Moon Launch Live

Author
Discussion

stuartmmcfc

Original Poster:

8,664 posts

193 months

Saturday 13th July 2019
quotequote all
Anyone watching this on channel 4 now?
It’s got me glued smile

Matt..

3,602 posts

190 months

Saturday 13th July 2019
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Some of the footage is the same as the Apollo 11 documentary that came out this year (and might still be at your local cinema). What this is showing is just how incredibly well they did remastering the footage.

If you can you should see if the Apollo 11 documentary is still on near you!

I’m enjoying this though!

MiniMan64

16,941 posts

191 months

Saturday 13th July 2019
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There’s fantastic programs all over the schedules at the moment.

What I really enjoyed about this one (and the 8 days to the Moon on BBC4 this week) is there’s no talking heads, no interruptions, no commentary.

Just what happened.

It’s incredible

parabolica

6,724 posts

185 months

Saturday 13th July 2019
quotequote all
Matt.. said:
Some of the footage is the same as the Apollo 11 documentary that came out this year (and might still be at your local cinema). What this is showing is just how incredibly well they did remastering the footage.

If you can you should see if the Apollo 11 documentary is still on near you!

I’m enjoying this though!
Went and saw Apollo 11 last night and couldn't agree more; I knew it was a documentary but didn't realise it was a non-commentary documentary - its just the remastered footage with audio actually taken from 1969. It was fantastic.

Langweilig

4,329 posts

212 months

Saturday 13th July 2019
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It brought back a lot of memories, even though I was very young at the time. I wasn't aware that there was a fuel leak in the third stage of the Saturn V. To see our own James Burke showing us around an escape bunker built under the launchpad was amazing.

MitchT

15,883 posts

210 months

Saturday 13th July 2019
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Great programme. It did make me wonder though... what with the moon mission stopping the world in its tracks and other things, like Concorde, for example, what is there today that's stopping the world in its tracks and capturing the imaginations of all ages, genders, ethnicities, etc. on a global scale? I can't think of anything and it makes me feel rather sad.

Bungleaio

6,337 posts

203 months

Saturday 13th July 2019
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I really enjoyed tonight's programme too.

If you've never seen this then I'd recommend watching it, think band of brothers but space

https://m.imdb.com/title/tt0120570/

anonymous-user

55 months

Saturday 13th July 2019
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MitchT said:
Great programme. It did make me wonder though... what with the moon mission stopping the world in its tracks and other things, like Concorde, for example, what is there today that's stopping the world in its tracks and capturing the imaginations of all ages, genders, ethnicities, etc. on a global scale? I can't think of anything and it makes me feel rather sad.
1,The climate change thing
2.Crap on Twitter

irocfan

40,539 posts

191 months

Saturday 13th July 2019
quotequote all
Bungleaio said:
I really enjoyed tonight's programme too.

If you've never seen this then I'd recommend watching it, think band of brothers but space

https://m.imdb.com/title/tt0120570/
Or another (sort of) related one: The Right Stuff

patmahe

5,754 posts

205 months

Sunday 14th July 2019
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I just watched it on the all4 player using my Chromecast, just thinking I'm probably holding more computing power in my hand than that entire Saturn 5 had available to go to the moon.

Astonishing to see just how gripped the world was, concerning also that there was so much difficulty keeping communication going while they were in Earth orbit. Cool footage though, I guess it's the first 'first' in exploration where TV cameras existed to capture it all. Imagine in a thousand years what people will make of this footage.

MiniMan64

16,941 posts

191 months

Sunday 14th July 2019
quotequote all
MitchT said:
Great programme. It did make me wonder though... what with the moon mission stopping the world in its tracks and other things, like Concorde, for example, what is there today that's stopping the world in its tracks and capturing the imaginations of all ages, genders, ethnicities, etc. on a global scale? I can't think of anything and it makes me feel rather sad.
There isn’t really.

If we go to Mars it should be interesting.

The difference in how the media covers it will be interesting. One thing I've noticed in these documentaries is how much calmer and more uncomfortable people are being interviewed for TV than they are now.

poo at Paul's

14,153 posts

176 months

Sunday 14th July 2019
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MitchT said:
Great programme. It did make me wonder though... what with the moon mission stopping the world in its tracks and other things, like Concorde, for example, what is there today that's stopping the world in its tracks and capturing the imaginations of all ages, genders, ethnicities, etc. on a global scale? I can't think of anything and it makes me feel rather sad.
Love Island finale?

laugh




iandc

3,718 posts

207 months

Sunday 14th July 2019
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poo at Paul's said:
Love Island finale?

laugh

That sums today's epic views nicely! don't bother with anything serious when a bunch of randy airheads can get us all gripped to the sofa.

Elroy Blue

8,689 posts

193 months

Sunday 14th July 2019
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MiniMan64 said:
There isn’t really.

If we go to Mars it should be interesting.

The difference in how the media covers it will be interesting. One thing I've noticed in these documentaries is how much calmer and more uncomfortable people are being interviewed for TV than they are now.
If we go to Mars there will be hours of TV from climate nutters taking about the pollution from the rocket or how the money should have been spent on lentils


AshVX220

5,929 posts

191 months

Monday 15th July 2019
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Elroy Blue said:
MiniMan64 said:
There isn’t really.

If we go to Mars it should be interesting.

The difference in how the media covers it will be interesting. One thing I've noticed in these documentaries is how much calmer and more uncomfortable people are being interviewed for TV than they are now.
If we go to Mars there will be hours of TV from climate nutters taking about the pollution from the rocket or how the money should have been spent on lentils
I thought the same thing as I watched it. I don't think humans on Mars will grip the world in the same way Apollo 11 did sadly. People just don't seem to be as impressed or in awe of such achievements these days sadly. I hope I'm wrong.

Watching the show, I was a bit sad that I wasn't around to see and appreciate it as it happened, it must have been remarkable.

However, when we do return to the Moon, or go to Mars, just imagine how amazing the footage will be, all in 4k probably, it'll be fantastic and I hope I'm here to see it.

Zirconia

36,010 posts

285 months

Monday 15th July 2019
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AshVX220 said:
I thought the same thing as I watched it. I don't think humans on Mars will grip the world in the same way Apollo 11 did sadly. People just don't seem to be as impressed or in awe of such achievements these days sadly. I hope I'm wrong.

Watching the show, I was a bit sad that I wasn't around to see and appreciate it as it happened, it must have been remarkable.

However, when we do return to the Moon, or go to Mars, just imagine how amazing the footage will be, all in 4k probably, it'll be fantastic and I hope I'm here to see it.
They absolutely will be watching it I expect. Reality TV generation, chances of something dire happening, real deaths, this will be the ultimate love island in the jungle or whatever for a few people.

Unfortunately it will popular for all the wrong reasons.

I expect.

bony_13

166 posts

98 months

Monday 15th July 2019
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Moon Launch Live was good.

8 Days To The Moon was fantastic!

Great to have so much coverage on the main channels.

S7Paul

2,103 posts

235 months

Monday 15th July 2019
quotequote all
MitchT said:
Great programme. It did make me wonder though... what with the moon mission stopping the world in its tracks and other things, like Concorde, for example, what is there today that's stopping the world in its tracks and capturing the imaginations of all ages, genders, ethnicities, etc. on a global scale? I can't think of anything and it makes me feel rather sad.
I agree, and from what I read in many comments against various videos on YouTube, a significant number of people don't believe the moon landings happened, don't think we've ever been into space (or in some cases, that space even exists), and think footage of (and from) the ISS is all done in a studio. So, when you're faced with that level of stupidity, I don't think that any future achievement on that scale will have the same effect as it did back in 1969.

Zirconia

36,010 posts

285 months

Monday 15th July 2019
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Just finished watching. That was a good un.

They have just finished restoring mission control as well.


anonymous-user

55 months

Monday 15th July 2019
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James May on the Moon.
BBC4 now and on I player