This absolutely stunning to watch. I am so infatuated with early space travel. I can’t wait for us to return. It’s so great that we have iPhones that have more tech in it than the entire space program. And we can watch this at any time anywhere. I love having TH-cam at all times.
I'm currently pursuing a degree in Aerospace Engineering, and when Harrison Schmitt said "I think the next generation ought to accept this as a challenge" it gave me goosebumps. I know he wasn't talking about my generation, but I think it would be so awesome having a hand in making something like the Apollo program happen some day.
@Hayden O'Neil I just commented on what you noticed today 1.2.19 not realizing you wrote a similar comment a month earlier. It also gave me "goosebumps". Unfortunately, I do not see the U.S. in today's political climate allocating the money necessary to go back. Back in the 60s, the biggest disagreement was the Viet Nam war. Now we seem to disagree about almost everything.
@@daffidavit I agree... We live in such a sad social media time. Facts aren't important anymore. Weve mass hysteria, spending billions while we should spend that money on research and technological development... America is as devided as it can be... I dont see it change very soon either.
"hatch is closed." "Hey jack, don't lock it." "I'm not gonna lock it..." "We gotta go back there, you lose the key and we're in trouble!" Man these guys have such a terriffic sense of humour.
Aremis Somar They laugh because it’s a giant conspiracy headed up by a secret government of demonic reptilians who love to mock us and make us feel tiny and alone in the universe? It that what you’re saying? Hmm, that sounds a little far fetched. Got any proof?
Moon landing was filmed in side the LEM simulator. No videos of the astroNOTS inside the LEM during ascent or descent because they could not fake that part of the hoax.
Just a beautifully crafted film, stunning in fact. Very emotional and contemplative thanks to brilliant editing. Nice long shots. No overvoice. Hands down the best mission documentary I've ever seen. BRAVO!
Amen to that man. Almost brought tears to my eyes. It’s incredible to see those great men having the time of their lives, part of the Apollo missions, the single most epic and crazy thing that humans have ever done. This film should be mandatory viewing in all US schools. Such as shame that today’s role models are rappers who throw money at women in bikinis. What must the great men of this film think of today’s America?
So incredibly emotional to watch this, brings a tear to my eye seeing human beings waking on the moon. All the Apollo missions proves what human beings can achieve anything when we all put our hate, jealously and bigotry away. It is the most single achievement human beings have ever achieved. Beautiful. When my son is old enough I will be taking him to NASA so that he can see and experience the endeavours we have achieved.
When you take him to see the Lem make sure you tell him that little rocket motor was not what got us on to the moon or back with Apollo 20 and 21 the secret missions. It was the alien anti graviton drive that was used in its place. The foil they picked up also at Roswell shielded radiation so it lined the walls and space suits to go through the Van Allen belts. But by the time comes that should all be public next year. Aliens 👽 it’s always aliens it’s how your cell phone works that’s alien circuitry it’s not the same as the computer in your car or microwave or tv it’s a boost we got now considered to be a dual edge sword and many aliens now think while we got smarter younger we got disconnected from each other and nature y a dual edge.
I was born in 1963 - I remember the thrill of these days with clear detail. I am embarrassed to admit that our country and society has been slowly and steadily moving downhill since this last great Apollo mission. As a young boy I always took for granted that our great proud country would always aim for excellence and forward motion. Sadly some 45 years later our country is an embarrassing mess. Our sights have turned to short term greed and frivolous goals. Watching these films makes me very proud of what we were capable of. However upon completed viewing I feel like I am trapped in a time that I never dreamed would take place. People lost focus, we lost a sense of respect and class we once had. Now we are a society of people staring with blank void into smart phones while we pretend we are accomplishing something. God Bless the USA. We have a long way to go yet again. I pray we can get there again.
I agree I was born in December 62 I remember the same things and I thought our country was great nobody lied now pornographic telephones and computers and children were being raised right outside playing ball I remember seeing glad Ford going across the sky and my parents standing there with me showing me with my brothers and sisters and California I remember great things being accomplished and I feel the same way I stuck in a different world I don't even know who I am anymore or where I'm at and I look at my young daughter and sometimes I feel like crying because I brought her end of this world and I'm afraid of what her future might be like now since we have a ball secret government and all these psychopath running are country to and greedy rich people the rock child's and the burger masters in the Rockefellers there disgusting even bill Gates's on their side the demons of got ahold of them. Help us
Wow! I seemed to have stumbled onto this thread by coincidence. I too was born in 1963 I'm from southern California, raised on a missle test base and I blindly assumed the US would always be at the forefront of technology. We should be on Mars by now...this is sad, we owe an apology to the people that accomplished these things, it's sad too that England, and Germany are going down the same road, was kinda hoping you guys would show us where we went wrong...sucks being in the same boat, I'm afraid we're just switching seats on the Titanic these days.
The Artemis mission is scheduled to put humans back on the moon by 2024. Search for ‘Artemis moon nasa’ and it will come right up. They are going to stay this time. It was named for the twin of Apollo, Artemis, Goddess of the moon.
Gene Cernan and his Apollo 17 mission was my favorite of them all! Look how far we came in technology in just the 5 years since the Saturn V first flew and 3 years of moon missions!! I have always thought, and will always think until I'm 6' under, it was an absolute travesty America just quit right when we'd become so damn good at it! Personally, I don't think we'll ever get it right again. We maybe have more technology today, but we don't have anything close to the dedicated scientists engineers and technicians we had back then. They're gone. And we don't have the leadership of the likes of Werner von Braun, et al. And back then Uncle Sam basically gave NASA a blank check to do whatever. I don't see that happening again either anytime soon.
I somewhat agree with you. However, just look at the amazing things Musk is doing. I think we will get our "footing" again, just with a longer than necessary lapse,
@@cedarshoals529Yes, I do agree re Musk and the amazing Falcon flights. And landings!! Incredible. But just think if we'd kept upgrading and modifying our majestic mighty Saturn V who'd proved herself so worthy, so many times!? I get goosebumples thinking what it would be capable of by today, and maybe with the Orion or Starliner or even the Dragon sitting atop!? Hmmm... Just sayin. 🤔
Yes I have always thought this. Very sad and now all we're left with is a generation that relentlessly claim it to all of been one big hoax. Devastated.
J Read yea that’s just plain stupid kids think this was faked. This country used to stand for something. Now it’s just a watered down politically correct non alcoholic light beer of a country. Kids think now making a big sacrifice is going without WiFi for 2 days
The smarter of us millennials just find it strange we never went back. We also find it strange NASA claims to not know how to get over some of the hurdles now. Idk no big deal. These astronauts are great. They rode rockets regardless.
Jack Schmidt - the most unlikely of astronauts. Can you imagine a guy studying and training to be a geologist and in seemingly no time, gets to walk on the moon! Just amazing.
The most powerful rocket ever,I think the scene of Apollo 17 leaving the launch pad is by far the best ever put together,the music the build up to ignition and we did all this 50 plus years ago....simply incredible...watch that Saturn 5 go
Zander Weaver cheers mate. Jack Schmitt actually has a lake cabin in Minnesota one lake over from me. I’d love to run into him some time in the Summer buying gas for the boat, “that one runs a little slower than your last ship eh Jack?”
Should have been another, with Skylab B in the 1975/1976 timeframe, but alas, funding was not available for utilizing $1 billion in hardware left available.
@Григорий Апокалипсис Please read carefully. The post was about the content of the dumb comment you chose to put out there. So, how were launches of a 100 meter plus high structure, weighing almost 3 million kgs faked in front of live audiences of 100s of thousands of people (it could be seen from miles around), including a night launch? Otherwise, don't believe in radar, or radio telescopes? Think there is some conspiracy in civil aviation to pretend radar exists (or the tracking of Skylab from 1973 to 1979)? I could go on to demonstrate that the content above was stupid. Not saying anything ad hominem since I don't know you.
What a change to see a documentary that hasn't been ruined by loud and obtrusive music. Fantastic. 38:23 - How can we hear the sound of the hammer. I thought in a vacuum there was no sound. Is it the vibrations being picked up by the speech mic inside the space suit?
Very good point. According to a bit of research, the vibrations are being picked up by the microphone and voice comm's in the suit. However it sure sounds clear to me. You can hear the chipping of the rock. I was also under the impression that external sounds could not be heard.
External sounds can't be heard due to the vacuum. But the sound is travelling through the hammer handle and through the suit. It's just that we are used to thinking of the medium of sound as being predominately air. Whereas higher density materials are superior sound conductors. Note the deadness of the sound due to a total absence of echo.
Proof they went on the moon at 48:40...the front flap would stay up if air was present at that forward speed, it keeps coming down since there's no air wind...
I would certainly buy a copy. Go on timeline put out a bluray or HD disc. I have a lot of the official apollo 17 footage on disc. Bought that from "spacecraft films",well worth buying.
Totally agree. Feel cheated that I never saw this first time round and watching this after 47 years has made me realise the sheer magnitude of the appollo missions which should never be underestimated.
All those that deny the moon landings will feel embarrassed for having ever doubted it happened and I also think, a sigh of relief/pride, that MAN did indeed make it to the surface of the moon. These brave men unselfishly represented ALL man kind, for all time, not just the U.S.A., remember that and honor them for what they did.🙏🇺🇸👍
fabulous documentary. my only complaint is the background dramatic music was a little much, I want to hear the dialogue clearly, and the music drowns it out a bit
Would have been better if it was background music, instead of foreground music (i.e. music quieter than the speech that you sometimes had to strain to hear)
At 26:40 after walking on the moon for the first time I believe it was Harrison (Jack) Schmitt who "moonwalked" backward and left two parallel lines with his boots instead of footsteps. He was drawing lines in the dust. But what he said was a challenge to future generations. Jack said at 26:40 "Well I tell ya, Gene I think the next generation ought to accept this as a challenge, to see them leave footsteps like these someday".
I’m no expert but I’ve watched a lot of these things and in the homemade documentary channel they say they are between ten and fifteen thousand feet at that stage and it is because of no atmosphere
It wasn’t the final Apollo mission, nor the final Saturn V launch as the text said, the hardware for 18,19 and 20 were still used, for the Apollo -Soyez mission and Skylab.
Steven McGuinness they did but the rockets were not used. They just took the lem to the moon. Took off at night from an AFB. They used the anti gravity drive and foil to line suits and walls of the space craft from Roswell wreckage. Bringing Russia was the right thing to do. In fact it’s how they landed the Lem-mon on the moon all along even with a car attached to the side. Ain’t alien stuff amazing ? They could not get the lem to fly safely With a ground team of engineers on the ground on our own planet. Way more cool stuff coming next year as long as Trump wins. If he does not it will be Chaos which may happen as the Henoch prophecy marches on and Democrats getting in would certainly inflame Russia which is how our future ended. one govt ship left floating dead in oceans colored black giving orders to soldiers that are not there.
38:30 how are we hearing the sound of him hammering? is the sound travelling through his suit or something? I've never heard anything else do that on the moon
He's probably holding the hammer in just the right way for the vibration to travel through his suit to be picked up by the mic. When you watch the full scene, you'll notice that most of the time we don't hear any hammering sound; th-cam.com/video/eMcbgNPayY0/w-d-xo.html Hence if that was sound traveling through air to an external microphone, then we would hear all the hammer strikes, not just some of them; I hope that helps :-)
@@yazzamx6380 hmm that's pretty interesting. makes me wanna hear clearer audio from inside a space suit. I've always assumed there would be muffled sounds from vibrations going through the suit, but this is the first time I've heard anything like that actually happening
Such a shame and honestly disgraceful that the government pulled the plug on Project Apollo. Should've at minimum seen the original amount of missions through
I suppose it was inevitable that money and public interest would dry up. Don't forget that the Americans had been fighting a long, futile and expensive war at the time as well. The legacy Apollo created was the true valuable outcome and there are serious conversations about returning to the moon and going to Mars. I think there's genuine cause for optimism. I just hope I'm here to see it!
@@Lunarfacia Also, Apollo created helped create success that in certain ways undermined support for manned flight, notably with micro-electronics, integrated circuits, semis. Along with the Minuteman program, Apollo was instrumental in accelerating technologies that made unmanned missions more feasible (like with spy satellites). What is surprising was the willingness to just drop all the capability/infrastructure that took so much money to develop - about $1 billion in Apollo hardware remained unused in the mid-70s and ended up expensive museum artifacts. Important considering the time and effort required with developing the space shuttle, and that no heavy lift capacity was available for concepts like SDI in the 1980s.
Look at their feet when they're walking around, look at how they kick up soil. When Cernan first steps off and starts walking around, at one point he kicks soil further away than his height in feet with just a flick of his heel. You can't do that on Earth! On another video of the same mission he scuffs the regolith with his foot and sends soil hurtling a good 12 feet away from him, impossible in Earth gravity and in an atmosphere with air resistance. It's the best visual evidence that it was not faked. Notice also that there is never any dust cloud of any kind as would be expected in a VACUUM.
+ Jared Freeman It's too bad that Ridley Scott decided not to bother modeling 3/8G for 'The Martian'. Seeing that 1/6G in vacuum was so convincingly faked decades ago, I'm sure he would've figured out their tricks, if he could have. It seems that low gravity/low atmospheric conditions can only be explicitly depicted on location.
46:46 In case you were wondering what he means by that, "It's Only a Paper Moon" is an old jazz standard. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/It%27s_Only_a_Paper_Moon
8:38 it’s funny that Cernan says a relatively remote region of the moon. Yes the moon is a remote place but where is he comparing the area to elsewhere on the moon? I’d say the entire surface is equally remote. 😁
What he means is that the site is more difficult to get to, from an orbital mechanics point of view, than the other sites. If you look at all the landing sites you will notice that most are close to the equatorial region, which was easier to get to.
@@leobakkerflightandspace6655 and to think, they could have attempted a mission to Tycho Crater, they were seriously considering it, until Jim Mcdivitt(By 1970, the Apollo Program Manager)I think it was him looked at the Surveyor photos and the photos from other Apollo missions of the proposed landing area and said, "Over my dead body!" That would have been the ultimate test of man and machine landing there .spaceflighthistory.blogspot.com/2016/11/an-apollo-landing-near-great-ray-crater.html?m=1
it's amazing the biggest fear for the LEM was the possibility of tipping over or sinking in the dust, Armstrong constantly worried about it. It appears Gene was concerned as well, the greatest accomplishment in history.
@Bob Dillahunty I don't think that was really what B Caldwell was trying to communicate. His post was a word play on 'around the entire globe'! Just like FEers are flat out getting around insurmountable difficulties.
I don't get it. How can a sphere be described as flat? Is a baseball flat? Is a frizbee a sphere? Why do certain people want to be duped? Doesn't Physics, orbital mechanics and calculus pretty much take care of the sphere issue? Or did these people refuse to want to learn more passed geometry while in grade school??? At least they are bold in their ignorance!
I think the math is off on the mission counts. Remember, two of the flight to the Moon were intentionally orbital, 8 and 10, 10 being the final dress rehearsal for Apollo 11 (but no landing of the LM) and the first time they sent the combined CSM/LM stack to the Moon. Apollo 13 became an unintentional orbital-only. So, to the Moon => Apollo 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17. 9 missions times 3 men per capsule = 27; 6 successful landings times 2 men per LM = 12. One flight's not being counted in the tally. I would still count Apollo 13 as a success, scrubbed landing or not. At least they got everybody back in one piece which is more than you can say for two space shuttles...
Thank you for the clarification! You're absolutely right here I think. It's been so long since I've read about the missions and crew lists. I DID forget some of these guys flew to the Moon twice! I feel worst for Lovell. He really did get a raw deal BUT at least he survived Apollo 13. I think the astronauts killed on the last flight of the shuttle Columbia absolutely suffered horrifically in the breakup. I won't go into the graphic details but my stomach was turned by the descriptions in some of the news articles from back then about what they found of the crew remains. I hope it was over in a split second. The indications for Challenger was that it was a much less violent death for the crew and that they were unconscious when that Shuttle's crew cabin collided with the water. I still think one of NASA's worst decisions was hiding the two shuttle accident debris from the public. There should be some vehicle remains displayed just to remind people that there is a physical cost to these things. There is NOTHING ROUTINE about them and they should be regarded as experimental flight with higher risk. The casual attitudes and malaise that set in are what I believe killed the two Shuttle crews more than the technical issues. The Apollo 1 families AGREED to let NASA display the charred remains of that space capsule in a museum but NASA still hides it. The latest photos of the remains (under a tarp in a warehouse) are from 1998. Granted, you can actually listen to the audio from that accident if you care to. I'm amazed NASA let this happen -- they have a tendency to hide their accidents after the investigations are over as I've noted. They've already had a fatality with one of the public (Virgin effort) efforts to get people into space. I can't imagine that they WON'T get setback a decade or more IF the first public/civilian flight has a fatal accident. We're far too risk averse for spaceflight which besides the $$$ is why we really haven't been back to Moon or sent people further since the early 1970s.
@@locjacko129 I got you now. I can't be sure, but I believe the shadow is from the lunar module itself (the craft where the filming takes place) and the other is just some dirt in the window.
Could have been a good video, but that annoying background music made it un-watchable for me. Had to cut out at 27:50. I don't understand why people think that's necessary.
They would likely have died, which makes someone question this whole moon buggy and moon landing nonsense. Who in their right mind would take these kinds of chances. Everything was untested, the lunar lander, the rover, taking off from the moon, the suits, the plss. They were pretty much winging the whole thing. It's complete nonsense that these guys didn't crash and die.
@@rifham Ignoring the mindless responses from others, this was the key facet. Their circumference of travel was always constrained by how far they could walk back in case of the rover failure. And we should add that they had various means of increasing oxygen supplies: each astronaut had a separate high pressure supply of oxygen (OPS) and mechanisms to share oxygen and cooling. These never had to be used (thankfully), but the rover did not present a single point of failure in the mission. www.workingonthemoon.com/WOTM-BSLSS.html
This documentary series is probably twice as good as the Apollo 11 documentary that came out recently. And that is mostly because this is twice as long. Twice the goodies. Otherwise, perhaps the most exalting depiction of the exploration of the moon put to film. First Man was a fabulous fictional account of the first moonlanding, but I'm inclined to agree with Chris Hadfield's opinion: everyone was too gloomy in that film; spaceflight is fun. Why wasn't there more fun? This documentary clearly depicts the utter joy Cernan and Schmitt felt every waking moment on the moon.
Ok, at 44:37 one of the astronauts sings darth vader’s imperial march. But this was in 1972. Did john williams take this and use it in the star wars score or am I missing something? Bit weirded out by that.
rockethead7 thanks - put me out of my misery and confusion. The two have some very similar elements. Clearly John williams was influenced by this piece.
Vibration travelling through the space suit and into the mic on his head gear. Sound vibration actually travels through material more efficiently than it does through air.
Moon landing was filmed in side the LEM simulator. No videos of the astroNOTS inside the LEM during ascent or descent because they could not fake that part of the hoax.
The US is not America as described here. America is the name of our Continent which extends from Canada to Argentina, and anybody born here is an American. That group of united states in our America Continent doesn’t have a country name. AMERICA 🌎 = NORTH AMERICA + CENTRAL AMERICA + SOUTH AMERICA Latin Americans are happy to be part of America.
Why do they choose fonts too small to read in colors too light, and place them on a light background? Can't read most of it, and they are removed before I can see them for sure.
That is THE way it's supposed to be spelled in proper standard queens english. Americans changed it over time. Sometimes i wonder why. Sigh. 🙄 No offence intended.
oxygen in a a diving tank can only last 60 minutes maximum, 50 years later. Yet these fool can walk around on the moon surface for 8 hours ,with a small back pack which contains a cooling condenser,heat pump, radio.all which can withstand 260 degree Fahrenheit.
Since it's blocking my reply from being seen, I'll try to divide this up into multiple messages. First of all, learn to control your breathing better. I can routinely last 80-90 minutes on a single tank, even when diving deep.
This is ridiculous. It's blocking everything I'm trying to write. I can't even write the next word without it blocking ONE WORD. Ivan, you have absolutely no understanding of this entire topic. And, everything you wrote is wrong.
The pictures of the stage separations are from Apollo 4. And what is shown at 14:00 is NOT the TLI, but the separation of the 2nd stage and the ignition of the S-VIB booster.
I can't see women building a rocket and fly it to the moon, all by themselves, as fun as that would be. Not because they're too dumb.. they generally seem to be interested in different things.
This absolutely stunning to watch. I am so infatuated with early space travel. I can’t wait for us to return. It’s so great that we have iPhones that have more tech in it than the entire space program. And we can watch this at any time anywhere. I love having TH-cam at all times.
My father took us to watch that last Apollo mission blast off at the cape. I was young but still have those amazing memories of the tour and launch.
rest in peace Mr. Cernan. You are a true hero sir.
My favorite astronaut
I'm reading his "Last Man on the Moon" now. Great read. Entertaining and informative.
I want to be him
He never went to the moon.
Those landings are myths, unable to be recreated in today's times.
@@neilarmstrongsson795 we are landing on the moon again in 3 years with Elon Musks Starship, he will proof you and the other brainless idiots wrong.
I'm currently pursuing a degree in Aerospace Engineering, and when Harrison Schmitt said "I think the next generation ought to accept this as a challenge" it gave me goosebumps. I know he wasn't talking about my generation, but I think it would be so awesome having a hand in making something like the Apollo program happen some day.
@Hayden O'Neil I just commented on what you noticed today 1.2.19 not realizing you wrote a similar comment a month earlier. It also gave me "goosebumps". Unfortunately, I do not see the U.S. in today's political climate allocating the money necessary to go back. Back in the 60s, the biggest disagreement was the Viet Nam war. Now we seem to disagree about almost everything.
@@daffidavit I agree... We live in such a sad social media time. Facts aren't important anymore. Weve mass hysteria, spending billions while we should spend that money on research and technological development...
America is as devided as it can be... I dont see it change very soon either.
"hatch is closed."
"Hey jack, don't lock it."
"I'm not gonna lock it..."
"We gotta go back there, you lose the key and we're in trouble!"
Man these guys have such a terriffic sense of humour.
hey RaM so why had those ramsies been kicked out from the moon-loon?
That's because they weren't in any danger.
I have watched the initial 17 minutes over a hundred times and can watch it all life long. What a generation of people - truly inspirational.
I love how these astronauts are joking and have great attitude during the mission.
They have invested years into this endeavor, at this point it must of been second nature.
they laugh because its a joke..the whole thing is one giant joke on you and i.
Aremis Somar They laugh because it’s a giant conspiracy headed up by a secret government of demonic reptilians who love to mock us and make us feel tiny and alone in the universe? It that what you’re saying? Hmm, that sounds a little far fetched. Got any proof?
Moon landing was filmed in side the LEM simulator. No videos of the astroNOTS inside the LEM during ascent or descent because they could not fake that part of the hoax.
Sue Kennedy That proves nothing. There’s no video of you being born, so you must be A.I.
Cernans excitement is palpable when he is climbing down the ladder getting ready to step foot on the lunar surface
He was a better actor than my father.
With hindsight he should've been on apollo 11.
@@neilarmstrongsson795, get a life.
@@neilarmstrongsson795 You wouldn't know who your biological father was
Kinda tough to watch with tears pouring down my face. Somethings are so awe inspiring, they bring massive emotions.
Well said! I'm not crying, I got moon dust in my eye.
RIP Gene Cernan and Ron Evans 😥
@ 26:38 Gene Cernan invents the moonwalk
You're kidding Right? You do know that these guys were never on the moon?
Varuzh Shakbazyan Go back to your third world shithole and get off of our American TH-cam.
Just a beautifully crafted film, stunning in fact. Very emotional and contemplative thanks to brilliant editing. Nice long shots. No overvoice. Hands down the best mission documentary I've ever seen. BRAVO!
you're being serious ha?
Amen to that man. Almost brought tears to my eyes. It’s incredible to see those great men having the time of their lives, part of the Apollo missions, the single most epic and crazy thing that humans have ever done. This film should be mandatory viewing in all US schools. Such as shame that today’s role models are rappers who throw money at women in bikinis. What must the great men of this film think of today’s America?
So incredibly emotional to watch this, brings a tear to my eye seeing human beings waking on the moon. All the Apollo missions proves what human beings can achieve anything when we all put our hate, jealously and bigotry away.
It is the most single achievement human beings have ever achieved. Beautiful. When my son is old enough I will be taking him to NASA so that he can see and experience the endeavours we have achieved.
When you take him to see the Lem make sure you tell him that little rocket motor was not what got us on to the moon or back with Apollo 20 and 21 the secret missions. It was the alien anti graviton drive that was used in its place. The foil they picked up also at Roswell shielded radiation so it lined the walls and space suits to go through the Van Allen belts. But by the time comes that should all be public next year. Aliens 👽 it’s always aliens it’s how your cell phone works that’s alien circuitry it’s not the same as the computer in your car or microwave or tv it’s a boost we got now considered to be a dual edge sword and many aliens now think while we got smarter younger we got disconnected from each other and nature y a dual edge.
@@AboxofMonsters lol
Next mission krypton…
Allow your son watch the apollo 11 'return' press conference.
And then let him make up his mind as to whether we _really_ went.
genuinely
The Saturn V night launch is just glorious.
I've NEVER experienced a moon landing documentary like this. It was very moving. I loved it! Also, I want to print that picture at 30:21
Pretty much available. Ebay.
I was born in 1963 - I remember the thrill of these days with clear detail. I am embarrassed to admit that our country and society has been slowly and steadily moving downhill since this last great Apollo mission. As a young boy I always took for granted that our great proud country would always aim for excellence and forward motion. Sadly some 45 years later our country is an embarrassing mess. Our sights have turned to short term greed and frivolous goals. Watching these films makes me very proud of what we were capable of. However upon completed viewing I feel like I am trapped in a time that I never dreamed would take place. People lost focus, we lost a sense of respect and class we once had. Now we are a society of people staring with blank void into smart phones while we pretend we are accomplishing something. God Bless the USA. We have a long way to go yet again. I pray we can get there again.
Very good comment.
Unfortunately, it's not much different with Germany.
I agree I was born in December 62 I remember the same things and I thought our country was great nobody lied now pornographic telephones and computers and children were being raised right outside playing ball I remember seeing glad Ford going across the sky and my parents standing there with me showing me with my brothers and sisters and California I remember great things being accomplished and I feel the same way I stuck in a different world I don't even know who I am anymore or where I'm at and I look at my young daughter and sometimes I feel like crying because I brought her end of this world and I'm afraid of what her future might be like now since we have a ball secret government and all these psychopath running are country to and greedy rich people the rock child's and the burger masters in the Rockefellers there disgusting even bill Gates's on their side the demons of got ahold of them. Help us
Wow! I seemed to have stumbled onto this thread by coincidence. I too was born in 1963 I'm from southern California, raised on a missle test base and I blindly assumed the US would always be at the forefront of technology. We should be on Mars by now...this is sad, we owe an apology to the people that accomplished these things, it's sad too that England, and Germany are going down the same road, was kinda hoping you guys would show us where we went wrong...sucks being in the same boat, I'm afraid we're just switching seats on the Titanic these days.
The Artemis mission is scheduled to put humans back on the moon by 2024. Search for ‘Artemis moon nasa’ and it will come right up.
They are going to stay this time. It was named for the twin of Apollo, Artemis, Goddess of the moon.
Forget it! You are watching another version of the fall of Rome!
This takes me right back to when i was a nine year old boy watching this unfold on tv. I'm 55 now for the record.
Me too :)
Gene Cernan and his Apollo 17 mission was my favorite of them all! Look how far we came in technology in just the 5 years since the Saturn V first flew and 3 years of moon missions!! I have always thought, and will always think until I'm 6' under, it was an absolute travesty America just quit right when we'd become so damn good at it! Personally, I don't think we'll ever get it right again. We maybe have more technology today, but we don't have anything close to the dedicated scientists engineers and technicians we had back then. They're gone. And we don't have the leadership of the likes of Werner von Braun, et al. And back then Uncle Sam basically gave NASA a blank check to do whatever. I don't see that happening again either anytime soon.
I somewhat agree with you. However, just look at the amazing things Musk is doing. I think we will get our "footing" again, just with a longer than necessary lapse,
@@cedarshoals529Yes, I do agree re Musk and the amazing Falcon flights. And landings!! Incredible. But just think if we'd kept upgrading and modifying our majestic mighty Saturn V who'd proved herself so worthy, so many times!? I get goosebumples thinking what it would be capable of by today, and maybe with the Orion or Starliner or even the Dragon sitting atop!? Hmmm... Just sayin. 🤔
Yes I have always thought this. Very sad and now all we're left with is a generation that relentlessly claim it to all of been one big hoax. Devastated.
J Read yea that’s just plain stupid kids think this was faked. This country used to stand for something. Now it’s just a watered down politically correct non alcoholic light beer of a country. Kids think now making a big sacrifice is going without WiFi for 2 days
The smarter of us millennials just find it strange we never went back. We also find it strange NASA claims to not know how to get over some of the hurdles now. Idk no big deal. These astronauts are great. They rode rockets regardless.
Jack Schmidt - the most unlikely of astronauts. Can you imagine a guy studying and training to be a geologist and in seemingly no time, gets to walk on the moon! Just amazing.
He is a very talented person
Neither of them went to the moon, it remains difficult to reach even today.
@@neilarmstrongsson795 Incorrect, correct.
Fantastic documentary
The night launch of the Saturn V was spectacular!
Cernan does a moonwalk on the Moon before it was thought of as a dance.
The most powerful rocket ever,I think the scene of Apollo 17 leaving the launch pad is by far the best ever put together,the music the build up to ignition and we did all this 50 plus years ago....simply incredible...watch that Saturn 5 go
One of the best docs on the space program I've seen. Nice seeing a couple of brothers in the control room 🙌
styleemusic there is a newer one out called Apollo 11,highly recommend it,lots of unseen footage,really top notch
This was my favorite of all Apollo documentaries.
Looks like a reflection off the antenna on the top of the pack to me....
32:29 - It's lens flare off a part of his life support.
Thank you buddy. I co-directed this, so that means a great deal! Best.
Zander Weaver cheers mate. Jack Schmitt actually has a lake cabin in Minnesota one lake over from me. I’d love to run into him some time in the Summer buying gas for the boat, “that one runs a little slower than your last ship eh Jack?”
Oh imagine that! I'd love that too. Would love to meet some of these incredible men in person. Sad to hear of Gene Cernan's passing recently.
The music they're using for this documentary is KILLER. Overall, a well done piece.
Does anyone know what this music is? It's just wonderful.
The music is just like the music in the film "The Truman Show".
Thank you timeline, for putting such an incredibly interesting documentary on youtube. It's brilliant to see. 👍❤
Apollo 17 was the PERFECT final Apollo mission.
The longest length rover mission was over 3 miles from the lander!
no i think they drove 8 kilometres away from the lunar module, which are 5 miles i think
Excellent and beautiful footage and doc. Loved it! 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
Apollo 17 was NOT the last Saturn 5 launch. They used a full kit (less a LEM) Saturn 5 to launch Skylab.
It was the final launch of the Saturn V in the Apollo program however, which is what the text says.
@Григорий Апокалипсис try and learn some proper English, if you attempt to make a point, flat- earther.
Should have been another, with Skylab B in the 1975/1976 timeframe, but alas, funding was not available for utilizing $1 billion in hardware left available.
@Григорий Апокалипсис For dumb comments like that, no, the person doesn't need to learn Russian to provide a response.
@Григорий Апокалипсис Please read carefully. The post was about the content of the dumb comment you chose to put out there. So, how were launches of a 100 meter plus high structure, weighing almost 3 million kgs faked in front of live audiences of 100s of thousands of people (it could be seen from miles around), including a night launch? Otherwise, don't believe in radar, or radio telescopes? Think there is some conspiracy in civil aviation to pretend radar exists (or the tracking of Skylab from 1973 to 1979)? I could go on to demonstrate that the content above was stupid. Not saying anything ad hominem since I don't know you.
What are very awesome and exciting time, too bad it stopped, the moon footage is magic pure magic
loving the banter ^^ "great american tape not sticking to the fender" and the mission control calmly announcing this XD
Jemppu he was saying grey tape.( basically duct tape)
By this stage they were taking the p out of anyone who believed it.
Cernan was the most excited and happiest astronaut ever.
Yep. I remember him providing commentary during early shuttle launches.
Gene Kranz is a hero ❤ and this mission is just epic
What a great documentary, made all the more warm and entertaining by the enthusiastic chit chat commentary from the two astronauts.
The dichotomy of that and the tension in the faces at mission control just before touch down on the moon is fascinating [ 22:33 - 24:40 ].
9:43 Alan Shepard in the brown pants. Guys, If you find a golf ball on the moon, It's mine.
That time when man drove a freaking buggy on the moon
It was a great time
with $5 lawn chairs as seats
This was the third/final time, it first went up on Apollo 15 and then 16.
Yep... Now weve Grets Thunberg telling us how the world works.
Played golf, ran around like rabbits with no care for the immediate danger should they damage their spacesuits.
Awesome show, goosebumps watching it. A pity it wasn't a bit longer though, was really getting into it!
there's a part two :)
@@zanderweaver9222 can you send the link for it
@@liam_7564 th-cam.com/video/-vcrYyHjD_8/w-d-xo.html
What a change to see a documentary that hasn't been ruined by loud and obtrusive music. Fantastic.
38:23 - How can we hear the sound of the hammer. I thought in a vacuum there was no sound. Is it the vibrations being picked up by the speech mic inside the space suit?
Very good point. According to a bit of research, the vibrations are being picked up by the microphone and voice comm's in the suit. However it sure sounds clear to me. You can hear the chipping of the rock. I was also under the impression that external sounds could not be heard.
External sounds can't be heard due to the vacuum. But the sound is travelling through the hammer handle and through the suit. It's just that we are used to thinking of the medium of sound as being predominately air. Whereas higher density materials are superior sound conductors. Note the deadness of the sound due to a total absence of echo.
The vibration from the hammer traveled through the glove into his suit and got picked up on microphone
+Tom Richnafsky
You don't say...
I'm wondering why they come back on their tracks before they arrive at their destination at 48:27..... That makes you wonder.
Wow! Waiting on part 2!!
Awesome.. thank you 👍🇳🇿
Proof they went on the moon at 48:40...the front flap would stay up if air was present at that forward speed, it keeps coming down since there's no air wind...
Annother good evidence. Bravo. Or brava.
i am glad to see this on here but i think these docs should all be digitised and sold to the public.this stuff is so important!
I would certainly buy a copy. Go on timeline put out a bluray or HD disc. I have a lot of the official apollo 17 footage on disc. Bought that from "spacecraft films",well worth buying.
Totally agree. Feel cheated that I never saw this first time round and watching this after 47 years has made me realise the sheer magnitude of the appollo missions which should never be underestimated.
All those that deny the moon landings will feel embarrassed for having ever doubted it happened and I also think, a sigh of relief/pride, that MAN did indeed make it to the surface of the moon. These brave men unselfishly represented ALL man kind, for all time, not just the U.S.A., remember that and honor them for what they did.🙏🇺🇸👍
@World Coming Down 5779 Why the hate? You don't like achievements ?
World Coming Down 5780 We thank our US allies from Australia.
Remember, you have no evidence they actually landed, you just take their word for it.
@@neilarmstrongsson795 shame on you
All I want to know is Boba Fett out there ?
I love the mission patch for Apollo 17.
Thank you.
All astronauts are true heroes.
fabulous documentary. my only complaint is the background dramatic music was a little much, I want to hear the dialogue clearly, and the music drowns it out a bit
Armstron & Cernan my favourite 💕 BRRAVE HEROES
@Thomas Pickering One minute silence for you 💩🌹
@Thomas Pickering you're an idiot.
Loved Schmitt and Cernan’s banter ❤️
Being woke up to Ride Of The Valkyries, with the reality then kicking in that you're on the Moon 😯 😀 ...must've been some rush!
Nice comment!
Love the music
So do i jennifer. 👍
Would have been better if it was background music, instead of foreground music (i.e. music quieter than the speech that you sometimes had to strain to hear)
I loved this video and gave it a thumbs up but I found the music a bit over powering at times...
At 26:40 after walking on the moon for the first time I believe it was Harrison (Jack) Schmitt who "moonwalked" backward and left two parallel lines with his boots instead of footsteps. He was drawing lines in the dust. But what he said was a challenge to future generations. Jack said at 26:40 "Well I tell ya, Gene I think the next generation ought to accept this as a challenge, to see them leave footsteps like these someday".
Invention of the "Moonwalk" dance at 26:26
lol 😂😂😂😂
What altitude were they at at 22:15? The shadow looks so clearly defined! I guess it's cause there's not an atmosphere
I’m no expert but I’ve watched a lot of these things and in the homemade documentary channel they say they are between ten and fifteen thousand feet at that stage and it is because of no atmosphere
It wasn’t the final Apollo mission, nor the final Saturn V launch as the text said, the hardware for 18,19 and 20 were still used, for the Apollo -Soyez mission and Skylab.
The text says it was the Apollo program's final launch of a Saturn V. Not the final launch of a Saturn V fullstop.
Steven McGuinness they did but the rockets were not used. They just took the lem to the moon. Took off at night from an AFB. They used the anti gravity drive and foil to line suits and walls of the space craft from Roswell wreckage. Bringing Russia was the right thing to do. In fact it’s how they landed the Lem-mon on the moon all along even with a car attached to the side. Ain’t alien stuff amazing ? They could not get the lem to fly safely With a ground team of engineers on the ground on our own planet. Way more cool stuff coming next year as long as Trump wins. If he does not it will be Chaos which may happen as the Henoch prophecy marches on and Democrats getting in would certainly inflame Russia which is how our future ended. one govt ship left floating dead in oceans colored black giving orders to soldiers that are not there.
38:30 how are we hearing the sound of him hammering? is the sound travelling through his suit or something? I've never heard anything else do that on the moon
He's probably holding the hammer in just the right way for the vibration to travel through his suit to be picked up by the mic.
When you watch the full scene, you'll notice that most of the time we don't hear any hammering sound;
th-cam.com/video/eMcbgNPayY0/w-d-xo.html
Hence if that was sound traveling through air to an external microphone, then we would hear all the hammer strikes, not just some of them;
I hope that helps :-)
@@yazzamx6380 hmm that's pretty interesting. makes me wanna hear clearer audio from inside a space suit. I've always assumed there would be muffled sounds from vibrations going through the suit, but this is the first time I've heard anything like that actually happening
Duct-tape saved the lives of the astronauts on Apollo 13 - Here, it saved the fender on the Lunar Rover...
Never go anywhere without it!
Absolutely superb !!!
Such a shame and honestly disgraceful that the government pulled the plug on Project Apollo. Should've at minimum seen the original amount of missions through
Agreed. To Apollo 20, and then do Skylab and Skylab B to 1977/1978. Much would have been achieved in science.
I suppose it was inevitable that money and public interest would dry up.
Don't forget that the Americans had been fighting a long, futile and expensive war at the time as well.
The legacy Apollo created was the true valuable outcome and there are serious conversations about returning to the moon and going to Mars. I think there's genuine cause for optimism.
I just hope I'm here to see it!
@@Lunarfacia Also, Apollo created helped create success that in certain ways undermined support for manned flight, notably with micro-electronics, integrated circuits, semis. Along with the Minuteman program, Apollo was instrumental in accelerating technologies that made unmanned missions more feasible (like with spy satellites). What is surprising was the willingness to just drop all the capability/infrastructure that took so much money to develop - about $1 billion in Apollo hardware remained unused in the mid-70s and ended up expensive museum artifacts. Important considering the time and effort required with developing the space shuttle, and that no heavy lift capacity was available for concepts like SDI in the 1980s.
Hola donde puedo conseguir este documental del apollo 17 con subtitulos en castellano ?? me pueden dar un enlace, gracias.
Im ashamed that so many people downplay these great achievements with all the braindead conspiracies 🙄
AwesomE !!!
Handsome, brave, incredibly intelligent astronauts!
love nasa bless us
I would definately panic being so far away from home.
Look at their feet when they're walking around, look at how they kick up soil. When Cernan first steps off and starts walking around, at one point he kicks soil further away than his height in feet with just a flick of his heel. You can't do that on Earth! On another video of the same mission he scuffs the regolith with his foot and sends soil hurtling a good 12 feet away from him, impossible in Earth gravity and in an atmosphere with air resistance. It's the best visual evidence that it was not faked. Notice also that there is never any dust cloud of any kind as would be expected in a VACUUM.
+ Jared Freeman It's too bad that Ridley Scott decided not to bother modeling 3/8G for 'The Martian'. Seeing that 1/6G in vacuum was so convincingly faked decades ago, I'm sure he would've figured out their tricks, if he could have. It seems that low gravity/low atmospheric conditions can only be explicitly depicted on location.
@World Coming Down 5779 You're a hopeless idiot.
@@johnmellor932 AABSOLUTELY the most solid and convincing evidence we went to the Moon.
@@johnmellor932 hi, you are perfectly right.
46:46 In case you were wondering what he means by that, "It's Only a Paper Moon" is an old jazz standard.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/It%27s_Only_a_Paper_Moon
8:38 it’s funny that Cernan says a relatively remote region of the moon. Yes the moon is a remote place but where is he comparing the area to elsewhere on the moon? I’d say the entire surface is equally remote. 😁
What he means is that the site is more difficult to get to, from an orbital mechanics point of view, than the other sites. If you look at all the landing sites you will notice that most are close to the equatorial region, which was easier to get to.
He meant remote area of the desert.
@@leobakkerflightandspace6655 and to think, they could have attempted a mission to Tycho Crater, they were seriously considering it, until Jim Mcdivitt(By 1970, the Apollo Program Manager)I think it was him looked at the Surveyor photos and the photos from other Apollo missions of the proposed landing area and said, "Over my dead body!" That would have been the ultimate test of man and machine landing there .spaceflighthistory.blogspot.com/2016/11/an-apollo-landing-near-great-ray-crater.html?m=1
Wonderful. Thank you
. And 50 years after the last moon landing all our generation only got to see was a earth hugging space station.
John Smith Yeah it’s barely in space; actually, technically it isn’t and is still flying in the earths mesosphere.
And yet people still buy that this actually happened.
Amazing!!
Pity the program had to end just when they were really getting really good at the science. We'll have to start all over when we go back.
Yep very sad. 1 of the biggest letdowns of the US democratic system. Basicly short term projects and things like Apollo need long term vision.
it's amazing the biggest fear for the LEM was the possibility of tipping over or sinking in the dust, Armstrong constantly worried about it. It appears Gene was concerned as well, the greatest accomplishment in history.
Romancing The Moon.
at the minute 38:43 is possible to hear the sound of the hammer striking a rock? How is it possible? vibration through the space suit?
You said it. Hammer, glove, air inside the suit, microphone. In that order.
The flat Earth society has members around the entire globe...
@Bob Dillahunty I don't think that was really what B Caldwell was trying to communicate. His post was a word play on 'around the entire globe'! Just like FEers are flat out getting around insurmountable difficulties.
good one.
I don't get it. How can a sphere be described as flat? Is a baseball flat? Is a frizbee a sphere? Why do certain people want to be duped? Doesn't Physics, orbital mechanics and calculus pretty much take care of the sphere issue? Or did these people refuse to want to learn more passed geometry while in grade school??? At least they are bold in their ignorance!
@@chinatype2bassrocker809 Dunning-Kruger effect.
Say that again but slowly..
I remember this day very well. Everyone and I mean everyone stopped what they were doing to see this moment in time.
I think the math is off on the mission counts. Remember, two of the flight to the Moon were intentionally orbital, 8 and 10, 10 being the final dress rehearsal for Apollo 11 (but no landing of the LM) and the first time they sent the combined CSM/LM stack to the Moon. Apollo 13 became an unintentional orbital-only. So, to the Moon => Apollo 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17. 9 missions times 3 men per capsule = 27; 6 successful landings times 2 men per LM = 12.
One flight's not being counted in the tally. I would still count Apollo 13 as a success, scrubbed landing or not. At least they got everybody back in one piece which is more than you can say for two space shuttles...
Cernan was on apollo 10 & 17, Young was on 10 & 16 and Lovell was on 8 & 13, cant count them twice so 24 seems correct.
Thank you for the clarification!
You're absolutely right here I think. It's been so long since I've read about the missions and crew lists. I DID forget some of these guys flew to the Moon twice!
I feel worst for Lovell. He really did get a raw deal BUT at least he survived Apollo 13.
I think the astronauts killed on the last flight of the shuttle Columbia absolutely suffered horrifically in the breakup. I won't go into the graphic details but my stomach was turned by the descriptions in some of the news articles from back then about what they found of the crew remains. I hope it was over in a split second. The indications for Challenger was that it was a much less violent death for the crew and that they were unconscious when that Shuttle's crew cabin collided with the water.
I still think one of NASA's worst decisions was hiding the two shuttle accident debris from the public. There should be some vehicle remains displayed just to remind people that there is a physical cost to these things. There is NOTHING ROUTINE about them and they should be regarded as experimental flight with higher risk. The casual attitudes and malaise that set in are what I believe killed the two Shuttle crews more than the technical issues.
The Apollo 1 families AGREED to let NASA display the charred remains of that space capsule in a museum but NASA still hides it. The latest photos of the remains (under a tarp in a warehouse) are from 1998. Granted, you can actually listen to the audio from that accident if you care to. I'm amazed NASA let this happen -- they have a tendency to hide their accidents after the investigations are over as I've noted.
They've already had a fatality with one of the public (Virgin effort) efforts to get people into space. I can't imagine that they WON'T get setback a decade or more IF the first public/civilian flight has a fatal accident. We're far too risk averse for spaceflight which besides the $$$ is why we really haven't been back to Moon or sent people further since the early 1970s.
remember very first 2 saturn v's were un manned test shots
@@AvengerII I think Young got the best deal. He orbited alone as the CM pilot in 10 and then walked on the moon on 16.
@48:57 why are there tracks already on the ground?
Because this is the third and final EVA - Apollo 17 spent 75 hours on the lunar surface.
They drove back to the LEM by following their tracks.
Had to scroll a fair way to find the nutcase brigade, well done all.
From 21:58 the LEM looked way above Command Module, I am quite confuse with that.
Are you talking about that white speck? i don't think that's the cm.
@@jmrico1979 It had shadow in the left corner.
@@locjacko129 I got you now. I can't be sure, but I believe the shadow is from the lunar module itself (the craft where the filming takes place) and the other is just some dirt in the window.
they fly the LM up to slow it down since higher orbit is slower.
They can send all these commercials too the moon if they wish.
'As you can see it's only a paper fender, but the Moon is real....'Epic line.
Could have been a good video, but that annoying background music made it un-watchable for me. Had to cut out at 27:50. I don't understand why people think that's necessary.
@ 24:00: are those craters or pebbles cause at 300 ft the wholes or pebbles were the same size at 3 ft. 😮😶
Ruined by intrusive and unnecessary ads.
I must admit Joshua i feel the same. Wish they wouldn't do it. It's a great documentary though. 👍😊
Joshua Resnick, . . . and by intrusive and unnecessary music.
@@jamesneilsongrahamloveinth1301 Well i don't mind their soundtrack to be fair. But we all have different likes and dislikes.
Gotta pay for the shows somehow!!
Adblock has been invented 15 years ago. Maybe one day you will spend the 3 mouse clicks needed to install it.
@17:00 Capture of Challenger occurred at 15,000 miles, in the midst of the outer Van Allen Belt.
What would have they done if the rover broke down 7 kilometers from the lander? Guess they have the reserve air to walk (hop) back.
They had a "walkback limit" in case of a failure. This decreased as their suits where depleted during the EVA.
They would likely have died, which makes someone question this whole moon buggy and moon landing nonsense. Who in their right mind would take these kinds of chances. Everything was untested, the lunar lander, the rover, taking off from the moon, the suits, the plss. They were pretty much winging the whole thing. It's complete nonsense that these guys didn't crash and die.
@@varuzhshakbazyan5732 with your mindset we would still live in caves banging rocks together. All human progression involves taking risks
samik83 Well they could always have put their thumb out and hitchhiked, lol
@@rifham
Ignoring the mindless responses from others, this was the key facet. Their circumference of travel was always constrained by how far they could walk back in case of the rover failure.
And we should add that they had various means of increasing oxygen supplies: each astronaut had a separate high pressure supply of oxygen (OPS) and mechanisms to share oxygen and cooling. These never had to be used (thankfully), but the rover did not present a single point of failure in the mission.
www.workingonthemoon.com/WOTM-BSLSS.html
This documentary series is probably twice as good as the Apollo 11 documentary that came out recently. And that is mostly because this is twice as long. Twice the goodies.
Otherwise, perhaps the most exalting depiction of the exploration of the moon put to film.
First Man was a fabulous fictional account of the first moonlanding, but I'm inclined to agree with Chris Hadfield's opinion: everyone was too gloomy in that film; spaceflight is fun. Why wasn't there more fun?
This documentary clearly depicts the utter joy Cernan and Schmitt felt every waking moment on the moon.
sounded like they had fun on the moon, i guess if u were on it u would too, and a bit nervous lol
I think if they were _really_ on the moon they would've taken it a bit more seriously.
Ok, at 44:37 one of the astronauts sings darth vader’s imperial march. But this was in 1972. Did john williams take this and use it in the star wars score or am I missing something? Bit weirded out by that.
That's Chopin's Death March.
rockethead7 thanks - put me out of my misery and confusion. The two have some very similar elements. Clearly John williams was influenced by this piece.
I like the sound at 3830, of the hammer striking the object. I hope hoax theorists were not watching
Sonido en el vacio? Mmmmm
What is IN the space suit? A vacuum, too?
Vibration travelling through the space suit and into the mic on his head gear. Sound vibration actually travels through material more efficiently than it does through air.
Moon landing was filmed in side the LEM simulator. No videos of the astroNOTS inside the LEM during ascent or descent because they could not fake that part of the hoax.
We do have to wonder why opportunities weren't taken to film any of the 'landings' from other vantage points such as the hubble or orbiter etc
Would someone please tell me the name of the music? Will sub in appreciation. Thank you.
The US is not America as described here. America is the name of our Continent which extends from Canada to Argentina, and anybody born here is an American. That group of united states in our America Continent doesn’t have a country name.
AMERICA 🌎 = NORTH AMERICA + CENTRAL AMERICA + SOUTH AMERICA
Latin Americans are happy to be part of America.
America has been used as shorthand for the United States of America in many media, for many decades now.
Merica
America is the name of the Service Module, that’s why they’re always saying it.
28:45, magnificent desolation.
All the hoaxers should look at the DEMONSTRATION of how the flag "waves" in a vacuum at 29:50.
The hoaxers make that comment on the Apollo 11 landing. This one is the Apollo 17 mission.
Why do they choose fonts too small to read in colors too light, and place them on a light background? Can't read most of it, and they are removed before I can see them for sure.
Must be Brit made because they spelled neighbor neighbour. Now I see why they have that accent.
That is THE way it's supposed to be spelled in proper standard queens english. Americans changed it over time. Sometimes i wonder why. Sigh. 🙄 No offence intended.
@@spearhead787 No offense taken! Ask Google the proper spelling of neighbor, or, neighbour. Maybe Google needs a session with the Queen? 👑
@@bruce92106 That's cool bruce. Yes indeed it probably does. I'm sure her majesty would oblige. 😊
I was never too into space stuff growing up, I was always into airplanes but god damn this is amazing
oxygen in a a diving tank can only last 60 minutes maximum, 50 years later.
Yet these fool can walk around on the moon surface for 8 hours ,with a small back pack which contains a cooling condenser,heat pump, radio.all which can withstand 260 degree Fahrenheit.
Since it's blocking my reply from being seen, I'll try to divide this up into multiple messages.
First of all, learn to control your breathing better. I can routinely last 80-90 minutes on a single tank, even when diving deep.
Secondly, a scuba tank is not a good comparison anyway,
because every
This is ridiculous. It's blocking everything I'm trying to write. I can't even write the next word without it blocking ONE WORD. Ivan, you have absolutely no understanding of this entire topic. And, everything you wrote is wrong.
Rubbish. 260F? Where did you get that temperature from?
The pictures of the stage separations are from Apollo 4. And what is shown at 14:00 is NOT the TLI, but the separation of the 2nd stage and the ignition of the S-VIB booster.
fs2728 ya but it's still cool
Do they have to revise the term "mankind" to "humankind" now? Because "mankind" is not representative of all lol.
They really both mean the same thing
Not too social justice warriors fighting the good cause. To me yeah they are the same.
eurosensazion With that attitude you will remain part of the problem, not the solution.
I can't see women building a rocket and fly it to the moon, all by themselves, as fun as that would be. Not because they're too dumb.. they generally seem to be interested in different things.
@@payt01 yes , it was woman who gave these brave souls life ....
If you’re watching this 11/12/24 there is hope for the country and our children 🇺🇸