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Once Upon a Time in Space Season 1 Episode 4

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Transcript
00:00:00Columbia, Houston, State Vectors coming on board.
00:00:21We copy.
00:00:25This is Mission Control, Houston. This is a live television view of the shuttle landing facility runway
00:00:29at the Kennedy Space Center.
00:00:32It was a Saturday. I was at home, and the space shuttle Columbia landing was going to be
00:00:36at about 7 in the morning, Houston time.
00:00:42Columbia is 176 miles above the Indian Ocean. Also, a flight controller standing by for tracking data of Columbia.
00:00:52I turned on NASA Select, and you know the patter. You know exactly what landing is supposed to sound like.
00:00:58And so everything sounded great. The dots were coming down over Texas.
00:01:03Fourteen minutes to touchdown for Columbia at the Kennedy Space Center.
00:01:08Columbia, Houston, comm check.
00:01:11But then I heard, Columbia, Houston, comm check. I sat up. Right, I'm sitting up. Now I'm sitting up.
00:01:17I'm like, uh-oh. I don't like this. This doesn't look good.
00:01:20And then the worst was they go to a backup radio system, the UHF, and they go, Columbia, Houston, comm check on UHF.
00:01:28Columbia, Houston, UHF, comm check.
00:01:32If all else fails, that's when you try to reach them on the backup radio.
00:01:36Columbia, Houston, UHF, comm check.
00:01:39That's bad news. So I get up. I start getting dressed, because I know I've got to go in. So...
00:01:46What are you feeling?
00:01:48It's dread, right? This is kind of the worst case, right?
00:01:52GC flight. Lock the doors. Copy.
00:02:01I was on console in the space station flight control room.
00:02:05And I was listening on the loops, and I could hear my counterpart in the shuttle room trying to call the shuttle crew and them not answering.
00:02:14And we have CNN on in the control rooms, and I saw what was happening.
00:02:21What we're seeing here is very ominous indeed. These are pictures which tell the story.
00:02:29That is clearly the shuttle breaking up as it passes south of Texas.
00:02:35As I'm trying to figure out more details, Ken Bowersox calls down. He was on board the International Space Station.
00:02:43And he says, hey, Jen, according to my watch, the crew should have landed by now. How's it going down there?
00:02:50And I looked over at the flight director, and she shook her head. And I said, hey, there's not going to be a landing today.
00:03:00And he said, what do you mean? I said, there's been an accident, a serious accident.
00:03:06My fellow Americans, this day has brought terrible news. Debris was seen falling from the skies above Texas. The Columbia's lost. There are no survivors.
00:03:24We don't, we don't hesitate to talk about it. It's, you know, I'm, I'm, I'm incredibly sad for, for the friends that, that I lost, you know.
00:03:46I know that this incident carries huge consequences for NASA.
00:03:55You know, we, we, they built six shuttles, and we've lost two of them.
00:04:01Both Challenger and Columbia. You know, we couldn't afford to lose another shuttle.
00:04:11You know, we were halfway building the space station. And, you know, we needed the shuttles to fly to continue the job.
00:04:19The dead of God.
00:04:31When I was 16, I lived in Finland.
00:05:00And I was an exchange student, I lived with a Finnish family, and we lived in the eastern
00:05:04part called Karelia, right on the Soviet border.
00:05:10So I literally lived on a lake, and on the other side of the lake I could look over there
00:05:14and see the Soviet Union.
00:05:16They had one of these little wooden guard shacks.
00:05:19A year later, when I graduated from high school, I joined the Air Force when I was 17 to defend
00:05:24Europe from the Russians.
00:05:26I was an F-16 pilot for about a decade.
00:05:31And then I became a test pilot, and then eventually went to NASA as an astronaut.
00:05:38When I first joined NASA, we had a great relationship with Russia.
00:05:42We had just done Shuttle Mir.
00:05:45Russia was not the Soviet Union anymore.
00:05:47And they had this young president who was promising to reform things and get rid of corruption.
00:06:05The International Space Station will be a continuous operation to orbit the Earth for a minimum
00:06:09of 15 to 20 years.
00:06:12The object now is cooperation, not domination, a launching point for the future of humankind.
00:06:19The excitement about the ISS was really palpable.
00:06:23Everybody felt it.
00:06:24We used to say, off the Earth, for the Earth.
00:06:28There was this excitement that, hey, this is how people can and should work together.
00:06:33It's the end of an era.
00:06:48The Shuttle Endeavour takes up the final parts of the International Space Station.
00:06:55On a two-week mission to fit what's essentially a bay window in space.
00:06:59On my first space flight on the Space Shuttle Endeavour, we brought up two modules, Node 3,
00:07:10which is a big living module, and the Cupola.
00:07:16And the Cupola is everybody's favorite place in space.
00:07:18It's a really cool module.
00:07:20It's got seven windows.
00:07:21You go in there, you put your whole body inside of it, and you're surrounded by six windows,
00:07:27and then there's a seventh big window above you.
00:07:32I moved it to the bottom of Node 3, so it's on the bottom of the space station, so when
00:07:36you look up, there's Earth.
00:07:44It's really an amazing experience.
00:07:52The New York Times described it as a new window that forever changed our view of Earth.
00:07:59I love that description, a new window that forever changed our view of Earth.
00:08:04It changed my view of Earth, for sure.
00:08:11And the Cupola makes you feel emotional, which is an unusual experience for a fighter pilot
00:08:21to feel emotions, but it's an intense emotion to go, man, this is so beautiful.
00:08:28Just see things that you don't see on Earth.
00:08:30Well, in general, I really liked the MCS.
00:08:49All right. Let's go.
00:08:52Of course, when we were flying, I first started flying around, looking at how you can be comfortable, you don't need to sit on each other.
00:09:08In the beginning, when we were still not familiar, but when we were together, we were drinking tea, drinking in a cup of coffee,
00:09:19if we look at Russian, American, European, astronauts, astronauts, we have no difference between each other, absolutely.
00:09:30This is my best friend.
00:09:36You can see, yeah?
00:09:39He's drawing.
00:09:40He's drawing.
00:09:42He's drawing.
00:09:43He's drawing.
00:09:44I'm drawing.
00:09:45We can see you.
00:09:46He's drawing.
00:09:47He's drawing.
00:09:48He's drawing.
00:09:49You can see an associate.
00:09:50The Russian-American, Russian, Russian.
00:09:53It's such a friendly, friendly, nice environment.
00:09:57Then we are breathing.
00:09:59We drink one water.
00:10:01We drink one water.
00:10:03The one system, the one team.
00:10:06What are you doing?
00:10:08What are you doing?
00:10:10Sometimes I'm joking.
00:10:12To solve all political problems on our planet,
00:10:16we need to put our leaders in a ship ship
00:10:20and I can assure you,
00:10:22they will solve all the problems on Earth.
00:10:26We had obviously several cosmonauts.
00:10:36We had a Japanese astronaut.
00:10:38We even had an international crew dinner one night
00:10:40where we shared food from all the different countries.
00:10:44Japanese food and Russian food and Alabama, Creole food.
00:10:50So it was a fun international time. It was great.
00:10:54What is that sushi?
00:10:56It's a space sushi.
00:10:58Space sushi.
00:11:00Space cooked sushi.
00:11:06We all grew up at Cold War with each other, right?
00:11:10So it took time to build trust, to build relationships,
00:11:14to bridge that language gap,
00:11:18which was very real, especially early on.
00:11:20And it worked.
00:11:22We thought that we were going to be friends forever.
00:11:34Good morning to Janet and the rest of the crew.
00:11:37Hope you had a good night's sleep
00:11:39and it looks like a beautiful day to take a walk.
00:11:41Good morning, Beamer.
00:11:42We'll try to get our space boys out the door today
00:11:44and get to sail out on the spaceship.
00:11:46Fantastic.
00:11:50After I finished training astronauts for the ISS,
00:11:54I just kind of took some time to reassess what was next for me.
00:11:58And I went to talk to my boss at the time.
00:12:02And he says, you know, you know what would be a really good place for you is in the control room as a Capcom.
00:12:10And Capcom is short for Capsule Communicator.
00:12:12It's the person that talks to the crew.
00:12:14And as soon as he suggested that, I thought he was crazy.
00:12:17And I said, Randy, I can't be a Capcom.
00:12:20Capcoms are always astronauts.
00:12:24And he said, this is a brand new space station.
00:12:27And you're one of the few people that know the space station really in depth.
00:12:39So why don't you give it a try?
00:12:43I was honored, of course, to be the first one.
00:12:47But there's also a lot of pressure anytime you're the first one to do something.
00:12:51You know, don't screw this up, Ginger.
00:12:53So I dedicated myself to the training.
00:12:55I remember my first day on console.
00:12:57I was so nervous.
00:13:02And I walk in there and I sit down and the crew calls down.
00:13:06And so it's my first time talking to space.
00:13:11I look at the flight director.
00:13:12He gives me a go.
00:13:13And I answer the crew.
00:13:15And then all of a sudden you hear, oh, Ginger, was that you?
00:13:19Oh, my gosh.
00:13:20Congratulations.
00:13:21This is your first day.
00:13:22And you sound really professional.
00:13:24And I'm thinking, I'm unlike what you sound like right now, Frank.
00:13:27But thanks a lot.
00:13:29And the flight director's looking at me and he's like, how did you know him again?
00:13:32We're looking forward to a good day of transfer and handover.
00:13:35And do you have any questions or comments for us?
00:13:37No questions, I don't believe.
00:13:38We're real happy to be here.
00:13:39And it was a very nice night on the station.
00:13:40And we're ready to begin work.
00:13:41As part of Capcom, they use their link to Earth as well, is that?
00:13:42Yes.
00:13:43And the more familiar they are with you, the more comfortable they are.
00:13:46And you know how to package information.
00:13:48And it may be one way for one crew member and another way for another crew member.
00:13:51And I always thought it was my job, too, to kind of keep it light, keep them entertained.
00:13:56So a lot of the crew members will celebrate their birthday in space.
00:14:02And they also deserve a birthday party.
00:14:03Happy birthday, Daddy!
00:14:04Happy birthday, Daddy!
00:14:06We love you, Daddy!
00:14:07We love you, Daddy!
00:14:08And Gennady Padalka, when he flew, I brought the space to base on the crew members.
00:14:11You know how and how many of you are.
00:14:13And they're here.
00:14:14And you know how to package information.
00:14:15And maybe one way for one crew member and another way for another crew member.
00:14:21And I always thought it was my job, too, to kind of keep it light, keep them entertained.
00:14:25and he flew. I brought this to his first birthday party. This is a crocodile, and his name is Genya,
00:14:31and he's part of a Russian children's story, and there's a very special song that is in this
00:14:37children's story that I learned in Russian, and I sang to Gennady, and it was years ago,
00:14:44so I'm going to see if I can remember it, but it's...
00:14:55We try to do our best to make sure that they can follow along with us, so we've sent
00:15:10up for Christmas. We sent up Christmas trees, so they can put their Christmas tree out.
00:15:19We try to make sure that they don't feel isolated, that they feel a part of what's going on on Earth.
00:15:26Because psychologically, I think that helps them, you know, thrive in that environment.
00:15:31Beyond just sort of making them feel connected to Earth, have you had to deliver bad news?
00:15:37Yes, I have had to deliver bad news sometimes.
00:15:41It was December. I'd been on the ISS for about two months, and I was just talking to Jane on the phone,
00:16:00sort of like I normally do, and it was probably 10 or probably a little bit after 10 o'clock, my time.
00:16:09It was kind of a, you know, a normal Dan's in space day. Dan would phone me during his evening time before he went to bed.
00:16:25And so I was just talking to Jane, we were talking about the day, and out of the communication system,
00:16:33CAPCOM says, hey, Station Houston, on Space to Ground 1, that's the communication channel,
00:16:38we're going to set up a private call on Space to Ground 2 for Dan.
00:16:41And so, first of all, nobody should be talking to you during the sleep period.
00:16:46Something's happening. There's no reason to call. There's some dire news.
00:16:51Thank God I was on the phone with Jane. If I wasn't on the phone with Jane, I would have gone nuts.
00:17:02I would have thought Jane or my kids, even if it took 10 seconds for me to find out if she was okay,
00:17:09that would have been terrifying.
00:17:10My personal phone started ringing, and it was our NASA flight doctor calling, and he said,
00:17:23maybe you should come in. I walked into this small room at Mission Control, and they had set up a conference for me.
00:17:34Dan was already on the screen.
00:17:35Yeah, I had to tell him what had happened.
00:17:41There was an accident. I said his mom had died.
00:17:47Yeah.
00:17:56Daniel Taney's 90-year-old mother died after a train hit her car at a vehicle crossing.
00:18:01His mother stopped behind a school bus at the crossing, then drove around the bus, bypassing the lowered crossing gate.
00:18:09She was pronounced dead at the hospital.
00:18:11Taney is grieving in space.
00:18:21And you just, you know, nobody gets training for this, you know.
00:18:26Nobody gets training for losing your mother.
00:18:28You know, I would be on the phone for hours talking to my family, talking to Jane,
00:18:42and that would make me feel better helping make arrangements or helping, you know,
00:18:47the way you, the way, you know, families all pitch in and do that in times of crisis like that.
00:18:52What you want to do then is hug each other and hold each other and support each other like that.
00:19:06And, yeah, we couldn't do that.
00:19:11Was there ever any thought that he could come down?
00:19:14He would not have wanted that.
00:19:20I wouldn't have wanted that for him.
00:19:22This was his mission.
00:19:23And, um, no, not at all.
00:19:26Good afternoon.
00:19:41I have feared this moment for most of my adult life.
00:19:44Of course, I never suspected that I'd have to speak on this occasion on videotape.
00:19:51It sounds funny to say, but at age 90, I think we lost Mom in the prime of her life.
00:19:58All of us know how active and involved and passionate she was.
00:20:02And she got, she seemed to get better and better as the years went on.
00:20:05I just want to say that Mom has been and will continue to be my hero,
00:20:11my role model as a citizen and as a friend and as a parent.
00:20:17Mom, I love you so much.
00:20:19How does it feel?
00:20:39You are the first person to have to go through this.
00:20:42First American.
00:20:43It happened to a Russian, although the Russian program chose not to tell this guy
00:20:48that his father had passed away for a year or so.
00:20:50It was a much, much different story.
00:20:54But, uh, we have the International Space Station
00:20:57because we want to learn what it's like to live off this planet.
00:20:59But if you're going to live not on the planet,
00:21:03all the aspects of life are still going to happen.
00:21:06And so there's going to be wonderful things
00:21:07and there's going to be terrible things.
00:21:09We just have to accept that it's not going to be all rosy and easy
00:21:12and we're not just missing birthdays.
00:21:18My space shuttle mission, STS-130,
00:21:28we were actually the final assembly flight.
00:21:31It was called 20A in the assembly sequence.
00:21:33And we finished building the International Space Station
00:21:36and once that was complete, the space shuttle was to be retired.
00:21:40Wonderful.
00:21:40It was the highlight of my career
00:21:50to be the pilot of the space shuttle Endeavour.
00:21:53I loved flying it.
00:21:55Hundreds of years from now, people will look back at the space shuttle.
00:21:57We're never going to build anything like that again.
00:21:59This week marks the beginning of the end of an era,
00:22:12the final countdown for America's space shuttle program.
00:22:15The space shuttle Atlantis is on its last and final mission
00:22:18of NASA's 30-year shuttle program.
00:22:21Kristen Fisher, a reporter with our Washington station, WUSA,
00:22:24was not only covering history, she has been a part of it.
00:22:26And she's at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
00:22:29Kristen, good morning.
00:22:31Good morning, Russ.
00:22:32Well, you know, I think so many people my age
00:22:34take the space shuttle program for granted
00:22:36and I used to be one of them.
00:22:38I grew up five minutes away from the Johnson Space Center
00:22:41in Houston, Texas,
00:22:42and everyone in my neighborhood worked for NASA,
00:22:45including my mom and dad.
00:22:47So, basically, ever since my first little psychedelic mushroom trip
00:22:53in college, I've been obsessed with space.
00:22:57I caught the space bug
00:22:58and I never really felt the call to be an astronaut like my parents.
00:23:03Give daddy a kiss.
00:23:06I think there is something kind of psychologically as a kid
00:23:11when you grow up your entire life with people saying,
00:23:14oh, are you going to grow up to be an astronaut, too?
00:23:16Anna, I couldn't help but wonder
00:23:18if you'd recommend a career as an astronaut
00:23:21to your daughter, Kristen.
00:23:23Oh, that I would, Mr. President.
00:23:26It's a truly incredible experience
00:23:28and I'm going to recommend it there highly.
00:23:31Oh, that's wonderful.
00:23:32The President of the United States
00:23:33asking if I'm going to be an astronaut, too,
00:23:36it was something that was just like,
00:23:37oh, all of you think that this is what my path in life is?
00:23:40It just, for whatever reason,
00:23:41made me want to do something different.
00:23:44And I went into political journalism.
00:23:47Whether the President is pushing his health care plan
00:23:49in person or online,
00:23:50he's really doing the same thing
00:23:52and that is selling it.
00:23:54Right now, the top story on the White House website...
00:23:56The older I got, though,
00:23:57the more I felt this kind of primal pull to space.
00:24:07In the days leading up to the last shuttle launch,
00:24:09I went to my news director and begged.
00:24:13I was like, please, like, I have to go cover this.
00:24:16Like, if you don't pay me to go cover this,
00:24:17I'm going to take a week of vacation
00:24:19and go do this by myself.
00:24:21Atlantis, on behalf of KSC launch teams past and present,
00:24:31have an excellent mission and Godspeed.
00:24:36It was just a really special experience
00:24:37to get to be there with my mom.
00:24:40It's sad.
00:24:41It's very, very sad.
00:24:43But it's time to move on to the next program, I guess,
00:24:47but there'll never be anything like the shuttle launch.
00:24:48All three engines up and burning.
00:24:52Liftoff!
00:24:53The final liftoff of Atlantis.
00:24:58That seems incredible.
00:25:00So I was the last flight director that they allowed to get certified on shuttle operations,
00:25:22and I had flown three shuttle missions, but I was not assigned to the last one.
00:25:27I went into mission control, and I was in the viewing room at the top
00:25:32waiting for, you know, we'll stop.
00:25:39Having fired the imagination of a generation,
00:25:43a ship like no other, its place in history secured,
00:25:46the space shuttle pulls into port for the last time,
00:25:50its voyage at an end.
00:25:52I just wanted to be there.
00:26:00I had no responsibilities, but as a flight director, I could be in there.
00:26:03And we helped close it down for the last time.
00:26:08What were you feeling?
00:26:08Simultaneous pride and sadness and concern.
00:26:23This vehicle had been flying since 1981, and it lasted 30 years.
00:26:29I was proud from that perspective, and then I was concerned because we didn't have U.S. launch capability.
00:26:40We had no way, as a nation, as a very proud spacefaring nation,
00:26:45I couldn't get a crew up into orbit if you asked me to tomorrow.
00:26:48For years, we had been the country to watch,
00:26:57the country that, you know, sent up, you know, John Glenn.
00:27:05The country that first set foot on the moon.
00:27:08They've got the flag up now, and you can see the stars and stripes on the moon.
00:27:14We had all these firsts, and we were the leader in the space industry,
00:27:18and now we're in unfamiliar territory.
00:27:23The shuttle was so prominent in the space industry.
00:27:27Every country knew that we had that capability,
00:27:31and I'm sure that every country knew that we had lost that capability.
00:27:38Early this morning, China boldly went where very few others have ever gone before.
00:27:46It's become the third country to send a man into space.
00:27:49Meet Yang Li Wei, China's first spaceman and soon-to-be national hero.
00:27:56I will not disappoint the motherland.
00:27:58I will gain honor for the Chinese nation.
00:28:01It's taken years of planning and has cost 80 million dollars,
00:28:10but India has now successfully launched a mission to the moon.
00:28:13It's a historic moment as far as India is concerned.
00:28:17We have started our journey to the moon.
00:28:21China has taken its first step towards building a rival to the International Space Station.
00:28:27A rocket containing the Tiangang-1 Space Laboratory
00:28:30was launched today from a site in the Gobi Desert.
00:28:33This mission is being seen as a milestone for China's space program.
00:28:38It really was a low point for human spaceflight in this country.
00:28:54But very quickly it emerged that the most immediate plan was going to be
00:29:00for the U.S. government to take a risk that it hadn't really taken before,
00:29:03which was enter into a truly public-private partnership with these commercial space companies.
00:29:11After half a century of flying astronauts into space,
00:29:15NASA is hoping commercial companies will soon be ready
00:29:18to take over its responsibility of flying astronauts and cargo
00:29:22to the International Space Station.
00:29:24Several companies are developing commercial rockets.
00:29:27SpaceX is furthest along.
00:29:29I hope SpaceX will be one of the principal means
00:29:33by which NASA astronauts go to space.
00:29:37But SpaceX's lack of experience bothers some NASA legends
00:29:41like Apollo astronaut Gene Cernan.
00:29:44Now is the time to overrule this administration's pledge to mediocrity.
00:29:50Gene Cernan testified against commercial spaceflight
00:29:54and the way that you're developing it.
00:29:55I was very sad to see that
00:29:57because those guys are, yeah,
00:30:01you know, those guys are heroes of mine,
00:30:03so it's really tough.
00:30:04They inspired you to do this, didn't they?
00:30:06Yes.
00:30:09And to see them casting stones in your direction?
00:30:15It's difficult.
00:30:17Did you expect them to cheer you on?
00:30:21Certainly hoping they would.
00:30:25SpaceX were still, you know, babies at the time
00:30:33that the space shuttle retired.
00:30:35And NASA was skittish about bad headlines
00:30:38from failures or explosions, right?
00:30:46So SpaceX was years away
00:30:49from being ready to carry humans into space.
00:30:51And the answer in the short term was to pay Russia
00:30:56up to $90 million per seat
00:31:00to get American astronauts on a Russian Soyuz rocket
00:31:04and then hitch a ride with Russian cosmonauts
00:31:07to and from the International Space Station.
00:31:09That was their, that was the short-term solution.
00:31:14American astronaut Dan Burbank
00:31:16will launch on a Russian rocket late Sunday night,
00:31:18the first American to take a Soyuz into orbit
00:31:21since America's space shuttle fleet retired in July.
00:31:24The U.S. now faces the prospect
00:31:26of relying on the Russians for several years
00:31:28to take our astronauts into space
00:31:30because NASA does not have a replacement
00:31:32for the space shuttle.
00:31:34It felt like an abandonment
00:31:37of prioritization of our nation's space flight program
00:31:42is what it felt like.
00:31:43I don't think we should have done that.
00:31:46You don't give up a capability
00:31:47before you have a replacement capability.
00:31:51And we put ourselves in a very precarious situation.
00:31:54It has been a day of high tension in Ukraine,
00:32:03in particular, the southern peninsula known as Crimea.
00:32:06As many as 20,000 Russian soldiers
00:32:09have been on the move across Crimea
00:32:10in the past 24 hours.
00:32:13Russia!
00:32:14Many people in this region
00:32:15don't feel Ukrainian at all.
00:32:17Russia!
00:32:19Russia!
00:32:20In 2014, I was finishing my training.
00:32:35I was getting ready
00:32:36for what was supposed to be
00:32:37a 169-day flight on the space station.
00:32:41So, in the months leading up to my launch,
00:32:45Russia invaded Crimea.
00:32:47It was like, they were proud of that.
00:32:49Like, and my crewmate, Anton Shkaplerov,
00:32:52would run around and
00:32:53Krimnash, Krimnash,
00:32:55which means Crimea's ours.
00:32:57And he's from Crimea.
00:32:59He's from Sevastopol.
00:33:00And he was running around
00:33:01all gung-ho about what they're doing.
00:33:05And how did that make you feel?
00:33:08I didn't understand fully what had happened.
00:33:12Every Russian I knew had friends in Ukraine.
00:33:14And they had cousins or uncles,
00:33:16or they were born in Ukraine,
00:33:17or their spouse was Ukrainian.
00:33:19They were just connected.
00:33:21And so I thought,
00:33:23well, these people are
00:33:24kind of the same,
00:33:26and their language is kind of the same.
00:33:30I'm learning to speak Ukrainian now.
00:33:31It is not Russian.
00:33:33But I didn't understand
00:33:34any of this at the time.
00:33:35I was blinded to the excitement
00:33:37of having these Russian partners,
00:33:39and I did not understand
00:33:41the magnitude of the situation.
00:33:42In Moscow today,
00:33:45just like that,
00:33:46Vladimir Putin signed a document
00:33:48and made it official,
00:33:49and now tonight,
00:33:50Crimea belongs to Russia.
00:33:53Today, the United States
00:33:55is imposing new sanctions
00:33:56in key sectors of the Russian economy.
00:33:58The major sanctions we're announcing today
00:34:00will continue to ratchet up
00:34:01the pressure on Russia,
00:34:03including the cronies and companies
00:34:04that are supporting Russia's illegal actions
00:34:07in Ukraine.
00:34:07We were very aware
00:34:09that sanctions had happened.
00:34:11In fact,
00:34:12during that time,
00:34:13we sanctioned a guy named
00:34:15Dmitry Rogozin,
00:34:16who was in charge
00:34:17of the Russian space program.
00:34:19Dmitry Rogozin is just full of bluster.
00:34:21He's the Russian equivalent
00:34:22of a mega-extremist.
00:34:24Dmitry Rogozin is just full of bluster.
00:34:27We warned our American friends,
00:34:30if they want to make an impact
00:34:33on the economic potential
00:34:35of the Russian rocket-building,
00:34:36then they will send their astronauts
00:34:39to the International Space Station.
00:34:42Gospodin Trampoline.
00:34:44Gospodin is like Mr.
00:34:45So we called him Mr. Trampoline.
00:34:48He was threatening to take away
00:34:50our ability to get to space.
00:34:51He was like,
00:34:52hey, you're not flying on our spaceship,
00:34:53you can launch yourself
00:34:55on a trampoline.
00:35:02So when I'm going to launch,
00:35:04you're in your space suit
00:35:05and you're carrying this cooling thing
00:35:07and you walk up to the rocket
00:35:08like John Glenn in the 1960s,
00:35:11and there's somebody walking with you.
00:35:13And Dmitry Rogozin,
00:35:15the guy that told us
00:35:16we could take trampolines,
00:35:17was actually the guy
00:35:18that walked me up to my rocket.
00:35:21I'm going.
00:35:23It was a dichotomy
00:35:26like I've never seen before.
00:35:30Prime and liftoff.
00:35:31First stage engines.
00:35:32First stage engines.
00:35:33I was just excited about the mission
00:35:49and excited to fly with Russians.
00:35:51So it was one night,
00:36:00January 2015,
00:36:03I was with Sasha Samokutya,
00:36:04a Russian cosmonaut.
00:36:07And we were just looking out at Europe
00:36:09as we flew over,
00:36:10and we flew over Ukraine.
00:36:12As we went over the eastern part of Ukraine,
00:36:15all of a sudden,
00:36:15there were little red flashes,
00:36:16and we were watching bombs go off.
00:36:20We were literally watching
00:36:22people being killed
00:36:24on planet Earth.
00:36:26We were watching Ukrainians
00:36:27being killed by Russians.
00:36:29And it was a profound moment.
00:36:30We didn't say anything.
00:36:31We were both,
00:36:31I remember distinctly being like,
00:36:33holy cow,
00:36:34I can't believe what I'm seeing.
00:36:36And Sasha saw it too.
00:36:37So it was probably
00:36:40the most poignant moment
00:36:41of my time in space.
00:36:56We didn't talk about it.
00:36:57I just made the assumption.
00:36:59If you see this happening,
00:37:01any normal human being
00:37:03would come to the conclusion
00:37:04that this is bad
00:37:05and it should not be happening.
00:37:07I realized that
00:37:16there's one country
00:37:18destroying another country,
00:37:20or at least in the beginnings
00:37:21of that phase.
00:37:25That age of innocence
00:37:26ended for me.
00:37:34Everything kind of
00:37:35started to click in my brain
00:37:37that, yes,
00:37:38there are geopolitics on Earth
00:37:40up heretofore
00:37:41that had not affected
00:37:42the space station.
00:37:43And I realized
00:37:44that this was going
00:37:45to affect space.
00:37:47We were going to need
00:37:48to launch our own astronauts
00:37:49and not be dependent
00:37:50on the Russian Soyuz.
00:37:52We move on now to the countdown
00:38:15to history.
00:38:16NASA and SpaceX
00:38:17set to launch a pair
00:38:18of U.S. astronauts
00:38:19into space
00:38:20in less than 48 hours,
00:38:22the first astronauts
00:38:23to lift off
00:38:24from U.S. soil
00:38:24in nine years.
00:38:302020,
00:38:31that was the year
00:38:32that everything changed.
00:38:34That was the year
00:38:34that SpaceX
00:38:36returned the ability
00:38:39to launch American astronauts
00:38:40from U.S. soil
00:38:42once again
00:38:42for the first time
00:38:44in almost a decade.
00:38:49A stunning new era
00:38:51of space travel
00:38:52started today
00:38:53when two NASA astronauts
00:38:55launched in a rocket
00:38:56built by a private company.
00:38:57Five,
00:38:58four,
00:38:59three,
00:39:00two,
00:39:01one,
00:39:02zero.
00:39:02Ignition.
00:39:04Liftoff
00:39:04of the Falcon 9
00:39:06and Crew Dragon.
00:39:07Go NASA!
00:39:08Go SpaceX!
00:39:09Godspeed!
00:39:10Bob and John!
00:39:11We're still America.
00:39:16We're still strong.
00:39:17We can overcome
00:39:17these challenges
00:39:18and we still press forward.
00:39:24I was at the White House
00:39:26at the time
00:39:26and I remember once again
00:39:27kind of begging my bosses
00:39:29to let me cover this.
00:39:34What a day
00:39:35for both NASA,
00:39:36SpaceX
00:39:36and Elon Musk.
00:39:38What he has been able
00:39:38to accomplish
00:39:39in just a few short years.
00:39:40there were a lot of people
00:39:42who didn't think
00:39:42he would be able to do it.
00:39:43Now his company
00:39:44has become the first
00:39:45to put astronauts
00:39:46from any country
00:39:47into orbit.
00:39:50So proud of the people
00:39:52at NASA,
00:39:53all the people
00:39:54that work together,
00:39:56public and private.
00:39:58And when you see
00:39:58a site like that
00:39:59it's incredible.
00:40:05This event
00:40:05is something
00:40:06that all of humanity
00:40:07can get excited about.
00:40:09it's just a fundamentally
00:40:10positive good thing.
00:40:12Have you heard from
00:40:12your Russian counterpart?
00:40:14So Dmitry Rogozin
00:40:16is the head
00:40:16of Roscosmos
00:40:17in Russia.
00:40:19They believe
00:40:20in the partnership
00:40:20so I think
00:40:21it's going to remain strong.
00:40:23The trampoline
00:40:24is working.
00:40:25That's right.
00:40:30It's the inside joke.
00:40:31I know it's the inside joke.
00:40:32We're inside 10 meters.
00:40:38We cannot make up
00:40:39the docking target
00:40:41but we do see the outline.
00:40:44We puppy and pinker
00:40:4510 meters.
00:40:49Soft capture confirmed.
00:40:50Standby for retraction
00:40:51and docking.
00:40:53SpaceX makes it possible
00:40:55for the United States
00:40:56to launch American astronauts
00:40:58from U.S. soil
00:40:59in 2020.
00:41:00An absolutely
00:41:02critical milestone
00:41:03that the United States
00:41:05was already
00:41:05really desperate for.
00:41:09But when you look back
00:41:10it's just incredibly lucky
00:41:11because look what happened
00:41:13just two years later.
00:41:14U.S. officials estimate
00:41:37Russia has likely amassed
00:41:39up to 190,000 troops
00:41:41in and around Ukraine.
00:41:44Russia is poised
00:41:47with its military forces
00:41:48to conduct an invasion
00:41:50at any time.
00:41:51It could be imminent.
00:41:59Russian forces
00:42:00attacking Ukraine
00:42:01from nearly every direction.
00:42:04Vladimir Putin gave
00:42:06this warning
00:42:07for anyone
00:42:08trying to stand
00:42:09in his way.
00:42:12Whoever tries
00:42:13to interfere with us
00:42:14or threaten our country
00:42:15should know
00:42:15that Russia's response
00:42:16will be immediate
00:42:17and lead to such consequences
00:42:19that have never been
00:42:20experienced in history.
00:42:32When Russia invaded Ukraine
00:42:34I couldn't believe it
00:42:37at first.
00:42:38I couldn't believe that
00:42:39somebody I knew now
00:42:42was going to be impacted
00:42:43by war
00:42:44because that was my home
00:42:46for four years.
00:42:48I know the people there.
00:42:49I love the people there.
00:42:51And you can't
00:42:53just blanketly say
00:42:54when something bad
00:42:55like that happens
00:42:56that everybody
00:42:57in this country
00:42:58is at fault.
00:42:59And I would hear
00:43:01that rhetoric
00:43:03and it just
00:43:03would make my stomach churn.
00:43:06Putin is the aggressor.
00:43:13Putin chose this war
00:43:14and now he and his country
00:43:17will bear the consequences.
00:43:19Today I'm authorizing
00:43:20additional strong sanctions.
00:43:25Tonight the Kremlin
00:43:26is accusing the U.S.
00:43:27of an economic war
00:43:28on Russia.
00:43:29New penalties daily
00:43:30as the effects
00:43:31of those western sanctions
00:43:32sink into the Russian economy,
00:43:34the currency collapsing.
00:43:35McDonald's also
00:43:36temporarily closing
00:43:37over 800 locations.
00:43:39I would say
00:43:39there is a creeping realization
00:43:41that 30 years of progress
00:43:42may be about to end.
00:43:48We're going to turn now
00:43:49to the future
00:43:49of the International Space Station,
00:43:51the controversial head
00:43:52of the Russian space program
00:43:54threatening to end
00:43:55cooperation on the ISS
00:43:56unless sanctions
00:43:58on Russia are lifted.
00:44:00Word started coming
00:44:01that, oh,
00:44:02we're going to cancel
00:44:04the space station.
00:44:04So now I'm just worried,
00:44:09is this going to destroy
00:44:10what we created?
00:44:14Is somebody going to come in
00:44:16and tell us now
00:44:17that because the country
00:44:19that we've been partnering with
00:44:21for so many years,
00:44:22peacefully,
00:44:23that because they have declared war
00:44:26on another country,
00:44:27are we no longer going to be able
00:44:28to work together?
00:44:29It's not the people
00:44:30that I work with
00:44:31that declared war.
00:44:33Are we still going to be allowed
00:44:35to continue operating
00:44:36the space station
00:44:37or is someone just
00:44:38who's not connected with it
00:44:40going to take it away?
00:44:41A few months after the invasion
00:44:59in 2022,
00:45:01the Russians went out
00:45:02and did a spacewalk
00:45:03and unfurled the Soviet flag
00:45:05on the outside
00:45:06of the Russian segment
00:45:07and it was a terrible thing
00:45:10to do,
00:45:11like something out
00:45:12of the Cold War.
00:45:15The message is Russia's back.
00:45:18It's just them remembering
00:45:19this time
00:45:20when they were powerful
00:45:21and they were co-equal
00:45:23with the United States.
00:45:25It's them wanting
00:45:26to make their country
00:45:27great again.
00:45:27Russia has claimed
00:45:33full control
00:45:34of Luhansk,
00:45:35one of the two regions
00:45:36of the Donbass
00:45:37at the heart
00:45:37of the war in Ukraine.
00:45:39The Russians
00:45:40are overwhelming
00:45:41the Ukrainians
00:45:42out in the east
00:45:43in that offensive
00:45:44right now.
00:45:51What is this photograph?
00:45:53This is a flag
00:45:54of the Luhansk Republic.
00:45:55How do you feel
00:45:58about the ISS
00:45:59being politicized
00:46:00in this way?
00:46:01Well,
00:46:02it's been a political decision
00:46:03that it's a new region
00:46:07of Russia.
00:46:07It's a question
00:46:08to the astronauts.
00:46:09They told them
00:46:10this flag
00:46:11they sent it
00:46:12and they do it.
00:46:13The astronauts
00:46:14are people
00:46:14in this case.
00:46:19If it's on them,
00:46:20on the American
00:46:21astronauts,
00:46:22it's their own
00:46:22it's their own
00:46:24and they do it.
00:46:25It's their own
00:46:25and they do it.
00:46:26It's their own
00:46:26and they do it.
00:46:27They do it.
00:46:28They do it.
00:46:28They do it.
00:46:29They do it.
00:46:33They do it.
00:46:34They do it.
00:46:35They do it.
00:46:35They do it.
00:46:36They do it.
00:46:36They do it.
00:46:37They do it.
00:46:37They do it.
00:46:38They do it.
00:46:40After Russia
00:46:42invaded Crimea,
00:46:44it was a really
00:46:44strange time
00:46:45on the ISS.
00:46:48I call it
00:46:49cognitive dissonance.
00:46:50On the one hand,
00:46:50I love these guys
00:46:51that I'm with,
00:46:52and on the other hand,
00:46:53their government
00:46:54is doing these
00:46:54horrendous things.
00:47:00So on the ISS,
00:47:01there is a Russian
00:47:02segment and an American
00:47:03segment.
00:47:04U.S. astronauts
00:47:04don't do a lot of work
00:47:05on the Russian segment,
00:47:06but sometimes there's
00:47:07things you need to do.
00:47:13And I remember
00:47:14it was 2015,
00:47:15and I had to go down
00:47:16there one day
00:47:16to do something.
00:47:18And as I went down there,
00:47:20the laptop was open.
00:47:20And on our laptops,
00:47:23we have this software
00:47:23that tells us
00:47:24where we should
00:47:25take pictures.
00:47:26Like, there's a volcano
00:47:27to take a picture.
00:47:29And the Russians
00:47:30had left their laptop
00:47:31open to Aviano Air Base.
00:47:37It's a U.S. F-16 base
00:47:39in Italy.
00:47:41And I saw that,
00:47:42and I was like,
00:47:43come on, guys.
00:47:44Seriously?
00:47:45We have satellites
00:47:46to take pictures
00:47:47of that stuff.
00:47:48I never did anything,
00:47:49you know,
00:47:50spy pictures
00:47:51from the space station.
00:47:52That was like,
00:47:54all right,
00:47:54this is not cool.
00:47:59But my goal
00:48:01was just to survive
00:48:02and not die.
00:48:03I mean,
00:48:03we're in a super dangerous
00:48:04situation living in space.
00:48:06So I did my best
00:48:08to not let it affect
00:48:09my relationships.
00:48:11How are those
00:48:11relationships now?
00:48:13All of the relationships
00:48:14I had with Russians
00:48:16have ended.
00:48:16And that was really
00:48:18probably
00:48:19angering
00:48:20more than anything,
00:48:21but also disappointing.
00:48:22So since Shuttlemeer,
00:48:30America and Russia
00:48:31feels like they got on
00:48:32pretty well.
00:48:33But with the war in Ukraine,
00:48:35things really start to go wrong.
00:48:36I don't have a question
00:48:38to go wrong.
00:48:38I didn't start to go wrong.
00:48:44But it was more
00:48:45more than the Americans
00:48:47in Livia
00:48:48and the United States
00:48:49were killed.
00:48:50We've got breaking news
00:48:51out of Livia today,
00:48:52where the assault
00:48:53on Gaddafi
00:48:53intensifies.
00:48:54As American bombers
00:48:56are going to take part
00:48:57in the aerosol
00:48:58on Yugoslav military forces.
00:49:00Когда американцы
00:49:00Югославию бомбили,
00:49:02на меня это очень
00:49:03сильно повлияло.
00:49:04Я волнуюсь.
00:49:06Но от моего волнения
00:49:06американцы
00:49:07не ушли оттуда.
00:49:11Американцы
00:49:12приперли на Украину
00:49:13и начинают нам
00:49:13рассказывать,
00:49:14как надо Родину любить.
00:49:16Хотя,
00:49:17где Украина,
00:49:18а где Америка?
00:49:20Давайте сейчас
00:49:21эту же политику
00:49:21проведем там
00:49:22в отношении Кубы
00:49:23или еще чего-то.
00:49:25Как себя поведет
00:49:25Америка?
00:49:26Или на Кубе
00:49:27разместим
00:49:28ядерное оружие?
00:49:30Она будет что,
00:49:31в ладоши хлопать
00:49:32Америка?
00:49:33Я сомневаюсь.
00:49:35Сколько
00:49:35войн развязала
00:49:37Америка?
00:49:38Почему
00:49:38она на себя
00:49:40взяла роль
00:49:41мирового жандарма?
00:49:42Почему
00:49:42она может
00:49:43начинать войны,
00:49:45а другой
00:49:46государство
00:49:46не может?
00:49:47Америка?
00:49:48Америка?
00:49:49Америка?
00:49:50Америка?
00:49:51Америка?
00:49:52Америка?
00:49:52Америка?
00:49:5312 people
00:49:53were killed
00:49:54and some
00:49:54of them
00:49:54were children
00:49:55after Russia
00:49:56unleashed
00:49:57a barrage
00:49:57of more
00:49:57than 20
00:49:58cruise missiles
00:49:59that came
00:49:59and...
00:49:59Ukrainian forces
00:50:00have reported
00:50:01finding hundreds
00:50:02of bodies
00:50:03and mass graves
00:50:04are taking place
00:50:05to try to find
00:50:06survivors
00:50:07after a theater
00:50:08was bombed
00:50:08in the besieged
00:50:09city of
00:50:10Mariupol.
00:50:15My feelings
00:50:16about my
00:50:17NASA career
00:50:19which was all
00:50:20about the
00:50:20space station
00:50:21are kind of
00:50:22mixed.
00:50:25I'm very proud
00:50:26of what we did
00:50:27as a country
00:50:28in America
00:50:28and NASA.
00:50:29We built
00:50:30an amazing
00:50:30space station
00:50:32and an amazing
00:50:32partnership
00:50:33and I'm proud
00:50:33of that.
00:50:34and I'm
00:50:34disappointed
00:50:36is not nearly
00:50:39a strong enough
00:50:39word
00:50:40in the Russians.
00:50:43What do you see
00:50:44as the future
00:50:45of the ISS?
00:50:46The ISS
00:50:47won't last forever
00:50:48and there's
00:50:50other things
00:50:50we want to do.
00:50:51We do want to go
00:50:52back to the Moon
00:50:52and hopefully
00:50:53eventually to Mars.
00:50:54So it's supposed
00:50:56to be deorbited
00:50:56in 2030
00:50:57and then
00:51:00cooperation with Russia
00:51:01will end
00:51:03after the
00:51:03International Space
00:51:04Station.
00:51:06I hope
00:51:07the cooperation
00:51:08ends
00:51:08but I can't
00:51:10say that it
00:51:11will for sure.
00:51:19That's a crazy
00:51:20thing to say.
00:51:20I hope the cooperation
00:51:21ends
00:51:22for an International
00:51:24Space Station
00:51:25commander
00:51:25who launched
00:51:26on a Soyuz
00:51:27to say,
00:51:27I hope the cooperation
00:51:28ends.
00:51:31But here we are.
00:51:33I wish I'd
00:51:34that's like
00:51:35the worst thing
00:51:36I could say
00:51:37except for it's not.
00:51:39It's true.
00:51:41But what a terrible
00:51:42place that we've
00:51:43come to.
00:51:43The United States
00:52:06will once again
00:52:07consider itself
00:52:08a growing nation
00:52:09and we will
00:52:10pursue our
00:52:11manifest destiny
00:52:12into the stars
00:52:13launching American
00:52:14astronauts
00:52:15to plant the
00:52:17stars and stripes
00:52:18on the planet
00:52:19Mars.
00:52:19Good morning,
00:52:32Texas.
00:52:32It's going to be a
00:52:33beautiful day here
00:52:34in Boca Chica.
00:52:35Are you driving down
00:52:36the highway to Mars?
00:52:37Because later today,
00:52:38Elon Musk and his team
00:52:39at Starbase are due
00:52:40to launch
00:52:40Starship 7.
00:52:42This is your Space
00:52:43Coast update
00:52:44this morning.
00:52:45More after the break.
00:52:46Boca Chica,
00:52:48it's the Wild West.
00:52:50Like, you can get
00:52:51right up to the rocket.
00:52:55Right here,
00:52:55swing around
00:52:56and look at that.
00:52:57This is what it's all
00:52:57about.
00:52:58You can get to be
00:52:58this close
00:52:59to the rocket.
00:53:09I wouldn't be
00:53:10the first person
00:53:11to suggest
00:53:11that the rockets
00:53:13of the modern age
00:53:15are like the
00:53:15cathedrals
00:53:16of hundreds
00:53:17of years ago.
00:53:22Draw on a rocket.
00:53:24Isn't every day
00:53:25you get to do
00:53:25something like this?
00:53:28I mean,
00:53:28these are where
00:53:29a lot of people
00:53:30go to worship
00:53:32in the sense
00:53:32that this is where
00:53:33you're going
00:53:34to reflect on
00:53:35what is my place
00:53:37in all this?
00:53:38Why am I here?
00:53:39What does this all mean?
00:53:45It feels like the future.
00:53:50Like, it really does
00:53:51feel like
00:53:52the launch pad,
00:53:53the base,
00:53:54starbase,
00:53:55as they call it,
00:53:56for where humans
00:53:58are going to
00:53:59become multi-planetary.
00:54:01I would be more
00:54:04than happy to live
00:54:04on Mars.
00:54:05I would be happy
00:54:06to go work there
00:54:06and stay there.
00:54:07I don't even need
00:54:08to come back.
00:54:08I know it's difficult.
00:54:11This Earth
00:54:11is not going
00:54:12to last forever.
00:54:13The only chance
00:54:15we have
00:54:15is Mars.
00:54:16So,
00:54:17I can go
00:54:18on one-way ticket.
00:54:18I think
00:54:23the symbolism
00:54:24of landing
00:54:25humans on Mars
00:54:26would be
00:54:27one of those
00:54:28moments in history
00:54:29that would be
00:54:31seared into
00:54:32a nation's
00:54:32consciousness.
00:54:34Now,
00:54:35the big question
00:54:35is,
00:54:36who gets there
00:54:37first?
00:54:41Tonight,
00:54:42Chinese astronauts
00:54:43make in history
00:54:44on their longest
00:54:44mission yet,
00:54:45a six-month stay
00:54:47on board
00:54:47China's space station.
00:54:48All signs point
00:54:56to this
00:54:56new space race.
00:54:58Only
00:54:59instead of Russia,
00:55:01the United States'
00:55:01big contender
00:55:02is now China.
00:55:03today, I understand
00:55:11that the two countries,
00:55:13which are
00:55:13between us
00:55:13are
00:55:14China and
00:55:16America.
00:55:20How
00:55:21are you
00:55:21growing up?
00:55:22China and
00:55:23China,
00:55:23but
00:55:24for the
00:55:24kites
00:55:25tomorrow,
00:55:25the
00:55:25future.
00:55:26Here we go! Here we go! Go, baby!
00:55:56There it is! Stage separation! There it is! Yes! Come on! Come on, baby! Come on! Come on! We got it!
00:56:21Come on! Come back! Come back, baby! Come on, baby! Here it comes! Here it comes, guys!
00:56:29There we go! Holy shit! Oh, my God! Oh, my God! Come on, baby! Go!
00:56:39Oh, my God! Yes! Yes! Yes! We did it!
00:56:49There we go!
00:56:51There we go!
00:56:53There we go!
00:56:55There we go!
00:56:57There we go!
00:56:59There we go!
00:57:01There we go!
00:57:03There we go!
00:57:04There we go!
00:57:05There we go!
00:57:06There we go!
00:57:07There we go!
00:57:08There we go!
00:57:09There we go!
00:57:11We'll see it!
00:57:12There we go!
00:57:13We'll be thinking!
00:57:14With the external cosmos
00:57:15comes from отдельly in Russia
00:57:16It will become problematic!
00:57:17It's problematic.
00:57:18We need to do it together.
00:57:21It's bringing together, it's bringing together.
00:57:32Our world is too small and cruel,
00:57:35so we can continue this politics.
00:57:39Because there will be nothing good,
00:57:42if we kill ourselves.
00:57:47Well, I'm not aware of any other programs
00:58:01that we are currently planned to partner on.
00:58:05And so to me, you ask me that,
00:58:08it could be the end of our partnership.
00:58:11I sure hope not,
00:58:12because I can't even imagine
00:58:16everything that we've learned in all these years
00:58:20just going to waste.
00:58:23You know, if we can accomplish this together,
00:58:27along with the other countries that we collaborated with,
00:58:30just think about what we could do together on the moon
00:58:34or going to Mars.
00:58:37But I know that's not the world we live in.
00:58:43You turn on the news,
00:58:44and you know that there's these horrid things
00:58:47happening everywhere.
00:58:49And, you know, people used to make fun of me
00:58:54because, you know, in my utopia bubble today,
00:58:58here's what we did.
00:59:00And they just can't believe it.
00:59:03world leaders are not interested in things that benefit
00:59:27the human race.
00:59:30They're interested in things that benefit their nation.
00:59:36But for a little while, I lived in a world
00:59:39that didn't operate that way.
00:59:42And it was beautiful.
00:59:44And any of us that have lived that life
00:59:49really believe that there's more we can accomplish together.
01:00:00It's hard to explain,
01:00:03but it's real.
01:00:06I lived it.
01:00:08So we know what we're talking about.
01:00:13It happened.
01:00:17Yeah.
01:00:19And it would be a tragedy
01:00:22not to continue to build on it.
01:00:38The Open University has produced an interactive flipbook
01:00:45offering extraordinary insights
01:00:47into the human exploration of space.
01:00:50To discover more, scan the QR code
01:00:53or visit connect.open.ac.uk
01:00:57forward slash once upon a time in space.
01:01:08Então,
01:01:24the human race and the human race
01:01:27The Open diyors
01:01:28The Open Legion
01:01:30Amazing
01:01:31New South
01:01:32New South
01:01:33khi
01:01:34베drawals
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