I like how he said he was a representative of 7.8 billion people, not America, not Russia or Japan or Canada, he knows he is a representative of the human race
I took note of that, as well! Like I said, the guy is a Godsend! No biases. No contradictions. Just pure information that all of us on this world will understand!
Chris is the perfect example of "Space for Dummies". The way he can "dumb it down" for people that knows nothing on space stuff is amazing. Not a lot of people can do that even lecturers on universities.
Water actually alive water moves and tries to stick together every drop gather with other drops with no gravity it will make form of ball he is correct
I think he’s done enough talks to audiences that are not completely ignorant but obviously not astronaut-level educated (I.E. the majority of people who watch these type of videos) to know what depth he can/needs to go to when explaining things.
This isn't so much dumbing down as relatable for the audience viewing it. Dumbing down implies that people are too stupid to understand so you have to use easy words. Hatfield isn't saying that the big red ball up space is called the earth, he's using broader terms that most people will understand. Like, I teach preschool, and you'd be surprised how many teachers act like they're trying to teach rocks how to walk. You teach at their level, and you'd be surprised at how much they will learn.
All of that speech literally made me cry, when he said that, and the he got to the part when he "surfed" through the earth's aurora, I'm crying, its beautiful the way he describes it
navin rathakrishnan being an astronaut, he got to move around the world inside the ISS 2650 times or so. By saying “around the world”, he meant that literally which is kind of funny how casual he said it
This guy is like the peak of humanity. Master's degree in aviation systems, fighter pilot for 25 years, became an engineer and astronaut, went on 2 space shuttle missions (including making videos on them), installed the Canadarm 2, and commanded the entire ISS for a short time. Like, you're done. You're basically overqualified for almost any other job on earth after that. He earned his retirement with flying colors.
"You're basically overqualified for almost any other job on earth after that." - Not really. There aren't that many jobs where being e.g. a fighter pilot is all that helpful. Being an engineer is pretty useful and sure he has made a great career, but his skills are not really super versatile.
The scene in interstellar when they see their crew member and family’s age significantly is so terrifying to know you’ve missed years and decades of life without knowing it.
Except it wasn't "terror! dun dun duhhhnnn". It was the love you feel seeing your children growing up and surviving and seeing the adults they turn in to.
It's nearly as if astronauts were chosen for their high intelligence and professionalism and went through rigorous training that most certainly also included public speaking.
I like how he doesn’t just say it’s bad, he says it’s inaccurate but still understands the filmmaker has to make it interesting and engaging for the viewer.
So many things in movies are abstracted to some extent so the viewer can understand and so the movie itself can be compelling, not just in space movies but really all kinds. For starters, they only show you the "interesting" parts, and almost never in real time. You have to find a way to get months of preparation and a four day journey down to two hours, so people with no astronaut training and no knowledge of orbital mechanics can cheer at the end of Apollo 13. I still do, 25 years later.
First Man wasn't a movie about space, it was about loss and grief. Did he not catch the main theme? No wonder he didn't get why everyone was so down all the time. Pay more attention to the details you're not so interested in next time Chris! It seems like he only pays attention to the parts in space for most of the films. The theme was loss: Neil Armstrong lost his daughter, collective loss of the other astronaut candidates, Buzz Aldrin's loss of humility, I could go on.
@@slcpunk2740 that's not the point of the video. Chris isn't here to watch the movie to "catch the main theme". He's here to point out the accuracy about space in the films.
"I've been around the world 2650 times or so, and I never once could see enough of it". This guy talks sleek and smart about all of the engineering, mechanics, and scientifically complex stuff for a moment; and then hits you with a sucker punch of profound poetic brilliance. What a guy. What a storyteller.
@@NT_1 I love that film too. It's terribly scary! But as far as genuine "space" movies go, I absolutely think that while Interstellar is an absolutely compelling, mind-boggling and truly great fun, it still exists within the shadow of the greatest movie about outer space - 2001: A Space Odyssey. For me, there is no greater film of any genre out there. Oh, and while they are clearly fiction, I also really like a number of the "Star Trek" films. Particularly the first one, and "Star Trek: First Contact".
I met Chris Hadfield at an airshow once, when I was a kid. He had a picture in the back of the program, and autographed it for me. In it, he wrote "The Sky Is Not The Limit". I had no idea then, that he would end up commanding the International Space Station & being so accomplished...I was just stoked to get a pilot's autograph at the time. Cool guy for sure :)
As amazing physicists are, they aren't automatically great writers just because they know a lot of the accurate science. You need a good writer for a good story, and often distorting reality becomes necessary. That's why it's called science fiction.
@@Qopa Yes I do, thnx. The film makers had very good physics expert advice, so that there would be no reason for such mistakes as Mr. Kowalski's ominous fall. It is almost disrespectful to these experts to claim that they did not even know such simple things. The producer had said that physical deviations are intentional in that movie. So there is no fault at all, because it is a symbolic story with "letting go" as its central theme (watch again and look for letting-go-symbols, both in speech and image, and for arbitrary inconsistencies that indicate dreaming but not reality). That's what Dr. Stone's nightmares look like after she lost her daughter, and she can't deal with that, she can't let go; that's the point. Basically, if it's not one hundred percent clear that a film is supposed to reflect reality, then one should not just assume that it does. You should then allow it to be interpreted. By the way, I can even fly without any aids -- in my dreams. :)
This man is doing a great job at commenting on these movies: objective, logical, critical, knowledgeable, straight-headed and they let him talk without interruption, way to do it!
Chris is being very subjective about the movies, him being one of the very few people who actually can, and that's what makes this talk so great. A physicist could tell how movies pan out objectively, but Chris can tell that and so much more.
Wait till the Russians build another space station then their will be a swimming pool onboard. I mean, they have swimming pools inside their Typhoon Class submarines. Sure they are a little small, but still, a swimming pool on a submarine.
I really love how passionate he became when talking about Peggy Whitson. It really shows how much respect he has for her and really wished her achievements were properly displayed in the female character of Gravity.
I love how he was extremely honest and unbotheredly destroy some of these space movies. Dude found an opportunity and went ahead, venting out his inner, well hidden, long-time anger for these films. No remorse at all. 😂💀
I can only imagine how much living in space can humanize you... 😳 I think there should be some type of therapy that shoots you off into space for a day or so, to really get a sense of what life is about 💞
Relative to the comet... you're trying to avoid hitting at high speed. I'm a little surprised someone who's resume makes mine look like crap, is picking on this aspect of the movie.
Astronauts are the best of the best. The brightest people with the utmost passion to explore space and also have to be physically fit enough to survive the g forces that are tearing your body apart and have huge balls cause they know they are sitting on a giant rocket that could explode apart at any moment.
@@rohaverseee Do you know 'Genetically modified Sceptic'? He's one of the warmest Atheists and would never talk down to anyone or anything. I recommend him warmly.
The guy is articulate and intelligent. Also not only he criticises the scenes but he also concedes the requirement of some scenes. Balanced approach and seems like a great guy!
I love this guy. He seems to take bad science almost personally. Also, I got really jealous when he talked about surfing through the aurora. That must have been the most amazing thing ever.
The way he described surfing on the Earth’s aurora, that was absolutely magical, an experience I’ll never have but felt fantastic just hearing him describe it.
@@niles6159 What do you mean? Where is the joke? Gravity’s characters are a slap in the face to true astronomers and astronauts. These people go into space with a very serious job that requires extreme dedication and respect, especially of other astronauts. The characters in the movie are shown in a way that are absolute polar opposites of the real deal, it’s really shameful representation of real astronauts. So, again, where’s the joke?
@@baneblack8821 Getting offended about the inaccurate portrayal of astronauts in Gravity is like getting offended about Steven Segal's portrayal of Navy SEAL's in Under Siege. The entire concepts of the movies are so far-fetched that they can't even be take seriously as a whole, so looking at a specific part and saying, "I can't believe that they portrayed this part so inaccurately!" is ludicrous. Also, anyone who watches Sandra Bullock in Gravity and bases their opinion of female astronauts off the movie's portrayal of her must be considered a moron.
@@WetaMantis yeah, I definitely don't on either count. Regardless of stupidity, pretty sure you've never heard anyone disparage women as astronauts on account of Sandra Bullock in Gravity.
I know one guy, Jonny Kim. The guy decided at age 16 that he wanted to be a Navy Seal, so what'd he do? The guy went through training and graduated and was deployed with Seal Team 3 where he was a combat medic, sniper, and pointman. He made quite a career in that, earned several high honor medals, and after that he went on to obtain a degree in math where he was inspired to become an astronaut. So what'd he do? He went to NASA and became an astronaut. I can't remember when, but he also got a doctorate in medicine. Truly an amazing person.
His last bit here made me tear up. Both because his explanation of the feeling is beautifully articulated, but because I was born too early and will never have enough money to afford a trip to space to see it for myself. I imagine the beauty would be overwhelming.
I love how he stands up for little girls dreams and says you're not just some girl needing rescuing you can be legendary on your own (awesome hat tip to the most experienced astronaut lady)
I like too how he isn’t like “well she needs to be an empowered woman” as if it’s not okay for a woman to be vulnerable or weak in a movie. He was frustrated that she is supposed to be a competent astronaut and that they wouldn’t panic like that, like an astronaut in general would be trained to keep calm and collected and she just seems like a helpless victim in the scene. It’s kinda a dig on astronauts and their competence, and showing a calm collected male astronaut just makes it worse like that disparity is no good.
You can feel how Chris loves his job by the way he talks about Space and what's like to be an astronaut. It's contagious. One of the best interviews/reviews I've ever see.
Yes Re loving his job and excited by his experience. If only Neil Armstrong had half of his conversational ability there would be less conspiracies about 1969.
Just notice how this guy gives credit to everyone. He never says "I" did this or that. Its always "we" or "those people" even says Stanley Kubrick and "his team".. I like Chris Hadfield, hes a real guy
Citizen Mike well that’s because being an Astronaut is a very team oriented thing so because of that he would be much more oriented to refer to everyone in a group. Of course he still deserves the credit.
@@Mgl1206 Honestly Chris Hadfield has kinda transcended his role as just an astronaut...right now especially in interviews like this the spot light is on him and him alone and he still is being humble about his amazing accomplishments....i think thats what the OP was implying
I could listen to Chris for days. It’s rare that someone has experienced so much of life and what it is to be a human being, in a literally cosmic sense, and yet remain so relatable. The way he describes seeing the earth, the tone of his voice when recalling a space walk, these things are too profound for words, but he still manages to give some small piece of it to us
@@bibekirig6418 All right, since you have engaged with me in this manner, I would like a five paragraph essay on why I should visit your channel, PLEASE.
Grandson: "Grandpa Chris, what did you do?" Grandpa Chris: "Well, let me see. I was a test pilot, a Colonel, an astronaut, I commanded a space station. Oh and I did downhill ski races and played rock guitar" That's not a bad resume 😁
@Anestassia Faessler did you literally just take someone elses comment and post it in another comment? I mean, I laughed pretty dn hard, but then 4 seconds later I see the same exact comment LITERALLY the next thread down.
You have been systematically dumbed down to INSTANTANEOUSLY believe everything that scientism tells you!! You INSTANTANEOUSLY believe, memorize and regurgitate while liar Chris Hadfield laughs all the way to the bank!! You deserve it!!
He is a story teller. He wrote a book called “Apollo Murders”. It’s absolutely fantastic. He took real events, historical space figures, his actual space experience, and masterfully created a fiction novel. I could NOT put it down.
I like that he is talking as a human, not as an American or whatever. He speaks on behalf of all of us equally, no matter what part of the planet we live on.
When I was in eighth grade my science teacher had us all write a letter to an astronaut w some basic prompts abt what to say. Idt I put too much effort in tbh, but I wrote to Chris hadfield and I was the only one who got a letter back. Super nice too. Great dude considering there was no incentive to reply
I know I’m a year late, but that makes me so happy! I’m not surprised bc he seems like an incredible guy, but things like that are always heartwarming to hear and it says so much about his character.
It blows my mind just trying to imagine how intelligent, skilled, dedicated, and healthy (physically, emotionally, and mentally) a person has to be to become an astronaut. They're practically superhuman, yet here is one of them being totally chill and sharing his wealth of knowledge with us. Thank you Chris Hadfield and Vanity Fair, this was fascinating to watch!
i feel like when you reach all that (being intelligent, skilled etc) you become chill. like almost every scientist ive seen on youtube giving interviews has this vibe to them.
@@adisaster8734 It's an illusion, of course he is going to word himself and represent himself in a way that would appear comfortable to the viewer. He's not a bad guy just pointing out that, its the entire purpose of the video.
While I agree with you, I also wanted to point out that that is soon going to change when companies in lead with SpaceX reach their ultimate goal. Plenty of stupid, spoiled, rich fatasses are going to go to space then. On the plus side it will also be more affordable to send flatearhers to space to ruin their day. P.S.: I am sorry, I might've been incorrect. I heard that they might be going to adjust the definition so that those won't be called astronauts.
He is a verry gifted communicator. Even in the small bunch of people who have gone in space, he stands apart. He has the technological background to go there and the way to talk about it in interesting maners.
The film has some mistakes, but the reason why the satellite flying past the space shuttle is so slow could be that the space shuttle flies in the same direction but at a not so high speed.
I hate movies like Gravity. Space is so interesting that you could make a really fun and entertaining movie whilst keeping things realistic. Why do movies always insist on dramatising things so much
@@ravioliravioligivemethefor3131 youre the type of person to watch spongebob, turn up your nose, and be like "Well Ackshyually, sponges in real life do not talk. This show is scientifically inaccurate."
He's also what people would call a great 'science communicator.' There are people who can do scientific things far beyond our understanding, and when they explain it, the explanations are also beyond our understanding. That's why people like Hadfield are so important - they communicate the concepts that are harder for the average (even scientifically-minded) people to understand in a way that they easily can understand.
I really enjoyed this entire interview. Fantastic. I think it is always amazing to talk to someone that loves what they do and can articulate it the way Chris does here.
You all are overreacting. Everyone knows astronauts have to know how a space ship works and how to do basic repair. Yes there are different specialties, like doctors, scientists, engineering (usually a pilot too). So the lady might be a dr or scientist who does research and the guy an engineer. But, yeah, you would except an astronaut to be the most able people on earth.
The reason I love this series is because we get to hear experts’ pure, genuine love and passion for their area. Chris is so incredibly eloquent and excited to share his viewpoint, and just hearing him speak about his experience in the last 2 minutes of this video left me in awe as I watched him beautifully describe why he loves space. Such a wonderful series, please keep them coming!
I cant agree more, and not only that, you can see that Chris like film making and storytelling, like when he was talking about Hidden Figures, about Kevin Spacey character, he noted that in reality would be tree different persons, but understands that narratively speaking makes sense merge all of them in one single character. He does that others times throughout the video. I have seen some specialists that don't care, or don't understand, narrative story telling, and end up pointing out "erros" that where proposital, due to narrative.
This is the same reason I like this series - I like to hear what experts have to say. You learn when talking to someone who knows more than you. Being uneducated should not be a badge of honor.
I got to listen to him for two hours live, speaking in Edinburgh. It was genuinely a spiritual moment, I've never been more inspired and in awe of anything a person has ever said before, or since. If you get the chance, I don't care what it costs, go and hear him live.
@Erik Lerström It's sci fi but not star wars. I mean it still working in the same reality as us only that there are some new stuffs. Yet, why would they changed the thing that is already exist? it kills the immersion for some tbh, regardless I love interstellar anyways, it's one of my fav movie besides Passengers.
"I've been around the world 2650 times or so, and.... I never once could see enough of it. During my first space walk, while i was outside in the dark, we were far enough south that we went through the earths aurora. It is so fantastically beautiful, and such a raw artistic human experience. To look at the northern lights is like magic. To be in them, to surf on them is beyond magic, it's surreal. My last orbit of the world was even more rich and magnificent and awe inspiring than all of the ones before it. The unheralded beauty of our planet and of where it sits in the environment that we are in is so constantly magnificent that when you're looking at you talk in hushed tones." Imagine going somewhere so incredible that you need a thesaurus of adjectives to try to describe it. I'm envious.
If you want some more of that go read the "Pale Blue Dot" statement that Carl Sagan wrote about after seeing the image of planet earth taken by Voyager 1. I still believe that venturing into space will slowly unify us as as a race. But being human also means being petty and selfish too. We may invent new ways to become tribal. But still occasionally we get to see the minds of men and women, rise above the sheer pettiness of our egos. That is also when we are at our best.
Even though I question whether or not he actually watched the movie. The fact that not only did he not mention Kessler Syndrome at all, but it wasn't the first thing he mentioned (instead saying something about asteroid debris?) leads me to conclude he just saw clips. He also made zero mention of centrifugal or centripetal forces. ... and THEN mentions it in the very next movie he spoke of. There's questioning, and there's outright refusal to acknowledge answers even exist. Sadly, far too many people fall into the latter, especially when it pertains to Gravity. Its like, the better it looks, the more desperate they are to tear it apart. Meanwhile the same people are quick to defend everything wrong with films like Armageddon. At least he laughs at it, but it deserves at least five times as long as Gravity.
@@amolghadigaonkar2114 In what respect? By what metric? What were you expecting of the film? What specific things were you needing to see that it didn't do? note "specific", don't use buzz words or vague nonsense like "I expected it to be good", good in WHAT way? What specific things would you do differently? Again, no vague nonsense like "just don't make the film"
@@kevinschultz4518 Tyson uses very higher vocabulary scientific words sometime or make things very complex for normal humans like us. It all gets up my head many times haha
@@mohammedubed7000 I don't know about that, lol. I think Tyson does a magnificent job of breaking it down for us normal people. I think he spends alot of time trying to break things down into terms we will understand.
For the Ad Astra section, I would think that you could hear anything that made physical contact with the ground, as the ground would carry vibrations up into the rover and into the suit. Like how you can hear/feel vibrations of your car’s tires against the road. I understand that the sounds would be extremely muted because the vibrations are carried only through solids, which our ears aren’t designed to hear, but I’m pretty sure that it wouldn’t be silent.
The Moon also actually does have a very thin atmosphere which could be capable of carrying a very small amount of sound and due to the amount of energy gunshots produce I really don't think it's all that far fetched to add very muted sound effects to the shots.
as someone who was always vaguely angry with Gravity and couldn't really explain why, I didn't know how much my life needed Chris Hadfield totally *obliterating* that movie until this moment
"The reverence and understanding of both the miniscule nature of being a human in the enormity of the universe, but also the enormity of being able to see it in that way." With the things Hadfield has experienced, and his wonderful way with words, I am surprised that people don't give him more attention. That man is like a poet, without even having to try.
exactly what I was thinking. Real talk, I kept rewatching the last 5mins - 10mins of the video just to hear him poetically explain these experiences! mans really got a way with words! plus lowkey I might have to use some of these to impress a girl! 👌🏼😏 hahaha
Yeah... the problem with technobabble is that it just makes non-experts nod and say “yup, science stuff”, while someone who actually knows what the words mean is listening to absolute gibberish.
The dumbest thing about Armageddon is that with 12 days of training available, they decided to teach a bunch of drillers to be astronauts instead of teaching astronauts to operate the drilling equipment.
I love the way he explains things so it can be understood in a simple way in layman terms So even when I'm too tired, I can still listen and learn something easily
They say POTUS is the most powerful man on Earth. Chris had a job that would probably rival that in some ways. What could be more important or require more responsibility than commanding the ISS?
@@LilyTheCat151 I dunno, personally I'd say being a general in the army or something to that effect; you're in charge of a lot of people's lives and the commands you give don't just affect the people you're giving them out to
Anyone else break down a little when Chris was talking about how he has been around the world 2650 or so times but he could never see enough of the Earth and how beautiful it was flying through the aurora?
I was literally about to comment about this. I found myself tearing up -- every single last word he spoke was so true -- the awe inspiring beauty, the breathtaking majesty, the humbling reverence -- all of it!
I could sit listening to him talk about space for hours. The vastness space has always been surreal to think about, but right now during this crazy time where so many of us are sequestered in our homes...there is something so perfectly awe-inspiring about it.
It would be the most boring movie of all time because he simply has no imagination. It would be a 12 hour movie about them getting ready for space then them just sitting in a spaceship with no action or any reason to watch.
Being an advisor would be more suited to him. He could be on the team to help keep it as realistic as possible but let a good screenwriter and director create the story.
What an articulate, superbly clever man … But I _did_ like First Man: I think it was sad, at times, for a reason… its music created the necessary lightness, however.
@@Triunity4 That image they created (maybe the actors got to see it on monitors?) was the most accurate projection anyone ever made! It matches the Real Picture astronomers made later, right?
@@Triunity4 not sure if they actually did this but a lot of sets these days have a central set surrounded by a massive LED screen, so it is entirely possible that they did in fact see black holes
@@sketchur I don't know what it is. His most recent press worthy event was 2018 when he released a master class. His book was 7 years ago. Normally when someone has a huge interview on Wired, and then Vanity fair, they're on a press junket promoting something.
Just love him! What an incredible human he is! And the way he explains things with passion but also in a way that we can understand without making us feel dumb or making himself seem like a “know it all”. Such a genuine person! An absolute hero of mine!
“We actually carried guns on board the Russian space ship that I flew.” That has to be the most badass thing anybody has ever uttered whilst being completely serious.
@Barry Obama Actually Russian cosmonauts used to carry TP-82 pistols with them as a survival aid against bears and wolves in Siberia after landings and before being recovered, He's probably talking about that.
Barry Obama nah. Only thing lack of gravity would do is make the bullet fly a lot farther. Less air resistance would probably keep the bullet more on a straight trajectory as well. Shooting long distances. The air can push a bullet a certain direction. With no air resistance that wouldn’t happen.
Well, the saddest thing I ever learned about Astronomy, is that we are never going anywhere. There will never be Star Wars, Star Trek, or Interstellar, or 2001. Everything is just too far away, and our lifespans are just not long enough for that. Unless we can figure out artificial gravity, hypersleep, or some sort of worm hole or other anomaly that will immediately get us to other galaxies, it's just going to have to be the movies that we enjoy, and not reality. Although I still love space, it was a sobering thing to learn.
@@Room-xi6nb true, even at 1/3 the speed of light we barely make a dent but hey yknow what, there's a lot we can do with the few solid planets in our solar system, not to mention all those moons as well
@@ririhaha182 I sure hope we don't though. If we humans are gonna die we should die on the planet we started on. After all, we are the ones who destroyed it. Morally I believe it would be wrong for us to try and live on Mars. Leaving earth after we've destroyed it to do the same process over again on another planet. If humans were to make even a gazillionth of a footprint in the universe's history, I'm not sure what I want us to be remembered as. But I know what I DON'T want us to be remembered as - planet killers.
Chris is incredibly humble, intelligent and is a great communicator. He's a hero for many of us Canadians and we couldn't be more proud that we have someone like him representing us. And he's a diehard Maple Leafs fan! Go buds!
This dude is so badass, they didn’t even invite him, he just showed up and started reviewing movies
lol
How do you know?
@Name Name No... he’s Chris hadfield!
Next video: Jesus Christ reviews christian movies
@@cassieridley8147 lol😆
Props to Vanity Fair for letting him just talk and story-tell. Too many channels love to cut and speed through an interview or feature.
Yes!!!! Agreed
Yepp, this deserved to be the length it was!
I can listen to this guy talk for hours. So much passion
@@NicholasCat me too!!
I do wonder what the interview was before the editing though, I'd love to see the unedited version. I could listen to him for hours and hours
I like how he said he was a representative of 7.8 billion people, not America, not Russia or Japan or Canada, he knows he is a representative of the human race
It's crazy the moment I scrolled across this comment he was literally just saying that. Perfectly on cue.
I took note of that, as well! Like I said, the guy is a Godsend! No biases. No contradictions. Just pure information that all of us on this world will understand!
Sadly this video only has 2.8M views
human species*
This is the awesome mindset of astronauts, you hear it very often. Just to think, what we could achieve on earth with it...
Chris is the perfect example of "Space for Dummies". The way he can "dumb it down" for people that knows nothing on space stuff is amazing. Not a lot of people can do that even lecturers on universities.
Water actually alive water moves and tries to stick together every drop gather with other drops with no gravity it will make form of ball he is correct
@@btoulzahrani4700 Water is not alive. It follows physical laws, not an imaginary mind.
Exactly, but at the same time, he’s not talking like everyone is an idiot.
I think he’s done enough talks to audiences that are not completely ignorant but obviously not astronaut-level educated (I.E. the majority of people who watch these type of videos) to know what depth he can/needs to go to when explaining things.
This isn't so much dumbing down as relatable for the audience viewing it. Dumbing down implies that people are too stupid to understand so you have to use easy words. Hatfield isn't saying that the big red ball up space is called the earth, he's using broader terms that most people will understand. Like, I teach preschool, and you'd be surprised how many teachers act like they're trying to teach rocks how to walk. You teach at their level, and you'd be surprised at how much they will learn.
"I've been around the world 2650 times or so, and...I never once could see enough of it." That gave me goosebumps.
Right before that, when he spoke of flying THROUGH the earth's aurora...literally brought tears to my eyes.
you give me goosebumps 😜😜😜
All of that speech literally made me cry, when he said that, and the he got to the part when he "surfed" through the earth's aurora, I'm crying, its beautiful the way he describes it
that whole bit made me so emotional lol
In a heartbeat. I wouldn't make a one way trip, but something on par with a short vacation (a few days), sign me up!
“I’ve been around the world 2650 times or so. And I never once could see enough of it” now that actually put a tears in my eyes
I am sorry, can u please tell me what does it mean.
navin rathakrishnan being an astronaut, he got to move around the world inside the ISS 2650 times or so. By saying “around the world”, he meant that literally which is kind of funny how casual he said it
@@josephineemarch thanks mate
Same
@@AngelLerma987 its called a gut feeling, cause hes a good liar.
This guy is like the peak of humanity. Master's degree in aviation systems, fighter pilot for 25 years, became an engineer and astronaut, went on 2 space shuttle missions (including making videos on them), installed the Canadarm 2, and commanded the entire ISS for a short time. Like, you're done. You're basically overqualified for almost any other job on earth after that. He earned his retirement with flying colors.
"You're basically overqualified for almost any other job on earth after that." - Not really. There aren't that many jobs where being e.g. a fighter pilot is all that helpful. Being an engineer is pretty useful and sure he has made a great career, but his skills are not really super versatile.
@@makeplay8004 oh, so you're that guy
Or he is a good actor.
lmaoo I wonder how well someone like this would do in fast food.
Probably fine, but it’d still be funny to see.
@@joey_btw4718 Yes. :)
The scene in interstellar when they see their crew member and family’s age significantly is so terrifying to know you’ve missed years and decades of life without knowing it.
Agreed.
Except it wasn't "terror! dun dun duhhhnnn".
It was the love you feel seeing your children growing up and surviving and seeing the adults they turn in to.
Even more terrifying is we will soon face that reality thanks to fusion powered starships.
I think that was what terrified me the most about the movie so unsettling add on the solitary of space unable to control anything around you
The way he can express himself so clearly and make what he's criticising, and why, so understandable is very impressive.
It's nearly as if astronauts were chosen for their high intelligence and professionalism and went through rigorous training that most certainly also included public speaking.
@@draqone1183 I think a lot of people have become used to a certain president that has ... well absolutely no skill in public speaking
@J K no he clearly means the current president donut tramp, and was talking about speaking skills, so your joke is pretty dumb and unfunny.
WITHOUT THE WORDS LITERALLY, LIKE, OR YAKNOWWHATIMEAN.
@J K An IQ as low as income ... he would easily be a genius with a salary most likely far above $300
Soo ???
I like how he doesn’t just say it’s bad, he says it’s inaccurate but still understands the filmmaker has to make it interesting and engaging for the viewer.
So many things in movies are abstracted to some extent so the viewer can understand and so the movie itself can be compelling, not just in space movies but really all kinds. For starters, they only show you the "interesting" parts, and almost never in real time. You have to find a way to get months of preparation and a four day journey down to two hours, so people with no astronaut training and no knowledge of orbital mechanics can cheer at the end of Apollo 13.
I still do, 25 years later.
First Man wasn't a movie about space, it was about loss and grief. Did he not catch the main theme? No wonder he didn't get why everyone was so down all the time. Pay more attention to the details you're not so interested in next time Chris! It seems like he only pays attention to the parts in space for most of the films. The theme was loss: Neil Armstrong lost his daughter, collective loss of the other astronaut candidates, Buzz Aldrin's loss of humility, I could go on.
@@slcpunk2740 but that’s not the point of the video, he’s just supposed to talk about accurate or inaccurate things about space in the movie
@@slcpunk2740 he was there to comment on inaccuracies. Maybe you should pay attention.
@@slcpunk2740 that's not the point of the video. Chris isn't here to watch the movie to "catch the main theme". He's here to point out the accuracy about space in the films.
this man hasn’t only had one of the coolest life the world has seen, but explains such complex things in such an easy way. 11/10
No. At least 16/10.
@@jakubn7234 that's an understatement 69/10
Being extremely educated gives amazing communication skill. He's incredibly intelligent, and incredibly educated
@@davidkonevky7372 what about 1000/10 lol
@@davidkonevky7372 nah 6969/10
"I've been around the world 2650 times or so, and I never once could see enough of it". This guy talks sleek and smart about all of the engineering, mechanics, and scientifically complex stuff for a moment; and then hits you with a sucker punch of profound poetic brilliance. What a guy. What a storyteller.
*S* *U* *N* *S* *H* *I* *N* *E* is an utterly existential movie. I highly recommend it. The soundtracks throughout are breathtaking as well
@@NT_1 I love that film too. It's terribly scary! But as far as genuine "space" movies go, I absolutely think that while Interstellar is an absolutely compelling, mind-boggling and truly great fun, it still exists within the shadow of the greatest movie about outer space - 2001: A Space Odyssey. For me, there is no greater film of any genre out there. Oh, and while they are clearly fiction, I also really like a number of the "Star Trek" films. Particularly the first one, and "Star Trek: First Contact".
I met Chris Hadfield at an airshow once, when I was a kid. He had a picture in the back of the program, and autographed it for me. In it, he wrote "The Sky Is Not The Limit". I had no idea then, that he would end up commanding the International Space Station & being so accomplished...I was just stoked to get a pilot's autograph at the time. Cool guy for sure :)
"Don't tell me the sky's the limit
There's footprints on the moon"
That's so lovely.
Chris Burke what a wonderful memory.
@@entropyzero5588 I’m sorry that was so good I might have to steal it.
@@loganreuter6072 It's part of the lyrics to Paul Brandt's "There's A World Out There"
They should definetly hire Chris as a consultant before shooting or writing movies about space.
No one would watch such movie I'm afraid. It would be slow. Sloooowwww...
And without special effects.
Eek!
Hendrik Hendrikson slow? Sounds to me like an opportunity to make a real thriller in space.
@@guyh3403 a good story line does wonders for a movie, you dont have to rely on exaggerated action scenes
As amazing physicists are, they aren't automatically great writers just because they know a lot of the accurate science. You need a good writer for a good story, and often distorting reality becomes necessary. That's why it's called science fiction.
Except for Star Wars LOL😂😂
Imagine watching a space film in the cinema and you see Chris hadfield angrily leave the cinema
AHAHAHAHAHAHAH
Ahahah. I would definitely follow him
And I would laugh at him for not being able to think outside the box.
@@gk... outside of reality you mean
@@Qopa Yes I do, thnx. The film makers had very good physics expert advice, so that there would be no reason for such mistakes as Mr. Kowalski's ominous fall. It is almost disrespectful to these experts to claim that they did not even know such simple things. The producer had said that physical deviations are intentional in that movie. So there is no fault at all, because it is a symbolic story with "letting go" as its central theme (watch again and look for letting-go-symbols, both in speech and image, and for arbitrary inconsistencies that indicate dreaming but not reality). That's what Dr. Stone's nightmares look like after she lost her daughter, and she can't deal with that, she can't let go; that's the point.
Basically, if it's not one hundred percent clear that a film is supposed to reflect reality, then one should not just assume that it does. You should then allow it to be interpreted. By the way, I can even fly without any aids -- in my dreams. :)
17:33 "No where in mathematical equation is there a symbol for love." What a great line, delivered perfectly.
Maybe a little heart symbol.
The perfect line. ❤
One of a very few things bad about the movie was bringing love as physical dimension. So cringe. Chris nol is going to regret it.
@@bobbyjose2265 going to regret what? the results dont lie.
I'd have to see the proof... ;0)
This man is doing a great job at commenting on these movies: objective, logical, critical, knowledgeable, straight-headed and they let him talk without interruption, way to do it!
Chris is being very subjective about the movies, him being one of the very few people who actually can, and that's what makes this talk so great. A physicist could tell how movies pan out objectively, but Chris can tell that and so much more.
I love how he said:
“That’s a very compelling and accurate scene, assuming there is a swimming pool on a spaceship.”
Wait till the Russians build another space station then their will be a swimming pool onboard. I mean, they have swimming pools inside their Typhoon Class submarines. Sure they are a little small, but still, a swimming pool on a submarine.
@@nvstewartI guess the guys who built the submarines are very big brain
@@nvstewart I think it will be the chinese now
@@nvstewart 3day leter all crew drowned
time: 7:12
I really love how passionate he became when talking about Peggy Whitson. It really shows how much respect he has for her and really wished her achievements were properly displayed in the female character of Gravity.
Timestamp ?
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@@flatweee6066 You alright there mate?
@@hollanderson g4ghgnvdth
@@flatweee6066 Don't die on me here cat I still need you
I love how he was extremely honest and unbotheredly destroy some of these space movies. Dude found an opportunity and went ahead, venting out his inner, well hidden, long-time anger for these films. No remorse at all. 😂💀
Out of all the "expert reacts to movies" that I've seen so far, this is by far the best. This man is something else.
His explanations did not allow a 0/10 rating. Brutal honesty
I can only imagine how much living in space can humanize you... 😳 I think there should be some type of therapy that shoots you off into space for a day or so, to really get a sense of what life is about 💞
Fr
@@michellei9662 that would be way too expensive
not elected...china virus selected.
"We're coming in hot? Relative to what?" is the most astronaut thing I've ever heard.
Relative to the comet... you're trying to avoid hitting at high speed. I'm a little surprised someone who's resume makes mine look like crap, is picking on this aspect of the movie.
The non existent atmosphere on the comet that let them slow their decent.
@@SkyborneVisions cuz he was paid to, I assume LOL
@@SkyborneVisions there was also instant communication pish when the president spoke to the man on the moon with no delay 🤨😉
@@SkyborneVisions - well that is the point of this video sir
"I surfed the northern lights" is probably the hardest flex in human history
Aswell as I commanded the international space station
Idek if there’s anyone else in the world that can say that... this guy is literally a space surfer. Freakin awesome
@@someidiot4311 of course I didn’t idiot
@@HomebrandFishfood same
@@someidiot4311 they meant that this quy said he commanded it
I think the strangest thing about sound in space movies is that the silence could be so impactful if they used it
Absolutely!
The silence of Holdo’s light speed jump in the last Jedi was magnificent
I appreciate Chris using a language that everyone understands even though he could speak with unnecessarily large words in every sentence
He demonstrates the saying “if you can’t explain it simply, you don’t understand it”
He could even explain it to you in different languages and im sure with the big words in those languages too lol
well said. I can't can't stand when people use overly complicated speech to explain something. It's like, we aren't writing a novel here.
like which
Astronauts are the best of the best. The brightest people with the utmost passion to explore space and also have to be physically fit enough to survive the g forces that are tearing your body apart and have huge balls cause they know they are sitting on a giant rocket that could explode apart at any moment.
I liked that he said, “we’re the representative of 7.5 billion people”, not any country specifically.
Yeh because they are.
@@rohaverseee Do you know 'Genetically modified Sceptic'?
He's one of the warmest Atheists and would never talk down
to anyone or anything. I recommend him warmly.
@@loturzelrestaurant who tf cares
Humanity above all. We survive as a civilization first!
@@genny1814 i kidna care, im looking it up...
s
The guy is articulate and intelligent. Also not only he criticises the scenes but he also concedes the requirement of some scenes. Balanced approach and seems like a great guy!
And speaks easy enough for simps like me ☺️
That’s a Canadian for ya. 😎🇨🇦
I love this guy. He seems to take bad science almost personally. Also, I got really jealous when he talked about surfing through the aurora. That must have been the most amazing thing ever.
The way he described surfing on the Earth’s aurora, that was absolutely magical, an experience I’ll never have but felt fantastic just hearing him describe it.
I cried
i feel you man
I absolutely love how he defended his profession and women astronauts during gravity
That's the joke!
@@niles6159 What do you mean? Where is the joke? Gravity’s characters are a slap in the face to true astronomers and astronauts. These people go into space with a very serious job that requires extreme dedication and respect, especially of other astronauts. The characters in the movie are shown in a way that are absolute polar opposites of the real deal, it’s really shameful representation of real astronauts. So, again, where’s the joke?
@@baneblack8821 Getting offended about the inaccurate portrayal of astronauts in Gravity is like getting offended about Steven Segal's portrayal of Navy SEAL's in Under Siege. The entire concepts of the movies are so far-fetched that they can't even be take seriously as a whole, so looking at a specific part and saying, "I can't believe that they portrayed this part so inaccurately!" is ludicrous. Also, anyone who watches Sandra Bullock in Gravity and bases their opinion of female astronauts off the movie's portrayal of her must be considered a moron.
@@jchesney Believe me many do. Never underestimate stupidity.
@@WetaMantis yeah, I definitely don't on either count. Regardless of stupidity, pretty sure you've never heard anyone disparage women as astronauts on account of Sandra Bullock in Gravity.
The are only few guys as cool as Chris Hadfield
I can say one: Elon Musk.
@@emmer_120 He is a bully.
Chris Hadfield is one of a kind
I know one guy, Jonny Kim.
The guy decided at age 16 that he wanted to be a Navy Seal, so what'd he do? The guy went through training and graduated and was deployed with Seal Team 3 where he was a combat medic, sniper, and pointman. He made quite a career in that, earned several high honor medals, and after that he went on to obtain a degree in math where he was inspired to become an astronaut. So what'd he do? He went to NASA and became an astronaut. I can't remember when, but he also got a doctorate in medicine. Truly an amazing person.
@@emmer_120 not even close
His last bit here made me tear up. Both because his explanation of the feeling is beautifully articulated, but because I was born too early and will never have enough money to afford a trip to space to see it for myself. I imagine the beauty would be overwhelming.
Stay on earth. Gaia loves you
I love how he stands up for little girls dreams and says you're not just some girl needing rescuing you can be legendary on your own (awesome hat tip to the most experienced astronaut lady)
I like too how he isn’t like “well she needs to be an empowered woman” as if it’s not okay for a woman to be vulnerable or weak in a movie. He was frustrated that she is supposed to be a competent astronaut and that they wouldn’t panic like that, like an astronaut in general would be trained to keep calm and collected and she just seems like a helpless victim in the scene. It’s kinda a dig on astronauts and their competence, and showing a calm collected male astronaut just makes it worse like that disparity is no good.
I was just thinking how nice it was to see him so offended. It’s really comforting.
You can feel how Chris loves his job by the way he talks about Space and what's like to be an astronaut. It's contagious. One of the best interviews/reviews I've ever see.
Yes Re loving his job and excited by his experience. If only Neil Armstrong had half of his conversational ability there would be less conspiracies about 1969.
I dont believe 1969 ever happened by the way. In Hollywood maybe but not on the moon not until much later !!!
yeah
I watched his master class, it's pretty incredible
Just notice how this guy gives credit to everyone. He never says "I" did this or that. Its always "we" or "those people" even says Stanley Kubrick and "his team".. I like Chris Hadfield, hes a real guy
Citizen Mike well that’s because being an Astronaut is a very team oriented thing so because of that he would be much more oriented to refer to everyone in a group. Of course he still deserves the credit.
Because all of them used same lies. Grow up we are in 2020
Hafa bk right back at you. Because clearly you aren’t.
@@Mgl1206 Honestly Chris Hadfield has kinda transcended his role as just an astronaut...right now especially in interviews like this the spot light is on him and him alone and he still is being humble about his amazing accomplishments....i think thats what the OP was implying
@@Mgl1206 DO you think you are speak with how exactly🔊🔊🔊? I'm not your friend .becareful🤢
I could listen to Chris for days. It’s rare that someone has experienced so much of life and what it is to be a human being, in a literally cosmic sense, and yet remain so relatable. The way he describes seeing the earth, the tone of his voice when recalling a space walk, these things are too profound for words, but he still manages to give some small piece of it to us
“I’ve been around the world 2650 times or so”
Just a casual flex
Hes basically 2650 years old in moon/ around the earth orbit years
@@janluus9590 I think I'll call that.... orbital field years?
@@xtremetuberVII PLEASE visit my channel th-cam.com/video/T14ClH5p-xw/w-d-xo.html
@@bibekirig6418 All right, since you have engaged with me in this manner, I would like a five paragraph essay on why I should visit your channel, PLEASE.
@@xtremetuberVII haha nice one
This has to be one of the best segments on TH-cam... Hadfield should have his own science show.
He does have an online space class program
i think he is one that does a tour of the ISS, it's long but well worth the watch.
hes so funny!
We should get hadfield, Neil degrasse Tyson, and bill nye on a show
@@apoorlydrawnpotato419 I would definitely watch.
I love how offended Chris is with Gravity.
Yes!!
Grandson: "Grandpa Chris, what did you do?"
Grandpa Chris: "Well, let me see. I was a test pilot, a Colonel, an astronaut, I commanded a space station. Oh and I did downhill ski races and played rock guitar"
That's not a bad resume 😁
Gravity is the worst-conceived space movie since the worst of the 1950s' improbable sci-fi physics. And, with a ridiculous plot like in the 50s.
I thought you said he is offended by Earths pull! Hahahaha
@Anestassia Faessler did you literally just take someone elses comment and post it in another comment? I mean, I laughed pretty dn hard, but then 4 seconds later I see the same exact comment LITERALLY the next thread down.
35:00 made me tear up a little. I haven't felt the magic of our world since I was a kid.
*S* *U* *N* *S* *H* *I* *N* *E* is an utterly existential movie. I highly recommend it. The soundtracks throughout are breathtaking as well
Yeah, I literally just started full on crying in like 10 seconds while listening to that
@@twiceravenpuff watch sunshine
Chris' rant just shows his passion and I find that incredibly inspiring.
It ruined it for me. I cut off his rant midway through.
SAME. TOTALLY FEEL THAT ENERGY.
This man said he just casually space walked in an aurora borealis. Literally never even thought that was possible. He truly has lived life. Wow
its made me tear up
@@reisbejj Same
You have been systematically dumbed down to INSTANTANEOUSLY believe everything that scientism tells you!! You INSTANTANEOUSLY believe, memorize and regurgitate while liar Chris Hadfield laughs all the way to the bank!! You deserve it!!
@@ramonortiz7462 cool story bro
@@mrgermanvono35 Well you love your stories dont you!!
I quite like the man. Ironically, he seems quite down to Earth.
You got a good chuckle out of me with that.
He is down to mars
Nice one 😄
give him some space man....
@@GTXBOY1650 stfu u beta Nvidia card
Interstellar is the peak of any space movies for me, the way they match kip thorne's math and the theory of relativity. Whoa just whoa!
For me it will always be 2001, but I think its more about mankind and unknown than actual space
It is incredibly silly. I dont get why anyone takes it seriously
@@trequor It's artistic,
its just too bad you have to watch matthew mcconaughey as the main character
@@Chris-ks4swhis acting was great in interstellar??
Netflix should give Chris his own show. Dude is an excellent story teller
Netflix doesn't deserve him. But yeah, if they got him, it would be the best show they would have.
he sure is
Funny that Hua
He is a story teller. He wrote a book called “Apollo Murders”. It’s absolutely fantastic. He took real events, historical space figures, his actual space experience, and masterfully created a fiction novel. I could NOT put it down.
He should play himself in For All Mankind!
The way Chris Hadfield articulates his thoughts into Layman's terms is art in itself.
He can only talk to & "explain" something to sheeple.
I like that he is talking as a human, not as an American or whatever. He speaks on behalf of all of us equally, no matter what part of the planet we live on.
@@dusandragovic09srb that doesn't make any sense or have any corialtion.
@@BojanBojovic Chris Hadfield is Canadian.
@@stevenkotyk5806 Sure, this is why I added "or whatever". 🙂
I want to listen to him reviewing a flat earth documentary.
He'd probably be able to smash it to pieces in a matter of two-three sentences.
Why? Doesn't people like you give them enough attention already? Giving them what they want is probably the wrong move.
@@Gnossiene369 Exactly. And also why waste the time of a genius like him? He could be talking to kids, making videos like these with that time.
I think you might kill him if he does that
Haha would love to see that too!
When I was in eighth grade my science teacher had us all write a letter to an astronaut w some basic prompts abt what to say. Idt I put too much effort in tbh, but I wrote to Chris hadfield and I was the only one who got a letter back. Super nice too. Great dude considering there was no incentive to reply
I know I’m a year late, but that makes me so happy! I’m not surprised bc he seems like an incredible guy, but things like that are always heartwarming to hear and it says so much about his character.
It blows my mind just trying to imagine how intelligent, skilled, dedicated, and healthy (physically, emotionally, and mentally) a person has to be to become an astronaut. They're practically superhuman, yet here is one of them being totally chill and sharing his wealth of knowledge with us. Thank you Chris Hadfield and Vanity Fair, this was fascinating to watch!
i feel like when you reach all that (being intelligent, skilled etc) you become chill. like almost every scientist ive seen on youtube giving interviews has this vibe to them.
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@@adisaster8734 xx7uxxrxxu, rief xc
@@adisaster8734 It's an illusion, of course he is going to word himself and represent himself in a way that would appear comfortable to the viewer. He's not a bad guy just pointing out that, its the entire purpose of the video.
While I agree with you, I also wanted to point out that that is soon going to change when companies in lead with SpaceX reach their ultimate goal. Plenty of stupid, spoiled, rich fatasses are going to go to space then. On the plus side it will also be more affordable to send flatearhers to space to ruin their day.
P.S.: I am sorry, I might've been incorrect. I heard that they might be going to adjust the definition so that those won't be called astronauts.
"I surfed on the northern lights" talk about a flex
The northern lights near the south pole, no less.
I was totally gobsmacked to hear that. If I had a bucket list see "the lights" would be on it. To be inside of them has to be transforming.
Yeah hard to top that one.
lmao
I’ve spent ball night wanking, how bout that for flex
I love the fact that you can clearly see his love and passion for space. The way he speaks about it and describes it is so beautiful and poetic.
The Wall-E fact was adorable, I actually thought that was impossible as child but now that I know that it is possible my inner child is proud lol
He "surfed" on the Auroras... Uh that's the coolest thing I have ever heard.
i agree. the man is not only an astronaut but a gifted wordsmith as well.
He is a verry gifted communicator. Even in the small bunch of people who have gone in space, he stands apart. He has the technological background to go there and the way to talk about it in interesting maners.
No matter how bright I dye my hair, or how many piercings I have, or how creative is the name of my dog, I'll never be as cool as him
Never thought I'd see Chris angry, but Gravity got him there
Well its the biggest crap space movie of all time
The film has some mistakes, but the reason why the satellite flying past the space shuttle is so slow could be that the space shuttle flies in the same direction but at a not so high speed.
@@TheWehzy i like the tension and suspense made in this movie. Its a good action movie.
I hate movies like Gravity. Space is so interesting that you could make a really fun and entertaining movie whilst keeping things realistic. Why do movies always insist on dramatising things so much
@@NebulousPenguin sadly, I agree. Too many people never take the opportunity to learn about space and educate others
Chris Hadfield: Reminding everyone why they wanted to be astronauts as kids.
You're perfectly right!
I almost cried remembering that feeling in this video.
Astronaut....Man was a Top Gun Fighter pilot to boot.
that reminded me of when I was in 5th grade and my teacher read his book to us
And remembering why they shouldn't
This guy is amazing… he explains complicated stuff in such a simple way…
"We're there as the representatives of 7.5 billion people"
That's just the kind of person I want as "my" representative in space.
You are not representing me with that stupid "magnum" on your upper lip.
@@kraspootis9051 we probably going back to 7.5 billions with the coronavirus lol
@@MsDead-io4ik wow thats dark even in a space video
Proud that he is Canadian!
@@WillPower46 Correction: *crooked "magnum." I guess shaving in zero gravity is harder than it looks.
Chris should be hired as a consultant in every SciFi movie.
yeah, they should suck the joy and fun out of every sci fi movie, good call
@@gregtronica3569 it may bring a new taste that will be more joyful
@@gregtronica3569 unlogical stuff in movies doesnt make joy and fun it just makes the movie nonsense
@@ravioliravioligivemethefor3131 youre the type of person to watch spongebob, turn up your nose, and be like "Well Ackshyually, sponges in real life do not talk. This show is scientifically inaccurate."
@@botaniccal uh no im just saying illogical things in movies doesnt make it cool
Can we make this a regular thing? Thirty minutes with Chris Hadfield every week. I'd watch.
How about the next best thing, listening to his son Evan on Rare Earth? :)
Well, if you're willing to pay for it, you can always watch him on his masterclass
Why?
@@noleftturnz Why not? ;)
I'd tune in. We all want more Colonel Hadfield in our lives.
6:25 "onboard the international space station we played with water all the time." wholesome.
He's also what people would call a great 'science communicator.' There are people who can do scientific things far beyond our understanding, and when they explain it, the explanations are also beyond our understanding. That's why people like Hadfield are so important - they communicate the concepts that are harder for the average (even scientifically-minded) people to understand in a way that they easily can understand.
That goes to show how much he truly understands these concepts. He's able to break it down into a much more digestible manner.
Right-I didnt understand why humans can’t breathe the air on Mars until he explained it.
there's this quote by Albert Einstein himself: "If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough."
Hear hear great comment.
0:50 Gravity
4:58 Passengers
7:59 Armageddon
9:53 The Martian
13:40 Apollo 13
16:27 Interstellar
20:41 First Man
23:57 Hidden Figures
25:55 Ad Astra
29:27 2001 : A Space Odyssey
31:08 WALL-E
32:46 Sunshine
Razane Louli I love you
You’re a real one
I, too, will thank you for this, kind internaut fellow.
You the real mvp
are you a messiah?
He talked so passionately about the seriousness of astronauts and the competency of female astronauts that it brought tears to my eyes.
samee!!
That's what got me
S I M P
weakling
oh stfu !
I really enjoyed this entire interview. Fantastic. I think it is always amazing to talk to someone that loves what they do and can articulate it the way Chris does here.
“It set back a little girls vision of what a women astronaut can be” someone give this man a medal, I know he already has some but still.
“It set back a little girls vision of what a women astronaut can be” someone give this man a medal, I know he already has some but still.
Right? Chris is my hero.
sees intersteller for 5 seconds
Chris: well, im just confused now.
Me: wait until you see all his movies.
Yeah, I love how offended he gets over that. I love this guy so much.
You all are overreacting. Everyone knows astronauts have to know how a space ship works and how to do basic repair.
Yes there are different specialties, like doctors, scientists, engineering (usually a pilot too). So the lady might be a dr or scientist who does research and the guy an engineer.
But, yeah, you would except an astronaut to be the most able people on earth.
The reason I love this series is because we get to hear experts’ pure, genuine love and passion for their area. Chris is so incredibly eloquent and excited to share his viewpoint, and just hearing him speak about his experience in the last 2 minutes of this video left me in awe as I watched him beautifully describe why he loves space. Such a wonderful series, please keep them coming!
I cant agree more, and not only that, you can see that Chris like film making and storytelling, like when he was talking about Hidden Figures, about Kevin Spacey character, he noted that in reality would be tree different persons, but understands that narratively speaking makes sense merge all of them in one single character. He does that others times throughout the video.
I have seen some specialists that don't care, or don't understand, narrative story telling, and end up pointing out "erros" that where proposital, due to narrative.
These series on Vanity Fair, WIRED, etc. have become my favorite TH-cam content. Along with the Bon Appetit test kitchen, obviously.
@@cthomas025 also, you should check out 'Binging with Babish' if you like tv/movies & cooking!
Thanks Sherlock
This is the same reason I like this series - I like to hear what experts have to say. You learn when talking to someone who knows more than you. Being uneducated should not be a badge of honor.
I could LITERALLY listen to this guy speak about space and physics etc for hours and hours and hours.....
Please stop using LITERALLY all the time...
I got to listen to him for two hours live, speaking in Edinburgh. It was genuinely a spiritual moment, I've never been more inspired and in awe of anything a person has ever said before, or since. If you get the chance, I don't care what it costs, go and hear him live.
@Erik Lerström No, no one was speaking figuratively.
Yup me too, I almost follow Chirs' every video on youtube since that music video came out.
@Erik Lerström It's sci fi but not star wars. I mean it still working in the same reality as us only that there are some new stuffs. Yet, why would they changed the thing that is already exist? it kills the immersion for some tbh, regardless I love interstellar anyways, it's one of my fav movie besides Passengers.
Chris, as a Canadian I have nothing but pride and massive respect for you and your insight. Thanks for agreeing to do this.
"I've been around the world 2650 times or so, and.... I never once could see enough of it. During my first space walk, while i was outside in the dark, we were far enough south that we went through the earths aurora. It is so fantastically beautiful, and such a raw artistic human experience. To look at the northern lights is like magic. To be in them, to surf on them is beyond magic, it's surreal. My last orbit of the world was even more rich and magnificent and awe inspiring than all of the ones before it. The unheralded beauty of our planet and of where it sits in the environment that we are in is so constantly magnificent that when you're looking at you talk in hushed tones."
Imagine going somewhere so incredible that you need a thesaurus of adjectives to try to describe it. I'm envious.
I get what you mean but that thesaurus isn't needed per se, only utilized in a manner to attempt an accurate description.
Tbrg I think that’s what they’re trying to say
Wow! I was scrolling through the comments and exactly when I saw this comment he started saying it! Perfect timing! It was really cool!!😂😂😱
THanks for typing it!
If you want some more of that go read the "Pale Blue Dot" statement that Carl Sagan wrote about after seeing the image of planet earth taken by Voyager 1. I still believe that venturing into space will slowly unify us as as a race. But being human also means being petty and selfish too. We may invent new ways to become tribal. But still occasionally we get to see the minds of men and women, rise above the sheer pettiness of our egos. That is also when we are at our best.
Chris Hadfield destroying Gravity is probably amongst the 3 most satisfying things I've ever witnessed.
You're a Trump supporter aren't you?
Even though I question whether or not he actually watched the movie. The fact that not only did he not mention Kessler Syndrome at all, but it wasn't the first thing he mentioned (instead saying something about asteroid debris?) leads me to conclude he just saw clips. He also made zero mention of centrifugal or centripetal forces. ... and THEN mentions it in the very next movie he spoke of.
There's questioning, and there's outright refusal to acknowledge answers even exist. Sadly, far too many people fall into the latter, especially when it pertains to Gravity. Its like, the better it looks, the more desperate they are to tear it apart. Meanwhile the same people are quick to defend everything wrong with films like Armageddon. At least he laughs at it, but it deserves at least five times as long as Gravity.
@@k1productions87 'Gravity (2013)' was always really a bad Movie.
@@amolghadigaonkar2114 In what respect? By what metric? What were you expecting of the film? What specific things were you needing to see that it didn't do?
note "specific", don't use buzz words or vague nonsense like "I expected it to be good", good in WHAT way? What specific things would you do differently? Again, no vague nonsense like "just don't make the film"
@@k1productions87 lmao u literally destroyed bro so bad he refused to answer
I just realized I need to watch every interview ever with Chris Hadfield. The way he talks about space is beautiful and respectful.
You should watch Neil Degrasse Tyson videos too! Equally interesting and captivating to listen to.
Exactly I could understand every single thing he said. The way he explained it all
@@kevinschultz4518 Tyson uses very higher vocabulary scientific words sometime or make things very complex for normal humans like us. It all gets up my head many times haha
@@mohammedubed7000 I don't know about that, lol. I think Tyson does a magnificent job of breaking it down for us normal people. I think he spends alot of time trying to break things down into terms we will understand.
you should read his book. its really good
For the Ad Astra section, I would think that you could hear anything that made physical contact with the ground, as the ground would carry vibrations up into the rover and into the suit. Like how you can hear/feel vibrations of your car’s tires against the road. I understand that the sounds would be extremely muted because the vibrations are carried only through solids, which our ears aren’t designed to hear, but I’m pretty sure that it wouldn’t be silent.
The Moon also actually does have a very thin atmosphere which could be capable of carrying a very small amount of sound and due to the amount of energy gunshots produce I really don't think it's all that far fetched to add very muted sound effects to the shots.
0:51 Gravity (2013)
4:58 Passengers (2016)
7:59 Armageddon (1998)
9:53 The Martian (2015)
13:41 Apollo 13 1995
16:27 Intersellar 2014
20:41 First Man
23:56 Hidden Figures
25:55 Ad Astra (2019)
29:27 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
31:09 WALL-E (2008)
32:46 Sunshine (2007)
Nice
Thank you very much Xeroo ! :)
my hero
I have never heard someone hate on Gravity as much as he does and I love it.
Me too!
He
Jeff Davis
Gravity is very overrated
Anyone who knows orbital mechanics or general spaceflight info is going to ha it because it is beyond unrealistic
This video should be title: "Chris Hadfield Roasting Science Fiction Movies"
Chris Hadfield roasting Armageddon
Feeling bored?
Heres something soothing...
The song of the mermaid!
th-cam.com/video/MHv0apmlqmM/w-d-xo.html
Thank me later.
gimme that ms!
I would watch an entire series of this.
as someone who was always vaguely angry with Gravity and couldn't really explain why, I didn't know how much my life needed Chris Hadfield totally *obliterating* that movie until this moment
The last 2 minutes of him talking and describing the experience of space was absolutely amazing. I could listen to him talking hours.
"The reverence and understanding of both the miniscule nature of being a human in the enormity of the universe, but also the enormity of being able to see it in that way."
With the things Hadfield has experienced, and his wonderful way with words, I am surprised that people don't give him more attention. That man is like a poet, without even having to try.
exactly what I was thinking. Real talk, I kept rewatching the last 5mins - 10mins of the video just to hear him poetically explain these experiences! mans really got a way with words! plus lowkey I might have to use some of these to impress a girl! 👌🏼😏 hahaha
He's a national hero here in Canada - he's even on our $5 bill!
You guys are just late to the party lol
When I watched this the first time, that part got me teary eyed a bit
Rename this to : Chris Hadfield destroys sci-fi movies with facts and logic
Takes a pretty exceptional person to be accepted as NASA astronaut though. So it's unsurprising he's intellectual and well spoken, it's not the 60's.
You know it's weird when a astronaut says: "I'm confused"
Yeah... the problem with technobabble is that it just makes non-experts nod and say “yup, science stuff”, while someone who actually knows what the words mean is listening to absolute gibberish.
"I'm confused" is just a polite way of saying this is crap! He is not really confused.
@Rob Roy im confused?
The dumbest thing about Armageddon is that with 12 days of training available, they decided to teach a bunch of drillers to be astronauts instead of teaching astronauts to operate the drilling equipment.
Se supone que son los mejores y es imposible que un astronauta sea tan bueno como ellos, ahí está el punto.
In which role would Bruce Willis be more convincing? Hint: not the more intellectual one.
Ben Afleck told Michael Bay that who told him to STFU.
@@matthewdopler8997 lmao I remember that interview
The only thing I remember about "Armageddon" is an animal cracker gazelle headed south.
The rest is just a blur.
I love the way he explains things so it can be understood in a simple way in layman terms
So even when I'm too tired, I can still listen and learn something easily
When he lists all his occupations it was like when a kid lists what he is going to do when he grows up
beautiful observation!
They say POTUS is the most powerful man on Earth. Chris had a job that would probably rival that in some ways. What could be more important or require more responsibility than commanding the ISS?
@@LilyTheCat151 I dunno, personally I'd say being a general in the army or something to that effect; you're in charge of a lot of people's lives and the commands you give don't just affect the people you're giving them out to
not saying that commanding the ISS isn't important or that it doesn't require responsibility, it certainly does
Truuuu
Anyone else break down a little when Chris was talking about how he has been around the world 2650 or so times but he could never see enough of the Earth and how beautiful it was flying through the aurora?
TripleTapHK I must say I shed a tear
Yep. One thing I really enjoy about Chris Hadfield is he can be both a man of Science and a man of Wonder.
I was literally about to comment about this. I found myself tearing up -- every single last word he spoke was so true -- the awe inspiring beauty, the breathtaking majesty, the humbling reverence -- all of it!
I felt that too.
no im not a weakling
I could sit listening to him talk about space for hours. The vastness space has always been surreal to think about, but right now during this crazy time where so many of us are sequestered in our homes...there is something so perfectly awe-inspiring about it.
John Thor Shut up and stop rotting people’s brains.
If he kept talking like the last couple of minutes, I'd listen to him forever
Love how intelligent and critical he was of everything. Also, for such a long time this video took to shoot.
00:51 Gravity
04:59 Passengers
07:59 Armageddon
09:53 The Martian
13:40 Apollo 13
16:27 Interstellar
20:40 First Man
23:56 Hidden Figures
25:55 Ad Astra
29:27 2001: A Space Odyssey
31:09 WALL-E
32:46 Sunshine
Thank you!
@@trysholives3587 careful he's a hero
thx!
much appreciated
Thank you
"I've been around the world 2,650 times or so, and I never once could see enough of it." - Chris, what a beautiful statement.
th-cam.com/video/vt78MuVE6Jw/w-d-xo.html
Also, he says that he doesn't know how to multiply love, yet he did when he sang that song.
Chris Hadfield should write and direct an accurate movie.
Underrated comment
Atharva Shinde yes it’s very underrated
It would be the most boring movie of all time because he simply has no imagination. It would be a 12 hour movie about them getting ready for space then them just sitting in a spaceship with no action or any reason to watch.
Jeff Arnold that’s a highly uneducated statement it would be easy to have someone write it and he gives the idea
Being an advisor would be more suited to him. He could be on the team to help keep it as realistic as possible but let a good screenwriter and director create the story.
What an articulate, superbly clever man …
But I _did_ like First Man: I think it was sad, at times, for a reason… its music created the necessary lightness, however.
Chris: “an endless world of Venetian Blinds.” Interstellar cgi designer: “I’m not crying. I just have hurt feelings in my eye.”
That's why astronauts say we should send poets to describe space. Engineers lack imagination.
Afif Abdullah so the actors saw black holes?
@@Triunity4 That image they created (maybe the actors got to see it on monitors?) was the most accurate projection anyone ever made!
It matches the Real Picture astronomers made later, right?
@@Triunity4 not sure if they actually did this but a lot of sets these days have a central set surrounded by a massive LED screen, so it is entirely possible that they did in fact see black holes
"Houston? What's Houston gonna do?"
i'm wheeezinggggggg
Legit haven't laughed that hard in years.
Houston be like: what'd you want... Dallas ?
Haha...
lmao
They put you on hold like text support
@@ln7929 😆😆😅😅
I will watch anything Chris Hadfield does.
@@chasehicks6952 he's Canadian.
Agreed. He seems to be getting tons of publicity lately. I first learned of him only a few months ago on a Ted Talk recording. This man is incredible!
@@sketchur I don't know what it is. His most recent press worthy event was 2018 when he released a master class. His book was 7 years ago. Normally when someone has a huge interview on Wired, and then Vanity fair, they're on a press junket promoting something.
Careful he doesn't do your mom.
Chase Hicks Lol did you not see the Canadian flag on his suit 😂😂
Just love him! What an incredible human he is! And the way he explains things with passion but also in a way that we can understand without making us feel dumb or making himself seem like a “know it all”. Such a genuine person! An absolute hero of mine!
“We actually carried guns on board the Russian space ship that I flew.” That has to be the most badass thing anybody has ever uttered whilst being completely serious.
@Barry Obama bullets dont travel because of gravity, the force of the ignition when the gun fires makes the bullet fly
@Barry Obama did you even watch the video bro
@Barry Obama Actually Russian cosmonauts used to carry TP-82 pistols with them as a survival aid against bears and wolves in Siberia after landings and before being recovered, He's probably talking about that.
Barry Obama nah. Only thing lack of gravity would do is make the bullet fly a lot farther. Less air resistance would probably keep the bullet more on a straight trajectory as well. Shooting long distances. The air can push a bullet a certain direction. With no air resistance that wouldn’t happen.
@@Highminded12 true but not just a lot farther, it would endlessly execute it's trajectory assuming it has a clear path
Timestamps
0:51 Gravity (2013)
5:00 Passengers (2016)
8:00 Armageddon (1998)
9:53 The Martian (2015)
13:40 Apollo 13 (1995)
16:28 Interstellar (2014)
20:41 First Man (2018)
23:57 Hidden Figures (2016)
25:56 Ad Astra (2019)
29:29 2001:A Space Odyssey (1968)
31:09 WALL-E (2008)
32:47 Sunshine (2007)
thanks
👍
Thanks
Thank you broooo.
Thanks!
U know.. being stuck in this quarantine but thinking about the epicness of space and his enthusiasm about it all is making me tear up a little.
In that space i found your comment...
I fell ya man..
Well, the saddest thing I ever learned about Astronomy, is that we are never going anywhere. There will never be Star Wars, Star Trek, or Interstellar, or 2001. Everything is just too far away, and our lifespans are just not long enough for that. Unless we can figure out artificial gravity, hypersleep, or some sort of worm hole or other anomaly that will immediately get us to other galaxies, it's just going to have to be the movies that we enjoy, and not reality. Although I still love space, it was a sobering thing to learn.
@@Room-xi6nb true, even at 1/3 the speed of light we barely make a dent but hey yknow what, there's a lot we can do with the few solid planets in our solar system, not to mention all those moons as well
@@ririhaha182 I sure hope we don't though. If we humans are gonna die we should die on the planet we started on. After all, we are the ones who destroyed it.
Morally I believe it would be wrong for us to try and live on Mars. Leaving earth after we've destroyed it to do the same process over again on another planet. If humans were to make even a gazillionth of a footprint in the universe's history, I'm not sure what I want us to be remembered as. But I know what I DON'T want us to be remembered as - planet killers.
@@Scareth Earth isn't destroyed. What are you talking about?
Chris is incredibly humble, intelligent and is a great communicator. He's a hero for many of us Canadians and we couldn't be more proud that we have someone like him representing us.
And he's a diehard Maple Leafs fan! Go buds!
him knowing peggy whitson’s achievements and accolades practically as well as his own is an incredible sign of his genuine respect for her
🥰
He rattled them off like he has her baseball trading card and was listing off her stats like he was listing off Mantle's stats. I loved that.
Reading these comments just shows how disconnected u ppl are 👈🤣😂
@@noleftturnz wat
Graivity's movie authenticity aside - George Clooney kind of looks like Buzz Lightyear in the space suit
Yooo ikson Whats up
Heeeyyy Ikson! Love your music sooo much
Sounds like him too
Everyone looks like Buzz Lightyear in that suit
Ah yes, "Graivity"
There's something about Hadfield's mustache that makes me want to trust him with my life.
You’d know
AHHHH I GOT YOU, FINALLY, IM ON TIME
bro.. you literally comment on every vid don't you
I mean you have something about mustaches ain’t that right ?
not again
And there he is Ladies and Gentlemen, The Most Interesting Man in the World. Thank you for sharing some of your time with us Chris Hadfield.