If it wasn’t for RUclips these great Documentaries would never have been seen. So difficult to find any great documentaries like this one and many others anywhere other than RUclips. Thank you to this channel and to RUclips.
I was 16 years old when I watched Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walk on the moon (from my 16-inch television set). It was extraordinary. I didn't sleep a wink that night, I couldn't stop thinking about what an incredible moment it had been. Then, they returned to earth safely which was a huge relief and equally amazing. What a time to have lived through.
Total BS. They didn't go there. Why do people even believe it-? It's damn obvious that they have no technology for it. We can't go today, so how did they go then-? Lies
That's evidence enough for me that it's real, that men like that would turn into excited children. No way they're on a sound stage, they wouldn't be that good at acting.
@@2259r3z they did fake the landing what are you talking about lol it was filmed nowhere near the real location, it was actually filmed on the other side of the moon sad people still believe its real...
Yep, it's a great movie. And they call on God when they say "and God said let there be light." And yet, these astronauts never saw any of the lights in the sky except for the sun. Not a single star. The stars were given by God for our navigation. Yet they never saw one of them. What a movie!
@alejandrorojas-2025 Agree. Been studying the stuff (made an engineering career because of it) and watching the footage since being a kid. Incredible effort, especially when you go deep into the technical aspects.
I remember this as a kid at 7 years old. Although I didn't quit understand all the details but remember friends, teachers and parents briefly talking about it. pretty cool and wish I was older when it happened.
@@crixxxxxxxxx I suppose that pluralizing "times" allows for more than a single year. Although, for that matter, how meant U.S. soldiers were killed in 1972? How many Vietnamese?
This is what America is supposed to be, it breaks my heart to see what has become of this God blessed country. Dear God please save America, give her another chance and save her....
There's absolutely no room for uncertainty - Felix accomplished one of the most mind-boggling feats ever undertaken by a human being. I've replayed the video countless times, and each viewing continues to leave me utterly astounded.
Yep. You are totally "correct" No reason whatsoever to doubt these highly incredulous narratives. None whatsoever. Yep- I totally believe in NASA, even tho they have lied to us SO MANY times. So I just have one simple question to anyone who still believes in the Apollo stories. Question: " How did the footpads of the Apollo 11 LEM get cleaned of the moondust, which would have surely been there after the lunar landing?? Did moon fairies come out with feather dusters to clean them off before the cameras rolled??? Please tell me how. I want to know.
Back in the early 90's. while I was still living in Austin Texas. The son and grand sons of Ronald Evans lived across the street from me. they had a room with Apollo and other NASA stuff. I got to meet Ronald Evans when he came to visit his family and talked with him for a bit. He was kind enough to autograph an encyclopedia that I had on the entry for the Saturn V. Wish I still had that book. Unfortunately it has gone missing over the years and I have no idea what happened to it.
I never missed a single lift off. In fact I was the hero of my grade school class because we had a portable TV that i could bring to school so my class could watch the launch.
@4:37 way that flag moves is very similar compared to the footage on the moon. And how they did a live broadcast is just crazy…we can’t even do that today without lag….
What's the big deal about "lag"? It's the speed limit of the universe--the speed of light. It takes at least 1.3 seconds for information of any kind to travel from the moon to Earth.
1) Take into account where the recording is taking place (in Houston). There's no reason to expect a delay when an astronaut speaks and Houston answers. The delay is in the other direction, when Houston speaks and an astronaut answers. 2) Many documentaries and other shows edit out the delays because the audience doesn't want the long pauses and wasted time. The delays are always correct on the original recordings.
Actually that’s a good point. We have large sensor cameras with real good low light performance with the capability of storing thousands of images. There is going to be so much to look at on the next mission.
@@skatepark02”Low light performance” is irrelevant on the Moon’s surface during daylight. The required exposure settings would be about the same as standing in an asphalt parking lot on a sunny day on Earth.
Yes Good point, I dont know why I brought up low light, I think i was tired. Dynamic range however. People might stop complaining aout not seeing stars @@executivesteps
even though we as Indians have made so much progress into space, but i am stunned to see how advanced USA was even 50-60 years ago....i mean they got live footages from that time also which we can't even think of.............hats off to them and their technology.................hopefully we can emulate them and in the coming future a force to reckon with in space missions........PROUD OF OUR "ISRO"
@@sushandkrishna7220 You cannot convince those who choose to bury their heads in sand. All those conspiracy theories have been convincingly debunked. They all have scientific explanations, including the flag-wave "gotcha" that ignoramuses like to cite. By the way, there were 6 successful human landing on the moon, all by American astronauts. Adding all their missions, a total of 12 men walked on the moon.
@@CallmeMaspr Are you aware that just like you, there are Pakistanis who believe that Chandrayan-3's moon landing was faked by Indians? I am sure you agree with them also, right?
As a kid we were there at the launch site. It was delayed. I remember my mom waking me up as I got to see the launch. The first nite launch and our last moon mission. Great memories. Thank you father.
The last guy to walk on the moon was the late Gene Cernan. On his way back to the LEM to leave the surface, he bent down and scratched his daughters' initials into the lunar surface. It was the most incredible act of a father in history. Nothing can top it. For the next billion years his tribute to her will stand undisturbed.
As a father that is the greatest thing he did. Thought about her up there. Imagine the thought of your initials there!!! Your dad did that. Makes me want to cry!
Hopefully I can be one of them, trying to get my CS masters and then going to apply to be an astronaut, I should be done by the time applications are up again
When you look at what was done by the last Apollo missions you see how much better it was to be an Apollo astronaut at the end of the program. They had all the toys and didn't need to waste energy figuring out how and where to land.
Though as pilots they wanted the "firsts". For example, Apollo 9 was considered a plumb mission even though it never left earth orbit. It was the first chance to fly the LM, the first flying machine designed to only work in space.
The debate in Apollo was do we need a crew of three highly skilled aviator/pilots who receive some scientific training, or, in the case of Jack Schmitt, do we send a scientist to the USAF Air Education and Training Command for a year and train him to fly high performance jet aircraft. I think Apollo 13 showed that if things go wrong...very wrong, you needed as many skilled pilots as you can squeeze into the capsule! Regardless, I'm glad Jack Schmitt made it into space, but sorry that the Apollo program ended three flights short of what had been scheduled. It was a hell of a ride while it lasted.
To all the people past and present that made it possible for us to explore the vast expanse of outer space and the moon I got mad respect for each and everyone....... However I have to say that Apollo 17 made it most funny.... He kept calling his buddy twinkle toes.... Wish there was more documentaries like this..... Godspeed to all of humanity past present and beyond
I didn’t know they was planning on going back to the moon. I’ve been wondering why Elon Musk hasn’t worked towards that. He has done great things and so far it always seems like he is successful. It will be awesome to land on the moon again.
Cernan was the best moonwalker to speak with (and I've spoken with most of them). That man, I'll tell ya, he could read people better than anybody I've met, and he instantly could tell whether to ramp the conversation up to super-techy engineering talk, or tone it down to casual basics. Somehow, he instantly knew how technical to be (or not to be). I've only met him 3 or 4 times, but, each time was really great. He'd tell my wife exactly the types of things she'd want to hear (more simple stuff), then shift gears and tell me about how the guidance computers worked, then shift gears again and talk about how he felt emotionally while on the moon. The only thing I didn't like was that he kept bringing up his religion (and his religious experiences while on the moon) every time I'd talk with him. That's about the only thing he ever misread about, because I could have lived without those little segments of conversation. But, the rest... pure perfection. Another thing I learned was never to make heroes of anybody. I mean, not that I really ever did. But, like I tell my kids, just judge people on the stuff you know. If you are a Michael Jordan fan (or any other sports person), fine, but don't admire him for who he is as a person, just admire his abilities on the basketball court. And, if you admire an astronaut, just admire him for his accomplishments in space, not because of who he is as a person. Not that Cernan is really bad or anything, but, there are some aspects of his personality that are very "human" (that I won't get into), and it's best to stick with admiring as the astronaut he is (er, was), and not necessarily judge anything (good or bad) outside of that topic.
@@rockethead7 Cool account, thanks for sharing. Great that you met him on several occasions. I never met him. Was born in 68 so too young to remember Apollo 10 and 17. I remember watching him in the broadcast booth during the first Shuttle launch.
@@rockethead7Man, I went to SpaceFest the year after Cernan died and the guy running the booth that sells photos for autographs started talking to me about him and how Cernan liked to get people together for golf at such events (which were often held near golf courses). And then he asked me if I had ever met Cernan, and I said no. The guy looked genuinely sad for me that I would never get to experience Cernan in person.
Hey cody wy do i still see pictures of the moon wen they take pictures,cuz that is not earth,earth is green &waz seen wen they took off frm the moon,something is fishy
@@rozzgrey801 Apparently, if you mash the keyboard enough, something resembling language just might be created. This was a good example if that cliche.
@smeeself 🤣🤣😅🤣😂😅🤣😂😅👏👏👏 there we have it...more proof of thru fantasy land you think you live in...oh wait...that's not proof of that...that's proof of your IQ 👍
To all the Indians talking about the "flying flag" despite no air, it never flew; it was held by a horizontal rod on top and only moved while being planted.
They said the future would be bright. We were led to believe that the future was going to be great. All the future brought was death and destruction. The future brought pain and anguish. People have changed. Everything has changed and not for the better. I miss the old days. I miss the days where people was nice. I miss the days when people smiled and enjoyed life. I miss those family reunions. Things was so much better. The people was better. Life was better. The way Americans stood together. The way people cared. There was a time when America was united. Why has things gotten so bad? Why has people lost hope? God and country has no meaning anymore. Take me back to those days.
I believe that everything in life is cycles. Before them, there was also a lot of pain and suffering with tragedies, natural disasters, wars, etc. Our bad luck is that we are in the exact transition between these cycles, at the same time that there is a lot of innovation, there is a lot of pain.
The US government is actually using the name of the continent to its citizens and country. We are US citizens and citizens of the United States. Everyone in North America, Central America, South America,, the Americas,, the American continent is an American like Asia are Asians Africa are Africans and Europe are Europeans. Europe has 50 countries Asia has 51 countries Africa has 54 countries Oceania has 14 countries and America is not a country America is a continent of 35 countries in total. What happened first ❓ The United States OF America or the American continent ❓ The United States OF America became a nation on the date of July 4th of 1776 and the whole entire continent was already named America after Amerigo Vespucci in the year 1507 that's 269 years difference way before the United States OF America became a nation. Why are people not educated about America ❓.
Engineers of that era were so perfect at building their machines. We seem to have advanced technologically, mainly in computers and electronics, but that old knowledge seems to have gotten lost.
Both Soviet orbital probes and the Indian moon mission have confirmed the remnants of the LEM on the moon. Not to mention the laser reflectors placed there.
@@TimBrown-e9lThe best images (by far) of the lunar surface were taken by NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter launched in 2009. They clearly showed the disturbed trails in the regolith as the astronauts walked on the Moon along with their equipment.
Grandes recuerdos nostálgicos, nos entrega estos documentales a personas que vimos estos programas de la NASA con los apolos al espacio,,,,soy generación 53 y me marabillo viendo documentales de estos,,, gracias x compartir, felicitaciones 👋👋
Ray wy do i stil see the pictures of the moon wen they took pictures on the moon,something is fishy,al the way frm afrika,i would hv loved to cum houston taxes,the is wall unit for poor people,al de way frm Afrika
The largest mass extinction of life on Earth was caused by 100,000s of years of continuous volcanic eruptions (Deccan Traps). The dinosaurs and many other species died due to climate changes caused by changes due to a meteorite impact.
Intersting tech with the field scan video cameras. In 1972, color video cameras were massive. They figured out how to make it light by using a black and white camera that shot three images thru primary color filters and interlaced them to make a video frame. Works well, but it does cause color artifacts called the "Harris Shutter Effect" when objects move between images in each frame. This is why the LM liftoff images have the camera artifact colorful sparks.
I love the joy and polite expressions, serious stuff but with good humor. No 4 letter words (eh em, earlier missions), and even Kosher at times: 49:00 . So much better and more real than the over scripted NASA of today.
Well, Cernan did get in trouble on Apollo 10 for using some blue words on live audio. Had to issue an apology. I think he had that in mind when he says, "Golly!"
When you look at the 2023 lunar missions, you really appreciate the spectacular achievement of the Apollo missions. The culmination of a monumental effort and the best of what humans are capable of. This is a fantastic documentary. 🍻
@Xiao_CommenterOk . Anything else 😂We are not saying it's fake but most people believe this is fake. 80 percent comment you will see they say it's fake.
Beautiful, sentimental documentary. Incredible images. Fantastic! Looking forward to really getting back into the space age with the upcoming lunar base.
Que aventura y proeza más increible. No había tenido la experiencia de verlo en detalle. Me pregunto ¿que hubiese sentido si hubiese sido yo quien piso solo con un compañero ese terreno, el que tantas noches no ha alumbrado en nuestra vida...? Realmente maravilloso. 👍👍🇨🇱 What an incredible adventure and feat. I had not had the experience of seeing it in detail. I wonder what it would have felt like if it had been me who walked alone with a partner on that ground, the one that hasn't illuminated so many nights in our lives...? Really wonderful. 👍👍🇨🇱
de verdad crees que eso es de verdad? fijate en el minuto 16:10 es una maqueta se puede ver que esta clavado parece chapon y clavos toda esa maqueta esta desnivelada es una broma de mal gusto
@@markdos1538 no se puede salir de la tierra una vez que ya no hay densidad no hay forma de seguir subiendo si no hay densidad contra que se propulciona un motor es imposible solo en la guerra de la galaqxia se puede
The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter which was launched to the Moon in 2009 has taken thousands of high resolution photographs of the Moon. The descent stages of the Apollo Lunar Modules are clearly visible on the surface of the Moon. Spacecraft from China, India and Japan have also taken such photos. End of story...
Just happened just like this. My father was an engineered from NASA for people who don't believe that we went to the moon. It happened and memory of my father John Velez engineer from NASA rest in peace Dad February 12th 1933 October 27th, 2004
🌘Excellent, hat’s off & well done . My Father was Aerospace elec engineer for NAAviation / Rockwell 1965 - til this A17 mission . He worked on all missions then later on X-15 HypersonicAircraft
🌘Excellent, hat’s off & well done . My Father was also Apollo Aerospace / he was elec engineer for NAAviation / Rockwell 1965 - til this A17 mission . He worked on all missions then later on X-15 HypersonicAircraft
Watched all the Appollo missions on TV, but Appollo 17 was my Ultimate favourite, albeit the last in the series. If we could do what we did then, imagine what could be achieved now.
@@aemrt5745Schmidt pushed hard for a landing on the far side crater Tsiolkovskiy. Meanwhile on earth, the Space Shuttle was being developed, Skylab was in the works, OPEC was creating oil shortages, and the Vietnam War needed to be paid for. The old saying, “No bucks, no Buck Rogers”, helped to seal the fate of the lunar program.
I remember going to the Smithsonian Air and Space museum. There I saw a large book in a glass case opened. I saw that is was the source code of the computers on board. I find it hard to imagine software development in the 60's
The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter which was launched to the Moon in 2009 has taken thousands of high resolution photographs of the Moon. The descent stages of the Apollo Lunar Modules are clearly visible on the surface of the Moon. Spacecraft from China, India and Japan have also taken such photos. End of story...
The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter which was launched to the Moon in 2009 has taken thousands of high resolution photographs of the Moon. The descent stages of the Apollo Lunar Modules are clearly visible on the surface of the Moon. Spacecraft from China, India and Japan have also taken such photos. End of story...
It's incredible how the astronaut can sing while running and hopping on the moon in that bulky suit without a hint of exertion in his voice! As a singer, I'm impressed!
7 hours of oxygen as well while they are out and about. i don't know too many scuba divers that sing like idiots when they are hundreds of feet away from safety let alone 3 days..
The thing that strikes me is the confidence of the men on the mission. They are kicking boulders, falling over and jumping around. I would be so terrified of tearing my suit or breaking something. This might seem like an odd comment, but I hope we have that confidence going back to the moon and beyond. We live in a world of anxiety these days and I really hope Artemis and its partners can be bold.
Good point about the suits. There is a just hot off the press GAO report that sites space suit development as one the the potential show stoppers for the Artemis III Mission.
My guess is they’re buzzing with adrenaline and excitement, almost to the point that they’ve lost their sense of danger. You can really hear the excitement in their voices when they first entered the luna orbit. Can’t say I blame them though, what an experience!
These are mainly hardened folks just built for this. They don't let all the small things (that could be catastrophic) get to them. If they did half the missions would be aborted due to anxiety caused by overthinking. Lots of things we do in our world are actually pretty dangerous, but if you don't overthink them the risks are greatly minimized.
The earlier moonwalks were far shorter, less ambitious in scope, and the astronauts much more careful with the suits and other equipment because they didn't know how well things would hold up in that environment. Apollo 11's "contingency" plans for a quick exit if need be were a good example. With each mission they got more comfortable with the technology, more bold in their actions, and less formal in their behavior during the EVA's. By Apollo 17 the moon walkers were downright playful and giddy. In other words, going to the moon had became more routine, which is part of the reason Apollo 18 - 20 were cancelled. We'd been there, done that, it had become routine, taxpayers were losing interest and questioning why we were spending the money to keep going back.
@@neilarmstrongsson795 - Your loss. If you want to live in a world of willful ignorance, go ahead. But how you believe something you can't back up with any good evidence is beyond me. I guess science isn't your thing. Try religion.
@@renejean2523 Now, now Rene. Dingus has a point. He was a better actor, when he did all those docos afterwards - In the Shadow of the Moon, my favorite, he did a great acting job there. It was articulate and genuine, almost as good as his piloting and test piloting skills, less better than his astronautic skills as they got him to the moon and back and certainly his moon exploration ability was top notch.
Blech @ Gene. He's so corny and bland. Michael Collins all day long, baby! Grissom if we've choosing skill, but Collins if we're choosing personality. Dude's a riot! 😂
@@ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid - I agree about Collins. He was a hoot. His book is by far the best of any space person I've read. I suppose I'm swayed by Cernan's intense and more comprehensive mission. The length of time on the moon and his relationship with Harrison Schmitt while there. Also, his first words soon after landing were, "Incredible. Absolutely incredible. ... The most epic moment of my life." Which I've always thought was pretty cool.
I hope one day we are able to visit some of the Apollo sights. I would love to see the stuff we left behind all those years ago. I wonder if the sun has baked it like they found it had the surveyor on Apollo 12
@@coolnamebro whatever moron there is tons and tons of proof and you choose to deny it all. Literally an explanation for every component involved and hundreds of thousands who worked on the project. But I know you don’t care and we lied about going not just once but multiple times we even faked Apollo 13 disaster just for the hell of it right? Lol
@@coolnamebro Sure is, Lunar Laser Ranging (LLR) for one. That can still be used today, just visit your local observatory with laser ranging equipment.
I spent time at Orroral Valley Tracking Station here in Australia and we supported the ALSEP experiments installed by the astronauts. Uploading commands and downloading data on a daily basis. We shutdown ALSEP on the 30th September 1977 due to NASA budget cuts.
@@MrMarco855 No females on our shift. Don’t think there were on the other two shifts either. Might have been such a person on day shift, but they were pretty much a mystery to us shift staff..
The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter which was launched to the Moon in 2009 has taken thousands of high resolution photographs of the Moon. The descent stages of the Apollo Lunar Modules are clearly visible on the surface of the Moon. Spacecraft from China, India and Japan have also taken such photos. End of story...
Few questions... 1) Who was the cameraman filming them on the moon? 2) How did they transport those quads they were driving on the moon? Surely not at the same time with the lander? 3) Does the module not look rather very basic for such a complex mission? If it was that basic, how come it's taking them ages to replicate a modern version with all that knowledge they have? I am not saying that they didn't or they did. I just have questions.
1) each other, or the GCTA. 2) the Lunar Roving Vehicle was actually folded up in the Quadrant 1 bay of the Lunar Module on the J-missions (Apollo 15-17). There is footage of them deploying it on Apollo 15. 3) looks can be deceiving, but why would they want to replicate anything?
@siletamus2016 1. Remote controlled (in Houston) camera on the rover. 2. Look up the Engineering. The rover was very light weight (lunar gravity is 1/6 earth) and foldable. Plenty of images on line. 3. The LM was NOT simple. For the time, it had advanced tech including fly by wire computer controls, life support systems, a landing engine that could throttle, and dopler radar for landing.
It's amazing to watch the shadows and see how quickly between 40'30" and 40'55" Sun is moving from left to the right. At 40'48" it's even on the left and already on the right as well at the same time!
Good gods, do you REALLY not understand photographic perspective? Really? You're not aware that shadows converge? Dewdrop, it's the same as if you squat down between two train tracks and take a photo. It looks like the two train tracks are converging, right? It looks like there's no way a train could ever roll down those tracks, because the left track is converging toward the right, and the right one is converging toward the left. Yet, you know darned well that if you took the photo from above, the two tracks are parallel. Well, same thing goes in that photo you're talking about, dewdrop. The shadows converge. That's what they're supposed to do. If they didn't then that means that the light source was inside the camera, not 93 million miles away. You have pointed out a very good photo that confirms the single light source that's extremely far away. But, somehow, you managed to believe that the shadows shouldn't converge?
Go take any photo with the sun behind you, dewdrop, and look at what the shadows do. Or, if you're too lazy, "converging shadows" (Google is your friend), and look at the images. Sheeeeessssshhhh.
@@rockethead7My answer to your first question is - no - I'm not familiar with photography aspects, as well as with most other disciplines. I specialze in something completely else as most of the people, except some daVincis who are capable to absorb multidiscipline knowledge. I'm not believer of anything - religious or not religious meaning. I prefer to know. So, if I don't know something, I'm asking question, then I'm thankful for answers.
Tell me why America couldn't have landed on the moon. Disprove all the math done for fuel, life support, engines, and all the rest and then tell me its fake, heck even disprove just one peice of math that they actively used in the apollo missions and I might believe you. I am going off of the assumption that you aren't a flat earther.
Here in Australia we used to support the ALSEP experiments installed on the lunar surface by the Apollo astronauts at Orroral Valley tracking station. Uploading commands and downloading data on a daily basis.
If it wasn’t for RUclips these great Documentaries would never have been seen. So difficult to find any great documentaries like this one and many others anywhere other than RUclips. Thank you to this channel and to RUclips.
@@onlythewise1 For real! my girl always makes me wear a condom. I hate! being suppressed like that.
@@onlythewise1
I know right! Fridges, freezers, dish washers, polar bears, milk, cream, cotton, snow, paper, clouds, the list goes on.
@@kotastrophie good thing she didn't cut it off like other females have done , you won't joke about it then will ya
@@davidsheckler4450 Prove it.
This documentaries shows that the Moon-landings are fake.
I was 16 years old when I watched Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walk on the moon (from my 16-inch television set). It was extraordinary. I didn't sleep a wink that night, I couldn't stop thinking about what an incredible moment it had been. Then, they returned to earth safely which was a huge relief and equally amazing. What a time to have lived through.
Total BS. They didn't go there. Why do people even believe it-? It's damn obvious that they have no technology for it. We can't go today, so how did they go then-?
Lies
Did you watch full documentary? Was that live casting on TV?
16" tv ? Well la te da bigshot !
Have you believed this?
aww the little jump was adorable and the excitement from their voices. they must be so happy and felt unbelievably proud
That's evidence enough for me that it's real, that men like that would turn into excited children. No way they're on a sound stage, they wouldn't be that good at acting.
@@jodyssey9921 And that's only one of a LONG list of reasons why it would be impossible to fake
@@2259r3z they did fake the landing what are you talking about lol
it was filmed nowhere near the real location, it was actually filmed on the other side of the moon
sad people still believe its real...
@@2259r3z
Anyone capable of critical thought knows that no human has ever been on the lunar surface.
Well, THIS Spaceman will always be a Spaceman. I did 32 years in the program and am proud to have done so. No one can take that away.
Was really confused about what you meant, so I looked you up. Very impressive sir!
@@ryanthomson6756 thank you very much.
Part of the fakery huh ?
RIP Gene. I wanted to meet you, but God took you before I had the chance. A picture perfect mission.
You mean he died?
He had guts beyond the mission.
I was a freshman in college when this mission occurred. What an achievement!!
I was a 16 year-old high school student and my heart nearly flew out of my chest, I was so excited.
10 here. We got to stay home from school during one of the landings
What a film by Kubrick!
i never get tired of whatching this never ever ever
Yep, it's a great movie. And they call on God when they say "and God said let there be light." And yet, these astronauts never saw any of the lights in the sky except for the sun. Not a single star. The stars were given by God for our navigation. Yet they never saw one of them. What a movie!
@alejandrorojas-2025 Agree. Been studying the stuff (made an engineering career because of it) and watching the footage since being a kid. Incredible effort, especially when you go deep into the technical aspects.
They were playful because they had the certainty that all of the previous dangers of walking and staying on the Moon had been worked out.
Men in culture appreciate your skill...
@@Xformat01 What makes you think they never saw stars?
One day India will also do man mission on moon🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳
I think we indian should not spend money on space missions .
We Indians hope, definitely. We can do that .
@@gladiatorx6085 good thinking, keep it up
@@gladiatorx6085I think we should.
Probably in 2040
I remember this as a kid at 7 years old. Although I didn't quit understand all the details but remember friends, teachers and parents briefly talking about it. pretty cool and wish I was older when it happened.
What a moment in our history. We should bring those times back.
Well, 1968 was considered a pretty bad year by that who lived it, as i hear.
@@gives_bad_advice This is 1972
@@crixxxxxxxxx I suppose that pluralizing "times" allows for more than a single year. Although, for that matter, how meant U.S. soldiers were killed in 1972? How many Vietnamese?
@@gives_bad_advice There are always conflicts going on in the world at any point in history. You can pick any year and find a conflict happening.
@@crixxxxxxxxx I don't doubt that. What I doubt is that all points in history show the same level of conflict.
This is what America is supposed to be, it breaks my heart to see what has become of this God blessed country. Dear God please save America, give her another chance and save her....
He allegedly helps those who help themselves. And nobody is more fanatically religious than the maga crowd.
That’s why America become like today because everybody was cheering fake moon landings and buying stuff they don’t need
Just grab your your little place in our country and protect it
I've learnt to create my own bubble and live within, the world will eat u up if u let it, true happiness comes from within
There's absolutely no room for uncertainty - Felix accomplished one of the most mind-boggling feats ever undertaken by a human being. I've replayed the video countless times, and each viewing continues to leave me utterly astounded.
Felix ?
Yep. You are totally "correct" No reason whatsoever to doubt these highly incredulous narratives. None whatsoever. Yep- I totally believe in NASA, even tho they have lied to us SO MANY times. So I just have one simple question to anyone who still believes in the Apollo stories. Question: " How did the footpads of the Apollo 11 LEM get cleaned of the moondust, which would have surely been there after the lunar landing?? Did moon fairies come out with feather dusters to clean them off before the cameras rolled??? Please tell me how. I want to know.
Harrison Schmitt was the most important astronaut to go to the moon, as a geologist he helped more discoveries about how our universe was formed.
❤😅
I think they are all equally important in their own way.
Yeah, ask Netherlands how they liked their petrified moon rock.
@@-TheOracle- Petrified wood it was and not even near interesting.
Ha ha.... you *still* think the moon landings were real? 😂
Back in the early 90's. while I was still living in Austin Texas. The son and grand sons of Ronald Evans lived across the street from me. they had a room with Apollo and other NASA stuff. I got to meet Ronald Evans when he came to visit his family and talked with him for a bit. He was kind enough to autograph an encyclopedia that I had on the entry for the Saturn V.
Wish I still had that book. Unfortunately it has gone missing over the years and I have no idea what happened to it.
Buy the Lego for Saturn V.
Did you ask that NASA stuff about the Moon? How was his experience with Moon and is this document or a movie??? What do you think about Moon landing?
but you still have underwear from grade nine. go figure.
Our lives today are like sand through an hour glass. So many treasures slip through our fingers.
Today is 22 August 2024.
I never missed a single lift off. In fact I was the hero of my grade school class because we had a portable TV that i could bring to school so my class could watch the launch.
Damn that's nice
It's all lies😂
@4:37 way that flag moves is very similar compared to the footage on the moon. And how they did a live broadcast is just crazy…we can’t even do that today without lag….
What's the big deal about "lag"? It's the speed limit of the universe--the speed of light. It takes at least 1.3 seconds for information of any kind to travel from the moon to Earth.
great observation
@@gives_bad_advice
Chek out the flag moving in and out of a frame on a stationary camera on Apollo 14. What's your explanation?
@@gives_bad_adviceright much faster of the digital era , but it's all non sense
How are they able to have these back n forth conversations with the people on earth that seam seamless without any delay? That’s a long ways away?
1) Take into account where the recording is taking place (in Houston). There's no reason to expect a delay when an astronaut speaks and Houston answers. The delay is in the other direction, when Houston speaks and an astronaut answers.
2) Many documentaries and other shows edit out the delays because the audience doesn't want the long pauses and wasted time. The delays are always correct on the original recordings.
Because it never happened...it's all a lie.
@@Mrdilligaf421 Your lack of evidence to back up your claim is no lie.
@@Mrdilligaf421 yet all the Landers, rovers and rover tracks can be seen on the Moon.
@@MultiVeetaнет такого телескопа способного через атмосферу разглядеть следы
If landing in the moon actually happened today, astronauts would definitely take 5000 selfies 😂
Actually that’s a good point. We have large sensor cameras with real good low light performance with the capability of storing thousands of images. There is going to be so much to look at on the next mission.
And I would pretend an alien monster was coming for us, bouncing away .😂
As well as livestream the moon's surface and a 24/7 telescope pointing at Earth
@@skatepark02”Low light performance” is irrelevant on the Moon’s surface during daylight.
The required exposure settings would be about the same as standing in an asphalt parking lot on a sunny day on Earth.
Yes Good point, I dont know why I brought up low light, I think i was tired. Dynamic range however. People might stop complaining aout not seeing stars @@executivesteps
even though we as Indians have made so much progress into space, but i am stunned to see how advanced USA was even 50-60 years ago....i mean they got live footages from that time also which we can't even think of.............hats off to them and their technology.................hopefully we can emulate them and in the coming future a force to reckon with in space missions........PROUD OF OUR "ISRO"
Studio Work😂 How easily came back in all Man Moon Missions 😂
They fooled the world.
If it’s one time, we can say studio work but they went 5 times?
No atmosphere on moon and we can see the flag is waving like their is wind blowing.. Haahhh Nice studio edit but forget about minor details 😂😂😂😂
@@sushandkrishna7220 You cannot convince those who choose to bury their heads in sand. All those conspiracy theories have been convincingly debunked. They all have scientific explanations, including the flag-wave "gotcha" that ignoramuses like to cite. By the way, there were 6 successful human landing on the moon, all by American astronauts. Adding all their missions, a total of 12 men walked on the moon.
@@CallmeMaspr Are you aware that just like you, there are Pakistanis who believe that Chandrayan-3's moon landing was faked by Indians? I am sure you agree with them also, right?
As a kid we were there at the launch site. It was delayed. I remember my mom waking me up as I got to see the launch. The first nite launch and our last moon mission. Great memories. Thank you father.
The last guy to walk on the moon was the late Gene Cernan. On his way back to the LEM to leave the surface, he bent down and scratched his daughters' initials into the lunar surface.
It was the most incredible act of a father in history. Nothing can top it.
For the next billion years his tribute to her will stand undisturbed.
True.
As a father that is the greatest thing he did. Thought about her up there. Imagine the thought of your initials there!!! Your dad did that. Makes me want to cry!
26:46 "I think the next generation ought to accept this as a challenge. Let's see 'em leave footsteps like these someday." Challenge accepted, sir.
Hopefully I can be one of them, trying to get my CS masters and then going to apply to be an astronaut, I should be done by the time applications are up again
@@a65232 I worked on Artemis and did my small contribution.
@@davidcruz1941 My son has one semester left at OSU. Not the same goal in mind but I will be glad when he graduates
When you look at what was done by the last Apollo missions you see how much better it was to be an Apollo astronaut at the end of the program. They had all the toys and didn't need to waste energy figuring out how and where to land.
And, they could go to the grocery store, the movie theater, the sports arena, whatever, without being mobbed (like Aldrin and Armstrong always were).
Though as pilots they wanted the "firsts". For example, Apollo 9 was considered a plumb mission even though it never left earth orbit. It was the first chance to fly the LM, the first flying machine designed to only work in space.
The debate in Apollo was do we need a crew of three highly skilled aviator/pilots who receive some scientific training, or, in the case of Jack Schmitt, do we send a scientist to the USAF Air Education and Training Command for a year and train him to fly high performance jet aircraft. I think Apollo 13 showed that if things go wrong...very wrong, you needed as many skilled pilots as you can squeeze into the capsule! Regardless, I'm glad Jack Schmitt made it into space, but sorry that the Apollo program ended three flights short of what had been scheduled. It was a hell of a ride while it lasted.
If they had continued on, i recon we would have been on mars by the 90s.
@@procta2343The 2090s I presume?
@@executivesteps i would say so now, closet thing we may get in our life time is an orbit around mars, and that's about it.
After our chandrayan 3 I watched this it's a greatest achievement 🎉
Really
Really bro
The glory days of NASA
back when it was properly funded 🥲
@@lootbot not only that but also when it got the best of the best of people.
To all the people past and present that made it possible for us to explore the vast expanse of outer space and the moon I got mad respect for each and everyone....... However I have to say that Apollo 17 made it most funny.... He kept calling his buddy twinkle toes.... Wish there was more documentaries like this..... Godspeed to all of humanity past present and beyond
This was amazing. My salute to these extraordinary and brave men who tasked upon themselves to quench the thirst of human curiosity and exploration.
Indeed. Incredible effort.
It's a credit to them, at least they gave it a good try.
This is a beautiful documentary, covers everything that those astronauts did, great work on this
We agree and happy you appreciated it.
This should be shown in schools. It would bolster the youths interest in space tenfold
Enough brainwashing in schools as is…
@@tombystander Watching Apollo Soyuz as a kid got me a career as an Aerospace Engineer!
@@aemrt5745thank u for ur contributions to humanity!
Proud of you America
🇮🇳♥️🇺🇲
This is something our children need to see
Amazing! ..space is the future and we are in the future . and now we are going back to the Moon with Artemis thank you.👍🇳🇿
Wy do i still see pictures of the moon wen they took pictures on the moon,something is fishy,that is not earth
@@shimzamamorobela5085 you definitely have never seen that lmao
@@shimzamamorobela5085😄😆 😂😂🤣🤣😅
Quando?
I didn’t know they was planning on going back to the moon. I’ve been wondering why Elon Musk hasn’t worked towards that. He has done great things and so far it always seems like he is successful. It will be awesome to land on the moon again.
saw their post on FB and click right away to watch this amazing mission
Read Cernan's book about his life and this mission. Lots of great insights into Apollo.
It’s the best of the three Apollo astronaut autobiographies that I have read.
Cernan was the best moonwalker to speak with (and I've spoken with most of them). That man, I'll tell ya, he could read people better than anybody I've met, and he instantly could tell whether to ramp the conversation up to super-techy engineering talk, or tone it down to casual basics. Somehow, he instantly knew how technical to be (or not to be). I've only met him 3 or 4 times, but, each time was really great. He'd tell my wife exactly the types of things she'd want to hear (more simple stuff), then shift gears and tell me about how the guidance computers worked, then shift gears again and talk about how he felt emotionally while on the moon. The only thing I didn't like was that he kept bringing up his religion (and his religious experiences while on the moon) every time I'd talk with him. That's about the only thing he ever misread about, because I could have lived without those little segments of conversation. But, the rest... pure perfection.
Another thing I learned was never to make heroes of anybody. I mean, not that I really ever did. But, like I tell my kids, just judge people on the stuff you know. If you are a Michael Jordan fan (or any other sports person), fine, but don't admire him for who he is as a person, just admire his abilities on the basketball court. And, if you admire an astronaut, just admire him for his accomplishments in space, not because of who he is as a person. Not that Cernan is really bad or anything, but, there are some aspects of his personality that are very "human" (that I won't get into), and it's best to stick with admiring as the astronaut he is (er, was), and not necessarily judge anything (good or bad) outside of that topic.
@@rockethead7 Cool account, thanks for sharing. Great that you met him on several occasions.
I never met him. Was born in 68 so too young to remember Apollo 10 and 17. I remember watching him in the broadcast booth during the first Shuttle launch.
@@rockethead7Man, I went to SpaceFest the year after Cernan died and the guy running the booth that sells photos for autographs started talking to me about him and how Cernan liked to get people together for golf at such events (which were often held near golf courses). And then he asked me if I had ever met Cernan, and I said no. The guy looked genuinely sad for me that I would never get to experience Cernan in person.
Its all fake man. Look into it.
It's amazing to see how much the technology changed between 17 and earlier missions like 8 or 11
Hey cody wy do i still see pictures of the moon wen they take pictures,cuz that is not earth,earth is green &waz seen wen they took off frm the moon,something is fishy
@Smee Self Apparently non-existent.
@@rozzgrey801 Apparently, if you mash the keyboard enough, something resembling language just might be created. This was a good example if that cliche.
It's amazing that you believe in space
@smeeself 🤣🤣😅🤣😂😅🤣😂😅👏👏👏 there we have it...more proof of thru fantasy land you think you live in...oh wait...that's not proof of that...that's proof of your IQ 👍
😮 This was soo interesting to watch! I’ve only seen bits & clips, but Never the whole documentary! TY for uploading 🫶🏼
To all the Indians talking about the "flying flag" despite no air, it never flew; it was held by a horizontal rod on top and only moved while being planted.
Got it
Indians? You think the people who doubt about the flag are Only Indians? You must edit your comment. You are Degrading your country here.
THANK YOU, LOVEEEEEEEEEE !
They said the future would be bright. We were led to believe that the future was going to be great. All the future brought was death and destruction. The future brought pain and anguish. People have changed. Everything has changed and not for the better. I miss the old days. I miss the days where people was nice. I miss the days when people smiled and enjoyed life. I miss those family reunions. Things was so much better. The people was better. Life was better. The way Americans stood together. The way people cared. There was a time when America was united. Why has things gotten so bad? Why has people lost hope? God and country has no meaning anymore. Take me back to those days.
Woke progressivism happened..
I believe that everything in life is cycles. Before them, there was also a lot of pain and suffering with tragedies, natural disasters, wars, etc. Our bad luck is that we are in the exact transition between these cycles, at the same time that there is a lot of innovation, there is a lot of pain.
No man landed on the moon😂
The US government is actually using the name of the continent to its citizens and country. We are US citizens and citizens of the United States. Everyone in North America, Central America, South America,, the Americas,, the American continent is an American like Asia are Asians Africa are Africans and Europe are Europeans. Europe has 50 countries Asia has 51 countries Africa has 54 countries Oceania has 14 countries and America is not a country America is a continent of 35 countries in total. What happened first ❓ The United States OF America or the American continent ❓ The United States OF America became a nation on the date of July 4th of 1776 and the whole entire continent was already named America after Amerigo Vespucci in the year 1507 that's 269 years difference way before the United States OF America became a nation. Why are people not educated about America ❓.
The moon movie was a just a big game of rape the tax payer. now its on to mars. Elon would like his fare share of rape the tax payer.
Engineers of that era were so perfect at building their machines. We seem to have advanced technologically, mainly in computers and electronics, but that old knowledge seems to have gotten lost.
Ony byly ztraceny úmyslně, protože to byly jen simulace a animace.
Engineers were so amazing that when they passed they took that knowledge with them. 😂
@smeeselfis this the only line you can type in English?
We are expecting next Men on the moon to continue this amazing adventure, hopefully moon travel become popular within the young adults.
Great screen play with best actors n director
Your mistaking this documentary for Bollywood
How I wish I could travel to the moon too like these men….Congrats guys👍👍👍
Both Soviet orbital probes and the Indian moon mission have confirmed the remnants of the LEM on the moon. Not to mention the laser reflectors placed there.
Way to many questions to ask
@@TimBrown-e9lThe best images (by far) of the lunar surface were taken by NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter launched in 2009. They clearly showed the disturbed trails in the regolith as the astronauts walked on the Moon along with their equipment.
Grandes recuerdos nostálgicos, nos entrega estos documentales a personas que vimos estos programas de la NASA con los apolos al espacio,,,,soy generación 53 y me marabillo viendo documentales de estos,,, gracias x compartir, felicitaciones 👋👋
We will go to the moon again and beyond. Amazing.
Quando?
@@vantuengler1264now. Look up Artemis program. We already launched Artemis 1.
Nah we lost the technology 😂😂😂😂
@@vantuengler1264 next year artemis 2
Can we play frisbee golf this time?
35:18 the sun is the prime mover, prime force for change of the environment on Earth.
Ray wy do i stil see the pictures of the moon wen they took pictures on the moon,something is fishy,al the way frm afrika,i would hv loved to cum houston taxes,the is wall unit for poor people,al de way frm Afrika
The largest mass extinction of life on Earth was caused by 100,000s of years of continuous volcanic eruptions (Deccan Traps).
The dinosaurs and many other species died due to climate changes caused by changes due to a meteorite impact.
Amazing how much the video quality improved over those 3 years
🤣...FFS ITS CG👁....🎯🤺🤬TS
@@amarshmuseconcepta6197In 1972? Yeah, sure kid. 🤣🤡
Intersting tech with the field scan video cameras. In 1972, color video cameras were massive. They figured out how to make it light by using a black and white camera that shot three images thru primary color filters and interlaced them to make a video frame. Works well, but it does cause color artifacts called the "Harris Shutter Effect" when objects move between images in each frame. This is why the LM liftoff images have the camera artifact colorful sparks.
@@aemrt5745 😳
As a student this is master piece thank god i could see the moon very closely
It seems like Artemis' super advanced technology was defeated by Apollo 11's primitive technology 55 years ago.
I love the joy and polite expressions, serious stuff but with good humor. No 4 letter words (eh em, earlier missions), and even Kosher at times: 49:00 . So much better and more real than the over scripted NASA of today.
Well, Cernan did get in trouble on Apollo 10 for using some blue words on live audio. Had to issue an apology. I think he had that in mind when he says, "Golly!"
Nice how the 2 of them got along so well.
Excellent video. Thx.
When you look at the 2023 lunar missions, you really appreciate the spectacular achievement of the Apollo missions.
The culmination of a monumental effort and the best of what humans are capable of.
This is a fantastic documentary.
🍻
Yes. Capable of making amazing scenerys in studio.
Looking forward to Artemis and modern tech HD video. Should be awesome!
That’s why the cant send humans anymore cause they lost the technology 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Congrats to all the Astronauts who did it to the Moon👍👍👍👍❤️❤️❤️
Great acting and direction. Brought a tear to my eye.
Why ?
A jealous indian
@Xiao_CommenterOk . Anything else 😂We are not saying it's fake but most people believe this is fake. 80 percent comment you will see they say it's fake.
@Xiao_Commentercàn nasa repeat this again to send astranauts to the moon now a days
@@VBG9284 It does like quite fake to be honest. As for the Indian fiasco thats a comedy clown show.
I hope someday we really will visit the moon.
@smeeself
Beautiful, sentimental documentary. Incredible images. Fantastic! Looking forward to really getting back into the space age with the upcoming lunar base.
What might the world be like today if keep Apollo alive! Thank you for sharing!
I really do believe in my heart they landed on the moon and returned.💯
Thanks!
Que aventura y proeza más increible. No había tenido la experiencia de verlo en detalle.
Me pregunto ¿que hubiese sentido si hubiese sido yo quien piso solo con un compañero ese terreno, el que tantas noches no ha alumbrado en nuestra vida...?
Realmente maravilloso.
👍👍🇨🇱
What an incredible adventure and feat. I had not had the experience of seeing it in detail. I wonder what it would have felt like if it had been me who walked alone with a partner on that ground, the one that hasn't illuminated so many nights in our lives...? Really wonderful. 👍👍🇨🇱
de verdad crees que eso es de verdad? fijate en el minuto 16:10 es una maqueta se puede ver que esta clavado parece chapon y clavos toda esa maqueta esta desnivelada es una broma de mal gusto
lona clavada parece toda arrugada una estupidez
@@BRUSEBEENMA
Esto es una recreación de la proeza real, la que me sigue impresionando.
Saludos.
@@markdos1538 no se puede salir de la tierra una vez que ya no hay densidad no hay forma de seguir subiendo si no hay densidad contra que se propulciona un motor es imposible solo en la guerra de la galaqxia se puede
@@BRUSEBEENMA
Acción y rescción...hasta ahora...
Saludos.
Good Hollywood movie 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Still better than bollywood and their unreal green screen life Uncle
The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter which was launched to the Moon in 2009 has taken thousands of high resolution photographs of the Moon. The descent stages of the Apollo Lunar Modules are clearly visible on the surface of the Moon. Spacecraft from China, India and Japan have also taken such photos. End of story...
God bless America
ESTOS HOMBRES MERECEN TODO EL RESPETO Y ADMIRACION POR SU IMPORTANTE LABOR Y COMPROMISO
era todo mentira
Who is watching after Chandrayaan 3 land ???❤
Me, jai hind
Me 🙏
Me
Just happened just like this. My father was an engineered from NASA for people who don't believe that we went to the moon. It happened and memory of my father John Velez engineer from NASA rest in peace Dad February 12th 1933 October 27th, 2004
*THAT* was for Unbelievers?? O "it happened" i see, never heard that before....
Am an Aerospace Engineer too young for Apollo. We admire folks like your dad for this achievement. Our modern work stands on their shoulders.
Condolences on the passing of your dad. I am sure that you are proud that he played a part in an amazing achievement. Take care.
🌘Excellent, hat’s off & well done . My Father was Aerospace elec engineer for NAAviation / Rockwell 1965 - til this A17 mission . He worked on all missions then later on X-15 HypersonicAircraft
🌘Excellent, hat’s off & well done . My Father was also Apollo Aerospace / he was elec engineer for NAAviation / Rockwell 1965 - til this A17 mission . He worked on all missions then later on X-15 HypersonicAircraft
Watched all the Appollo missions on TV, but Appollo 17 was my Ultimate favourite, albeit the last in the series.
If we could do what we did then, imagine what could be achieved now.
It is a shame Apollo 18, 19, and 20 were cancelled. Those would have been bold missions.
@@aemrt5745Schmidt pushed hard for a landing on the far side crater Tsiolkovskiy. Meanwhile on earth, the Space Shuttle was being developed, Skylab was in the works, OPEC was creating oil shortages, and the Vietnam War needed to be paid for. The old saying, “No bucks, no Buck Rogers”, helped to seal the fate of the lunar program.
@@Sherwoody Indeed. Unfortunately large scale space exploration is depended on the changing political tides. Experienced it first hand in my career.
Like a movie yeah 😂😂😂😂
I remember going to the Smithsonian Air and Space museum. There I saw a large book in a glass case opened. I saw that is was the source code of the computers on board. I find it hard to imagine software development in the 60's
Freeman i still seee pictures of the moon wen they took pictures,that is not earth,is green&seen wen they took off frm the moon
@@shimzamamorobela5085
1/10 for spelling and punctuation, could do better, see me after class.
god bless america from sydney australia
Great movie.
I totally agree with you
Hollywood classic
The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter which was launched to the Moon in 2009 has taken thousands of high resolution photographs of the Moon. The descent stages of the Apollo Lunar Modules are clearly visible on the surface of the Moon. Spacecraft from China, India and Japan have also taken such photos. End of story...
Amazing for humanity
Apollo 17 is go..... well you ain't stopping now brother.. go is your only option at this point.
I have landed on the moon 🌙 in my dreams 😂
You and everyone else as noone actually has
No one has, or ever will, walk on that light we call the moon.
Thanks, I had a good laugh.
The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter which was launched to the Moon in 2009 has taken thousands of high resolution photographs of the Moon. The descent stages of the Apollo Lunar Modules are clearly visible on the surface of the Moon. Spacecraft from China, India and Japan have also taken such photos. End of story...
@@heather1985october
Humans have not been to the moon. They still can't get humans past the Earth’s magnetosphere.
A great era, a great feat, and a great documentary. Thank you very much for all this.
It's incredible how the astronaut can sing while running and hopping on the moon in that bulky suit without a hint of exertion in his voice! As a singer, I'm impressed!
Maybe you are out of shape and easily winded.
7 hours of oxygen as well while they are out and about. i don't know too many scuba divers that sing like idiots when they are hundreds of feet away from safety let alone 3 days..
@@cameronbartlett6593 Scuba diving is usually carried out underwater where singing is inconvenient.
@@gives_bad_advice same kind of suit at depth.
@@gives_bad_advice ....and astronauts do not have a regulator mouthpiece, which tends to hinder the ability to sing....
Great Art Directors , appalause to them🎉
30:22 is the greatest picture of all time ❤🎉
The thing that strikes me is the confidence of the men on the mission. They are kicking boulders, falling over and jumping around. I would be so terrified of tearing my suit or breaking something. This might seem like an odd comment, but I hope we have that confidence going back to the moon and beyond. We live in a world of anxiety these days and I really hope Artemis and its partners can be bold.
Good point about the suits. There is a just hot off the press GAO report that sites space suit development as one the the potential show stoppers for the Artemis III Mission.
My guess is they’re buzzing with adrenaline and excitement, almost to the point that they’ve lost their sense of danger. You can really hear the excitement in their voices when they first entered the luna orbit. Can’t say I blame them though, what an experience!
These are mainly hardened folks just built for this. They don't let all the small things (that could be catastrophic) get to them. If they did half the missions would be aborted due to anxiety caused by overthinking. Lots of things we do in our world are actually pretty dangerous, but if you don't overthink them the risks are greatly minimized.
The earlier moonwalks were far shorter, less ambitious in scope, and the astronauts much more careful with the suits and other equipment because they didn't know how well things would hold up in that environment. Apollo 11's "contingency" plans for a quick exit if need be were a good example. With each mission they got more comfortable with the technology, more bold in their actions, and less formal in their behavior during the EVA's. By Apollo 17 the moon walkers were downright playful and giddy. In other words, going to the moon had became more routine, which is part of the reason Apollo 18 - 20 were cancelled. We'd been there, done that, it had become routine, taxpayers were losing interest and questioning why we were spending the money to keep going back.
Obviously I admire *all* the astronauts that went to the moon, but I have to say that Gene Cernan is my personal favorite.
I agree he was one of the better actors.
@@neilarmstrongsson795 - Your loss. If you want to live in a world of willful ignorance, go ahead. But how you believe something you can't back up with any good evidence is beyond me. I guess science isn't your thing. Try religion.
@@renejean2523 Now, now Rene. Dingus has a point. He was a better actor, when he did all those docos afterwards - In the Shadow of the Moon, my favorite, he did a great acting job there.
It was articulate and genuine, almost as good as his piloting and test piloting skills, less better than his astronautic skills as they got him to the moon and back and certainly his moon exploration ability was top notch.
Blech @ Gene. He's so corny and bland.
Michael Collins all day long, baby!
Grissom if we've choosing skill, but Collins if we're choosing personality. Dude's a riot! 😂
@@ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid - I agree about Collins. He was a hoot. His book is by far the best of any space person I've read. I suppose I'm swayed by Cernan's intense and more comprehensive mission. The length of time on the moon and his relationship with Harrison Schmitt while there.
Also, his first words soon after landing were, "Incredible. Absolutely incredible. ... The most epic moment of my life."
Which I've always thought was pretty cool.
Real video ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
I hope one day we are able to visit some of the Apollo sights. I would love to see the stuff we left behind all those years ago. I wonder if the sun has baked it like they found it had the surveyor on Apollo 12
Like a muh fuggin skeleton in the desert baby
I hope they leave it alone. It would be shame to ruin the sites.
@@coolnamebro whatever moron there is tons and tons of proof and you choose to deny it all. Literally an explanation for every component involved and hundreds of thousands who worked on the project. But I know you don’t care and we lied about going not just once but multiple times we even faked Apollo 13 disaster just for the hell of it right? Lol
@@coolnamebro sooo much confidence with absolutely nothing to back it up.
@@coolnamebro Sure is, Lunar Laser Ranging (LLR) for one. That can still be used today, just visit your local observatory with laser ranging equipment.
Show us the photos of the moon buggy leaving no tire tracks. Those are more interesting!
:)
The ones in your head?
@@ArKritz84 Lol... you know nothing do you!
@@CT2507 how did you get that idea? There's a lot of weird stuff rattling around up in your brainy bits, isn't there?
@@ArKritz84 From photos fool. Search for them. Not all have been deleted from the net. You can still find a couple of them.
@@CT2507 Your claim is completely based on imagination and poor understanding what you see in the photos.
Only 5000 people showed up to watch! You know how many would show up now days!!!
Excelente. Gracias desde Durango, México.
I spent time at Orroral Valley Tracking Station here in Australia and we supported the ALSEP experiments installed by the astronauts. Uploading commands and downloading data on a daily basis. We shutdown ALSEP on the 30th September 1977 due to NASA budget cuts.
Did you happen to know the 'coke bottle' lady?
@@MrMarco855
No females on our shift. Don’t think there were on the other two shifts either. Might have been such a person on day shift, but they were pretty much a mystery to us shift staff..
Great. Documentary.
thank you successful landing all Astronaut thank you congratulation from Bangladesh 🇧🇩♥️🙂👍
Gene could barely contain his excitement during the whole trip.
Thanks to you tube
If its one thing we all can learn from Apollo 17, its that good old fashion American-grade tape doesn't stick to lunar dust covered fenders.
Well, it stuck for a while. But, yeah, then they needed to replace the tape with clamps.
Next time they'll have Gorilla Tape.
And what did we learn about duct tape from Apollo 13?
@@You.Tube.Sucks. That you can attach a square container of lithium hydroxide to a suit hose by using duck-tape, of course!
@@You.Tube.Sucks.They learned how to fit a square peg in a round hole!
Apollo 17 in the year 1972 are very good tracking on environment and on moon mission Apollo 17 on climate is very best on finding water 💦
Thankuu for this documentary😍
Great graphics 🎉🎉 Well dond
Hollywood studio ❤❤
@smeeselfbrainwashed lemming response
Great Shpeling!
The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter which was launched to the Moon in 2009 has taken thousands of high resolution photographs of the Moon. The descent stages of the Apollo Lunar Modules are clearly visible on the surface of the Moon. Spacecraft from China, India and Japan have also taken such photos. End of story...
Few questions...
1) Who was the cameraman filming them on the moon?
2) How did they transport those quads they were driving on the moon? Surely not at the same time with the lander?
3) Does the module not look rather very basic for such a complex mission? If it was that basic, how come it's taking them ages to replicate a modern version with all that knowledge they have?
I am not saying that they didn't or they did. I just have questions.
1) each other, or the GCTA.
2) the Lunar Roving Vehicle was actually folded up in the Quadrant 1 bay of the Lunar Module on the J-missions (Apollo 15-17). There is footage of them deploying it on Apollo 15.
3) looks can be deceiving, but why would they want to replicate anything?
@siletamus2016
1. Remote controlled (in Houston) camera on the rover.
2. Look up the Engineering. The rover was very light weight (lunar gravity is 1/6 earth) and foldable. Plenty of images on line.
3. The LM was NOT simple. For the time, it had advanced tech including fly by wire computer controls, life support systems, a landing engine that could throttle, and dopler radar for landing.
"I never thought I'd do Geology like this."
It's amazing to watch the shadows and see how quickly between 40'30" and 40'55" Sun is moving from left to the right. At 40'48" it's even on the left and already on the right as well at the same time!
so what are you saying .. the moon is flat...?
Moon is plasma , Earth is flat 💯 @@KPL400 FLAT
Good gods, do you REALLY not understand photographic perspective? Really? You're not aware that shadows converge? Dewdrop, it's the same as if you squat down between two train tracks and take a photo. It looks like the two train tracks are converging, right? It looks like there's no way a train could ever roll down those tracks, because the left track is converging toward the right, and the right one is converging toward the left. Yet, you know darned well that if you took the photo from above, the two tracks are parallel. Well, same thing goes in that photo you're talking about, dewdrop. The shadows converge. That's what they're supposed to do. If they didn't then that means that the light source was inside the camera, not 93 million miles away. You have pointed out a very good photo that confirms the single light source that's extremely far away. But, somehow, you managed to believe that the shadows shouldn't converge?
Go take any photo with the sun behind you, dewdrop, and look at what the shadows do. Or, if you're too lazy, "converging shadows" (Google is your friend), and look at the images. Sheeeeessssshhhh.
@@rockethead7My answer to your first question is - no - I'm not familiar with photography aspects, as well as with most other disciplines. I specialze in something completely else as most of the people, except some daVincis who are capable to absorb multidiscipline knowledge. I'm not believer of anything - religious or not religious meaning. I prefer to know. So, if I don't know something, I'm asking question, then I'm thankful for answers.
Best Hollywood movie ever
Tell me you’re not a movie critic without telling me you’re not a movie critic.
With a very big budget :)
Tell me why America couldn't have landed on the moon. Disprove all the math done for fuel, life support, engines, and all the rest and then tell me its fake, heck even disprove just one peice of math that they actively used in the apollo missions and I might believe you. I am going off of the assumption that you aren't a flat earther.
Kubrick was a Genius.
you can see that the footage is amatorial, kubrick is another style...
Here in Australia we used to support the ALSEP experiments installed on the lunar surface by the Apollo astronauts at Orroral Valley tracking station. Uploading commands and downloading data on a daily basis.
Jodrell Bank here in the UK observed .
I have no idea what has happened to our education system?….we can’t even repair the roads…
@@toucheturtle3840
Not just the lack of education it’s the laziness.
@@stephenpage-murray7226 virtual reality