From the Earth to the Moon (2019): Moon Landing (Clip) | HBO

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 19. 07. 2019
  • It’s been 50 years since mankind first stepped foot on the moon, and to celebrate, we’re showing the full length clip of the moon landing from miniseries, “From the Earth to the Moon. #HBO #FromTheEarthToTheMoon
    Subscribe to HBO on CZcams: goo.gl/wtFYd7
    Don’t have HBO? Order Now: itsh.bo/GetHBONow
    Get More HBO:
    Get HBO GO: play.hbogo.com
    Like on Facebook: / hbo
    Follow on Twitter: / hbo
    Like on Instagram: / hbo
    Official Site: www.hbo.com
    From the Earth to the Moon (2019): Moon Landing (Clip) | HBO
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 6K

  • @sidneymcdavid
    @sidneymcdavid Před 8 měsíci +67

    My dad woke me up 15 minutes before they landed to watch it. I was almost six years old. It was a thrill to watch. I have been a big Apollo fan since. This was such an excellent series to watch. It’s a shame that most of humanity did not care about any of the further Apollo flights other than 13 after the oxygen tank blew up. Even during the J missions when they were driving on the moon, most of humanity never cared. Crazy. Apollo 11 was representative of humanity’s greatest binding moments Apollo in general was the pinnacle of humanity’s technological achievements.

    • @JamieWex
      @JamieWex Před 8 měsíci

      My mom turned 20 on that day. What a birthday gift!

    • @misterwhipple2870
      @misterwhipple2870 Před 6 měsíci +1

      I was ten and my brother woke me up; it was about 1 in the morning.

    • @davewells9142
      @davewells9142 Před 5 měsíci +3

      I was the same age. It was my earliest historical memory that I can pinpoint to a specific date. I've been a space nerd ever since. I hope to live to see us set foot on the Moon again, this time to settle and stay!

    • @stevetheduck1425
      @stevetheduck1425 Před 14 dny

      I watched them all. Less and less coverage, but Apollo 15 had a lot of video shot from the rover, so I got to see a couple of astronauts skip away toward a split rock, get smaller, and smaller, until they were tiny below this gigantic broken rock larger than a house. Then the went all the way around it. Try building that on a soundstage using 1960s methods.

    • @aymenmusa3638
      @aymenmusa3638 Před 3 dny

      Born in 1993😢😢😢

  • @munwalk8970
    @munwalk8970 Před 9 měsíci +78

    Jesse we need to land on the moon, Jesse.

  • @misterwhipple2870
    @misterwhipple2870 Před 6 měsíci +55

    A mere 65 1/2 years from Kitty Hawk to Tranquility Base. When you think of the thousands of principles, facts and things that had to be discovered, invented, tested and perfected in that tiny space of time, it's all a miracle.

    • @chrisg4305
      @chrisg4305 Před 3 měsíci

      Makes you wonder if war had never broke out how long it would have taken

  • @WiilyDerbbinphlatte
    @WiilyDerbbinphlatte Před rokem +27

    In 2019 Gene Krantz came to Denver for a special appearance. There were about 400-500 people in attendance. As he came on stage he got a standing ovation for about 5 minutes and finally he had enough of it and looked sternly at the crowd and told us all to just sit down......NOW! All 400-500 people stopped clapping and sat down immediately. What a commanding presence to this day.

  • @rahula7650
    @rahula7650 Před 2 lety +36

    That's one small step for a man ...... A giant leap for a mankind
    Best statement ever

    • @paulward4268
      @paulward4268 Před rokem +2

      And here's one that's very appropriate for you Rocky...
      "The idiots have taken over the Asylum".
      (Don't think about it too much....you'll strain yourself).

  • @timheavrin2253
    @timheavrin2253 Před rokem +116

    I was 9 yrs old at the time watching it on TV with my late father. I'll never forget this day no matter how long I live. After Armstrong's ," Houston. Tranquility Base here. The Eagle has landed," Dad and I shook hands, laughed with joy and hugged. An amazing moment!

    • @Lightworker72
      @Lightworker72 Před rokem

      I KNOW YOU WONT, BECAUSE YOU PROBABLY KNOW IN 2023, BUZZ ALDRIN CONFESSED(Live) to a 8 you girl.
      "We didn't go...and that's the way it happened." -Buzz Aldrin
      Search - then come back to Earth.

    • @RobertGames2030
      @RobertGames2030 Před rokem +2

      👏👏👏

    • @Lightworker72
      @Lightworker72 Před rokem

      oh..you loved Kubrick's Movie set.
      And NASA with the red snake tongue, it's an anagram 4 'satan'
      See for yourself.
      Oh...buzz admitted to an 8yo girl, they never went.
      Search that too.
      Didn't want to ruin a memory, but the govt has done more lying, and any and all evil is by them.
      Earth is Satan's Domaine.
      Hmm...I wonder why the new voting machines, that can do whatever the programmer wants.
      Everyone believes whatever they see on t.v. - Richard Nixon, 1970.

    • @rockethead7
      @rockethead7 Před rokem

      @@Lightworker72
      Again, as I asked in the other thread, are you a drug addict?

    • @pedrodaniellopesferreira2916
      @pedrodaniellopesferreira2916 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Thank you for sharing such an awesome memory. It would take another 11 years for me to even exist.

  • @iitzfizz
    @iitzfizz Před 2 lety +212

    I always knew Walt could do something special if he applied himself

  • @zapdunga12
    @zapdunga12 Před rokem +70

    Many people do not know this but Neil and Buzz left a lot of commerative items behind on the moon and one was the official patch of the Apollo 1 crew who died in that horrible tragic fire. They were supposed to be the first crew to go to the moon. Let us never forget the bravery of Virgil I. 'GUS' Grissom who was the second man into space aboard Liberty Bell 7, and command pilot for Gemini 3. Let us not forget Edward Higgens White II who was aboard Gemini 4 and who was the first American to walk in Space. And let us not forget Roger Bruce Chaffee, naval officer, aviator and aeronautical engineer for NASA.

    • @bosshog8844
      @bosshog8844 Před rokem +2

      already knew that

    • @SHKEVE
      @SHKEVE Před rokem +5

      also coins commemorating cosmonauts who lost their lives in pursuit of these milestones. buzz almost forgot to leave them until neil reminded him as he was climbing the ladder to the LEM before taking off.

    • @arcosprey4811
      @arcosprey4811 Před rokem +1

      Gus Ed and Roger weren't the first moon crew, that was Apollo 8. The crew rotations were already set by Deke. They were to be the first manned flight of the Apollo spacecraft in general. It was to be essentially what Apollo 7 did.

    • @shep9231
      @shep9231 Před rokem +1

      These were good men who gave their all in the pursuit of going to the moon. Heros... One and all!

    • @Ween1776
      @Ween1776 Před rokem +1

      ​@SHKEVE that's interesting I never knew that. Thanks for the info

  • @MrPhotodoc
    @MrPhotodoc Před 3 lety +205

    I was 16 years old on a school camping trip in the Boundary Waters area of Minnesota on July 20, 1969. We had a transistor radio with us and it was a full moon while we listened to the voice of Neil Armstrong. A time I will never forget as long as I live.

  • @anthonytofts9371
    @anthonytofts9371 Před rokem +10

    I was 24 years old teaching Science at Usi
    -Ekiti, Western State of Nigeria during the landing, listening to BBC World Service..... A magical experience
    And a magnificent American achievement.

  • @hoyt_arms
    @hoyt_arms Před 2 lety +278

    I still to this day don't think people understand how Incredible this truly was.

    • @inmate24601
      @inmate24601 Před 2 lety +15

      Indeed. If someone suggested going to the moon today, with the computer technology we had at that time, everyone would think it was utterly insane.

    • @sagan1976
      @sagan1976 Před 2 lety +13

      And unfortunately we lost this as one of the things that could help us grow together instead of drifting apart like we've been doing.

    • @michaelhenry3234
      @michaelhenry3234 Před rokem +7

      Yep. I don't understand how people felt or reacted, what they were thinking as this all went down. I can't imagine it. I can't understand. As long as I've been alive, it's been common knowledge that we went to the Moon. I can't remember ever not knowing it, so it's easy to take for granted. To witness the impossible happen must have been extraordinary.

    • @FreejackCandy
      @FreejackCandy Před rokem +9

      Yes, people still can not believe how staged this was

    • @collegeman1988
      @collegeman1988 Před rokem

      They don’t think it’s incredible because most people today think the moon landings were a hoax.

  • @BedsitBob
    @BedsitBob Před 4 měsíci +8

    The reason for the 1202/1201 alarms is that Buzz Aldrin left the rendezvous radar on, so they could quickly locate the CSM, in case they needed to abort.
    This overloaded the computer, causing the alarms.

    • @jeffanon1772
      @jeffanon1772 Před 22 dny

      Actually the Flight Control crews had already experienced the same alarms during their endless simulations & knew it wasn't necessary to abort...on the video of the actual landing, when the alarm sounds, you can even hear one of the Controllers state "Just like the sim"....

    • @BedsitBob
      @BedsitBob Před 22 dny

      @@jeffanon1772 I didn't say in case they needed to abort due to the 1202/1201 alarms.

  • @digitalrailroader
    @digitalrailroader Před 4 lety +673

    the best part: Bryan Cranston and Tony Goldwyn are acting in a GENUINE Lunar Module; LM-13 was partially complete and was going to fly on Apollo 18 but never did when the program was cancelled. fortunately, it was never scrapped and was used for the series. you can see LM-13 fully restored and on display at the Cradle of Aviation Museum in Long Island, NY.

    • @jshepard152
      @jshepard152 Před 4 lety +10

      Awesome. Thank you.

    • @MrSandalwood
      @MrSandalwood Před 4 lety +2

      Thanks for the heads up.. 50 yrs ago..I shall check it out on my hoildays next week...

    • @Theaksten
      @Theaksten Před 4 lety +4

      Apollo 18 was black ops; aliens on the Moon. :P

    • @davidcarrero7848
      @davidcarrero7848 Před 4 lety

      Super interesting,thanks!

    • @Chaosfury50
      @Chaosfury50 Před 4 lety +1

      Lol you're a fucking moron, that shit room they were acting in was not the original

  • @oh8wingman
    @oh8wingman Před 2 lety +10

    I was 17 when these events took place. I was sitting in the living room with my Mother and sister along with an Aunt and Uncle and 3 cousins. They were at our house because we were the only members of the family with a colour television. When they landed, my family all cheered but I didn't. I just sat quietly and thought to myself, I will remember this day for the rest of my life. I'm 69 now and I still remember that day with clarity. It was the day we told the universe we are here on our little rock.

    • @rubenoteiza9261
      @rubenoteiza9261 Před 2 lety

      The day you got the diploma as a world class gullible innocent.

    • @diezgp
      @diezgp Před 2 lety +3

      @@rubenoteiza9261 Yeah, Ruben. You got it right. The earth is flat, right?

  • @RetiredLover
    @RetiredLover Před 2 lety +43

    My father was a young man when the Wright Brother first flew at Kitty Hawk. I was 30 when man first stepped onto the moon.
    Can you imagine looking up to see the entirety of the Earth?

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Před rokem +4

      And don't forget how in the lunar sky Earth appears 3.7 times wider than we see the Moon and 30 times brighter!

  • @TheKenPrescott
    @TheKenPrescott Před rokem +18

    This event took place on my fourth birthday. 53 years later, this scene chokes me up, especially Buzz Aldrin's simple message to the world and taking Communion. It's such a human moment . . . he wanted to move beyond the controversies of the day and remind everyone--including himself--to put things into perspective.

    • @paulradulescu
      @paulradulescu Před rokem +2

      Ken...God created. The 🌛Moon and the. ☀️Sun since the begging of time... For Buzz and. Neil touching the. Moon. Was a spiritual experience .....

    • @Ididntaskforahandleyoutube
      @Ididntaskforahandleyoutube Před 4 měsíci +1

      I'm not religious but that prayer moment is the best moment of the series. It makes me cry everytime I see it. The utter humility and gratitude....

  • @casualobserver3145
    @casualobserver3145 Před 4 lety +197

    Still get goosebumps watching this. I was 14 in 1969.....and a complete space nerd.

    • @linesandcircles7465
      @linesandcircles7465 Před 2 lety +4

      I wish i was around back then for all of that

    • @linesandcircles7465
      @linesandcircles7465 Před 2 lety +7

      @M B2 "Nobody believes" is a lie. Most of the world still believes it happened.

    • @emman.5995
      @emman.5995 Před 2 lety +2

      @M B2 everyone knows it happened numbnuts

    • @earth7440
      @earth7440 Před 2 lety +6

      @M B2 Most of these “proofs” have been debunked or can be debunked with a bit of research.

    • @odysseusrex5908
      @odysseusrex5908 Před 2 lety +2

      @@linesandcircles7465 No, they don't believe it, they know it, there's a difference. M B2 believes it didn't happen.

  • @bradleyeric14
    @bradleyeric14 Před 3 lety +37

    I was in Sicily, working on rebuilding after an earthquake the year before. I sat with the neighbours outside a cafe watching it on TV.

    • @RxGADITYA
      @RxGADITYA Před 3 lety

      😲 wow...u so old sir .... I dnt knw how was that moment on earth .what everyone was doing. Coz i m just 20 years now .....

    • @RxGADITYA
      @RxGADITYA Před 3 lety

      Couldn't imagine back in 1bc when humans used to look at sky thinking what are those and now we are setting humanity foot on planets

    • @valeenoi2284
      @valeenoi2284 Před 2 lety

      My dad was studying in main land Italy. He and his friends pulled over on the side of the highway and everyone ran to this cafe shop to watch this.

  • @phelanmcdonald1635
    @phelanmcdonald1635 Před 2 lety +86

    What a glorious time to be alive to witness this monumental event live on TV. The very moment that a moon landing was no longer science fiction.

    • @KevinNordstrom
      @KevinNordstrom Před rokem +5

      Just wait till we do it again in 4k

    • @duncanvantongeren4646
      @duncanvantongeren4646 Před rokem

      It always has been science fiction…
      Moon landings? What a joke!

    • @bunnyfan9960
      @bunnyfan9960 Před rokem +1

      @@KevinNordstrom That would be awesome!! 😁👍

    • @DreamCatcher-wg1bk
      @DreamCatcher-wg1bk Před rokem +3

      @@KevinNordstrom And 360 degree live Cam. Exiting times we are living in.

    • @Muslim.by.choice.
      @Muslim.by.choice. Před rokem +2

      Hmmm strange... After this mission nasa lost all data for the ship sits and what Ever was collected

  • @therealtampadude9175
    @therealtampadude9175 Před 6 měsíci +6

    I was almost 4 years old, and my parents woke me up and brought me into the living room to watch it on TV. I remember my mother telling me, "There's something we want you to see. It's very important." Been in love with spaceflight ever since.

  • @cleverusername9369
    @cleverusername9369 Před 4 lety +2043

    Anyone else here think Ed Harris is the only actor who can play Gene Krantz?

  • @gyurivarga2781
    @gyurivarga2781 Před 3 lety +281

    At that time, everyone in Hungary clung to the live TV screen and we excitedly followed this event. This is one of the fundamental experiences of my life.

    • @henryviii2091
      @henryviii2091 Před 2 lety +17

      And nowadays all the uncultured swine are making fun of it, saying it's fake.

    • @jsl151850b
      @jsl151850b Před 2 lety +11

      If only something *GOOD* could bring all the people of the world together again!

    • @fatitankeris6327
      @fatitankeris6327 Před 2 lety +2

      @third And that would mean that recovering film in a landing capsule isn't possible? Then somehow we recover humans, but you say can't do the same with film? What hinders sending low frequency radiowaves from big antennas beamed towards the Moon, and have the landing module pop out the television camera from the side, with signal beamed back to Earth... Saying that something can't be true because of your limited knowledge and from it following low understanding is foolish. With such thinking you can as well wrongly claim that we can't calculate area under curves to any precision.

    • @edwardhale4294
      @edwardhale4294 Před 2 lety

      @@henryviii2091 few say that

    • @irisbaez1972
      @irisbaez1972 Před 2 lety +5

      and you believed what you saw on tv? wow.

  • @knobdikker
    @knobdikker Před 2 lety +126

    I was 8 years old and was in the summer between second and third grades. What a wonderful time that was in my life to watch this live on TV! Something I will never forget!

    • @Redwhiteandtired
      @Redwhiteandtired Před rokem +14

      Crazy. You were 8 years old and watched the moon landing. I was 8 years old and watched 9/11. Two very different things that both changed the world and had everyone glued to the TV.

    • @garymaxwellian9085
      @garymaxwellian9085 Před rokem +5

      Mmm.. I was 9 same same.😁

    • @TravisMcGee151
      @TravisMcGee151 Před rokem +3

      Amazing.

    • @patrickpowell7994
      @patrickpowell7994 Před rokem +2

      Same here, 8yrs old, between 2nd & 3rd grade @ the time.

    • @kservant71
      @kservant71 Před rokem +1

      Same here! I was between 8 and 9, heading into third grade. I remember watching it with my grandmother.
      This was a few years after watching JFK’s funeral on TV. (I was too young to understand it, but I can remember watching it.)
      I had Revell’s full length Saturn V model kit with a carrying case, a Lunar Module model and a Command Service module combo model!

  • @brabanthallen
    @brabanthallen Před rokem +17

    The crowning achievement of mankind, bar none. Despite two program alarms during the critical part of the descent and his heartbeat racing, Neil Armstrong was as cool as a cucumber, one of the reasons he was chosen to be the first to land the LM. Switching to manual control in order to avoid the boulder field was a very bold move, and very well could have saved them from crashing or even flipping the entire LM over upon landing. I will never forget watching this live on TV as a kid. I was inspired by what I saw then and have been addicted to studying Apollo ever since. I am hoping to live long enough to watch us return to the moon, and watch the first humans land and walk on Mars.

    • @anitsaad6131
      @anitsaad6131 Před 9 měsíci

      bila ksmu masuk.dlm.iumh aku.menjadi celaka hidup .keluarga laki aku tk.berjaya ceraikn aku..kamu nangsah berjaya pinaskn aku cerai kan aku...tahniah...aku akan pergi daoat ke kasih aku di atas sana..yg sentiasa menungu aku..syg dan cintanya pd..apa aku nk dia setiasa turuti..alon mask lh ke kasih aku..

    • @anitsaad6131
      @anitsaad6131 Před 9 měsíci

      aku tahu alon mask nk naik ke bulan.dia nk aku di simpingnya..

    • @marcschneider4845
      @marcschneider4845 Před 4 měsíci

      I don't think he was chosen to be the first. He was chosen to command Apollo 11 and it turned out to be the first landing. It could just as easily have been Apollo 12 if the landing had been delayed. At least, that's what I have read.

  • @kansasjayhawk8386
    @kansasjayhawk8386 Před 4 lety +47

    Not an empty ashtray in the room. Amazing!

  • @tamisweetie
    @tamisweetie Před 4 lety +445

    I always cry like a baby while watching anything Apollo related. It is so magnificent.

    • @faikgolandaz879
      @faikgolandaz879 Před 4 lety +24

      @claude thibault Fuck off

    • @pikusharma4432
      @pikusharma4432 Před 4 lety +13

      @claude thibault they had 6 apollo mission how can all be faked?
      But one thing I'm also wondering that they never showed sun from the moon.. I wonder how does the sun look like from moon?

    • @Khrist9856
      @Khrist9856 Před 4 lety +14

      Fake moon landing 😹😂

    • @mollykeane2571
      @mollykeane2571 Před 4 lety +8

      @@pikusharma4432 'they had 6 apollo mission how can all be faked?' - Very easily it turns out. People will believe anything.

    • @sk3shahu9
      @sk3shahu9 Před 4 lety +6

      Same with me.....Apollo is a part of my soul

  • @ancliuin2459
    @ancliuin2459 Před 8 měsíci +3

    I was 6 when it happened... my father woke me up in the middle of the night (which it was in Europe) to see it live on TV. I could not really grasp the impact of what I was seeing, but I will always be grateful to my dad for letting me see it.

  • @GarryOzols
    @GarryOzols Před 2 lety +5

    Even though I am 60 I still remember this event like it was yesterday. I still get chocked up by it even though this is a recreation.
    We need to go back, and soon.

  • @nakulsri242
    @nakulsri242 Před 3 lety +104

    Goosebumps when ever I watch it . What about the people who were there live hearing it on radio. Thank you America

    • @89timesavibe
      @89timesavibe Před 3 lety +1

      How could you, and why would you want to get goosebumps watching a remake of the landing with actors.. when you can get goosebumps watching the real thing, which is also widely available on CZcams.? A little bit backwards ain't you.

    • @nakulsri242
      @nakulsri242 Před 3 lety +4

      I am from India we started using CZcams some 15 years ago on dial up modem.
      For the past 5 years we are using high speed internet.

    • @user-ib8lv2lx7x
      @user-ib8lv2lx7x Před 3 lety

      the first one

    • @stevenvicino8687
      @stevenvicino8687 Před 2 lety +3

      Watched it on a flickering black and white TV. I was 10.

    • @odysseusrex5908
      @odysseusrex5908 Před 2 lety +1

      @@stevenvicino8687 I was seven. A few years later, I got to watch Apollo 17 lift off in person.

  • @captainnerd6452
    @captainnerd6452 Před 3 lety +12

    I was a week short of my 10th birthday, watching it with my parents, we were visiting their friends' house, and I had to beg my parents to ask them to watch. Mom and Dad didn't want to, it wasn't important to them but I persuaded them that it was history and their friends had no problem, so we all watched. I was glued to the screen, and they'd every so often asked a question, since I was the "space nut" of the family, I had been following the space program since I was able to read. It was so exciting I practically passed out.

  • @nicsandee123
    @nicsandee123 Před 3 lety +7

    Imagine it, traveling 240,000 miles, totally reliant on the onboard systems to keep you alive and no hope of rescue if anything goes wrong.
    Then while coming into land, the plan goes out the window and you have to land the thing manually to avoid landing on rocks and with fuel running low. Technology may be great but humans can think outside the box. Gotta hand it to those guys, having the balls to land a glorified tin can on the moon.
    I always wonder what it would be like after placing your feet on the surface, that moment when you shed your fear of it and be like, ok here we go. Hats off to ya guys.

  • @dharshunanand8369
    @dharshunanand8369 Před 11 měsíci +5

    Jesse! I AM ON THE MOON JESSE

  • @smithyman33
    @smithyman33 Před 4 lety +716

    Landing men on the moon and returning them home safely (5 times) has to be the greatest human achievement so far.

    • @nebtheweb8885
      @nebtheweb8885 Před 4 lety +89

      9 trips to the moon, 6 of them landed.

    • @MrPhil4jazz
      @MrPhil4jazz Před 4 lety +45

      Still haven't had solid proof that they did, they are still working on a space suite that actually works on its own without umbilical tubes in a vacuum chamber let alone back in the 60's, which would be mandatory before you send people to walk on the moon, try and look it up folks there isn't one. There are plenty of clips showing how the spacesuits are made and how awkward it was to fit into them requiring 2 men, virtually impossible to climb into a space suite and fit the gloves and helmet on your own, worst still in a capsule don't you think. There are plenty of clips on the various Apollo trips of astronauts in their capsules not wearing their spacesuits, but no clips showing how they attempted to fit into them, a few clips of stupid things like brushing their teeth or showing weightlessness. There are some clips of blue sky through the porthole when they supposed to be approaching the moon. lol

    • @ant9944
      @ant9944 Před 4 lety +98

      @@MrPhil4jazz First of all, provide a source, second of all, please demonstrate a basic understanding of how any of this works, and btw they do have spacesuits that work without an umbilical. They've used them rarely in zero g because a cord connected to the spacecraft itself is far safer in zero g. They have made and tested such suits, before the apollo program. Before you make such claims maybe you should do some quick googling to confirm them?

    • @Jeramithehuman
      @Jeramithehuman Před 4 lety +48

      Phil Ellis look at third party proof of the landing sights google will make this easy. It all was real and it all happened. You have what’s called cognitive dissonance. Judging from your lack of intelligence you’ll probably need to google that too. With your thought about needing an umbilical is the same principle as divers don’t need one when diving underwater especially with a re-breather creating a closed loop system. Essentially the same but with less risk as underwater is far more dangerous than the vacuum of space. I’ll assume you’re a “it’s a hoax” person and everything is a lie. I heard sams club has great discounts on tin foil in bulk... stock up now

    • @6120mcghee
      @6120mcghee Před 4 lety +4

      You got that right. Better technology than today.

  • @oliviaphoenix9742
    @oliviaphoenix9742 Před 3 lety +210

    In 1977 When I started my new job at Ford Motor Company I purposely moved to Franklin Road in Lebanon, Ohio to be Neil Armstrong's neighbor.

    • @-First-Last
      @-First-Last Před 3 lety +4

      Me too.
      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @nedstudios6490
      @nedstudios6490 Před 3 lety +6

      Had I known, I would have too. Im 46 so the space program for us was everything. I recall sitting in Art Class in Middle School; watching Challenger and what was supposed to be the first teacher in space Christie M... we know how that turned out. My whole family adored the space program. I attended space camp. And My grandfather, this big burly Marine actually cried when they stepped onto the moon, so my grandma says. She as told not to tell anyone.

    • @dannyarmstrong2013
      @dannyarmstrong2013 Před 3 lety +1

      Is that near Wopakaneta ?

    • @HarleyandChase
      @HarleyandChase Před 3 lety

      So did my father in the United Kingdom, Dagenham

    • @nithishkumar6199
      @nithishkumar6199 Před 3 lety

      If........S.......T.......S.......If.......N.....P.+.C.×..

  • @jmajette2
    @jmajette2 Před 3 lety +5

    I was 8 going on 9 years old at the time of the Apollo 11 Moon landing. I will always remember that night!

    • @daffidavit
      @daffidavit Před 2 lety +2

      I was age 16 when we landed on the moon. I wanted to become an astronaut and was even accepted at FIT's Space Technology program back in 1970. Too bad Congress cut off the funding for Apollo 18, 19 and 20. Just think about what we could have learned about the Moon if those missions had proceeded on schedule! Nixon, you made a huge mistake when it came to our Space Program. You said all of those great things when Neil and Buzz were on the moon and you gave them a surprise telephone call to congratulate them, but in the end you cancelled the Apollo space program. What a huge mistake history will remember about you regarding the Apollo Space Program. You will be remembered as the person who cut off lunar science in the 1970s.

  • @dutchflats
    @dutchflats Před rokem +42

    One of, if not the apex moment of my life watching this happen. Glad I was alive when human beings first landed on a celestial body apart from earth.......spectacular!

    • @dossenasantino3129
      @dossenasantino3129 Před rokem

      NE SEI CONVINTO ? PER ESEMPIO ,POSSO DIRTI CHE NON SONO MAI ANDATI IN NESSUN POSTO SULLA LUNA

    • @dutchflats
      @dutchflats Před rokem

      @@dossenasantino3129 Sembra che il tuo cervello sia andato sulla luna?

    • @kevin-parratt-artist
      @kevin-parratt-artist Před rokem +4

      Yep, me too. I was out for my lunch break in Melbourne, Australia. I joined crowd watching it on TV through the window of a a bank in Swanston St.
      That image 'belongs' to me now. ... along with you and everyone who also watched it live.

    • @kevin-parratt-artist
      @kevin-parratt-artist Před rokem

      @@dossenasantino3129 Such a sad fool you are.

    • @plurplursen7172
      @plurplursen7172 Před rokem +2

      Wow, must have been something. I get brain explosions thinking about it. Nothing can come near that. Not even if we landed on Mars tomorrow. Because they did something that should not have been able with the tech and knowledge available at the time. They simply made the tools and components come into existence with pure willpower. Imagine what we could create today with the same willpower from that time. A space elevator in 5 years max! That would be the equivalent

  • @Appleholic1
    @Appleholic1 Před 3 lety +17

    I was 15 when I watched it all happen live. It is something I will never forget.

  • @MrEjidorie
    @MrEjidorie Před 3 lety +62

    I still remember when Armstrong landed on the Moon very vividly. I was a Japanese middle school student at that time. It was just like a dream because I could witness such a historical moment of humankind during my lifetime. Hopefully, I wish I could man`s landing on Mars while I`m still alive.

    • @edball4906
      @edball4906 Před 3 lety

      I STILL REMEMBER WHEN A STRONG LANDED ON THE MOON VERY VIVIDLY WAS JAPANESE MIDDLE SCHOOL STUDENT AT THAT TIME IT WAS JUST LIKE DREAM BECAUSE

    • @joratto2833
      @joratto2833 Před 2 lety +1

      wha

    • @coryleblanc
      @coryleblanc Před 2 lety

      it was faked

    • @tutsmojares8499
      @tutsmojares8499 Před 2 lety

      During Armstrong
      Did they really landed on the moon…

    • @tutsmojares8499
      @tutsmojares8499 Před 2 lety

      @@coryleblanc , did they literally landed
      on the moon

  • @dannyh8288
    @dannyh8288 Před rokem +55

    Fun Fact: at 1:02 you see the LM undock from the CM. There was some residual pressure in the docking area that added a few feet per second velocity to the LM. This is the reason Apollo 11 'landed long ' (at 6:19) ie a few miles down range from where they intended to land. Later missions took this into account to more accurately target the LM to the desired landing site.

    • @I_amTurok
      @I_amTurok Před rokem

      Fun fact the moon landing was fake and the space race was won In Hollywood. Fun fact. The is not one picture showing earth as a ball but all pictures show flat earth

    • @marksprague1280
      @marksprague1280 Před rokem +2

      ​@@I_amTurok Proof? Or are you just another liar?

    • @marksprague1280
      @marksprague1280 Před rokem +7

      I always wondered what adding that few feet per second to the 15 ton Eagle did to the orbit of the Command Module. Action/reaction.

    • @anitasaad4875
      @anitasaad4875 Před rokem

      apa yg berlaku pd aku allah akan mencari sesuatu tuk aku terusberwaspada

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart Před 11 měsíci +1

      But, Neal also went long manually to find a suitable landing site. Did you take that into account?

  • @dave36464736
    @dave36464736 Před 2 lety +22

    I remember reading about this in school. It fired my imagination and made me realise that even though humanity has seen its issues and troubles. Wars and plagues, We never lost the pioneering spirit that drives us forward every day to seek out new things and new challenges to overcome. The way the moon landing was described to me, It was a moment when everyone in the world held their collective breathes, Waiting for Neil Armstrong to put his foot down on the moon and utter his now legendary line. I wish I had been alive at that time but I know that someday we will land on the moon again, or mars and we will once again be captivated by the human spirit.

    • @rjpx947
      @rjpx947 Před 2 lety +1

      Sooner than many think.

    • @bradmiller9121
      @bradmiller9121 Před rokem

      I was 7 when Neil and Buzz landed. I had been enthralled with the space program from the beginning. I made it a point to never miss a minute of the missions. They would let us out of class so we could go to the cafeteria to watch the moon walks. Dad let me stay up and watch Neil and Buzz walk around on their very first walk. For one of my science fair projects I built a model of the LEM. Our family happened to be at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago during the Apollo 15 mission. They had a Lunar Rover set up in the main entry area along with a TV where we could watch, LIVE, the first use of the Rover on the moon. Design engineers were also there to answer any questions we had. They really gave us kids that were gathered around special attention because they knew we would be the next generation to keep this going. It was an incredible time to be alive.

    • @kevinb3812
      @kevinb3812 Před rokem

      We are working on it. Orion is a key part of future missions and it worked well!

  • @shubhankardasgupta4777
    @shubhankardasgupta4777 Před 3 lety +119

    The moment when Armstrong finally touched the moon and the background music made this stone-hearted 18 old teen into tears. Lost my mom at 15, I'm too ready going to become an Aerospace Engineer for human exploration and advanced-sustainable technologies to make these landings more usual.

    • @thorodinson524
      @thorodinson524 Před 3 lety +4

      Hey whts job of software engineers in NASA?? And astronauts need to have aerospace engineering degree??

    • @AD-ur1fk
      @AD-ur1fk Před 3 lety +3

      Save those tears this never happened in real life

    • @depressed_neutron
      @depressed_neutron Před 3 lety +2

      @@thorodinson524 i think so....

    • @salvor1
      @salvor1 Před 3 lety +17

      @@AD-ur1fk your channel doesn't have any content, just like your comment.

    • @Commander_Koyke
      @Commander_Koyke Před 3 lety +5

      Wish you luck lad
      When you graduate

  • @EuanWhitehead
    @EuanWhitehead Před 3 lety +89

    I love science, when I feel like humanity has forgotten themselves in the modern day, something like this makes me realise what incredible things we can achieve when we all work together.

  • @EyeKnowRaff
    @EyeKnowRaff Před 6 měsíci +3

    From walking on the moon to a drug kingpin, what a world

  • @YHBW1001
    @YHBW1001 Před rokem +48

    Simply epic!
    What an amazing achievement.
    A mere 66 years between the Wright brothers first powered flight to Neil Armstrong stepping on to the surface of the moon.
    It just goes to show what we can achieve.
    This beautiful moment still fills me with wonder, awe and hope for the future of the human race if we can all just work together in peace.❤

    • @humbledoc
      @humbledoc Před rokem +2

      Wow.. I didn't know it was as close as just 66 years.. Amazing 😮

    • @bigdogben
      @bigdogben Před rokem +3

      And one of the wright brothers said "Flight from new york to paris would happen in 1 million years."
      literally (vsauce told me you know its legit.)

    • @michaelstephenson4517
      @michaelstephenson4517 Před 6 měsíci

      Just 66 years wow, I am 67 years old. I was 13 watching the moon landing in Jamaica on one of the few TV sets in my town.

    • @frankh.rockel5811
      @frankh.rockel5811 Před 4 měsíci

      NASA's manned moon landings are the greatest technological achievement of mankind. But don't forget that two world wars accelerated technological progress disproportionately. Without those hot wars and the following cold war 66 years wouldn't have been possible. Sad but true.

  • @uprightape100
    @uprightape100 Před 4 lety +229

    "I killed Gus Fring".

    • @lois1677
      @lois1677 Před 4 lety

      LMAO i wasn't expecting this

    • @spunkmire2664
      @spunkmire2664 Před 4 lety +11

      "Rodger Huston......Say My Name!"

    • @lois1677
      @lois1677 Před 4 lety

      @@spunkmire2664 "You're goddamn right! "

    • @jnichols3
      @jnichols3 Před 4 lety +6

      "They will never find this lab"

    • @wino0000006
      @wino0000006 Před 4 lety +9

      Now you know what the Skylab was used for.

  • @tailhookmd2546
    @tailhookmd2546 Před 3 lety +50

    This blows First Man away. It’s a crime that people probably think that’s the best portrayal of this incredible achievement. Those dudes were animals. Brilliant, brave and beyond great pilots.

    • @jshepard152
      @jshepard152 Před 3 lety +8

      First Man was a pile of...

    • @HurricaneDPG
      @HurricaneDPG Před rokem +13

      Don’t have to put something else down to elevate this series. First Man was a great film and this was a great series.

    • @williamsplays8528
      @williamsplays8528 Před rokem +3

      @@jshepard152 First man was more accurate.

    • @jshepard152
      @jshepard152 Před rokem +2

      @@williamsplays8528
      Maybe in mundane detail, but the mood was completely wrong. You'll have to watch Apollo 11 to get that right.

    • @AlabamaTrumpeter
      @AlabamaTrumpeter Před rokem +5

      @@williamsplays8528 first man got many fundamental things wrong about spaceflight, starting with the opening scene. it was not an accurate movie in the slightest.

  • @killerdoritoWA
    @killerdoritoWA Před 3 lety +12

    RIP, General Collins.

  • @gazisher2372
    @gazisher2372 Před 4 měsíci +3

    This was such a remarkable event, that even in my small village in India, there was so much amazement that even I remember it even though I was only three years old!

  • @treytonzoss1853
    @treytonzoss1853 Před 4 lety +9

    The attention to detail is outstanding! I'm glad that Buzz Aldrin taking communion was included; we mustn't erase history.

    • @flightsimcraver2839
      @flightsimcraver2839 Před 3 lety

      except that its too obvious that there's gravity.

    • @shannonwittman950
      @shannonwittman950 Před 2 lety

      Due to lack of gravity, would be interesting to know if perhaps Buzz had the wine in a tiny plastic bag. I didn't know he was Catholic. But then, other denominations did (and do) the Eucharistic Communion.

    • @treytonzoss1853
      @treytonzoss1853 Před 2 lety

      @@shannonwittman950 Haha, that's a fascinating question! I'd be interested to know how he did it.

    • @thegreatdivide825
      @thegreatdivide825 Před rokem +5

      @@shannonwittman950 There is gravity on the Moon at a strength that is 1/6 of Earth's, the wine would still pour from a bottle

  • @nursesteve2004
    @nursesteve2004 Před 3 lety +6

    the actual landing was so smooth that Armstrong and aldrin barely felt a thump. It also occurred about 10-12 seconds after Charlie Duke's call of 30 seconds, not at one second left

    • @HO-bndk
      @HO-bndk Před rokem

      Yes, and Armstrong's heart rate never even went up during the landing either, but that's not dramatic enough for HBO!

  • @robertwalhout8982
    @robertwalhout8982 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I saw it all when I was 21.
    This was an excellent dramatization of what happened. It shows and tells details we weren't privy to back then. Thanks guys.

  • @usefulprogrammer9880
    @usefulprogrammer9880 Před rokem +5

    I had no idea Walter White went to the moon.

  • @bmwkmx1
    @bmwkmx1 Před 4 lety +180

    This is a forgotten HBO series that should be remembered. "Spider" is my fav!

    • @GopherBaroque61
      @GopherBaroque61 Před 4 lety +1

      Same here.

    • @DiegoQuirogaOnPlus
      @DiegoQuirogaOnPlus Před 4 lety +6

      Spider relates with me on so many levels, great stories about engineering work and leadership.

    • @kingpin6989
      @kingpin6989 Před 4 lety +8

      Me too! When he says "This one... this one is the Eagle." I choke up EVERY. TIME.

    • @collegeman1988
      @collegeman1988 Před 4 lety +4

      Mine too. In learning about historical events, it’s often the prelude to the event that is even more interesting than the historical event. Not only that, but Spider has a fair amount of humor in it, such as, “Sending a man to the moon is easy, so we’ll just keep sending him supplies, until we find a way to get him back.” That line always cracks me up.

    • @kenevanchik4478
      @kenevanchik4478 Před 4 lety +5

      Love the part in Spider where they pan up to the top of the building and the roof has dozens of balls on it thrown by the project manager.

  • @Leorstef
    @Leorstef Před 4 lety +21

    I binged the whole series this week. Time well spent.

  • @funnellbyrd
    @funnellbyrd Před 6 měsíci +4

    I AM THE ONE WHO WALKS

  • @4Truth4All
    @4Truth4All Před rokem +45

    With the renewed interest in travel to the moon of late I have been searching for all the Apollo related videos I could find. I found this one very well done. As a child when the first moon landing occurred I was smitten with all things related to space and space travel. Videos like this refresh that excitement in me and like so many others, I get chills and a lump in my throat when I relive those moments.

    • @asynchronous_man
      @asynchronous_man Před rokem

      I got goosebumps with the video

    • @dennispickard7743
      @dennispickard7743 Před rokem

      Lol 😂 check out the inverse square law and you will quickly see that’s it’s all BS

    • @jimmorrison2657
      @jimmorrison2657 Před rokem +5

      @@dennispickard7743 What are you on about fool?

    • @dennispickard7743
      @dennispickard7743 Před rokem

      @@jimmorrison2657 methinks little jimmy does not understand the inverse square law?

    • @stratisapostolou6284
      @stratisapostolou6284 Před rokem

      Keep dreaming and put on a coat. We dont want a fone virus as you are texting while getting the chills.😁

  • @edadan
    @edadan Před 3 lety +5

    Those guys had nerves of steel. If anything went wrong, that was it...no way to get help...no way to get back home. God bless our brave men and women who risk it all to make America the great nation that it is!

    • @MaynardGKrebs-gv4vy
      @MaynardGKrebs-gv4vy Před 3 lety

      They had to have their jock straps custom made, no doubt.

    • @Trans909
      @Trans909 Před 3 lety

      In ships about as rickety as an old Curtiss biplane. One solid kick and the LM would have fallen apart. It takes some serious cojones to fly a crate like that. Armstrong was probably the best pilot NASA had at the time. THAT man had nerves of steel and NEVER lost his cool.

  • @danko8983
    @danko8983 Před 3 lety +531

    Imagine Armstrong's parents thinking ... my son has become the first man to walk on the moon, who would tell.

    • @paulsarpong934
      @paulsarpong934 Před 3 lety +29

      So who will first walk on Mars?

    • @gfx2943
      @gfx2943 Před 3 lety +6

      Haha yea right I'm sure there's something they could still gripe about.

    • @sagarssule
      @sagarssule Před 3 lety +10

      First nasa should try to cross humans from Vallen allen belts and then probably one day we can step on moon and mars

    • @praveenkamireddy3352
      @praveenkamireddy3352 Před 3 lety +2

      @@paulsarpong934 c. Çcccç. C cc cccçc. Ç cc. C. C. C c. C. C. C. C. C. Cc. Cccç. C c. Ç c. C cc

    • @dskyyksd
      @dskyyksd Před 3 lety +6

      "I hope Neil puts on clean underwear before going out tonight."
      "I don't care where he said he was going! He'd better get in by midnight or he's going to be grounded!"

  • @350kph
    @350kph Před 2 lety +18

    Systems were much simpler in the 60s. Switches and valves, computers with only bytes of capability. Just fantastic.

  • @howardross9614
    @howardross9614 Před 2 lety +11

    I was 3 yrs and 4 months old and watching on a small TV, in Sydney, Australia! My mum said, Sit down and watch this, it's history! I still remember it to this day! What a glorious achievement, made all the more astounding, that it happened with such raw and nascent technology! And that even now with all our modern advances, we would still struggle to repeat the feat!!! God was right when He said, "Nothing will be impossible for them!" I'm greatful that they saw fit to include Buzz taking communion, as he did it on behalf of all of us!!! And to read John 15 "For without Me, you can do nothing!" Great pride in our achievements, great humility in our success!!!

    • @nirmalsiva1
      @nirmalsiva1 Před 2 lety

      Wonderful

    • @TheLarryBrown
      @TheLarryBrown Před rokem

      I was 9 years old that night in Houston and my mom also forced me to watch. I think I had my own TV in my bedroom and it was time for Sea Hunt and I wanted to watch that, but my mom insisted I come to her room and watch the moon landing. I didn't even know it was on the agenda, so I was no space nerd. I told her I could just catch it later....they would be rerunning it, but she countered that no...this is happening right now, this is making history right now and you need to watch this. Needless to say, I'm so glad she did.

    • @spud13x13
      @spud13x13 Před rokem

      I was five days past my fourth birthday. One of my first memories. Definitely shaped the trajectory of my life. I'm not a man of faith, but even so the scene with Buzz taking communion was incredibly powerful and moving. Like you put it: on behalf of all of us. Thanks for sharing, and be well.

    • @HO-bndk
      @HO-bndk Před rokem

      You don't remember anything from when you were three! Nobody does. Human brains rebuild themselves completely starting at about age 4. The film of Armstrong stepping off the LEM has been shown and reshown so many times in the intervening years that you're probably remembering that. I was four at the time too and I am told that I was allowed to stay up to watch it live. I also know I remember nothing of it.

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@HO-bndk lol

  • @BGCflyer
    @BGCflyer Před 3 lety +59

    Amazing that they showed Buzz taking Holy Communion. It’s true, it happened but it’s the first time I’ve seen it in a film/documentary of the Apollo 11. So much has changed in our values today.

    • @Agarwaen
      @Agarwaen Před 3 lety +8

      For the better yes.

    • @Agarwaen
      @Agarwaen Před 3 lety +4

      @The Catonaut a cannibalistic ritual based on superstitious nonsense

    • @NxDoyle
      @NxDoyle Před 3 lety +1

      Eating a stale wafer that you pretend is Jebus is fine if that's what you're into. But I prefer the science to the mysticism.

    • @Skive_67
      @Skive_67 Před 3 lety +7

      @@NxDoyle You too, shut up.

    • @shannonwittman950
      @shannonwittman950 Před 2 lety +2

      @Brian Fulsom ... nice choice of Scripture, on his part. Was also mindful of him to keep it personal this time (within the craft) and not say it to the world.

  • @shantelelshabaz8006
    @shantelelshabaz8006 Před 4 lety +259

    One of the greatest moments in human history

    • @imranbhaidheka5988
      @imranbhaidheka5988 Před 3 lety

      Super

    • @alexsaptetrei
      @alexsaptetrei Před 3 lety +5

      Just an s.f. movie

    • @uwillnevahno6837
      @uwillnevahno6837 Před 3 lety +6

      @@alexsaptetrei deny facts like no one is watching?

    • @alexsaptetrei
      @alexsaptetrei Před 3 lety +4

      @@uwillnevahno6837 everybody is entitled to his opinion. In my case, it's not just an opinion.

    • @uwillnevahno6837
      @uwillnevahno6837 Před 3 lety +9

      @@alexsaptetrei correct, in your case you have an incorrect opinion devoid of evidence about space flight being a movie.

  • @CloudStrife-zk6uv
    @CloudStrife-zk6uv Před 5 měsíci +1

    How we as human beings are still fighting with one another when something as spectacular as the moon landing is such a human achievement is such a conundrum.

    • @stevetheduck1425
      @stevetheduck1425 Před 14 dny

      There are always more political creatures: unthinking, not learning. Greedy, cowardly.

  • @BattleshipAgincourt
    @BattleshipAgincourt Před rokem +5

    One thing that outraged me about this series is that they skipped right over Apollo 10 and 16. John Young was my favorite astronaut and he barely got any screen time in this series.

    • @rockethead7
      @rockethead7 Před rokem +1

      Yeah, they basically just bundled Apollo 10 in with the Apollo 9 episode, and gave it about 30 seconds of attention. And, the Apollo 16 episode was directed by Sally Field, and was focused on the wives of the astronauts, and barely mentioned anything about the mission itself.

    • @smeeself
      @smeeself Před rokem

      Yeah that was disappointing, but what they did do, they did well.

    • @robertoroberto9798
      @robertoroberto9798 Před rokem

      Thomas Stafford > John Young tbh

  • @ramblerandy2397
    @ramblerandy2397 Před 4 lety +76

    Stupendous series from the late 1990s. Quickly covering Mercury and Gemini programmes, but including the Gemini 8/Agena rendezvous incident, involving Neil Armstrong in his first flight, where he saved Himself, Dave Scott and the mission, the Apollo 1 fire in decent detail, and all the way, through every Apollo to the last Apollo 17 mission and the 'orange soil', that we all got really excited about. Just great. Time for a re-watch, I think.

    • @paulwalton8759
      @paulwalton8759 Před 4 lety

      Is this available in scotland?

    • @ramblerandy2397
      @ramblerandy2397 Před 4 lety

      @@paulwalton8759 It's available to buy as a DVD or BluRay off ebay, etc. In HD Widescreen too.

    • @cdan5936
      @cdan5936 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes very good series. First man depicted the Gemini 8 incident well too.

    • @kevinb3812
      @kevinb3812 Před rokem +1

      It seemed to be a labor of love. I really liked the series too. It helped me to understand a lot of what was going on that we never knew at the time, or I was too young to grasp.

  • @johnsmithee6660
    @johnsmithee6660 Před 3 lety +81

    (The Lunar Module lands on the Moon against all odds)
    *Walter White:* I WON

  • @matthewstavrowsky2393
    @matthewstavrowsky2393 Před 2 lety +2

    Me too Gyuri. I was 11 years old with my family, in our living room in Minnesota. Seeing this brings it all back like yesterday. What a magnificent adventure it was.

  • @glenhughes8013
    @glenhughes8013 Před rokem +3

    I feel sorry for moon landing deniers, not having this amazing, awe inspiringly proud feeling of human achievement.

    • @rockethead7
      @rockethead7 Před rokem +1

      It's usually because they are such complete failures in life, and feel badly about that. But, rather than trying to better themselves, they choose to try to drag others down to their level. Apollo makes the perfect target for them. They love to feel like the most accomplished people in human history have actually failed just as badly as they have failed in their own lives. Facts and evidence don't matter to them.

  • @dwightgaston6079
    @dwightgaston6079 Před 3 lety +34

    In space, no one can hear flat earthers scream.

    • @decipheringenglish3356
      @decipheringenglish3356 Před 3 lety +1

      In one of the planets near Moon, God of death (Yamaraja) is waiting for the liars who are involved in faking moon mission and those supporting them. As soon as they get there, one by one, they will be punished severely for lying to the masses and misusing their hard-earned money.

    • @dwightgaston6079
      @dwightgaston6079 Před 3 lety +1

      @@decipheringenglish3356 are you trying to get a comedy job? You're screaming. It's a vacuum. No one hears. The ones who do, are greatly amused.

    • @dwightgaston6079
      @dwightgaston6079 Před 3 lety

      @@decipheringenglish3356 wait, you really are joking, arent you

    • @decipheringenglish3356
      @decipheringenglish3356 Před 3 lety +2

      @@dwightgaston6079 I'm not joking. It's a fact.

    • @dwightgaston6079
      @dwightgaston6079 Před 3 lety +1

      @@decipheringenglish3356 Ah. In your universe, did Trump win the election? Probably by a landslide? Popular and electoral? By the way, who is Moon? And why does he/she have planets?

  • @scotty3034
    @scotty3034 Před 4 lety +11

    This was such a great series. One of the most underrated of all time too.

  • @douggalliart3023
    @douggalliart3023 Před 4 měsíci +2

    And all this happened during the Vietnamese war. Good job men and thank you.

  • @christophermarshall4080
    @christophermarshall4080 Před 2 lety +8

    The fact we landed on the moon with the computing power of an iPhone is still unbelievable, truly the greatest leap for mankind so far

    • @sammencia7945
      @sammencia7945 Před 2 lety +2

      Less. Far less.
      Ground computers checked figures in a room off Mission Control but navigation computers were graphing calculators.
      2k of ram. 38k Rom
      2.048 mghz
      16 bit.
      Ludicrous.
      Audacious.

    • @williamdiffin28
      @williamdiffin28 Před 2 lety

      iPhone is good computing power. Get you further than the Moon.

    • @andreabindolini7452
      @andreabindolini7452 Před rokem

      Far less computing power than an iPhone, but precisely what needed. Current smartphones need a lot of computing power because they runs a ton of unnecessary software, often badly written and conflicting. Back in the day the task were simple and precise (flight in a vacuum is far simpler than in an atmosphere, from the mathematic point of view), and software and hardware were realized very well, I can tell you for sure. A current smartphone, under the bombardment of program errors that Apollo 11 sperimented in the first lunar landing, likely could have lead to a catastrophe.

    • @TheNowhereMan0
      @TheNowhereMan0 Před 9 měsíci

      Ignorant people 😂

  • @ijzersterk66
    @ijzersterk66 Před 4 lety +5

    The first words on the moon - spoken by Aldrin were - “Okay. Engine Stop”. In this clip (and in the original DVD version) he said “Okay. Engine Off”

  • @sukumarannair6471
    @sukumarannair6471 Před 3 lety +8

    Hearty welcome home,Bob and Douglas ! God Bless!!

  • @timovehkaoja
    @timovehkaoja Před 3 měsíci +1

    The comments on this video show that there is hope left for mankind. In these days of insecurity, war, political debate, flat-earthers and people who don’t believe we ever went to the moon, we still have people who know that on July 20th 1969 Neil Armstrong took that one giant leap for mankind. And I thank you all for that.
    And the thought of mankind returning to to the moon gets me even more hopeful. It brings tears to my eyes. Because we are going back.

  • @bevanml
    @bevanml Před rokem +1

    My mum remembers this moment. The Moon Landing took place in the late morning / early afternoon in Australian Eastern time and teachers ended classes early for the day. Everyone was instructed to go home and find a television that had the Moon Landing on it. Some feat for a small country town.

  • @jccr76
    @jccr76 Před 3 lety +7

    Still get emotional remembering watching the moon landing on TV, more than 50 years ago. What a fantastic epic it was.

    • @-First-Last
      @-First-Last Před 3 lety

      You still watch it on TV.

    • @shannonwittman950
      @shannonwittman950 Před 2 lety

      JC CR ... same with me. I was a typically confused HS sophomore kid (those pesky hormones). I recall not being emotional. But I was in awe.

  • @ogdocvato
    @ogdocvato Před 3 lety +499

    History will never forget the names, Armstrong, Aldrin, Collins.

    • @k1productions87
      @k1productions87 Před 3 lety +66

      Unfortunately Collins barely ever gets mentioned.
      And by all rights, history should still remember Conrad, Lovell, Shepard, Scott, Young, and Cernan.
      Lovell gets recognition because of a mission that didn't even land, but Young is forgotten. Yet he remains the only man in history to fly Gemini twice, Apollo twice, and the Space Shuttle twice, as well as being on the very first flight of two of them AND having walked on the moon.

    • @k1productions87
      @k1productions87 Před 3 lety +9

      @Ben Carlson And what would it take to convince you otherwise? What proof do you require? If (for argument sake) it actually DID happen, what evidence would you need to see to finally accept it?

    • @lesnyk255
      @lesnyk255 Před 3 lety +1

      @Oscar Banuelos Who? ;-)

    • @spacedoubt6504
      @spacedoubt6504 Před 3 lety +12

      Aren't those the guys who pretended to go to the moon a half century ago ?

    • @omniyambot9876
      @omniyambot9876 Před 3 lety +6

      Yuri Gagarin

  • @johnroache32
    @johnroache32 Před 3 lety +16

    Even though we know the outcome, my heart was throbbing.

  • @rishavagarwal5352
    @rishavagarwal5352 Před 7 měsíci +5

    Walter white cooking on moon

  • @charliehand398
    @charliehand398 Před 4 lety +263

    I love this series to death, but looking at it now that I have recently listened to the actual comms from the Apollo 11 flight, it's really hokey how everything is so Hollywooded up. Everyone over reacts to everything. Apollo's greatest strength, a result of all the extensive simulations, was that nobody got emotional about anything, ever. Here it's all "Oh my god, the eagle hasn't replied yet!!" "Oh my god, it's a 1202 alarm!!!"

    • @jeffmaxwell8297
      @jeffmaxwell8297 Před 4 lety +49

      Not nearly as bad as First Man. However, I will say that there WAS a lot emotion - just not outwardly. Armstrong's heart rate was 156 in the moments before touchdown. But when you listen to the actual audio, it all sounds fine. This was an attempt to strike a balance between staying true to the actual recordings and making clear what was a big deal that you wouldn't understand from the real audio.

    • @marcschneider4845
      @marcschneider4845 Před 4 lety +24

      @@jeffmaxwell8297 It's the nature of it being entertainment. Reality is often boring. In The Right Stuff, they have the press conference introducing the Mercury astronauts and the guy is almost hysterical-I presume it was supposed to depict Cold War "hysteria." I've seen newsreels of the actual news conference and it was nothing like that. Same in Apollo 13, where they are doing a burn in the LM and screaming and yelling. In reality, it was nothing like that. At the end of the day, it has to be entertaining.

    • @mjnmjn2958
      @mjnmjn2958 Před 4 lety +1

      @@marcschneider4845 က်ဘိန္႔ႏိုင္
      ရဟိုင္လ္ုေကာ့ မိတ္မွီခိုင္ေအာက္ေခါက္ေနာက္မိတ္ဒိုက္ေလာ္ ခ်က္မိန္း
      ေဒ့ရင္မိတ္လား

    • @rocknral
      @rocknral Před 3 lety +14

      So true. The reason why they were successful was they were professional. Things like 1202 alarms had to be just dealt with. Over reacting was going to help nobody. That's how someone with absolutely no idea would handle the situation. (like me) Fortunately, these people had a handle on it, they trusted each other implicitly.

    • @jpsned
      @jpsned Před 3 lety +4

      @@rocknral That's show business!

  • @jeffwhite4227
    @jeffwhite4227 Před 3 lety +55

    I've got this entire series on DVD - well worth the investment. I love this! And I love that a lot of the same actors here were in Apollo 13, albeit in different roles. Apollo 12 is the most fun episode! :)

    • @KayoMichiels
      @KayoMichiels Před 2 lety +5

      "BEANO!!! LOOK AT YOUR CHECKLIST!!!"

    • @patfer1189
      @patfer1189 Před rokem +5

      Episode 5 "Spider", with Apollo 9, is my personal favorite.

    • @jeffwhite4227
      @jeffwhite4227 Před rokem +3

      @@patfer1189 I agree - that's the one where they're designing it, right? If so, the humor in the episode. Though, I got an icy feeling in my middle when they messed up and the boss is like "This is so bad, I can't even laugh", and when he berated the young engineer, but then gave him the chance to fix the mistake. I know that feeling all too well. LOL

    • @RossComputerGuy
      @RossComputerGuy Před rokem +3

      "SCE to auxiliary? What's that?"

    • @jeffwhite4227
      @jeffwhite4227 Před rokem +2

      @@RossComputerGuy this may not help (because I'm not sure it tells me anything) - but "Flight controller John Aaron solved the problem with one recommendation, “Flight, try SCE to AUX.” The Signal Conditioning Equipment (SCE) could resolve the instrumentation issues in auxiliary mode (AUX), preventing mission abort for Apollo 12."

  • @sophdog1678
    @sophdog1678 Před 2 lety +1

    My school had just one B&W TV, and couldn't guarantee that we'd get to see it live, so my mum kept my sister and I home from school that day (landing was daytime here in Oz) so she could be sure we'd see it as it happened. She was a science and sci-fi nerd way back then, and I have carried on her tradition. RIP Mum.

  • @KlassicLoL
    @KlassicLoL Před 10 měsíci +21

    Walter white in space

  • @mehmetkanbil887
    @mehmetkanbil887 Před 4 lety +6

    Over the last 50 years, cinema techniques have improved greatly

  • @ereini0n
    @ereini0n Před 4 lety +31

    Such a good miniseries! I remember watching it when it came out, it's really one of my favourites.

  • @krishnabandhakavi8815
    @krishnabandhakavi8815 Před 3 lety +3

    It`s amazing!!!! I like it when neil says " thats one small step for man one giant leap for man kind"🌑

  • @user-ri9hb6th1w
    @user-ri9hb6th1w Před 7 měsíci +4

    Breaking moon.... 🌙 lol

  • @bony3603
    @bony3603 Před 4 lety +6

    Felt goose bumps for the Eucharistic scene. Catholic from India here . 😊❤️.
    Love you USA from India.
    ✝️🇮🇳🇺🇸

  • @maxsmodels
    @maxsmodels Před 4 lety +118

    I met Bryan Cranston briefly on the set of this series (I was an extra) along with Tim Daly (they were playing Aldrin and Lovell during Gemini). I had a great time during my 2 days in Orlando playing a MOCR (Mission Operations Controller). About as close to going to the moon as I will ever get.

    • @muhammadyounussiddiqui7608
      @muhammadyounussiddiqui7608 Před 4 lety

      اللہ کر ے ہندو ھميشہ روتے ھی رھيں چندرياں گاے
      کے پیشاب کی بوتلیں لیکر گیا تھا چاند نے کہا مجھے گندا نہیں کريں اپنی گندگی اپنے پاس رکھو

    • @maxsmodels
      @maxsmodels Před 4 lety +4

      @claude thibault So the Russians were in on the deal too? Seriously.?

    • @maxsmodels
      @maxsmodels Před 4 lety

      @@muhammadyounussiddiqui7608 I regret I cannot translate that,

    • @benclothier
      @benclothier Před 4 lety +4

      claude thibault haha imagine not believing science man!? Poor you

    • @Jeramithehuman
      @Jeramithehuman Před 4 lety +1

      claude thibault you realize NASA only gets .48% of us tax dollars. That’s chump change compared to the military and classified black projects. Not only that look how much money and technology went back into the economy. Because of Apollo you have smartphones and computers. Because of military waste we have dead soldiers and killing machines.

  • @rajasekhare9573
    @rajasekhare9573 Před rokem +4

    God bless Neil Armstrong and his colleagues who brought glory to mankind!

  • @StraightShot247
    @StraightShot247 Před rokem +4

    The world completely stopped when Neil Armstrong first stepped on the moon. It's as if time stood still for a few seconds.

  • @eventaudio-hoangaudio4624
    @eventaudio-hoangaudio4624 Před 4 lety +35

    Out earth is so beautiful, pls protect our home

    • @debbies230
      @debbies230 Před 3 lety +1

      They have already made such a mess of it with all the wars and nuclear tests. Not to mention the damage to people, the birth defects and the neurological damage is out of control. Documents declassified by Trump show the military have been exposed that they have been controlling the weather. The reason they say we never went to the moon as the footage was all destroyed. Apparently more to come.

    • @ismawan1980
      @ismawan1980 Před 3 lety

      @John Titor I would say unless we change all fossil fuel vehicles with electric ones, and all industrial machinery with electric, and able to control our waste process, and do reforestation in an accelerating rate, we will never save the earth.. the global temperature keeps increasing and in 50-100 years coastal cities would be submerged..

  • @Maniac536
    @Maniac536 Před 3 lety +8

    This is still the best show HBO ever produced. Although my fav episode remains the previous one, Spider

    • @kbabioch
      @kbabioch Před 3 lety

      Yup, Spider is really a good one!

  • @thalamusdredge3937
    @thalamusdredge3937 Před 9 měsíci +2

    He took ComMOONion

  • @grandoceaniclinesrblx8772
    @grandoceaniclinesrblx8772 Před 8 měsíci +2

    walter white went from landing on the moon to being a drug empire kingpin

  • @alanreynolds2287
    @alanreynolds2287 Před 3 lety +4

    What a great time to experience! When they initially said it would be HOURS before they went outside the LEM, I thought I would die of excitement! We need this today!

  • @ludiqtitan
    @ludiqtitan Před 3 lety +15

    So proud of Bryan. There was a time where I couldn't believe that he can play anything else than a goofy dad, but boooy did he prove me wrong over and over again. Extremely talanted.

    • @starguy2718
      @starguy2718 Před rokem +3

      Heisenberg has entered the chat.

  • @brunoblivious
    @brunoblivious Před 10 měsíci +2

    What an amazing time to be alive. I feel so lucky to have been born at a time when I could see this.
    Seriously, Bryan Cranston wasn't nearly as well known in '98 as he is today and it was a privilege to see him work.

  • @_stardust62
    @_stardust62 Před rokem +1

    I remember (I was 8 y.o.) watching this live on TV, then running outside to look up at the moon in the sky that night, it was about 3/4 quarters full. I'll never forget it

    • @dannyh8288
      @dannyh8288 Před rokem

      Nope...it was a small crescent. Apollo 12 had it 3/4 full