As a language enthusiast, thia has was my major takeaway from this interview, it's really hard to imagine they could have picked a better person for the job
Boris Belitsky - he was impeccable during the translating session of the interview. I second your thoughts @vkravchuk whereby the translator's linguistic skills was majestically impressive to behold!
I haven't heard his voice often, I think it was just a recording of his voice and no video. He's always so wholesome and caring, they made such a great choice. The translator is amazing, I would love to be as fluent as him!
Yuri Gagarin's historic journey into space not only marked a monumental achievement in human exploration but also inspired generations worldwide with his courage, determination, and pioneering spirit. His iconic flight symbolizes the boundless potential of humanity and serves as a reminder of the power of dreams to propel us beyond the limits of Earth, igniting a passion for space exploration that continues to inspire scientists, engineers, and dreamers alike. Gagarin's legacy shines brightly as a beacon of hope, reminding us to reach for the stars and push the boundaries of what is possible.
Alexei Leonov was the planned cosmonaut to be the first for a potential lunar mission of the Soviet Union. The same cosmonaut that did the first spacewalk and exited his capsule. However after Sergei Korolev, the head of the Soviet Space Program died due to a surgery, the program started to go downhill. In my opinion, the Soviets could have landed on the moon, but not first.
@@Simon-px8mi I honestly wish that the Soviets had been able to land on the moon too. There isn't really much scientifically to be gained over just sending a probe, it's just more of a 'we did it' sort of thing. Both countries landing on the moon would've made Apollo-Soyuz much more special than it already was. Although to be fair to the Soviets, they did pioneer space stations while the Americans were off landing on the moon. The ISS wouldn't exist without them.
I can understand being nostalgic about certain things from this time but surely not International relations bro this was in the middle of the cold war 💀
Not quite, this was a year or so after we had the bright idea of continuing to send U-2s over the USSR, a hallmark of us just simply not trusting them. If we put maybe a little more faith in Khrushchev, the cold war may have panned out very differently at the time, and the Apollo-Soyuz may have happened way sooner.
It's a shame he didn't live to see the Apollo Moon Landing. He just seems like such a nice guy, he and Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins would probably have been good friends.
It may have been just one trip into sheer nothingness in a metal box, but as the Alexander of Space, Gagarin's name and adventure will ring the same through human history forever. I'm overwhelmingly glad I can witness this sixty-two years after, a little weirded out that you can just pull his interview up on the same site people use to bingewatch cute capybara videos, but very glad regardless Трава у дома, братья, добро пожаловать домой
И он у могилы Карла Маркса. Замечательно. До слёз. Гагарин - советский человек. Во всём. Только не пишите чушь, что его заставили. Мы были так воспитаны. И это было прекрасно.
I have watched a movie about him. He had a very strange death during the flight, I think maybe he smiled too much towards the west... it is just my own idea....
Yuri Gagarin will forever be remembered as one of the greatest men in human history.
Какой красивый мужчина Юрий Гагарин. Простой парень с открытым лицом и шикарной улыбкой!
The translator does a great job here switching between russian and english effortlessly well!
As a language enthusiast, thia has was my major takeaway from this interview, it's really hard to imagine they could have picked a better person for the job
To be honest, the translator left me speechless. Either he was bilingual, or the School of the middle 20th century was much better than now
The translator’s name is Boris Belitsky. Can’t find any information about him.
As an interpreter myself, this is our job🫶🏼
Boris Belitsky - he was impeccable during the translating session of the interview. I second your thoughts @vkravchuk whereby the translator's linguistic skills was majestically impressive to behold!
У него красивая улыбка❤ (he has a beautiful smile)
Yuri Gagarin seemed like a genuinely nice guy. RIP.
What an absolute legend!! Cute too!!❤
Yes he had a nice, friendly face and an easy smile. The USSR picked a very photogenic and personable man to be their "face."
@@gutsfinkyHe was not picked for PR. He WAS the first HUMAN in space. A truly historical person.
@@gutsfinkyHe was the best Soviet pilot and that why he was chosen to fly in space as first man.Good looks don’t really matter
@@GoodFella-wi7gw you and I both know that's not true.
@@gutsfinky Are you Russian?
I haven't heard his voice often, I think it was just a recording of his voice and no video. He's always so wholesome and caring, they made such a great choice. The translator is amazing, I would love to be as fluent as him!
Our Yuri🎉 Наш Юрий🎉 ❤
The best translator that I have seen on TV.
The best known name on the planet, until the Beatles. RIP Yuri.
The first spaceman. No one can ever take that away from Major Gagarin.
Who tf is Beatles?
@@muhammadmehriddinov8317 A band that shock the world during the 60s
Наш Юра
Yuri Gagarin's historic journey into space not only marked a monumental achievement in human exploration but also inspired generations worldwide with his courage, determination, and pioneering spirit. His iconic flight symbolizes the boundless potential of humanity and serves as a reminder of the power of dreams to propel us beyond the limits of Earth, igniting a passion for space exploration that continues to inspire scientists, engineers, and dreamers alike. Gagarin's legacy shines brightly as a beacon of hope, reminding us to reach for the stars and push the boundaries of what is possible.
A kind, bright person. May his memory be blessed.
What a legendary badass
Everywhere i see him he is always smiling. I love him
That question at the end was deep. I wonder if he might have gone to the moon if he hadn't died so young.
Alexei Leonov was the planned cosmonaut to be the first for a potential lunar mission of the Soviet Union. The same cosmonaut that did the first spacewalk and exited his capsule. However after Sergei Korolev, the head of the Soviet Space Program died due to a surgery, the program started to go downhill. In my opinion, the Soviets could have landed on the moon, but not first.
@@Simon-px8mi I honestly wish that the Soviets had been able to land on the moon too. There isn't really much scientifically to be gained over just sending a probe, it's just more of a 'we did it' sort of thing. Both countries landing on the moon would've made Apollo-Soyuz much more special than it already was.
Although to be fair to the Soviets, they did pioneer space stations while the Americans were off landing on the moon. The ISS wouldn't exist without them.
Back when international relations were healthy. Good old days. 💔
I can understand being nostalgic about certain things from this time but surely not International relations bro this was in the middle of the cold war 💀
Not quite, this was a year or so after we had the bright idea of continuing to send U-2s over the USSR, a hallmark of us just simply not trusting them. If we put maybe a little more faith in Khrushchev, the cold war may have panned out very differently at the time, and the Apollo-Soyuz may have happened way sooner.
It's a shame he didn't live to see the Apollo Moon Landing. He just seems like such a nice guy, he and Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins would probably have been good friends.
The so called Cold War didn’t seem so cold here.
Just happiness and joy in a great human achievement.
We remember the Queen Elizabeth only she got some tea with the First Man Mr Gagarin
And I think she described him as "very russian" which is delightful in itself.
Gagarin is not only hero of the СССР, he is hero of humanity.
It may have been just one trip into sheer nothingness in a metal box, but as the Alexander of Space, Gagarin's name and adventure will ring the same through human history forever.
I'm overwhelmingly glad I can witness this sixty-two years after, a little weirded out that you can just pull his interview up on the same site people use to bingewatch cute capybara videos, but very glad regardless
Трава у дома, братья, добро пожаловать домой
И он у могилы Карла Маркса. Замечательно. До слёз. Гагарин - советский человек. Во всём. Только не пишите чушь, что его заставили. Мы были так воспитаны. И это было прекрасно.
That translator is amazing switching to Russian from English that quickly
RIP
Перевод легенда
dude always has a brilliant smile
Спасибо за Память!
Checkmate the flat-earthers. “The earth looked round.”
Легенда всего человечества.
Sad that he died within this same decade so young. The Russian saying he cites at the end of video certainly holds true.
Died 7 years after this at age 34 in the crash of his MiG-15. As he said at the end "if we live, we shall see."
First human in space gagarin wonderful🎉🎉🎉🎉
I'm from kazakhstan. Yeah Gagarin was in Baikonur. But the Kazakh cosmonaut was Toktar Aubukirov
Я просто оставлю этот комментарий здесь спасибо
His smile is sweet :(
❤
Был-бы лучшим президентом России.
Здесь ему всего 27 лет!
❤❤❤❤❤
💙 🛰️ 🇷🇺 🛰️ 💙
Yuri Gagarin
💙Magnificent🛰️
💙Cosmonaut🛰️
🥇🌍🥇🌎🥇
💙 🛰️ 🇷🇺 🛰️💙
🤍 🌍 🇷🇺 🌎 🤍
💙Magnificent💙
❤Cosmonaut❤
Yuri Gagarin
& Valentina &
Tereshkova
🥇🌍🥇🌎🥇
💙 🛰️ 🇷🇺 🛰️💙
I have watched a movie about him. He had a very strange death during the flight, I think maybe he smiled too much towards the west... it is just my own idea....
yuri gagarin is reading every responce to each question. Totally scripted. Sad really
He would have been Soviet premier if they hadn’t have killed him.. how sad…
He died because of an accident... it was not orchestraded by anyone
Что ты несёшь дубина. Он погиб во время испытательного полёта
So brainwashed.. Excellent work)
They had an excellent propaganda tool in him.
It is normal. You used your propaganda, we ours. 🤷😂
Soviets showed that their space technologies are better. 💪 We won the space race.