there were many. *But, we got to the Moon first.*
@jameskeith7608
@jameskeith7608 4 жыл бұрын
Are you really that stupid?
@supertramp6011
@supertramp6011 4 жыл бұрын
james keith this comment section is un- believable! ( just like NASA) have none of these morons actually watched the video? Wake up folks,no- one ever went to the moon,get over it! Sheeesh!
@mr.majestic2667
@mr.majestic2667 2 жыл бұрын
@@supertramp6011 Were did they go in rocket , nowhere , why was it built , for no reason , If they said it was mars , it would be fake , because the tech in 1969 would never get them there but moon in 3 days is believable .
@bennyandersen742
@bennyandersen742 4 жыл бұрын
the Apollo moon missions, nothing comes close... still the peak of human achievement
@bennyandersen742
@bennyandersen742 4 жыл бұрын
@Danne Cuttler some people just don't have enough intelligence, often combined with psychological issues, it's just sad
@JAYJay-qd7ov
@JAYJay-qd7ov 4 жыл бұрын
Imagine us going back with all our tech now.
@livefire666
@livefire666 4 жыл бұрын
@@JAYJay-qd7ov Other then computers the tech is and would be the same. Technology maxes out based on physics, and our physics have not changed in 100 years.
@JAYJay-qd7ov
@JAYJay-qd7ov 4 жыл бұрын
@@livefire666 I was thinking like camera tech
@livefire666
@livefire666 4 жыл бұрын
Justin Johnson Oh ya we could do 8k video from the moon streamed live to VR head sets with only a 1 sec delay, would be awesome in that regard👍!
@brianchristenson6055
@brianchristenson6055 Ай бұрын
Remember when NASA donated a moon rock and it turned out to be petrified wood!) lol
@rockethead7
@rockethead7 Ай бұрын
Who told you that? A conspiracy video? That's not what the museum that has that rock thinks happened. Why do you? No, dewdrop. The children of a dead politician in the Netherlands who was elected to office in the 1940s, two decades before Apollo ever went to the moon, gave a piece of petrified wood to an art museum, claiming it was a moon rock. It was the wrong color, wrong look, wrong size, wasn't encased in Lucite, had no plaque like the actual goodwill samples had, etc. The art museum contacted NASA to ask if it was real, and was told that they had no record of such rock, and offered to take a look if they'd send it to them. The art museum decided not to bother authenticating it, and just accepted it, and stuck it into a drawer for about 14 years. It was instantly spotted as a fake the moment they put it on display. Meanwhile, their real lunar samples remain proudly on display in their science museum. Now, what do you think actually happened here? Do you think NASA gave a piece of petrified wood to a politician who was elected decades before Apollo? That would be like China giving a moon rock to Bill Clinton rather than the sitting president. And, nobody noticed it wasn't a moon rock until long after he died? Or, hmmm, do you suppose maybe the children of a deceased politician were trying to get a massive inheritance tax credit by donating a fake $50 million rock to an art museum that would be gullible enough to accept it without verifying?
@gives_bad_advice
@gives_bad_advice 15 күн бұрын
You've bought into a bogus rumor. Which is ironic, since that's exactly what you pride yourself on having avoided.
@pramodkunjwal3454
@pramodkunjwal3454 2 жыл бұрын
These scientists must have had an amazing experience👍👍
@otakusmatcha7656
@otakusmatcha7656 3 жыл бұрын
i was crying and grateful at the same time.
@fredthompson4568
@fredthompson4568 3 жыл бұрын
Go Orion...Go Artemis...We must go Back.!
@Is-there_a-ChristianGod
@Is-there_a-ChristianGod 3 жыл бұрын
Why cause they lied and keep lying
@dq1275
@dq1275 3 жыл бұрын
After Engle was bumped off The Apollo 17 crew, he got to pick his next mission and chose the shuttle, being a test pilot and having flown the X-15, it was his area of expertise.
@samuelparker9882
@samuelparker9882 3 жыл бұрын
So true. These men are the MOST well traveled people on the moon. Stayed the longest, drove and walked the furthest. By far, they had THE COOLEST moon mission ... my bad... THE MOST SUCCESSFUL AND COOLEST moon mission that has ever left the earth. 3 days on Luna and HOURS at a time just roaming around, coolin' out on the surface of one of the most important gifts that the most HIGH gave to us.
@johninl.a.4509
@johninl.a.4509 2 ай бұрын
Thousands of people knew that they were going to get laid off as soon as Apollo 17 splashed down. In the months leading up to the flight, Gene Cernan had to work double-duty as a cheerleader to keep their morale up. This was especially tough because he had ditched a helicopter in Florida while having some fun with it; he secretly consulted his own private physician about the resultant burns and other injuries (to avoid getting bumped from Apollo 17).
@rockethead7
@rockethead7 Ай бұрын
Yeah, and he had to beg the physician to even stay on the mission with his injured leg.
@davidbreen4727
@davidbreen4727 4 жыл бұрын
i remember that mission,i was 16 at the time, not a lot of t v time on the mission, the orange dirt was i don't believe ever mentioned. or putting his daughters initials on the moon. that in it's own right is one of the GREATEST BRAGGING RIGHTS IN THE ENTIRE WORLD. LUCKY YOUNG LADY!!! great video, learned a heck of a lot, and still in awe of the people, planning, and achievment of N A S A and the american spirit.long live america!!!!!
@southface06
@southface06 4 жыл бұрын
The rover incident proves the #1 rule of success: Never leave home without a roll of duct tape!
@PORRRIDGE_GUN
@PORRRIDGE_GUN 4 жыл бұрын
Duct tape - Check Balaclava - Check Chloroform - Check Cable Ties - Check Hunting knife - Check
@davidbreen4727
@davidbreen4727 4 жыл бұрын
amazing, bringing duct tape on a moon mission, who would ever think like that, absolutely brilliant!!!
@FrancisMaxino
@FrancisMaxino 4 жыл бұрын
Held various previous cars together many times.
@rothbj1
@rothbj1 4 жыл бұрын
Cernan used to somewhat comically say that during public talks...
@PORRRIDGE_GUN
@PORRRIDGE_GUN 4 жыл бұрын
@@rothbj1 Mk2 Ford Mondeos had a plastic rear bumper that was as fragile as an eggshell. Lots of owners drove round for years with them held back together with duct tape after a minor shunt. I had silver duct tape on my dark blue Mondeo too. I used to call it my 'invisible repair'
@rogeryoumans9880
@rogeryoumans9880 4 жыл бұрын
I was there when Apollo 17 lifted off. I and my family were about a mile away when it lit up the night sky. The earth shook beneath our feet, and I could FEEL the crackle of those giant engines in my body! I was so excited and so proud! I will never forget it!
@TheMikelikus
@TheMikelikus 4 жыл бұрын
were you also at the studio with stanley kubrick filming astronauts walking on the moon in a studio setting...check it out dude! aint´cha proud to be a merican!
@rogeryoumans9880
@rogeryoumans9880 4 жыл бұрын
@@TheMikelikus ?
@conveyor2
@conveyor2 4 жыл бұрын
@@TheMikelikus debunked
@JudyOwen-r8e
@JudyOwen-r8e 3 ай бұрын
I sort of remember this i am 75 i married 69 so this was there with other memories of that time but this was the first time that i have listened in depth to any interviews or discussions regarding that first flight round the moon i do remember praying that they would land back on earth safely and the wait for the response by radio when they emerged from the dark side thank you to the families of those brave men
@nikxsn2042
@nikxsn2042 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for that documentary!
@christianege4989
@christianege4989 3 жыл бұрын
@@HolyRollerTV No, documentary.
@carloschavez5368
@carloschavez5368 4 жыл бұрын
Im glad to see these videos . i grew up during the Apollo program and was mesmerized seeing that giant rocket lift off, oh what a sight. Thanks for the memories.
@chunmingho6108
@chunmingho6108 3 жыл бұрын
The technology you're reading this with now GREW from the technology developed for the Apollo and other Space Race missions. Enjoy!
@wonderwheels-falkirk9038
@wonderwheels-falkirk9038 3 жыл бұрын
Thought the internet was invented during WW2
@RestrictedHades
@RestrictedHades 3 жыл бұрын
Wonder Wheels - Falkirk it was invented during the civil war
@elavke5441
@elavke5441 3 жыл бұрын
@@RestrictedHades I want proof
@lindaterrell5535
@lindaterrell5535 3 жыл бұрын
Being there for a Launch is epic. You *feel* it. It physically batters you. The Air moves.
@Birch37
@Birch37 4 жыл бұрын
Its great that 'Robbie Williams' took the time to provide commentary at the beginning of this documentary.
@MadDragon75
@MadDragon75 2 жыл бұрын
If you are one of the crew on any of these missions you may have known my grandpa Bruce Lokke. He's the guy you may have given one of these Apollo patches on the left he had framed over his lazyboy until he passed a couple decades ago. God I miss him. He made it to 96 and passed shortly after his wife grandma Esther. Godspeed.
@richardtitus-glover8951
@richardtitus-glover8951 4 жыл бұрын
The son of man is adventurous, but most importantly, born to conquer. Well done to the guys that put their lives on the line and the entire crew that made it possible. Cheers!
@retrogamerockstar4334
@retrogamerockstar4334 3 жыл бұрын
The son of man is Jesus . My Lord , My strength, my redeemer!!
@nasaskywatcher5200
@nasaskywatcher5200 3 жыл бұрын
Well said Richard. The capabilities and accomplishments of my fellow man never ceases to amaze me. Just watching what he's going to get up to next in space exploration ect really gives 'meaning' to existence.
@iggy502000
@iggy502000 4 жыл бұрын
I grew up watching the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo programs. I remember all those launches. Whenever there was a launch all classes in school stopped and the TV was turned on. How I miss watching the space program. On a trip to the Kennedy Space Center I toured the museum. one section has a Saturn 5 indoors lying on it side with all the stages separated but in line as assembled. Well, as I turned into the hall where it's located the fist sight you are hit with is staring directly at the business end of all five F1 engines. I stopped dead in my tracks, eyes wide and mouth open, staring at these gigantic motors. People standing further back were snickering. I turned and one of them said, "everybody that walks in gets the dumb expression in their face". So I stood back and watched. He was right. Anyone who walked in stood there with eyes wide and mouth open. It really is quite a sight.
@MrDaddyO8
@MrDaddyO8 4 жыл бұрын
I really am so sorry those Free Masons, former Nazis and even Walt Disney himself lied to you and caused you to believe such an overwhelming Hollywood concocted lie. It's criminal. I hope you don't lash out at me, because, trust me... I was just the same when I was a boy and got to take a special tour that others weren't able to get at Johnson Space Center. I stood in awe, mouth and eyes wide open as I stared at the Apollo rocket and even the Shuttle. Just remember, don't be mad at the one who says its all a lie...be mad at the liars.
@elco1980
@elco1980 4 жыл бұрын
You moon landing deniers are really true brain dead morons!
@jackiehaydl6209
@jackiehaydl6209 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this wonderful documentary. I was 11 for this Apollo and remember watching on tv. Now I have a new appreciation for all that they did.
@cammrendevilbiss5134
@cammrendevilbiss5134 3 жыл бұрын
My teacher got chosen to ride and and. But never seen her aging the must have feed her to. The ailan
@elijahaz1274
@elijahaz1274 3 ай бұрын
@@cammrendevilbiss5134o
@johnridgley9792
@johnridgley9792 2 ай бұрын
I was only 4 1/2 years old in 69 but i do remember the latter missions including Apollo 17. Was always fascinated with the space program and NASA.
@RLucasReviews
@RLucasReviews 3 жыл бұрын
There are a lot of people in the comments who think space in real life should look and behave like the version of space that lives in their imagination. Houston, our educational system has some problems.
@Ruda-n4h
@Ruda-n4h 3 жыл бұрын
They've watched too much Star Trek.
@OttawaMikes
@OttawaMikes 2 жыл бұрын
Apollo fans. Check out the Lunar Surface Journal for a blow by blow description of the Apollo missions by the astronauts.
@curtishill6490
@curtishill6490 3 жыл бұрын
How cool is it to have your initials written on the Moon!!! What a great idea/gift to your daughter💯Its a one of a kind priceless gift! Thank the astronauts for their bravery for these voyages👍👍👀☝
@christhevancura9113
@christhevancura9113 3 жыл бұрын
My Grandfather at that time worked for Grumman who helped build the LEM , They put a plate on lander part that has everyone at Grumman that worked on it names on it ..So my Grandfather and his co workers names are on the moon too..😎👍
@curtishill6490
@curtishill6490 3 жыл бұрын
@@christhevancura9113 That's awesome 💯I believe we have been there before that and have been there ever since! At least 1954 when we mastered antigravity according to Dr Greer! Thanks for the info 💯 I never heard that! Keep safe 👍👍👀👆
@hughmongous6613
@hughmongous6613 3 жыл бұрын
Kind of cool for me because my initials are TDC as well!😁
@hugonamenlos7218
@hugonamenlos7218 3 жыл бұрын
@@curtishill6490 so you think that there are anti gravity machines because a 66 year old physician told you so?
@ximalpopoca735
@ximalpopoca735 3 жыл бұрын
"the Earth is our Cradle, but we can't stay in the Cradle forever" ... right! This niche in the Galaxy & beyond is all ours to keep growing & learning forever!
@wavoconqueso
@wavoconqueso 4 жыл бұрын
Little did I know that Brits were part of this program. Thank you for your contribution. And thank you for posting this video. Every year I learn something new about the program and am in awe of the magnitude of the effort to make it happen.
@markclark5064
@markclark5064 4 жыл бұрын
You should have come to the conclusion that the moon landings and space past low earth orbit cannot be traveled by humans. Just listen to what NASA says they tell you that themselves
@wavoconqueso
@wavoconqueso 4 жыл бұрын
Mark Clark And why should I have come to that conclusion? You should have come to the conclusion that Alizarin Crimson, Ultramarine and. Yellow Ochre makes a pretty good black. Why didn’t you?
@fredrickm4436
@fredrickm4436 4 жыл бұрын
America and her people were super great. we have fallen. I hope not forever.
@rainmind
@rainmind 4 жыл бұрын
@Martin Andersson don't know how old you are, but if younare rich you'll be able to do it in 10 years.. So, save money. Space turism to. The moon will. Be raging before 2030
@Newton14alan
@Newton14alan 4 жыл бұрын
There is so much, about The Apollo Program, that is mind-bending, we still have people who can't believe that it took place. Everything, from building all the machinery...to men flying 26,000 mph...to (basically) landing on another planet (yes, I know it's a moon), was, and still IS, jaw-dropping! It seems almost laughable, then, that we give other topics (like whatever the latest blockbuster movie is) so much more attention. Humankind hasn't done ANYTHING, since then, that even touches this accomplishment. Cernan put it, succinctly, when he said, "I called the moon 'my home' for THREE DAYS, and I'm here to tell you about it." Talk about HEROES!! To hell with naming a few schools after them. As far as I'm concerned, Gene, and the other men who made those voyages, should, at LEAST, be gracing our pocket change, if not our bank notes, don't you think?
@Newton14alan
@Newton14alan 4 жыл бұрын
@One big eye. One big ear. --- Yeah, and a serial killer could attend one of the schools. I'm not sure I get your point. No disrespect intended. In any case, I'm glad that, at least, we share the same amount of awe that Gene Cernan, and Those like him, inspired. Be well, my friend! Huge fan of GB, by the way. My grandfather was from Manchester. Always hoped I might visit someday, but who knows? I'm not dead yet! Take care.
@robertoarriola-bustamante9169
@robertoarriola-bustamante9169 4 жыл бұрын
How can they get the Blue color of the Earth 🌎 and no color on the moon 😂
@Newton14alan
@Newton14alan 4 жыл бұрын
@@robertoarriola-bustamante9169 -- No oceans on the moon. The moon has, roughly, the same amount of land as the earth...just no bodies of water. And, because there's no atmosphere, I would imagine that this might affect lighting/color to some degree. Be well, Roberto.
@robertoarriola-bustamante9169
@robertoarriola-bustamante9169 4 жыл бұрын
@@Newton14alan sorry I don't believe in all of this 🤣 , the truth I did before but God has opened my eyes to believe what I see not what they tell us ,this is the big lie of the devil 😈, and I believe in Jesus Christ Amen, God Bless you in the Name of Jesus Christ Amen
@simonmoglie4518
@simonmoglie4518 2 жыл бұрын
I remember as a nine year old looking up at the moon at Christmas 1968 and thinking there were men going round it at the time. Awe inspiring stuff indeed. Then, just a few months later I watched man walking on the moon and again looking up in wonder. When even as a kid I knew there would be no Apollo 18 I was devastated. I am lucky enough to have Frank bormans and Gene Cernan's actual written autographs one on a photo of Apollo 8 Saturn V and one By Gene on a framed poster on my living room wall of which I got just before he died. I never had the same interest in Skylab, the Shuttle or the ISS. They to me seemed so trivial in comparison to Apollo. I know how sad Gene was towards the end of his life, just as I am now. God bless you guys, all of you and Rest In Peace.
@danshearer7627
@danshearer7627 4 жыл бұрын
I watched every launch and every splashdown. Truly amazing!
@johnkru1295
@johnkru1295 4 жыл бұрын
Me, also. A triple blu-ray is available of the history of the space program. I have it. Excellent! Called, 'When we left earth'. Discovery Channel put it out I believe.
@marxman00
@marxman00 4 жыл бұрын
Excelent , they were the real bits
@markr.devereux2713
@markr.devereux2713 4 жыл бұрын
I'm more interested in what they were really doing between the launch and splashdown. The area around this remote location was supposed to be cleared of all vessels for "safety reasons" prior to the expected splash down of capsule. Unfortunately on one of the apollo missions a freighter strayed close enough to witness the capsule dropped from a large military helicopter. It was squashed from all newspapers in the west but appeared prominently in some foreign countries.
@jondunmore4268
@jondunmore4268 3 жыл бұрын
I envy you! Amazing! Still the greatest achievement of mankind! And you were witness!
@THEBOSS-vn2ky
@THEBOSS-vn2ky 3 жыл бұрын
@@markr.devereux2713 I did not witness nothing but I have heard that twice in my life.
@philipmcdonagh1094
@philipmcdonagh1094 4 жыл бұрын
8 years from drawing board to the Moon. 51 years on I thought we would have made Mars by now. Something just does not add up.
@rockethead7
@rockethead7 4 жыл бұрын
Correct, the money doesn't add up. Back in the 1960s, during the peak of Apollo spending, NASA received about 4.5% of the entire federal budget. Add to that the "soft costs" (tax breaks to contractors, free land given out, etc.), and it's more like 5% or 5.5% of the entire federal budget. Add to that the international support for Apollo, and you're talking about even more money than that. And, a vast majority of NASA's money went straight into going to the moon. After Apollo, congress pulled the plug on that level of spending. Nowadays, NASA operates on about 0.5% of the federal budget, and has many more programs to operate. They are not allowed to sink all of their money into a single program. No, instead, they have hundreds of programs to manage, both in space, and aeronautics, as well as weather experiments and other things like that (which you would never know were part of NASA). And, they do this with very little international support. Yes, the main thing that "doesn't add up" is the pile of cash they'd need to go to Mars. Nobody is adding up any funds for anything like that. You didn't think NASA gets to pick and choose what it wants to spend its money on, did you? You do know that congress controls how every dime of NASA's money is spent, right?
@ZSAZSS09
@ZSAZSS09 3 жыл бұрын
A trip to mars has an other side than economy, namely a human cost. A trip to mars would be a one way mission. Are we, as humans willing to take those ethic problems?
@kenamaro3942
@kenamaro3942 3 жыл бұрын
We've never even put men back on the moon sense then...todays technology is a thousand fold when compaired to 50s and 60s technology. I watched a whole space shuttle program come and go yet a manned lunar landing was never duplicated.......??
@TheBandit7613
@TheBandit7613 3 жыл бұрын
@@kenamaro3942 Nasa pisses away money on fake global warming programs.
@larrysintay4456
@larrysintay4456 3 жыл бұрын
And just think it was shown on live TV. Analog TV in 1969
@roystonsixtus
@roystonsixtus 3 жыл бұрын
It’s very nostalgic to watch the documentary in the pandemic times as all those brave men and women who worked on the mission to the moon had one thing in common that they believed it can be accomplished and we all have one Mother Earth 🌍 that was 52 years back since then the world has never been the same again. God save us all and bless everyone on this beautiful earth 🌍👍👍⭐️🙏
@markbeames7852
@markbeames7852 3 жыл бұрын
we'll be fine.
@111highgh
@111highgh 3 жыл бұрын
The Earth is flat.
@markbeames7852
@markbeames7852 3 жыл бұрын
@@111highgh so's your head.
@zengpang3177
@zengpang3177 3 жыл бұрын
"those brave men and woman" who worked on the mission to the moon... ..., are you so sure they are not con men and con women?
@markbeames7852
@markbeames7852 3 жыл бұрын
@@zengpang3177 yep. My father was one. He wasn't a con man.
@sharirhodes7613
@sharirhodes7613 2 жыл бұрын
I enjoyed every moment of this video! It has restored the sense of pride I have always held for these Apollo missions. What a fabulous group of brave and intelligent men that gave their hearts, minds and souls to accomplish their particular roles in such a superlative manner!! Makes me proud to be an American again!!!
@davidhack6789
@davidhack6789 3 жыл бұрын
AHHHH YES, DUCT TAPE OLD MAPS AND SAFETY WIRE, WORKS EVERY TIME!
@christianege4989
@christianege4989 3 жыл бұрын
Ahhh yes, conspiracy believers, fail every time!
@trutacgear
@trutacgear 3 жыл бұрын
@@christianege4989 This is the truth i have wathced the video 100times frame by frame, there where wired indedeed ..!So, why shows as only copule of angels ...!
@dwaynecoy1871
@dwaynecoy1871 2 жыл бұрын
Hi kkkkkkkkkkkkiioki
@soco13466
@soco13466 4 жыл бұрын
I watched this launch from the Navy bombing and electronic warfare range at Pinecastle, about 100 miles away.
@rahnlawson9463
@rahnlawson9463 4 жыл бұрын
very nice, I watched this and all the launches from the beach about 5 miles away. i saw every launch from the Mercury Project through Sky Lab. My father worked at Kennedy Space Center located in Cape Canaveral.
@soco13466
@soco13466 4 жыл бұрын
@@rahnlawson9463 I assume you live nearby. If I had, I would have done the same.
@Okido24
@Okido24 3 жыл бұрын
We will have this pleasure ourselves. Thank you Spacex
@Bubba_Games373
@Bubba_Games373 3 жыл бұрын
And NASA with Artemis.
@butchcassidy3373
@butchcassidy3373 3 жыл бұрын
I remember standing in the back yard in South Georgia watching this night launch as a kid. Great mission. Onward we go.
@matthewsecrest9818
@matthewsecrest9818 3 жыл бұрын
The day they got ya, hook line and sinker. $135 billion to not go to the moon. crazy isnt it? you been paying them year after year after year with our tax money.
@rorschach3920
@rorschach3920 3 жыл бұрын
The blue marble So delicate and vulnerable is our home and still we didn’t managed to make a vital impression on the people convincing them taking good care and deeply appreciate that gift from the universe We need to act now and protect mother Gaya.
@sidstevens9035
@sidstevens9035 3 жыл бұрын
How exactly ? By pretending that the 3% of CO2 man is contributing is the cause ? Seriously ?
@harisviewpoint6991
@harisviewpoint6991 3 жыл бұрын
Fascinating ❤️👍🏼👏🏼👏🏼 hope now 55 years old Little girl on moon TDC doing well😀 proud daughter..
@AaronSchwarz42
@AaronSchwarz42 3 жыл бұрын
"A symbol (rock from moon) that mankind can live in peace & harmony in the future" well said // Astronaut Eugene Cernan
@Steveoneal7
@Steveoneal7 3 жыл бұрын
Just a shame it turned out to be petrified wood though huh 😆😆😆
@tonemarieantonsen1597
@tonemarieantonsen1597 6 күн бұрын
We may not have learned so much about moon ,but more about our planet how beautiful and resilient yet so fragile at the same it's .🌏🌚💚💙
@ousmonbaro9985
@ousmonbaro9985 3 жыл бұрын
I remember I see it in TV I was 19s young
@jerrypolete5258
@jerrypolete5258 3 жыл бұрын
Watching this brings tears to your eyes. The massive accomplishment we have made as humans is just our of this world, literally! I wish we were still going to the moon today. Watching this makes me want to be there with these men as they were acting like children again. Love it!
@haschocolate4542
@haschocolate4542 3 жыл бұрын
We will get there mate, SpaceX will get us there
@EXQCmoi
@EXQCmoi 3 жыл бұрын
Time to redo this in 4K...
@cheetahluv210
@cheetahluv210 3 жыл бұрын
Hopefully if there’s an actual film negative or print but if it’s on tape then well it’s not going to be in 4K
@alenparker3056
@alenparker3056 4 жыл бұрын
I cried.. This was beautiful, I'm so glad to be alive to witness this
@alenparker3056
@alenparker3056 2 жыл бұрын
@333piercingtruth Please elaborate your intentions.
@alenparker3056
@alenparker3056 2 жыл бұрын
@333piercingtruth You think you're smart aren't you? You deny the moon landing too probably right?
@raminagrobis6112
@raminagrobis6112 4 жыл бұрын
The narrator said it right: the last couple of Apollo missions went over the public, including the late teen I then was, like water over a duck's back. We had got blasé from the rapid succession of lunar missions, which seemed redundant to anybody not tuning on the tv broadcasts of those last Apollo flights, whose audience had dropped dramatically. It all went as though we would return to the moon regularly, since it seemed so routine by then. Little did we know that in 2020, we would have yet to return after 48 years !! Of course, we're scheduled to land back again in 2024, but still. And on privately funded flights. We all know that whenever profit is a leitmotiv, unpredicted bad outcome will result. I now wish NASA would have had the ear of the Congress to fund less frequent missions, but at least enough to keep that fantastic project alive. A private project is better than nothing, but it has not got my full support.
@tribalreubenites4926
@tribalreubenites4926 3 жыл бұрын
GOD BLESS MANKIND-and just maybe one day the human race can get along together Amen 😇💙❤️
@zaceriwata
@zaceriwata 3 жыл бұрын
Well... anyone would think your invisible friend has had at least 100k years to iron it out by now, but... no?
@tribalreubenites4926
@tribalreubenites4926 3 жыл бұрын
@@zaceriwata ,, then you must be referring to the Tower of Babel. As man stopped working together, as one particular form of language in one particular region became many new languages, which probably the cause-new social groups couldn't get along together..
@zaceriwata
@zaceriwata 3 жыл бұрын
@@tribalreubenites4926 A pineapple.
@BADger210
@BADger210 3 жыл бұрын
It’s not the masses but the leaders of those masses which do not get along and use the masses as pawns in their pointless wars and violence.
@tribalreubenites4926
@tribalreubenites4926 3 жыл бұрын
@Dick Johnson HTTR!!
@kurtwollermann2210
@kurtwollermann2210 2 жыл бұрын
this event drew all of humanity together......bravo
@Emy53
@Emy53 23 сағат бұрын
We were still in Vietnam until 1975....so much we could do for mankind, but there was always war, somewhere.
@BarryAlexanderKing
@BarryAlexanderKing 3 жыл бұрын
An amazing achievement and the music is so fitting. We are truly such privileged to have witnessed this.
@dexternorwood4657
@dexternorwood4657 3 жыл бұрын
How can their telecommunications work that far from the Earth but do not have the technology to go back to the moon now A bunch of mfn lies
@BarryAlexanderKing
@BarryAlexanderKing 3 жыл бұрын
@@dexternorwood4657 I believe in a few year time the final proof that man really went to the moon will be shown live on the next moon landing whenever they will happen. Satellites orbiting the moon from different countries have already photographed the landing sites so I cannot understand all these conspiracy theories. We do however allow people their own opinions.
@kody1654
@kody1654 3 жыл бұрын
This should be mandatory viewing for every human on Earth. It proves that even in our darkest hours, we can and have achieved great things.
@secondhandsock3086
@secondhandsock3086 3 жыл бұрын
You mean 55 min's of people talking up how good they were at acting and how absolutely no moon footage was put in this program at all
@kody1654
@kody1654 3 жыл бұрын
@@secondhandsock3086 Have any of you stopped to think about what anyone would have to gain from acting out the moon landing. It's not like they had a movie to sell or some product to push. It was the culmination of years of work, ending with successful science experiments and a safe trip home, and it was broadcasted for "free" over TV for everyone to watch. People have died trying to go back into space, why would they fake it?
@secondhandsock3086
@secondhandsock3086 3 жыл бұрын
@@kody1654 because we saw a coke bottle kicked on to the set here in australia and they quickly cut the feed as for what they would have to gain ? Ummmm unlimited amounts of unexplored mining materials unchallenged by any one and a cancellation of the push to ever actually go because in the mind's of the public we already achieved it and you really think we went to the moon in a tin can with a malfunctioning calculator motherboard? Okay believe that if you want but tell me why we've never set up a colony or a mining operation and why only a select handful of people get to go to the ISS and why Neil Armstrong couldn't answer any questions about it besides what it was like in the lunar module and why did buzz aldrin go the complete opposite way after being questioned so many times about it and why did they tell the press they couldn't see any stars and then go into a cold sweat in front of the cameras and how did they use the Hasselblad camera in a vacuum? And how did they lose all of the most important and inspiring moon footage from the NASA headquarters? Why don't people see the gaping holes in this story is patriotism really that blind?
@rockethead7
@rockethead7 3 жыл бұрын
@@secondhandsock3086 YOU SAID: "because we saw a coke bottle kicked on to the set here in australia" == Get real. Does that even make sense to you? No. That's an old story from an old and senile woman who says that's what she saw. But, it's completely unfounded. YOU SAID: "and they quickly cut the feed as for what they would have to gain ? Ummmm unlimited amounts of unexplored mining materials unchallenged by any one and a cancellation of the push to ever actually go because in the mind's of the public we already achieved it" == Wait, what are you talking about? What "mining materials"? On the moon? What are you talking about? I mean, good grief. Yeah, there are precious metals deep in the Earth's depths also. But, when it costs more to acquire it than you can ever sell it for, yeah, kind of doesn't matter. The same is true of the moon. It costs more to retrieve stuff from the moon than you can ever sell it for. YOU SAID: "and you really think we went to the moon in a tin can with a malfunctioning calculator motherboard?" == You have no idea what you're talking about. YOU SAID: "Okay believe that if you want but tell me why we've never set up a colony" == A COLONY!?!?!? What ARE you talking about? They spent today's equivalent of $200 billion to put 12 men on the moon for a few hours each. They stretched the envelope of Apollo's hardware to the limit, with a maximum stay of 74 hours on the lunar surface. You want a "colony" there?? YOU SAID: "or a mining operation" == Because it would cost more to retrieve anything from the moon than you could ever sell it for. YOU SAID: "and why only a select handful of people get to go to the ISS" == As opposed to what? Opening a line for everyone to ride, as if it's Disneyland? YOU SAID: "and why Neil Armstrong couldn't answer any questions about it" == He has answered thousands of questions. What exact questions are you talking about? YOU SAID: "besides what it was like in the lunar module and why did buzz aldrin go the complete opposite way after being questioned" == Opposite as what? Most people in the astronaut corps didn't get along with Bull Aldrin very well. Yeah, he was going to go a different way, whatever that means. YOU SAID: "so many times about it and why did they tell the press they couldn't see any stars" == From where? The lunar surface? From orbit? Which EXACT conditions are you asking about? YOU SAID: "and then go into a cold sweat in front of the cameras" == This is too ridiculous to fathom. YOU SAID: "and how did they use the Hasselblad camera in a vacuum?" == Point and click. YOU SAID: "And how did they lose all of the most important and inspiring moon footage from the NASA headquarters?" == They didn't. You don't know what you're talking about. YOU SAID: "Why don't people see the gaping holes in this story is patriotism really that blind?" == No, but you are.
@secondhandsock3086
@secondhandsock3086 3 жыл бұрын
@@rockethead7 well there you have it you have an answer for everything and none of it was backed up by anything,( you can't just say you have no idea what you're talking about and make no counter argument to most of the subjects, no alternative facts or ideas where do you think all our black budget money goes? Let alone the rest of the hidden GDP of countries and billion dollar corporations and I'm sorry but if we can't do it now with trillions then they didn't do it then with piss poor technology even if you write everything else off one talk with buzz aldrin will set you straight but just saying no to all my points makes you nieve and having nothing to back you up or any valid facts to prove I'm wrong you're not using your noodle you're just being a five year old child sticking your fingers in your ears and refusing to think you're restricting yourself because you don't want to look at the truth you want to live in your bubble of beliefs and that's alright if you feel safe in your bubble but you can't learn anything new if you live in a bubble
@Torahboy1
@Torahboy1 5 жыл бұрын
More adverts please.....!
@samosasosa6684
@samosasosa6684 4 жыл бұрын
@@just_because_ The mistake most people make is downloading the new improved version. After that you can't have a add blocker. NEVER click on the pop up that says new better you tube free click here. I didn't on my main PC the others I tried it then you can't delete and go back and get the original version.
@nasaskywatcher5200
@nasaskywatcher5200 3 жыл бұрын
Stanley Kubrick insisted that all SIX Apollo Moon Landings be filmed on location out there on the Lunar surface. He was aiming for realism.
@MRL86_
@MRL86_ 3 жыл бұрын
Man these landing still blow my mind. Doing that journey with that tech totally amazing. I got misty eyed when NASA’s OSIRIS-REx touched down successfully on that asteroid recently, what a bullseye to hit!
@jolibedano6970
@jolibedano6970 3 жыл бұрын
The greatest technological achievement done by human beings.
@firsttimediesels6289
@firsttimediesels6289 3 жыл бұрын
Wait till they tell you they needed Nazi help, the Nazis have a treaty with the underworld
@ilovecops6255
@ilovecops6255 3 жыл бұрын
nobody landed on the MOONE. ther is NO PROOF THEY DID.
@rozzgrey801
@rozzgrey801 7 ай бұрын
@@ilovecops6255 There's loads of proof, but you don't want to see it, 'cos it scares you. No E in Moon.
@jessicawells5145
@jessicawells5145 5 жыл бұрын
There's a first stage of the Saturn 5 down the road from my house in Mississippi, its a awesome sight to behold!!!
@smartin1601
@smartin1601 5 жыл бұрын
Most of us had to witness the fraud on TV.
@tyharris9994
@tyharris9994 5 жыл бұрын
@@smartin1601 How about the million people on the beach in South Florida who watched the launch live? Did they imagine it?
@smartin1601
@smartin1601 5 жыл бұрын
@@tyharris9994 No Sir. they watched a racket launch just like I have done; what we didn't realize was that the rcocket went to about 120k feet then it arched over the ocean unt it was out of our sight. Once the vehicle recached a cretian point it simply fell back to earth where it either sank or was partially recovered. Russia, China, the EU, all do the same thing. It is rocket science with a twist. God bless you. WWG1WGA
@michaelthomas7898
@michaelthomas7898 4 жыл бұрын
@@smartin1601 Your comment show lack of history, and your stupidity.
@matthewblack7206
@matthewblack7206 4 жыл бұрын
@@michaelthomas7898 These people are deliberate poop-stirrers. Some of them don't really believe the garbage they type - but tragically some do. Some of their belief systems - flat earth or the Earth is just a giant snow globe with no space and stars - their belief system is *LITERALLY* impossible and untrue, not to mention a waste of time. It's tragic...
@Camop-iz9kt
@Camop-iz9kt 3 жыл бұрын
I got to meet Gene Cernan in 2009 and 2010. A super memory.
@j.w.hunter8126
@j.w.hunter8126 3 жыл бұрын
My favorite mission to watch, loved the humor. Three days! Wow. Nice job, astronauts. Most productive mission and it shows!
@seanmccurry3734
@seanmccurry3734 2 жыл бұрын
Most post production or just productive? They never went 🤪🤣
@dirkdiggler8260
@dirkdiggler8260 2 жыл бұрын
@@seanmccurry3734 lol, what a beIIend you are.
@seanmccurry3734
@seanmccurry3734 2 жыл бұрын
@@dirkdiggler8260 cant attack the message so u result to this 🤡
@rozzgrey801
@rozzgrey801 7 ай бұрын
@@seanmccurry3734 We know for a stone cold certain fact that they went, as we know that you hate seeing success as it reminds you that you are not a success.
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