Amazing group of men and amazing memories for my generation who remember the Apollo missions. Just wish there was more of a remembrance and memories of Jack Swigert and his contribution to the Apollo missions we lost him way too early.
Four fantastic and humble men. Despite all the progress we have made since, nothing has come close to this short era of ambition, innovation and courage.
It was a school morning - my mother woke me up and told me what had happened, and I guess at that time the lifeboat scenario was already well underway. The way she said it, and the way I interpreted it, was that this was going to work. The scenario had been anticipated, and the crew of 13 was going to make it home safely. I ended up sick for the next few days - I really did have a cold or flu - unlike 16 when I faked it so I could watch the mission... lol. So I watched the continuous coverage. You guys in Mission Control had the confidence, but so did I. I didn't understand at the time just how critical every move was, how cold it was in the spacecraft, and the thousands of decisions that had to be made. Ironically when I went to see the movie the first time, just as the command module splashed down, the projector failed. The screen went dark, and minutes went by. People in the audience started calling "Ken Mattingly to the projection booth, please". After about 10 minutes the film was backed up a bit so we got to see the whole nail biting scenario at re-entry again. I have read Gene Kranz's book, Jim Lovell's book, and watched about every documentary and learned a lot more about the mission since. In spite of the Hollywood liberties (and the necessary inclusion of Kevin Bacon just to make sure it's all connected), I still feel it's the best film made about any real life space mission. I really enjoyed this presentation with some of my favorite people that I've never met. And we do need a goal, a public mandate to go forward with manned space exploration. The unmanned probes have gotten very sophisticated, to the point that I think we've covered more of Mars than the Moon, without actually landing human beings there. Going back to the moon is important for a number of reasons - it's far beyond "Been there done that". I have visited Kennedy Space Center multiple times and I'm always impressed by the people there - I looked up to all you guys when I was a kid, and now I'm seeing people less than half my age picking up this great legacy. It would be wonderful if it wasn't all ruled by politics, but that's the way it was, and the way it is. I am privileged to be born in the time and place I was to witness this history, and what can truly be accomplished by teamwork and dedication - and education.
I have to hand it to Commander Lovell, he's a trooper. Telling the same story probably started getting old after year 20, or 25. And you know there is no question that can be asked that has not been asked 100s of times. But it's his legacy.
I remember this mission vividly as one would who saw it as it happened. It's a testament to the astronauts and their intense training that there wasn't any panic from them at anytime. They all got back home because of their military background and bravery of the hardships they endured, coming back from the moon.
Wow! I am old enough to recall all of the Apollo missions but have no recollection of 13 in real time. Amazing people doing amazing things. What more can you say, other than thank you for making my early years so fantastic?
So glad to have found this video. Loved the history of our space program, especially the apollo program, loved Ron Howard's movie adaptation to the real events, and even though I wasn't alive at that time, I sure wish I was to have witnessed the events, not particular apollo 13 but the entire program in general. These men are the definition of courage, and bravery in the face of extreme danger, same as our men fighting overseas and to me, they are no different. Heroes, all of them.
The entire world was hanging on by their fingernails ... I'll never forget a lot of the Gemini/Apollo missions (the first vision of earth from space, the moon landing). but the successful return of Apollo 13 was ... I can't find the words. I think everyone in the world burst into tears when we finally heard their voices. Ron Howard's film captured just a small fraction of the emotion.
I met John Glenn on the first commercial jet flight from NY to La, before he had ever went up in space, he was on the way to inspect the space capsule he would take to space, He was a a young man, maybe 24 or so. I was maybe 6 or 7, Its a great story, of what a 6 year old and a Test Pilot could talk about . As we did for 30 minutes or so.
The last portion about the shallow trajectory causing the extended communications black out makes allot of sense. Since Nasa had never had to consider this sort of contingency to occur, the weight calculations were not as accurate. Therefore, the craft was actually lighter in weight than anticipated/calculated and that fact and the calculations for a heavier craft is what created the shallow angle of entry. Had the weight been just a little less or the calculation been for a slightly heavier craft then they would have skimmed off the atmosphere and never made it back. It was that close folks! An amazing miracle only just describes their safe return...
They should have brought back a couple hundred pounds of moon rocks - but they did have the urine :). I'm curious - what are the angles that are required to properly acquire the atmosphere for capturing earth? How narrow IS that window?
well, they would have made it back.. of sorts, just not alive. they did not have the sort of speed needed to escape earth, and even if their speed could have been enough to sustain an orbit, that orbit would unavoidably put them back through the atmosphere over and over until they'd bled enough speed to fall through it.
I met Jack & Jim a few years after the event, at SETP. No one brought up the issue. Guess they were tired of talking about it. Got holiday cards from Jack for a few years that I saved. Also got Armstrong’s signature on the program. They toured North American LAX and the B1 mock up. Have never forgotten them. Also got to know Gerry Griffon and his late wife at the San Diego Air & Space museum dinners. He was big help on Apollo 13 too. A fun bunch of smart men. Pilots are the best!
I was actually 15 minutes away from meeting gene kranz. If I went to visit mission control on the 50th anniversary for Apollo 11 earlier I would meet gene kranz
Hes been there for every one they've had. remarkable, well not really when you consider the man were referring to. EVERY MAN ALIVE TODAY can take a thing or two from Mr. Glenn. He knows this, and gives lectures for those of us who know it to.
12:07 Lovell knocks down the one major flaw I noticed in Apollo 13....the portrayal of Swigert as a mediocre pilot. If he had been, he wouldn't have gotten within a mile of an Apollo command module.
I've only seen clips of the movie. I refuse to watch it because of that, plus Lovell's comments on the inaccuracies. I actually don't watch any movies of that sort
Thank you for preserving this important event. My only wish -- I wish -- that John Glenn had acknowledged to Gene Kranz that Ed Harris portrayed both of them.
When I had the privilege of meeting him in 1987, that was one of his mantras: improvement for the sake of improvement is poison. If you can genuinely make it better, do it!
Another excellent argument against the unfortunates who deny moon landings: same stories from mercury to Apollo retold many ways in manyp settings without discrepancy. Thats a definition of truth.
Heroes to me. True Space travel dilema How to get back to the Earth. I had a chance to support the remnants of Apollo equipment to support pre-shuttle activities. There are hundreds of spacecraft up there, despite no manned program. I came aboard just after Apollo Soyuz, and left after Shuttle stopped flying.
i heard this s-m was first slated to fly on Apollo 10 but was replaced due to some problem they had with it i can not recall for sure what the problem was but i think it had something to do with a fan that in the 02 tank that end up exploding
Magnificent men ……..of the old school . So few left and even fewer now , coming to the fore compared to the umpteen millions who by choice , refuse education, to improve themselves, to listen , to learn , to aspire to anything worthy at all. And as long as the God of Welfare together with his best friend the God of Entitlement are the leaders , don’t expect much for the future. IMO
It didn't have a problem, it slipped on the crane installing it. The problems came when they tested it, had not known the voltage difference and got in a hurry getting ready it ready for the Apollo 13 final flight. Its a damn miracle they all did not die! It was nothing short of devine intervention that saved them. If those tanks end up on any other flight before or after they all die. I studied everything about that flight for 10 years. I been documenting all of it and will post my finding
Amazing group of men and amazing memories for my generation who remember the Apollo missions. Just wish there was more of a remembrance and memories of Jack Swigert and his contribution to the Apollo missions we lost him way too early.
Four fantastic and humble men. Despite all the progress we have made since, nothing has come close to this short era of ambition, innovation and courage.
It was a school morning - my mother woke me up and told me what had happened, and I guess at that time the lifeboat scenario was already well underway. The way she said it, and the way I interpreted it, was that this was going to work. The scenario had been anticipated, and the crew of 13 was going to make it home safely. I ended up sick for the next few days - I really did have a cold or flu - unlike 16 when I faked it so I could watch the mission... lol. So I watched the continuous coverage. You guys in Mission Control had the confidence, but so did I. I didn't understand at the time just how critical every move was, how cold it was in the spacecraft, and the thousands of decisions that had to be made. Ironically when I went to see the movie the first time, just as the command module splashed down, the projector failed. The screen went dark, and minutes went by. People in the audience started calling "Ken Mattingly to the projection booth, please". After about 10 minutes the film was backed up a bit so we got to see the whole nail biting scenario at re-entry again. I have read Gene Kranz's book, Jim Lovell's book, and watched about every documentary and learned a lot more about the mission since. In spite of the Hollywood liberties (and the necessary inclusion of Kevin Bacon just to make sure it's all connected), I still feel it's the best film made about any real life space mission. I really enjoyed this presentation with some of my favorite people that I've never met. And we do need a goal, a public mandate to go forward with manned space exploration. The unmanned probes have gotten very sophisticated, to the point that I think we've covered more of Mars than the Moon, without actually landing human beings there. Going back to the moon is important for a number of reasons - it's far beyond "Been there done that". I have visited Kennedy Space Center multiple times and I'm always impressed by the people there - I looked up to all you guys when I was a kid, and now I'm seeing people less than half my age picking up this great legacy. It would be wonderful if it wasn't all ruled by politics, but that's the way it was, and the way it is. I am privileged to be born in the time and place I was to witness this history, and what can truly be accomplished by teamwork and dedication - and education.
I have to hand it to Commander Lovell, he's a trooper. Telling the same story probably started getting old after year 20, or 25. And you know there is no question that can be asked that has not been asked 100s of times. But it's his legacy.
He's been telling us about Apollo 8 for over 50 years now.
@@jshepard152 haha him and Borman
A true raconteur par excellence.
The coolest guys on Earth!
I remember this mission vividly as one would who saw it as it happened. It's a testament to the astronauts and their intense training that there wasn't any panic from them at anytime. They all got back home because of their military background and bravery of the hardships they endured, coming back from the moon.
Wow! I am old enough to recall all of the Apollo missions but have no recollection of 13 in real time. Amazing people doing amazing things. What more can you say, other than thank you for making my early years so fantastic?
So glad to have found this video. Loved the history of our space program, especially the apollo program, loved Ron Howard's movie adaptation to the real events, and even though I wasn't alive at that time, I sure wish I was to have witnessed the events, not particular apollo 13 but the entire program in general. These men are the definition of courage, and bravery in the face of extreme danger, same as our men fighting overseas and to me, they are no different. Heroes, all of them.
The entire world was hanging on by their fingernails ... I'll never forget a lot of the Gemini/Apollo missions (the first vision of earth from space, the moon landing). but the successful return of Apollo 13 was ... I can't find the words. I think everyone in the world burst into tears when we finally heard their voices. Ron Howard's film captured just a small fraction of the emotion.
I met John Glenn on the first commercial jet flight from NY to La, before he had ever went up in space, he was on the way to inspect the space capsule he would take to space, He was a a young man, maybe 24 or so. I was maybe 6 or 7, Its a great story, of what a 6 year old and a Test Pilot could talk about . As we did for 30 minutes or so.
Wow, so happy you have this memory.
There's no way a 24 year old Glenn did that. He was almost 39 when he was announced as part of the original 7 astronauts.
Lucky 🍀 yuo
The last portion about the shallow trajectory causing the extended communications black out makes allot of sense. Since Nasa had never had to consider this sort of contingency to occur, the weight calculations were not as accurate. Therefore, the craft was actually lighter in weight than anticipated/calculated and that fact and the calculations for a heavier craft is what created the shallow angle of entry. Had the weight been just a little less or the calculation been for a slightly heavier craft then they would have skimmed off the atmosphere and never made it back. It was that close folks! An amazing miracle only just describes their safe return...
They should have brought back a couple hundred pounds of moon rocks - but they did have the urine :). I'm curious - what are the angles that are required to properly acquire the atmosphere for capturing earth? How narrow IS that window?
well, they would have made it back.. of sorts, just not alive. they did not have the sort of speed needed to escape earth, and even if their speed could have been enough to sustain an orbit, that orbit would unavoidably put them back through the atmosphere over and over until they'd bled enough speed to fall through it.
I met Jack & Jim a few years after the event, at SETP. No one brought up the issue. Guess they were tired of talking about it. Got holiday cards from Jack for a few years that I saved. Also got Armstrong’s signature on the program. They toured North American LAX and the B1 mock up.
Have never forgotten them. Also got to know Gerry Griffon and his late wife at the San Diego Air & Space museum dinners. He was big help on Apollo 13 too. A fun bunch of smart men. Pilots are the best!
God bless you Gene
Mr Lovell your the best
I love these lectures!
I can't believe it took me this long to find this channel. Excellent content as a whole.
Panel starts at 10:08
My heroes!
I wish I could meet Gene Kranz.
I met him once; quite the character, that's for sure!!!
Gene Is Who Made All Of Mission Controls' Job So Fascinating To Me!
Same here
I was actually 15 minutes away from meeting gene kranz. If I went to visit mission control on the 50th anniversary for Apollo 11 earlier I would meet gene kranz
Outstanding!
Fantastically brave - happily ignoring the conspiracy fools.
I'm Happily Ignoring The Conspiracy AND The The Flat Earth Fools!!
Hes been there for every one they've had. remarkable, well not really when you consider the man were referring to. EVERY MAN ALIVE TODAY can take a thing or two from Mr. Glenn. He knows this, and gives lectures for those of us who know it to.
12:07 Lovell knocks down the one major flaw I noticed in Apollo 13....the portrayal of Swigert as a mediocre pilot. If he had been, he wouldn't have gotten within a mile of an Apollo command module.
I've only seen clips of the movie. I refuse to watch it because of that, plus Lovell's comments on the inaccuracies. I actually don't watch any movies of that sort
wonderful... thanks for share !
Thank you for preserving this important event. My only wish -- I wish -- that John Glenn had acknowledged to Gene Kranz that Ed Harris portrayed both of them.
The Lovell Tautology: Any improvement will be for the better.
When I had the privilege of meeting him in 1987, that was one of his mantras: improvement for the sake of improvement is poison. If you can genuinely make it better, do it!
I Wish there is a Video of the Crew members of Apollo 13 watching the movie and See their reactions😀
Another excellent argument against the unfortunates who deny moon landings: same stories from mercury to Apollo retold many ways in manyp settings without discrepancy. Thats a definition of truth.
in 2024...AMERICA..........WHERE ARE YOUR LEADERS LIKE THIS GROUP
The Crew of Apollo 13 proved Survival is the best success!
Heroes to me. True Space travel dilema How to get back to the Earth. I had a chance to support the remnants of Apollo equipment to support pre-shuttle activities. There are hundreds of spacecraft up there, despite no manned program. I came aboard just after Apollo Soyuz, and left after Shuttle stopped flying.
Wonderful show. I do ask in the various mentioned Boeing involvements are tax reductions for that company.
O a história registra se faz memória no panteon do tempo.✍🏼🙎
i heard this s-m was first slated to fly on Apollo 10 but was replaced due to some problem they had with it i can not recall for sure what the problem was but i think it had something to do with a fan that in the 02 tank that end up exploding
God damn guys !
Do u feel that big mathematical
Thing ... when u watch that kind of things
For me I fell it but I can’t describe it enough..
Magnificent men ……..of the old school . So few left and even fewer now , coming to the fore compared to the umpteen millions who by choice , refuse education, to improve themselves, to listen , to learn , to aspire to anything worthy at all. And as long as the God of Welfare together with his best friend the God of Entitlement are the leaders , don’t expect much for the future. IMO
It didn't have a problem, it slipped on the crane installing it.
The problems came when they tested it, had not known the voltage difference and got in a hurry getting ready it ready for the Apollo 13 final flight.
Its a damn miracle they all did not die! It was nothing short of devine intervention that saved them. If those tanks end up on any other flight before or after they all die.
I studied everything about that flight for 10 years. I been documenting all of it and will post my finding
gene just needs that pen in his hand
I'm absolutely sure sound recording was further than this in 2010.
"Guys , they are catching on to the lottery scam , lets lose one , so they dont get suspicious!"
And the UK waves an unfold farewell to the EU and it’s loathsome undemocratic project.
Amazing stories, it is just too bad that they are just that
Endless lies
endless hate
prove it
Endless stupidity.
Momo detected.