"Mysteries at the Museum" Space Race: Mysteries at the Museum Special
ID | 13180519 |
---|---|
Movie Name | "Mysteries at the Museum" Space Race: Mysteries at the Museum Special |
Release Name | Mysteries.at.the.Museum.S20E22.Space.Race.Mysteries.at.the.Museum.1080p.MAX.WEB-DL.DDP2.0.H.264.GPRS |
Year | 2018 |
Kind | tv |
Language | English |
IMDB ID | 37493439 |
Format | srt |
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♪♪
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ARMSTRONG:
It's one small step for man...
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♪♪
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00:00:09,843 --> 00:00:12,579
...one giant leap for mankind.
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We all know those were
the first words
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uttered from the surface
of the Moon,
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and that they were spoken
by an American,
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00:00:20,854 --> 00:00:22,322
but just as plausibly,
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00:00:22,389 --> 00:00:24,858
they might've been spoken
by someone else...
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00:00:24,924 --> 00:00:27,293
and in Russian.
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00:00:27,360 --> 00:00:28,795
The dawn of the Space Age
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rose from the darkest depths
of of the Cold War.
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The U.S. and the Soviet Union
were locked eyeball to eyeball
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in a nuclear stare-down.
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Only the balance of bombs
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and the threat
of mutual annihilation
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00:00:42,108 --> 00:00:44,477
kept the paper-thin peace,
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00:00:44,544 --> 00:00:48,081
and then,
Russia shocked the world.
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GALLTENTINE:
They shot off a rocket
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that put a satellite
into space.
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00:00:52,018 --> 00:00:53,787
What is to stop them
from attaching
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00:00:53,853 --> 00:00:56,890
a nuclear warhead
to that?
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WILDMAN:
It touched off a furious race
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for dominance in space,
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00:01:01,094 --> 00:01:04,030
and America was losing.
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Our only chance was the greatest
scientific Hail Mary
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in American history.
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We choose to go to the Moon.
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WILDMAN: Now I'm uncovering
the treacherous true story...
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BAKER: 4 1/2-G right there.
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There you go.
-Impossible to do this.
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Impossible.
Oh, my God.
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WILDMAN:
And the real hidden history
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behind America's
most audacious achievement.
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MISSION CONTROL: 60 seconds.
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You don't want to run out
of gas and crash.
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Who were the fearless heroes
who risked their lives
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to climb on top of a rocket?
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MISSION CONTROL:
Godspeed, John Glenn.
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WILDMAN: How did they do it?
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How in just 10 short years
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did America leap
from the brink of nuclear war...
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3, 2, 1.
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Lift-off!
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♪♪
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...and land in the name of peace
for all mankind?
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[ Cheers and applause ]
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I'm Don Wildman.
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I've explored the world's
greatest mysteries,
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examined rare artifacts
and epic monuments.
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That is unbelievable.
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Now I'm digging deeper
into some of the most perplexing
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and famous cases in history.
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My goal --
to get closer to the truth...
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Let's burn this place down.
-Burn it down.
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...on this special episode
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of "Mysteries at the Museum:
The Space Race."
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♪♪
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It's launch day
at Cape Canaveral --
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the same historic spaceport
from which the United States
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took its first steps
to the stars,
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and NASA has offered me
a front-row seat
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to today's big event.
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Look. That is a Falcon 9 rocket,
sitting on a launch pad,
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out there between
those two concrete structures.
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It's unmanned,
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but human lives depend
on the success of this mission.
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The Falcon 9 rocket
is built and flown by SpaceX,
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a private American
aerospace company.
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And today,
it's carrying critical cargo.
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♪♪
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5, 4, 3, 2, 1.
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Lift-off!
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Wow! There it goes.
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♪♪
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Wow, that is so bright
I can't even look at it.
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♪♪
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Oh, my -- Look at that thing!
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There's the sound.
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[ Intense rumbling ]
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♪♪
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[ Groans ]
That deafening rumble.
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♪♪
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[ Loud crackling ]
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Yikes! That's loud.
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♪♪
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Next stop --
the International Space Station,
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where the SpaceX rocket will
deliver its precious payload,
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6,000 pounds
of food and supplies,
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to the six Space Station
astronauts --
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three from America,
one from Japan,
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and two cosmonauts from Russia.
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Space flight in the 21st century
is all about cooperation,
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but it didn't begin that way.
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60 years ago,
at the dawn of the Space Age,
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the world was strung taut
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between two
deadlocked superpowers,
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the United States
and the Soviet Union.
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Both countries
had massive nuclear arsenals,
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capable of destroying
whole cities.
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Nuclear strategists called it
"mutually assured destruction."
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But for most Americans,
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the Soviets and their fearsome
warheads seemed a world away.
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And then, on October 4th, 1957,
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Russia turned the world
upside down.
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REPORTER #1:
The Soviet Union is launching
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the first Earth satellite.
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REPORTER #2: All over the world,
people are tuning in
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to the bleep bleep
of the red Moon,
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600 miles above the Earth.
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WILDMAN: Sputnik.
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It unleashed a national panic.
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Hey, Jay. How you doings?
-Hi, Don. Welcome to NASA.
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Thank you very much.
So, you have...
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Jay Gallentine is
a historian and author
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on the formative years
of space exploration.
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So, tell me why Sputnik
caused so much concern.
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Because it was flying
directly over us.
Mm.
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And the Russians didn't ask
if they could do that.
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Our prime adversary is flying
right over our country.
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They shot off a rocket
that put a satellite into space.
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What is to stop them
from attaching
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a nuclear warhead to that?
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President Eisenhower
had a big problem.
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He needed to confront
this new Soviet threat
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without triggering
World War III.
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President Eisenhower
was getting swarmed
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by the different branches
of the military
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with proposals
for different options.
Yeah.
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And I think Ike saw
a real danger
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in making this
a military venture.
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But he had to do something.
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The United States
was not about to sit back
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and let Russia lock away the
cosmos behind the Iron Curtain.
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And so ultimately he decided,
wisely I think,
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to create
a civilian space agency,
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you know, whose charter
explicitly stated
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"peaceful space exploration
for the benefit of all mankind."
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♪♪
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That civilian agency was NASA,
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the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration,
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and its unwritten mission
was clear --
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make the United States
the leader in space.
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It would take something
much bolder than a satellite.
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So, it's 1959.
NASA's a brand-new organization.
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What's their plan?
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Their plan is something
called Project Mercury.
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So, they're going
to take one person,
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put them inside
a solo space capsule,
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send them off into space,
and get them back safely.
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00:07:01,554 --> 00:07:03,890
So how are they gonna do that?
Do they have spaceships?
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00:07:03,957 --> 00:07:06,993
Not exactly. They've got
ballistic missiles.
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So, they're gonna put a man
on top of a nuke?
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They're gonna take the nuke off
and put the man on in its place.
155
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They're gonna swap
payloads.
156
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This sounds like
a desperate plan.
157
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♪♪
158
00:07:21,107 --> 00:07:23,476
So, right here,
we have the two rockets
159
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from NASA's earliest days,
160
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and both of them started life
as ballistic missiles.
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And this is
a Mercury capsule?
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It's a mock-up, but yeah.
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This is what contained
the man
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and everything to keep him alive
for the whole trip.
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So, the only thing I'm
looking at, at that rocket
166
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that is designed
for space
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is the capsule, this on top.
-That's right.
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Everything else
just gets you there,
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and then it falls
into the ocean.
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Project Mercury
would be a two-step process.
171
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The ultimate goal was to place
a human into orbit.
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The space capsule
would fly around the Earth
173
00:07:54,407 --> 00:07:57,811
several times,
then splash down in the ocean.
174
00:07:57,877 --> 00:08:00,447
But first,
NASA would test the technology
175
00:08:00,513 --> 00:08:05,418
with a series of less-risky,
shorter suborbital flights.
176
00:08:05,485 --> 00:08:07,921
You go up far enough
to kiss space,
177
00:08:07,987 --> 00:08:09,255
then you splash down
in the ocean.
178
00:08:09,322 --> 00:08:11,991
This is the simplest form
of space flight.
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00:08:12,058 --> 00:08:15,128
Yes, but there was nothing
simple about it in 1959.
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Sure thing.
181
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♪♪
182
00:08:19,566 --> 00:08:22,102
By 1960,
Project Mercury was ready
183
00:08:22,168 --> 00:08:24,804
for its very first
unmanned flight test --
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00:08:24,871 --> 00:08:27,140
Mercury-Redstone 1.
185
00:08:27,207 --> 00:08:30,343
Most history books
make no mention of this mission,
186
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but it happened right here.
187
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An empty Mercury capsule
would be attached
188
00:08:35,548 --> 00:08:38,284
to a modified
Army Redstone rocket,
189
00:08:38,351 --> 00:08:41,721
then blasted 100 miles
into space.
190
00:08:41,788 --> 00:08:46,026
The suborbital flight
would last just 15 minutes.
191
00:08:46,092 --> 00:08:49,295
If it succeeded, the next
mission could carry a man.
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00:08:49,362 --> 00:08:51,831
♪♪
193
00:08:51,898 --> 00:08:53,166
Look at this place.
194
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This is the blockhouse
for launch pad #5.
195
00:08:57,103 --> 00:09:00,907
If it looks like a bunker,
that's because it is, basically.
196
00:09:00,974 --> 00:09:03,777
I mean, this place
was designed to not only
197
00:09:03,843 --> 00:09:06,479
control the rockets being fired
out there on the pad,
198
00:09:06,546 --> 00:09:09,449
but also to serve as protection
in the case of an explosion.
199
00:09:09,516 --> 00:09:12,619
♪♪
200
00:09:12,686 --> 00:09:16,222
Mercury-Redstone 1
was ready for launch.
201
00:09:16,289 --> 00:09:18,258
This was a high-tension moment.
202
00:09:18,324 --> 00:09:20,226
Very important lift-off
was about to happen.
203
00:09:20,293 --> 00:09:22,729
VIPs have been brought in,
the whole thing.
204
00:09:22,796 --> 00:09:26,266
And as far as they're concerned,
everything's systems go.
205
00:09:26,332 --> 00:09:29,703
So when the countdown happens,
the firing button is pushed
206
00:09:29,769 --> 00:09:32,205
and, sure enough,
ignition happens.
207
00:09:32,272 --> 00:09:35,075
A tremendous amount of smoke
comes out.
208
00:09:37,377 --> 00:09:38,745
But on this particular day,
209
00:09:38,812 --> 00:09:42,115
that rocket only went
four inches off the pad,
210
00:09:42,182 --> 00:09:45,819
and then settled back down
where it had taken off from.
211
00:09:45,885 --> 00:09:48,455
It's still standing right there
on the pad.
212
00:09:48,521 --> 00:09:50,957
Something had gone wrong.
213
00:09:51,024 --> 00:09:53,760
Mercury-Redstone 1
zipped through its entire
214
00:09:53,827 --> 00:09:58,298
15-minute flight program
in less than two seconds.
215
00:09:58,365 --> 00:10:00,133
It was a humiliating failure.
216
00:10:00,200 --> 00:10:06,006
♪♪
217
00:10:06,072 --> 00:10:08,241
NASA ordered more tests.
218
00:10:08,308 --> 00:10:11,177
It would be another five months
before Project Mercury
219
00:10:11,244 --> 00:10:14,647
was ready for
a living, breathing man.
220
00:10:14,714 --> 00:10:16,282
Astronaut Alan B. Shepard
221
00:10:16,349 --> 00:10:19,152
was tapped by NASA
to be that man.
222
00:10:19,219 --> 00:10:22,922
Shepard was a former
Naval aviator and test pilot.
223
00:10:22,989 --> 00:10:26,359
His suborbital mission
would last just 15 minutes,
224
00:10:26,426 --> 00:10:29,529
but was sure to land him
in the history books.
225
00:10:29,596 --> 00:10:33,867
Alan Shepard was destined
to be the first man in space,
226
00:10:33,933 --> 00:10:35,602
and then...
227
00:10:35,669 --> 00:10:37,737
the Russians did it again.
228
00:10:37,804 --> 00:10:41,808
On April 12th, 1961,
cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin
229
00:10:41,875 --> 00:10:44,944
road his Vostok
I rocket into space.
230
00:10:45,011 --> 00:10:47,681
♪♪
231
00:10:47,747 --> 00:10:49,683
And to add insult to injury,
232
00:10:49,749 --> 00:10:54,621
Gagarin's flight lasted
two hours and achieved orbit.
233
00:10:54,688 --> 00:10:57,257
America was
three weeks too late.
234
00:10:57,323 --> 00:11:00,293
The first man in space
was a communist.
235
00:11:00,360 --> 00:11:04,898
It seemed the Soviet Union
was months, if not years, ahead.
236
00:11:04,964 --> 00:11:06,499
How would NASA recover?
237
00:11:06,566 --> 00:11:09,069
Could we even catch
the Russians?
238
00:11:09,135 --> 00:11:12,339
The United States
was determined to try.
239
00:11:12,405 --> 00:11:13,907
It would be one
of the most difficult
240
00:11:13,973 --> 00:11:16,710
and ambitious endeavors
in American history.
241
00:11:16,776 --> 00:11:18,611
♪♪
242
00:11:21,381 --> 00:11:25,185
♪♪
243
00:11:25,251 --> 00:11:28,188
MISSION CONTROL: 3, 2, 1.
244
00:11:28,254 --> 00:11:29,789
Ignition.
245
00:11:32,092 --> 00:11:34,661
WILDMAN: May 5th, 1961,
246
00:11:34,728 --> 00:11:37,797
the United States
sent a man into space.
247
00:11:37,864 --> 00:11:39,466
REPORTER:
Astronaut Alan Shepard,
248
00:11:39,532 --> 00:11:43,003
the first American
to achieve space flight.
249
00:11:43,069 --> 00:11:45,205
WILDMAN:
But the Soviets got there first.
250
00:11:45,271 --> 00:11:49,409
♪♪
251
00:11:49,476 --> 00:11:53,146
America plunged into
a crisis of self-confidence.
252
00:11:53,213 --> 00:11:55,348
Was the mighty
arsenal of democracy
253
00:11:55,415 --> 00:12:00,053
that won World War II
simply no match for the Reds?
254
00:12:00,120 --> 00:12:03,590
There was only one person with
the power to lift America up
255
00:12:03,656 --> 00:12:07,027
and set us on
the starry path to victory.
256
00:12:07,093 --> 00:12:09,696
John F. Kennedy
had been sworn in as President
257
00:12:09,763 --> 00:12:11,631
just four months earlier,
258
00:12:11,698 --> 00:12:16,302
but he saw Russia's triumphs in
space through a Cold War lens.
259
00:12:16,369 --> 00:12:18,805
Left unchecked,
the Soviets might one day
260
00:12:18,872 --> 00:12:21,508
send a squadron
of nuclear-tipped Sputniks
261
00:12:21,574 --> 00:12:24,444
sailing over America.
262
00:12:24,511 --> 00:12:26,613
Kennedy needed
to respond boldly,
263
00:12:26,680 --> 00:12:29,382
but without touching off
an all-out war.
264
00:12:29,449 --> 00:12:32,352
I believe that this nation
should commit itself
265
00:12:32,419 --> 00:12:36,022
to achieving the goal
before this decade is out
266
00:12:36,089 --> 00:12:37,891
of landing a man on the Moon
267
00:12:37,957 --> 00:12:40,894
and returning him safely
to the Earth.
268
00:12:40,960 --> 00:12:43,530
WILDMAN:
It was a breathtaking challenge,
269
00:12:43,596 --> 00:12:46,299
but Kennedy hoped
that setting such a lofty bar
270
00:12:46,366 --> 00:12:49,069
would rally the public
and focus the United States
271
00:12:49,135 --> 00:12:53,239
on a clear, unmistakable,
all-or-nothing goal --
272
00:12:53,306 --> 00:12:55,709
plant an American flag
on the Moon
273
00:12:55,775 --> 00:12:59,212
by the end of the decade.
274
00:12:59,279 --> 00:13:01,648
It would be
a multi-step journey.
275
00:13:01,715 --> 00:13:04,150
To succeed,
Project Mercury must master
276
00:13:04,217 --> 00:13:08,521
the basics of space flight
by putting a man into orbit,
277
00:13:08,588 --> 00:13:12,192
then Project Gemini would tackle
more advanced techniques
278
00:13:12,258 --> 00:13:13,760
necessary to go to the Moon,
279
00:13:13,827 --> 00:13:17,564
such as how to work
outside the spacecraft,
280
00:13:17,630 --> 00:13:21,101
and how to rendezvous
and dock two ships together.
281
00:13:21,167 --> 00:13:23,036
If the Gemini missions
went well,
282
00:13:23,103 --> 00:13:26,339
NASA would graduate to Apollo.
283
00:13:26,406 --> 00:13:30,276
The Apollo Program would
send astronauts deep into space
284
00:13:30,343 --> 00:13:33,847
with the ultimate goal
of landing on the Moon.
285
00:13:33,913 --> 00:13:35,915
If all these steps
went perfectly,
286
00:13:35,982 --> 00:13:37,450
America might just meet
287
00:13:37,517 --> 00:13:42,355
President Kennedy's challenge
by 1970.
288
00:13:42,422 --> 00:13:45,925
Congress wrote NASA
a blank check.
289
00:13:45,992 --> 00:13:48,161
The Space Race
had officially begun,
290
00:13:48,228 --> 00:13:49,863
and the American people
were all-in.
291
00:13:49,929 --> 00:13:53,166
Suddenly rocket ships
were everywhere in pop culture.
292
00:13:53,233 --> 00:13:55,402
But nothing captured
the nation's heart
293
00:13:55,468 --> 00:13:59,539
so much as the astronauts
themselves.
294
00:13:59,606 --> 00:14:01,608
They were called the Mercury 7,
295
00:14:01,675 --> 00:14:04,544
America's first astronauts.
296
00:14:04,611 --> 00:14:06,546
They were all military
test pilots,
297
00:14:06,613 --> 00:14:10,116
and they were
the best of the best.
298
00:14:10,183 --> 00:14:12,952
Mr. Barbree. How are you doing?
-Hey. How are you, Don?
299
00:14:13,019 --> 00:14:14,454
-Nice to meet you.
-Come on in. Sit down.
300
00:14:14,521 --> 00:14:16,489
Join us here, buddy.
It's an honor here.
301
00:14:16,556 --> 00:14:20,427
Journalist Jay Barbree covered
every manned launch for NBC,
302
00:14:20,493 --> 00:14:23,930
in a career spanning
a half century.
303
00:14:23,997 --> 00:14:27,434
So, this is 1961.
Mercury 7 astronauts.
Right.
304
00:14:27,500 --> 00:14:29,436
You knew these guys.
Oh, yeah.
305
00:14:29,502 --> 00:14:31,137
Four of them
still owe me money, Don.
306
00:14:31,204 --> 00:14:33,406
[ Laughs ]
But anyway, yeah,
I knew them very well.
307
00:14:33,473 --> 00:14:37,043
So, this was a Holiday Inn then,
and they lived here, right?
308
00:14:37,110 --> 00:14:38,478
That's right.
This was it.
309
00:14:38,545 --> 00:14:39,879
And you could
come in here,
310
00:14:39,946 --> 00:14:43,149
"Oh, that's Alan Shepard,"
or "That's John Glenn."
311
00:14:43,216 --> 00:14:45,819
Hotshots. These guys
were rock stars, right?
312
00:14:45,885 --> 00:14:47,153
Well, they
turned out to be.
313
00:14:47,220 --> 00:14:49,723
They weren't rock stars
when they were selected.
314
00:14:49,789 --> 00:14:52,392
♪♪
315
00:14:52,459 --> 00:14:53,660
NASA made the astronauts
316
00:14:53,727 --> 00:14:56,296
the public face
of the space program --
317
00:14:56,363 --> 00:14:59,666
seven squeaky-clean,
all-American heroes,
318
00:14:59,733 --> 00:15:01,968
but Jay remembers
what the Mercury astronauts
319
00:15:02,035 --> 00:15:04,471
were really like.
320
00:15:04,537 --> 00:15:08,008
Look at that.
That is a beauty.
Yeah.
321
00:15:08,074 --> 00:15:09,209
Corvette.
Yeah.
322
00:15:09,275 --> 00:15:11,544
You know,
the astronauts loved these.
323
00:15:11,611 --> 00:15:13,146
And this is a '62,
324
00:15:13,213 --> 00:15:16,883
just like what
the astronauts had.
325
00:15:16,950 --> 00:15:19,285
Being an astronaut
had its perks.
326
00:15:19,352 --> 00:15:21,921
A local Chevrolet dealer
offered new Corvettes
327
00:15:21,988 --> 00:15:24,090
to the Mercury 7 every year,
328
00:15:24,157 --> 00:15:26,526
for the low price of $1.
329
00:15:26,593 --> 00:15:30,463
He says "I'm gonna give you guys
a Corvette each year,
330
00:15:30,530 --> 00:15:32,665
but you got to turn it
back in to me,
331
00:15:32,732 --> 00:15:35,468
and then I'll sell
your Corvettes."
And the next person
who bought it
332
00:15:35,535 --> 00:15:38,104
would get
an astronaut's Corvette.
That's right.
333
00:15:38,171 --> 00:15:40,640
And they paid twice as much
for a brand-new one, yeah.
334
00:15:40,707 --> 00:15:42,442
The ultimate used car.
Yeah.
335
00:15:42,509 --> 00:15:44,210
This is the perfect
astronaut car --
336
00:15:44,277 --> 00:15:46,379
hotshot...
Oh, man.
337
00:15:46,446 --> 00:15:47,714
...lots of engine,
lots of power.
338
00:15:47,781 --> 00:15:51,217
You wouldn't know --
They raced them out on the Cape.
339
00:15:51,284 --> 00:15:53,787
You wouldn't know what they did
around town, I'll tell you.
340
00:15:53,853 --> 00:15:55,889
Sure left a lot of people
in their tracks.
341
00:15:55,955 --> 00:15:59,192
So, all the Mercury 7
astronauts got these cars?
342
00:15:59,259 --> 00:16:00,994
Well, six of them did.
343
00:16:01,061 --> 00:16:03,229
John Glenn,
being the family man,
344
00:16:03,296 --> 00:16:05,632
he got some kind of
a station wagon or something,
345
00:16:05,699 --> 00:16:07,267
and everybody
always talked about it --
346
00:16:07,334 --> 00:16:08,468
he was a big family man.
347
00:16:08,535 --> 00:16:10,437
So, he was the sensible one
of the seven.
348
00:16:10,503 --> 00:16:12,706
-Supposedly.
-[ Laughs ]
349
00:16:12,772 --> 00:16:14,708
♪♪
350
00:16:14,774 --> 00:16:16,743
[ Engine turns on, revs ]
351
00:16:16,810 --> 00:16:19,646
♪♪
352
00:16:19,713 --> 00:16:21,481
GLENN: This is the way I look
at this whole program...
353
00:16:21,548 --> 00:16:23,283
I think there is
a power greater than I am
354
00:16:23,350 --> 00:16:26,152
that will certainly see
that I am taken care of
355
00:16:26,219 --> 00:16:28,455
if I do my part of the bargain.
356
00:16:28,521 --> 00:16:32,359
WILDMAN: John Glenn seemed
born to be a national hero.
357
00:16:32,425 --> 00:16:34,094
He grew up in rural Ohio
358
00:16:34,160 --> 00:16:37,430
and enlisted in the Marines
after Pearl Harbor.
359
00:16:37,497 --> 00:16:42,602
He flew 149 combat missions
in World War II and Korea,
360
00:16:42,669 --> 00:16:44,471
and now he would test his mettle
361
00:16:44,537 --> 00:16:46,673
on his most
dangerous mission yet,
362
00:16:46,740 --> 00:16:50,377
the crucial next step
on the road to the Moon.
363
00:16:50,443 --> 00:16:55,048
John Glenn was going to attempt
to orbit the Earth.
364
00:16:55,115 --> 00:16:59,085
WILDMAN: So, he went up
a year after Yuri Gagarin.
365
00:16:59,152 --> 00:17:00,987
Were people even excited
about Glenn?
366
00:17:01,054 --> 00:17:03,857
Oh, my lord. Everybody wanted
to go to the Moon.
367
00:17:03,923 --> 00:17:06,292
The nation loved
President Kennedy.
Right.
368
00:17:06,359 --> 00:17:07,861
We knew
it was a space race
369
00:17:07,927 --> 00:17:10,697
and we had to pass them
to get up there first.
370
00:17:10,764 --> 00:17:12,999
That was the whole thing,
the first to the Moon.
371
00:17:13,066 --> 00:17:15,201
The stakes were high
with Glenn.
Oh, yeah.
372
00:17:15,268 --> 00:17:18,905
♪♪
373
00:17:18,972 --> 00:17:22,275
On the morning
of February 20th, 1962,
374
00:17:22,342 --> 00:17:25,645
John Glenn strapped into
his Mercury space capsule,
375
00:17:25,712 --> 00:17:27,347
and America held its breath.
376
00:17:27,414 --> 00:17:33,086
♪♪
377
00:17:33,153 --> 00:17:35,355
WILDMAN: This is beautiful.
So, what is this place here?
378
00:17:35,422 --> 00:17:37,323
BARBREE: This is called
Jetty Park.
379
00:17:37,390 --> 00:17:39,192
Back in the days
when the astronauts
380
00:17:39,259 --> 00:17:40,960
were first launching
from here, Don,
381
00:17:41,027 --> 00:17:43,163
this is where
all the millions of people
382
00:17:43,229 --> 00:17:45,031
that come for the launches,
383
00:17:45,098 --> 00:17:46,966
this is the point
of where they gather.
384
00:17:47,033 --> 00:17:49,035
This is an incredible
moment in history.
385
00:17:49,102 --> 00:17:51,137
I mean, over there,
barely seen,
386
00:17:51,204 --> 00:17:53,907
on top of a rocket
is John Glenn.
387
00:17:53,973 --> 00:17:56,576
I mean, there's millions
of people watching that man,
388
00:17:56,643 --> 00:17:58,078
that rocket over there
389
00:17:58,144 --> 00:18:00,080
and waiting
for that moment of lift-off.
390
00:18:00,146 --> 00:18:01,915
MISSION CONTROL:
Godspeed, John Glenn.
391
00:18:01,981 --> 00:18:07,987
♪♪
392
00:18:08,054 --> 00:18:11,825
Roger. Loud and clear.
Flight path is good, 6-9.
393
00:18:11,891 --> 00:18:14,694
[ Cheers and applause ]
394
00:18:14,761 --> 00:18:17,630
♪♪
395
00:18:17,697 --> 00:18:19,299
REPORTER:
Then round and round the Earth,
396
00:18:19,366 --> 00:18:22,068
the whole world listened
and waited as he orbited again,
397
00:18:22,135 --> 00:18:26,072
finishing the second round
an hour and a half later.
398
00:18:26,139 --> 00:18:27,607
GLENN: Hello, Mercury recovery.
399
00:18:27,674 --> 00:18:29,542
This Friendship 7.
Do you read me?
400
00:18:29,609 --> 00:18:31,478
The chute looks
very good, over.
401
00:18:31,544 --> 00:18:34,280
♪♪
402
00:18:34,347 --> 00:18:36,449
WILDMAN: John Glenn
returned safely to Earth
403
00:18:36,516 --> 00:18:40,520
and became and instant hero.
404
00:18:40,587 --> 00:18:42,122
President Kennedy awarded him
405
00:18:42,188 --> 00:18:46,826
with the
Distinguished Service Medal.
406
00:18:46,893 --> 00:18:48,094
Glenn's orbital flight
was a roaring success,
407
00:18:48,161 --> 00:18:51,765
but it was just one part
of a greater mission.
408
00:18:51,831 --> 00:18:56,336
We were about to do something
that had never been done before,
409
00:18:56,403 --> 00:18:58,204
and that was to go
to the Moon,
410
00:18:58,271 --> 00:19:01,441
and John took us
a long way.
411
00:19:01,508 --> 00:19:04,911
John Glenn got the country
back on its feet.
412
00:19:04,978 --> 00:19:07,747
The Russians were still
way ahead in the Space Race,
413
00:19:07,814 --> 00:19:10,116
but the American
can-do spirit was back.
414
00:19:10,183 --> 00:19:13,286
♪♪
415
00:19:13,353 --> 00:19:14,854
And then...
416
00:19:14,921 --> 00:19:16,856
REPORTER: The President's car
is now turning onto Elm Street,
417
00:19:16,923 --> 00:19:18,358
and it will be only
a matter of minutes
418
00:19:18,425 --> 00:19:20,560
before he arrives
at the Trade Mart.
419
00:19:20,627 --> 00:19:21,961
[ Gunshots ]
420
00:19:22,028 --> 00:19:25,065
Something is wrong here!
Something is terribly wrong!
421
00:19:25,131 --> 00:19:28,234
WILDMAN: The nation suffered
an unthinkable blow.
422
00:19:28,301 --> 00:19:30,370
REPORTER: A dark page
in the annals of America
423
00:19:30,437 --> 00:19:33,907
has been written to the crack
of an assassin's bullet.
424
00:19:33,973 --> 00:19:37,944
WILDMAN:
John F. Kennedy was dead.
425
00:19:38,011 --> 00:19:40,180
The country had lost
its President,
426
00:19:40,246 --> 00:19:44,317
and the space program
had lost its champion.
427
00:19:44,384 --> 00:19:47,754
NASA was at a crossroads.
428
00:19:47,821 --> 00:19:49,989
America could either step aside
429
00:19:50,056 --> 00:19:52,258
and let the Soviets
dominate space,
430
00:19:52,325 --> 00:19:55,628
or stand up and show the world
we were ready to lead.
431
00:19:55,695 --> 00:19:58,031
President Kennedy
had offered the Moon up
432
00:19:58,098 --> 00:19:59,966
as a soul-stirring goal,
433
00:20:00,033 --> 00:20:03,069
but there were only seven years
left in the decade.
434
00:20:03,136 --> 00:20:07,340
NASA still had a long way to go
to get to the Moon.
435
00:20:09,809 --> 00:20:13,747
♪♪
436
00:20:13,813 --> 00:20:18,485
WILDMAN: 1965 - The Cold War
had erupted into open conflict
437
00:20:18,551 --> 00:20:22,589
on the far side
of the world in Vietnam,
438
00:20:22,655 --> 00:20:25,025
but back home,
the Space Race to the Moon
439
00:20:25,091 --> 00:20:27,394
remained a beacon of hope.
440
00:20:27,460 --> 00:20:30,430
NASA opened a new mission
control center in Houston
441
00:20:30,497 --> 00:20:32,565
for the next phase of the plan,
442
00:20:32,632 --> 00:20:34,534
Project Gemini.
443
00:20:34,601 --> 00:20:37,370
Project Mercury had put
an American into orbit,
444
00:20:37,437 --> 00:20:40,440
but there was a laundry list
of skills still to be learned
445
00:20:40,507 --> 00:20:43,209
if we'd have any hope
of making it to the Moon,
446
00:20:43,276 --> 00:20:45,612
things like working in space
447
00:20:45,679 --> 00:20:48,014
outside the safety
of the capsule,
448
00:20:48,081 --> 00:20:52,018
or how to rendezvous
and dock two ships together.
449
00:20:52,085 --> 00:20:54,020
Project Gemini
was a series of missions
450
00:20:54,087 --> 00:20:56,222
designed to sort out
these new skills,
451
00:20:56,289 --> 00:20:59,025
basically training wheels
for the Moon.
452
00:20:59,092 --> 00:21:04,097
♪♪
453
00:21:04,164 --> 00:21:07,467
The new Gemini spacecraft
would carry two astronauts
454
00:21:07,534 --> 00:21:11,404
and an onboard computer.
455
00:21:11,471 --> 00:21:15,442
That is an actual Gemini capsule
that flew in space.
456
00:21:15,508 --> 00:21:17,844
On June 3rd, 1965,
457
00:21:17,911 --> 00:21:20,347
astronaut Ed White
opened his hatch
458
00:21:20,413 --> 00:21:24,684
and stepped into the void,
the first American space walk.
459
00:21:24,751 --> 00:21:26,686
But a Russian cosmonaut
had completed
460
00:21:26,753 --> 00:21:30,457
the world's first space walk
three months earlier.
461
00:21:30,523 --> 00:21:34,327
The Soviets had beaten us again.
462
00:21:34,394 --> 00:21:36,463
NASA soldiered on.
463
00:21:36,529 --> 00:21:40,100
Gemini 8 would attempt
the next step in the plan --
464
00:21:40,166 --> 00:21:42,435
rendezvous two spacecraft
in orbit
465
00:21:42,502 --> 00:21:44,037
and connect them together --
466
00:21:44,104 --> 00:21:46,773
the first docking in space.
467
00:21:46,840 --> 00:21:49,909
But this mission has
a hair-raising, hidden story.
468
00:21:49,976 --> 00:21:52,579
♪♪
469
00:21:52,645 --> 00:21:54,981
The Gemini 8 astronauts
were rookies,
470
00:21:55,048 --> 00:21:58,485
Dave Scott and Neil Armstrong.
471
00:21:58,551 --> 00:22:01,688
They lifted off
on March 16th, 1966.
472
00:22:01,755 --> 00:22:05,125
♪♪
473
00:22:05,191 --> 00:22:07,560
In order,
Armstrong and Scott caught up
474
00:22:07,627 --> 00:22:11,064
with an unmanned target craft
launched the day before,
475
00:22:11,131 --> 00:22:13,066
and carefully inched closer.
476
00:22:13,133 --> 00:22:15,402
♪♪
477
00:22:15,468 --> 00:22:16,803
REPORTER: That was it.
478
00:22:16,870 --> 00:22:20,106
Two vehicles docked
for the first time in space.
479
00:22:20,173 --> 00:22:21,975
It was a major achievement.
480
00:22:22,042 --> 00:22:26,112
NASA had finally done
something before the Soviets.
481
00:22:26,179 --> 00:22:28,314
The official story ends there,
482
00:22:28,381 --> 00:22:30,784
but in reality,
something had gone wrong
483
00:22:30,850 --> 00:22:33,053
that put the astronauts
in mortal danger.
484
00:22:33,119 --> 00:22:40,126
♪♪
485
00:22:40,827 --> 00:22:45,031
Don, why don't you come in
and have a seat?
486
00:22:45,098 --> 00:22:47,500
Up in space,
Neil Armstrong and Dave Scott
487
00:22:47,567 --> 00:22:50,203
faced a life-threatening
emergency,
488
00:22:50,270 --> 00:22:53,506
and I'm about to get a taste
of what they went through.
489
00:22:53,573 --> 00:22:55,909
So, how dangerous is this?
490
00:22:55,975 --> 00:22:58,445
There's definitely dangers.
There's risks involved.
491
00:22:58,511 --> 00:23:01,047
You could lose
consciousness in there.
492
00:23:01,114 --> 00:23:04,284
That sounds --
Yeah, that sounds risky.
493
00:23:04,351 --> 00:23:05,852
[ Chuckles ]
Definitely risky.
494
00:23:05,919 --> 00:23:09,622
It takes skill to be able
to tolerate this kind of force.
495
00:23:09,689 --> 00:23:12,525
Specifically, centrifugal force.
496
00:23:12,592 --> 00:23:14,994
After they docked,
Armstrong and Scott noticed
497
00:23:15,061 --> 00:23:19,499
they were rolling, tumbling end
over end and picking up speed.
498
00:23:19,566 --> 00:23:21,768
A thruster was malfunctioning.
499
00:23:21,835 --> 00:23:25,605
Armstrong undocked,
but the roll only got faster.
500
00:23:25,672 --> 00:23:30,910
Soon, they were experiencing
a full revolution every second.
501
00:23:30,977 --> 00:23:33,046
The spinning capsule
was forcing the blood
502
00:23:33,113 --> 00:23:34,514
away from their brains,
503
00:23:34,581 --> 00:23:36,750
impairing vision
and motor skills.
504
00:23:36,816 --> 00:23:39,786
The astronauts needed
to pull out of the roll manually
505
00:23:39,853 --> 00:23:41,921
using the precise control stick
506
00:23:41,988 --> 00:23:44,391
and before they blacked out.
507
00:23:44,457 --> 00:23:45,792
Nobody could help them.
508
00:23:45,859 --> 00:23:48,328
They were fighting
for their lives.
509
00:23:48,395 --> 00:23:50,163
The stakes are lower for me,
510
00:23:50,230 --> 00:23:52,265
and I'll be staying
firmly on the ground,
511
00:23:52,332 --> 00:23:55,335
but my hosts have promised
a wild ride.
512
00:23:55,402 --> 00:23:58,104
I'm getting g-force training
in the same machine
513
00:23:58,171 --> 00:24:00,040
as the astronauts.
514
00:24:00,106 --> 00:24:01,274
Holy moly.
Look at that.
515
00:24:01,341 --> 00:24:02,409
Hey, Don.
That's cool.
516
00:24:02,475 --> 00:24:04,077
Welcome.
This is incredible.
517
00:24:04,144 --> 00:24:06,012
This is the beast.
Wow.
518
00:24:06,079 --> 00:24:07,714
This thing is gonna go
around and around.
519
00:24:07,781 --> 00:24:10,483
So, this is a human-rated
centrifuge.
520
00:24:10,550 --> 00:24:12,018
This one's gonna
go counterclockwise.
521
00:24:12,085 --> 00:24:13,286
You're gonna be
in our gondola.
522
00:24:13,353 --> 00:24:14,487
You're gonna kick up,
and when you do that,
523
00:24:14,554 --> 00:24:16,256
you're getting
angular acceleration,
524
00:24:16,322 --> 00:24:18,024
which is G --
more G.
Okay.
525
00:24:18,091 --> 00:24:21,327
So, 1-G is Earth gravity?
That's exactly right.
526
00:24:21,394 --> 00:24:24,030
So, if it's twice that,
that's 2-G.
527
00:24:24,097 --> 00:24:26,266
If it's three times that,
it's 3-G.
528
00:24:26,332 --> 00:24:28,435
A passenger on
an airplane experiences
529
00:24:28,501 --> 00:24:31,338
roughly 1 1/2-G at takeoff.
530
00:24:31,404 --> 00:24:34,074
So, Dave Scott
and Neil Armstrong,
531
00:24:34,140 --> 00:24:36,042
they're in
an emergency roll.
532
00:24:36,109 --> 00:24:38,044
What kind of g-forces
were they experiencing?
533
00:24:38,111 --> 00:24:40,280
So, the thing that's tricky
about their situation is
534
00:24:40,347 --> 00:24:41,581
they're getting
multiple g-forces
535
00:24:41,648 --> 00:24:43,783
in different directions.
So, very difficult.
536
00:24:43,850 --> 00:24:45,785
So I'm gonna get
some idea of...
Absolutely.
537
00:24:45,852 --> 00:24:47,854
...this much idea of what those
guys were going through.
538
00:24:47,921 --> 00:24:49,189
Absolutely.
539
00:24:49,255 --> 00:24:53,226
♪♪
540
00:24:53,293 --> 00:24:55,428
Today, I'll be going to 5-G,
541
00:24:55,495 --> 00:24:59,466
more than astronauts
experience at launch.
542
00:24:59,532 --> 00:25:03,603
The centrifuge has been set up
like a Gemini capsule.
543
00:25:03,670 --> 00:25:05,905
I have a control stick
right here by my right hand,
544
00:25:05,972 --> 00:25:08,174
just like Neil Armstrong did.
545
00:25:08,241 --> 00:25:12,012
He used it to wrestle
his out-of-control capsule.
546
00:25:12,078 --> 00:25:15,048
I'll just have to follow
a moving target on a screen.
547
00:25:15,115 --> 00:25:18,218
But the idea is to see
how I can manage precise work
548
00:25:18,284 --> 00:25:20,353
under intense g-force.
549
00:25:20,420 --> 00:25:21,988
Okay, I'm ready.
BAKER: Enjoy.
550
00:25:22,055 --> 00:25:23,523
Okay, go down.
551
00:25:23,590 --> 00:25:29,629
♪♪
552
00:25:29,696 --> 00:25:35,735
♪♪
553
00:25:35,802 --> 00:25:38,138
I'm gonna go to check my crew,
and then we'll get you spinning.
554
00:25:38,204 --> 00:25:39,572
Data stage? He's ready.
555
00:25:39,639 --> 00:25:40,674
Operator?
-We're ready.
556
00:25:40,740 --> 00:25:42,375
He's ready. Medical?
-Ready.
557
00:25:42,442 --> 00:25:44,077
He's ready.
Fire engines.
558
00:25:44,144 --> 00:25:46,513
[ Whirring ]
559
00:25:47,480 --> 00:25:48,581
Okay, you ready
to do this?
560
00:25:48,648 --> 00:25:52,118
Ready.
561
00:25:52,185 --> 00:25:54,421
Okay, 3, 2, 1.
562
00:25:54,487 --> 00:25:56,289
Engage.
Here we go.
563
00:25:56,356 --> 00:25:58,692
Nice and slow.
Just settle in.
564
00:25:58,758 --> 00:26:01,061
It's gonna feel like you're
going up and to the left.
565
00:26:01,127 --> 00:26:03,129
Doesn't it?
Yeah, it does.
566
00:26:03,196 --> 00:26:04,264
So, eventually
it's gonna feel like
567
00:26:04,330 --> 00:26:05,799
you're going straight up
in a rocket.
568
00:26:05,865 --> 00:26:08,401
I'm there now.
569
00:26:08,468 --> 00:26:09,936
Oh, boy.
570
00:26:10,003 --> 00:26:11,071
Oh, boy.
571
00:26:11,137 --> 00:26:14,207
You're at 3 1/2-G
right there.
Okay.
572
00:26:14,274 --> 00:26:15,742
G seems to be getting
pretty tight.
573
00:26:15,809 --> 00:26:17,744
There's 4-G.
574
00:26:17,811 --> 00:26:19,012
I'm okay.
575
00:26:19,079 --> 00:26:21,981
All right.
Looking good.
576
00:26:22,048 --> 00:26:23,783
Okay, you ready
to start the task?
577
00:26:23,850 --> 00:26:25,251
Yeah.
Here we go.
578
00:26:25,318 --> 00:26:27,687
♪♪
579
00:26:27,754 --> 00:26:29,989
I want you track that aircraft
for me, okay?
580
00:26:30,056 --> 00:26:31,925
There you go.
-Ooh, impossible to do this.
581
00:26:31,991 --> 00:26:33,893
Impossible.
Track him.
582
00:26:33,960 --> 00:26:35,895
Can't track him.
Can't do anything.
583
00:26:35,962 --> 00:26:37,564
Keep that stick on.
There you go.
584
00:26:37,630 --> 00:26:40,433
Look at that.
Impossible to try to --
585
00:26:40,500 --> 00:26:42,402
My -- My capsule
is spinning.
586
00:26:42,469 --> 00:26:45,405
I got to go get us
out of this roll.
587
00:26:45,472 --> 00:26:47,107
That's impossible.
588
00:26:47,173 --> 00:26:48,441
[ Out of breath ]
Oh, my God.
589
00:26:48,508 --> 00:26:51,911
I'm just astonished by
the ability for these guys
590
00:26:51,978 --> 00:26:53,680
to have any kind
of clarity
591
00:26:53,747 --> 00:26:55,081
of what they were doing
at that moment.
592
00:26:55,148 --> 00:26:56,349
I mean, I know they had
months of training,
593
00:26:56,416 --> 00:26:59,686
but this is insane.
594
00:26:59,753 --> 00:27:01,988
4 1/2-G right there.
595
00:27:02,055 --> 00:27:04,591
Okay.
And we're coming
into 5-G...
596
00:27:04,657 --> 00:27:05,658
right...there.
597
00:27:05,725 --> 00:27:07,594
Now we're gonna
slow it down.
598
00:27:07,660 --> 00:27:10,096
♪♪
599
00:27:10,163 --> 00:27:13,466
And believe it or not,
essentially you just stopped.
600
00:27:13,533 --> 00:27:15,635
Oh, boy.
601
00:27:15,702 --> 00:27:20,306
WILDMAN:
I was totally unable to track
my target with any precision,
602
00:27:20,373 --> 00:27:23,910
but up in space, under far more
extreme circumstances,
603
00:27:23,977 --> 00:27:25,779
Armstrong pulled out of the roll
604
00:27:25,845 --> 00:27:29,115
and initiated
an emergency reentry.
605
00:27:29,182 --> 00:27:31,184
The ship splashed down safely,
606
00:27:31,251 --> 00:27:34,554
and the mission
was considered a success.
607
00:27:34,621 --> 00:27:36,089
WILDMAN: [ Groans ]
How you doing, Don?
Doing all right?
608
00:27:36,156 --> 00:27:37,057
I'm all right.
Good job.
609
00:27:37,123 --> 00:27:38,692
Thank you.
Way to go, buddy.
610
00:27:38,758 --> 00:27:39,893
Wow!
611
00:27:39,959 --> 00:27:42,028
Uh, yeah, indescribable.
612
00:27:42,095 --> 00:27:44,497
I mean, talk about
working under pressure.
613
00:27:44,564 --> 00:27:46,166
Literal pressure.
Yeah.
614
00:27:46,232 --> 00:27:49,502
Saving the day and...
615
00:27:49,569 --> 00:27:51,971
I mean,
these were true heroes.
Absolutely.
616
00:27:52,038 --> 00:27:55,275
♪♪
617
00:27:55,342 --> 00:27:59,579
Gemini 8 accomplished the
world's first space docking,
618
00:27:59,646 --> 00:28:02,515
and nearly killed
two astronauts.
619
00:28:02,582 --> 00:28:04,918
It was gut check time at NASA.
620
00:28:04,984 --> 00:28:08,621
America was now neck and neck
with the Soviet Union,
621
00:28:08,688 --> 00:28:11,324
but at what cost?
622
00:28:11,391 --> 00:28:14,227
The U.S. space program
was screaming along
623
00:28:14,294 --> 00:28:18,631
at breakneck speed in order
to make it to the Moon by 1970.
624
00:28:18,698 --> 00:28:22,202
So, was Gemini 8
just a close call?
625
00:28:22,268 --> 00:28:26,172
Or was NASA on the verge
of spinning out of control?
626
00:28:29,142 --> 00:28:33,513
♪♪
627
00:28:33,580 --> 00:28:35,582
WILDMAN: 1967...
628
00:28:37,350 --> 00:28:39,386
...with just three years left
in the decade
629
00:28:39,452 --> 00:28:41,721
to meet
President Kennedy's challenge,
630
00:28:41,788 --> 00:28:44,157
America bounded
into the final phase
631
00:28:44,224 --> 00:28:45,959
of the Space Race,
632
00:28:46,026 --> 00:28:48,261
the Apollo Program.
633
00:28:48,328 --> 00:28:50,830
NASA needed all-new rockets
to reach the Moon
634
00:28:50,897 --> 00:28:53,099
and on a colossal scale.
635
00:28:53,166 --> 00:28:56,069
WILDMAN: Wow,
that is incredible.
636
00:28:56,136 --> 00:28:59,172
And I've gotten rare access
to their birthplace,
637
00:28:59,239 --> 00:29:01,574
the Vehicle Assembly Building.
638
00:29:01,641 --> 00:29:03,777
Man, that is
a big building.
639
00:29:03,843 --> 00:29:07,981
My tour guide is a NASA VIP,
Bob Sieck.
640
00:29:08,048 --> 00:29:10,550
Bob started working here
during Project Gemini,
641
00:29:10,617 --> 00:29:14,888
and went on to become the man
in charge of every launch.
642
00:29:14,954 --> 00:29:17,624
It is awe-inspiring.
I mean, this is a --
643
00:29:17,691 --> 00:29:20,293
This is really a cathedral
of technology, isn't it?
644
00:29:20,360 --> 00:29:24,364
Well, it was built to put
together the Saturn V rocket.
645
00:29:24,431 --> 00:29:27,701
The Saturn V was the rocket that
would carry men to the Moon,
646
00:29:27,767 --> 00:29:29,402
and it was put together
right here
647
00:29:29,469 --> 00:29:33,273
in the
Vehicle Assembly Building.
648
00:29:33,340 --> 00:29:35,775
All right.
Right out here?
649
00:29:35,842 --> 00:29:37,010
Yeah, yeah.
650
00:29:37,077 --> 00:29:39,346
Oh, man.
That is amazing.
651
00:29:39,412 --> 00:29:41,114
We are at the top here.
652
00:29:41,181 --> 00:29:47,687
We're about 350 to 400 feet,
right about the level
653
00:29:47,754 --> 00:29:51,491
where the Apollo spacecraft
was for the astronauts.
654
00:29:51,558 --> 00:29:53,760
Everything from
that point on down,
655
00:29:53,827 --> 00:29:54,994
all the way down
to the floor,
656
00:29:55,061 --> 00:29:57,697
that's all propellant.
That's all fuel.
657
00:29:57,764 --> 00:29:58,698
That's it.
That's it.
658
00:29:58,765 --> 00:30:01,401
It's tanks,
fuel, and engines.
659
00:30:01,468 --> 00:30:05,372
Everything below that command
module is to drive the rocket?
660
00:30:05,438 --> 00:30:08,208
To get the spacecraft
and the astronauts to the Moon.
661
00:30:08,274 --> 00:30:11,311
♪♪
662
00:30:11,378 --> 00:30:14,614
The Saturn V
stood 36 stories tall
663
00:30:14,681 --> 00:30:19,652
and held a jaw-dropping
950,000 gallons of fuel.
664
00:30:19,719 --> 00:30:24,190
To this day, it remains the most
powerful rocket every flown.
665
00:30:24,257 --> 00:30:26,393
Wow!
-Yeah, isn't that something?
666
00:30:26,459 --> 00:30:27,761
Look at the size
of that thing.
667
00:30:27,827 --> 00:30:28,795
Like, how do you
spell "big"?
668
00:30:28,862 --> 00:30:31,064
And Bob has offered me
an up-close look
669
00:30:31,131 --> 00:30:34,567
at one of the last ones
remaining in the world.
670
00:30:34,634 --> 00:30:37,937
So, I am looking at the business
end of a Saturn V rocket?
671
00:30:38,004 --> 00:30:39,572
Absolutely.
That is insane.
672
00:30:39,639 --> 00:30:42,008
I mean, this is so epic.
673
00:30:42,075 --> 00:30:46,146
The rocket's five F-1 engines
burned more fuel in one second
674
00:30:46,212 --> 00:30:49,916
than Charles Lindbergh used to
fly across the Atlantic Ocean.
675
00:30:49,983 --> 00:30:53,353
This Saturn V was left over
when Congress ended the program
676
00:30:53,420 --> 00:30:55,789
after Apollo 17.
677
00:30:55,855 --> 00:30:57,390
So, everything --
I'm looking back there --
678
00:30:57,457 --> 00:31:00,260
is about moving this
into outer space.
679
00:31:00,326 --> 00:31:01,761
Right. This is --
680
00:31:01,828 --> 00:31:05,732
The three astronauts
are in the command module,
681
00:31:05,799 --> 00:31:09,035
the gumdrop-looking part
of the spacecraft,
682
00:31:09,102 --> 00:31:14,741
and behind them,
inside of that cone,
683
00:31:14,808 --> 00:31:18,845
is the lunar module
which is another spacecraft.
684
00:31:18,912 --> 00:31:21,448
The lunar module
is the landing craft.
685
00:31:21,514 --> 00:31:24,617
This bug-like ship would take
two of the astronauts down
686
00:31:24,684 --> 00:31:27,153
to land on the surface
of the Moon.
687
00:31:27,220 --> 00:31:30,890
It's an incredibly
involved process.
688
00:31:30,957 --> 00:31:33,326
Yes, a lot of stuff
has to work really well
689
00:31:33,393 --> 00:31:35,462
or you're not
gonna land on the Moon.
690
00:31:37,430 --> 00:31:40,100
The question was --
would it work?
691
00:31:40,166 --> 00:31:44,838
Could NASA really land a man
on the Moon before 1970?
692
00:31:44,904 --> 00:31:47,240
And could they do it
before the Russians?
693
00:31:47,307 --> 00:31:49,509
♪♪
694
00:31:51,478 --> 00:31:58,485
♪♪
695
00:31:59,519 --> 00:32:02,655
The Smithsonian National
Air and Space Museum --
696
00:32:02,722 --> 00:32:05,759
if you're digging up the hidden
history of the Space Race,
697
00:32:05,825 --> 00:32:08,695
this is your library.
698
00:32:08,762 --> 00:32:10,764
I'm here to see
how close America
699
00:32:10,830 --> 00:32:13,066
came to losing the Space Race.
700
00:32:13,133 --> 00:32:16,770
♪♪
701
00:32:16,836 --> 00:32:20,073
Oh, and I recognize this --
the Saturn V rocket.
702
00:32:20,140 --> 00:32:24,711
Yes, 1/48th scale model
of the Saturn V rocket.
703
00:32:24,778 --> 00:32:28,114
Dr. Cathleen Lewis is the
Smithsonian's foremost expert
704
00:32:28,181 --> 00:32:30,483
on the Russian space program.
705
00:32:30,550 --> 00:32:31,584
What is that?
706
00:32:31,651 --> 00:32:33,019
This is the N1.
707
00:32:33,086 --> 00:32:36,923
This is the Soviet Union's
secret lunar rocket.
708
00:32:36,990 --> 00:32:38,291
No kidding.
709
00:32:38,358 --> 00:32:40,660
How is it that I've never
heard of this before?
710
00:32:40,727 --> 00:32:42,662
This was an official
Soviet secret,
711
00:32:42,729 --> 00:32:47,067
and it was only as
the Soviet Union was collapsing
712
00:32:47,133 --> 00:32:49,202
that the stories
began to come out.
713
00:32:49,269 --> 00:32:50,437
When you say "Space Race,"
I mean,
714
00:32:50,503 --> 00:32:53,673
this is as clear
as it gets.
715
00:32:53,740 --> 00:32:55,275
So, did it fly?
716
00:32:55,342 --> 00:32:58,345
They attempted a launch,
a test launch, four times,
717
00:32:58,411 --> 00:33:00,413
without humans inside.
Mm-hmm.
718
00:33:00,480 --> 00:33:05,318
Cathy has rare Soviet footage
from one of the N1 launches.
719
00:33:05,385 --> 00:33:07,587
There she goes.
720
00:33:07,654 --> 00:33:10,123
Oh, man.
Look at that.
721
00:33:10,190 --> 00:33:12,158
Oh, that's
a huge explosion.
722
00:33:12,225 --> 00:33:15,595
Liquid oxygen and kerosene
all went up.
723
00:33:15,662 --> 00:33:18,665
One of the largest
conventional explosions.
724
00:33:18,732 --> 00:33:20,700
-In the history of the world.
-In the history of the world.
725
00:33:20,767 --> 00:33:23,336
Unbelievable.
726
00:33:23,403 --> 00:33:25,905
Each of the four
N1 launch attempts
727
00:33:25,972 --> 00:33:29,743
ended in a cataclysmic fireball,
but for years,
728
00:33:29,809 --> 00:33:33,646
the Soviets had a held
a nearly undefeated record.
729
00:33:33,713 --> 00:33:35,348
So what happened?
730
00:33:35,415 --> 00:33:38,685
Probably the biggest problem
was that the Soviet Union's
731
00:33:38,752 --> 00:33:41,021
chief designer
of the space program
732
00:33:41,087 --> 00:33:43,857
died before they could
ever launch the N1.
733
00:33:43,923 --> 00:33:47,260
This guy was the genius behind
the whole Soviet space program.
734
00:33:47,327 --> 00:33:51,364
The man who brought us Sputnik,
sent Yuri Gagarin into space.
735
00:33:51,431 --> 00:33:55,135
And the Soviet Union did not
want anyone to know who he was.
736
00:33:55,201 --> 00:33:56,269
Really? Wow.
Yes.
737
00:33:56,336 --> 00:33:58,705
He was kept
a state secret.
738
00:33:58,772 --> 00:34:00,674
Did we ever
find out who he was?
Yes.
739
00:34:00,740 --> 00:34:03,376
His name was
Sergei Pavlovich Korolev.
740
00:34:03,443 --> 00:34:05,712
Sergei Korolev?
741
00:34:05,779 --> 00:34:09,015
Sergei Korolev
was a gifted engineer.
742
00:34:09,082 --> 00:34:11,217
He founded
the Soviet space program
743
00:34:11,284 --> 00:34:13,420
and became its chief designer.
744
00:34:13,486 --> 00:34:16,122
The Russians kept
his identity secret,
745
00:34:16,189 --> 00:34:19,826
to protect him
for Cold War assassins.
746
00:34:19,893 --> 00:34:21,227
So, he died.
747
00:34:21,294 --> 00:34:23,763
He died in January 1966,
748
00:34:23,830 --> 00:34:26,299
unexpectedly and suddenly.
749
00:34:26,366 --> 00:34:28,468
He had gone
into surgery for --
750
00:34:28,535 --> 00:34:30,003
polyp surgery.
751
00:34:30,070 --> 00:34:33,673
And he suffered a heart attack
while on the operating table.
752
00:34:33,740 --> 00:34:38,011
And without him,
there was really no chance.
753
00:34:38,078 --> 00:34:39,612
In the context
of the Space Race,
754
00:34:39,679 --> 00:34:41,047
it's interesting
to speculate.
755
00:34:41,114 --> 00:34:43,049
What if the chief designer
had not died?
756
00:34:43,116 --> 00:34:45,285
I mean, that might've been
the wild card here.
757
00:34:45,352 --> 00:34:47,220
That could've been the way
in which
758
00:34:47,287 --> 00:34:49,422
the Soviets
were ultimately successful
759
00:34:49,489 --> 00:34:50,924
in sending humans
to the Moon.
Yeah.
760
00:34:50,990 --> 00:34:52,459
It would've been
a very different story.
761
00:34:52,525 --> 00:34:56,529
It would've been a very
different story for all of us.
Mm-hmm.
762
00:34:56,596 --> 00:34:58,264
There might've been a hammer
and sickle on the moon
763
00:34:58,331 --> 00:34:59,666
instead of
the American flag.
764
00:34:59,733 --> 00:35:04,237
♪♪
765
00:35:04,304 --> 00:35:07,607
While the USSR struggled on
without its chief designer,
766
00:35:07,674 --> 00:35:09,909
NASA surged ahead.
767
00:35:09,976 --> 00:35:11,444
It was time for America
768
00:35:11,511 --> 00:35:13,947
to stop worrying about
the Russians at their heels.
769
00:35:14,014 --> 00:35:17,217
♪♪
770
00:35:17,283 --> 00:35:19,652
It was time
to shoot for the Moon.
771
00:35:19,719 --> 00:35:21,955
♪♪
772
00:35:23,890 --> 00:35:28,695
♪♪
773
00:35:28,762 --> 00:35:31,264
WILDMAN: July 20th, 1969 --
774
00:35:31,331 --> 00:35:33,099
Apollo 11.
775
00:35:33,166 --> 00:35:35,902
Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin,
and Michael Collins
776
00:35:35,969 --> 00:35:39,739
were in lunar orbit, preparing
for their descent into history.
777
00:35:39,806 --> 00:35:41,041
This was it.
778
00:35:41,107 --> 00:35:44,611
Almost six years after
President Kennedy's murder,
779
00:35:44,678 --> 00:35:49,115
America stood at the precipice
of his audacious goal,
780
00:35:49,182 --> 00:35:50,984
but the first moon landing
teetered
781
00:35:51,051 --> 00:35:52,919
on the brink of disaster,
782
00:35:52,986 --> 00:35:56,289
and nobody knew it
beyond the walls of this room.
783
00:35:56,356 --> 00:35:59,325
Ah.
Well, welcome
to the control room
784
00:35:59,392 --> 00:36:01,661
for the first landing
on the Moon.
785
00:36:01,728 --> 00:36:03,129
That's so cool.
786
00:36:03,196 --> 00:36:07,167
I'm getting the insider story
from a man who was right here,
787
00:36:07,233 --> 00:36:08,868
astronaut Charlie Duke.
788
00:36:08,935 --> 00:36:12,405
I was kept calm down
in this position over here.
789
00:36:12,472 --> 00:36:14,507
I was the only person
in this room
790
00:36:14,574 --> 00:36:16,476
that can actually talk
to the crew.
791
00:36:16,543 --> 00:36:17,744
Oh, okay.
792
00:36:24,384 --> 00:36:26,720
At 2:08 p.m., Houston time,
793
00:36:26,786 --> 00:36:29,055
Armstrong and Aldrin
began their descent
794
00:36:29,122 --> 00:36:31,891
in their lunar module, Eagle.
795
00:36:31,958 --> 00:36:36,396
The whole world was witnessing
history in real time.
796
00:36:36,463 --> 00:36:38,064
What's the vibe in here
as this is happening?
797
00:36:38,131 --> 00:36:39,432
Tense. Yeah, yeah.
798
00:36:39,499 --> 00:36:41,434
It was getting
very, very tense.
799
00:36:41,501 --> 00:36:46,206
We had some communication
problems, data dropouts,
800
00:36:46,272 --> 00:36:48,174
and then the computer
was overloaded,
801
00:36:48,241 --> 00:36:51,077
and that's disconcerting.
802
00:36:51,144 --> 00:36:54,681
The Eagle's onboard computer
was designed to land the ship.
803
00:36:54,748 --> 00:36:58,952
At 50,000 feet, it would fire
the engine to slow down,
804
00:36:59,019 --> 00:37:01,621
then, balancing
on the rocket thrust,
805
00:37:01,688 --> 00:37:03,289
the computer
would guide the Eagle
806
00:37:03,356 --> 00:37:06,292
down to the pre-programmed
landing site,
807
00:37:06,359 --> 00:37:08,328
but something was off.
808
00:37:08,395 --> 00:37:11,865
The computer was flying them
to the wrong spot.
809
00:37:11,931 --> 00:37:15,468
We had him targeted in
to a big field of rocks,
810
00:37:15,535 --> 00:37:16,703
a boulder field.
Wow.
811
00:37:16,770 --> 00:37:19,406
Armstrong switched
to manual control.
812
00:37:19,472 --> 00:37:23,043
He needed to find a smooth area
to land, and fast.
813
00:37:23,109 --> 00:37:27,213
He had to level off,
and then fly over horizontally.
814
00:37:27,280 --> 00:37:29,115
And he's burning fuel
all this time.
815
00:37:29,182 --> 00:37:32,452
A lot extra that we
didn't plan on.
Right.
816
00:37:32,519 --> 00:37:36,589
And, you don't want to run out
of gas and crash.
817
00:37:36,656 --> 00:37:38,324
There was nobody
that could help him
818
00:37:38,391 --> 00:37:40,927
and no possible way
to rescue him.
819
00:37:40,994 --> 00:37:44,964
Now, just like in Gemini 8,
it was all up to Armstrong.
820
00:37:46,000 --> 00:37:52,074
Support us and become VIP member
to remove all ads from www.OpenSubtitles.org
821
00:37:53,073 --> 00:37:56,409
At one minute
of fuel remaining,
822
00:37:56,476 --> 00:37:58,945
I said,
"Eagle, 60 seconds."
823
00:38:01,281 --> 00:38:02,916
Armstrong flew forward,
824
00:38:02,982 --> 00:38:05,518
furiously searching
for a landing site.
825
00:38:05,585 --> 00:38:08,021
He knew he was burning
through his fuel.
826
00:38:08,088 --> 00:38:10,724
The tension was really
ceiling-high in here,
827
00:38:10,790 --> 00:38:14,627
and dead silence.
828
00:38:14,694 --> 00:38:17,230
We were literally
holding our breath.
829
00:38:23,436 --> 00:38:26,272
They were about 10 or 15 feet
off the moon.
830
00:38:29,275 --> 00:38:30,710
And finally I heard
831
00:38:30,777 --> 00:38:32,645
"Contact. Engine stop."
832
00:38:41,688 --> 00:38:46,226
And then there was a big cheer,
and we got very excited.
833
00:38:46,292 --> 00:38:48,328
Yeah.
I'm gonna tear up.
834
00:38:48,395 --> 00:38:49,596
You know, at 2:00
in the morning,
835
00:38:49,662 --> 00:38:52,165
I was only my living room floor
watching this.
836
00:38:52,232 --> 00:38:53,600
Yeah.
You know,
I was a little kid.
837
00:38:53,667 --> 00:38:55,368
I didn't know anything
about that story.
838
00:38:55,435 --> 00:38:57,203
Oh, yeah.
Well, it was close.
839
00:39:05,445 --> 00:39:08,948
The United States
had landed men on the moon.
840
00:39:09,015 --> 00:39:12,419
President Kennedy's challenge
was met.
841
00:39:12,485 --> 00:39:14,854
America had won the Space Race.
842
00:39:14,921 --> 00:39:20,927
♪♪
843
00:39:20,994 --> 00:39:24,964
Astronauts Charlie Duke didn't
just talk to people on the moon.
844
00:39:25,031 --> 00:39:27,734
Three years later,
he went there himself,
845
00:39:27,801 --> 00:39:31,137
as lunar-module pilot
on Apollo 16.
846
00:39:31,204 --> 00:39:34,974
So, only 12 men, 12 Americans,
have ever set foot on the Moon,
847
00:39:35,041 --> 00:39:36,509
and you are one of them.
That's correct.
848
00:39:36,576 --> 00:39:37,610
Wow.
849
00:39:37,677 --> 00:39:39,446
Charlie Duke
actually got to stand
850
00:39:39,512 --> 00:39:42,415
at the finish line
of the Space Race.
851
00:39:42,482 --> 00:39:45,085
DUKE: Emotionally,
it was a big high.
852
00:39:45,151 --> 00:39:46,820
"Man, I'm on the Moon."
853
00:39:46,886 --> 00:39:49,055
We were so excited
about being there
854
00:39:49,122 --> 00:39:50,423
that we didn't want
to come home.
855
00:39:50,490 --> 00:39:53,159
How much of
the "right stuff" applied?
856
00:39:53,226 --> 00:39:54,461
Is that term fair?
857
00:39:54,527 --> 00:39:57,797
We didn't feel like we were
the cream of the crop,
858
00:39:57,864 --> 00:39:59,699
but I guess
you look back,
859
00:39:59,766 --> 00:40:02,535
and they picked us,
so I guess we were.
860
00:40:02,602 --> 00:40:06,106
It's prideful in a way,
but prideful for your country
861
00:40:06,172 --> 00:40:09,609
and for our --
NASA, not for me individually.
862
00:40:09,676 --> 00:40:10,910
Sure.
863
00:40:10,977 --> 00:40:13,913
NASA's towering accomplishment
may have been fueled
864
00:40:13,980 --> 00:40:16,449
by competition
with the Soviets,
865
00:40:16,516 --> 00:40:20,387
but it was achieved through
hard work, American ingenuity,
866
00:40:20,453 --> 00:40:23,923
and a courageous,
clear-eyed challenge.
867
00:40:23,990 --> 00:40:26,693
We choose to go to the Moon
in this decade
868
00:40:26,760 --> 00:40:30,196
and do the other things,
not because they are easy,
869
00:40:30,263 --> 00:40:32,265
but because they are hard.
870
00:40:32,332 --> 00:40:33,800
I mean,
it was a bold step,
871
00:40:33,867 --> 00:40:36,169
and the most amazing thing
about it,
872
00:40:36,236 --> 00:40:38,571
from the time he made
that announcement,
873
00:40:38,638 --> 00:40:41,708
eight years and two months
later, we did it.
874
00:40:41,775 --> 00:40:45,779
♪♪
875
00:40:45,845 --> 00:40:48,848
The Soviets never did
go to the Moon,
876
00:40:48,915 --> 00:40:52,218
but three years after
Charlie Duke returned to Earth,
877
00:40:52,285 --> 00:40:55,021
an American spacecraft
and a Russian capsule
878
00:40:55,088 --> 00:40:58,491
rendezvoused in space
and docked.
879
00:40:58,558 --> 00:41:03,396
In the year 1975,
the Vietnam war came to and end.
880
00:41:03,463 --> 00:41:06,766
The U.S. and the Soviet Union
agreed to nuclear-arms limits,
881
00:41:06,833 --> 00:41:09,235
beginning a thaw
in the Cold War.
882
00:41:09,302 --> 00:41:13,239
And the Space Race came
to a close with a handshake.
883
00:41:13,306 --> 00:41:15,775
♪♪
884
00:41:15,842 --> 00:41:18,978
The Moon landing inspired
a generation of Americans
885
00:41:19,045 --> 00:41:21,815
to study and work
in science and technology.
886
00:41:21,881 --> 00:41:25,618
Today, private companies,
like SpaceX, are developing
887
00:41:25,685 --> 00:41:27,787
a new generation
of rocket technology,
888
00:41:27,854 --> 00:41:30,223
and here at NASA,
they're working on Orion,
889
00:41:30,290 --> 00:41:33,893
the spacecraft that will one day
carry astronauts to Mars.
890
00:41:33,960 --> 00:41:35,929
We're closer than you think.
891
00:41:35,995 --> 00:41:39,299
The first person
who sets foot on Martian soil
892
00:41:39,366 --> 00:41:41,568
is almost certainly alive today.
893
00:41:41,634 --> 00:41:44,604
But here's the big difference
between the Space Race
894
00:41:44,671 --> 00:41:47,307
and 21st-century space flight --
895
00:41:47,374 --> 00:41:48,808
when we finally got to Mars,
896
00:41:48,875 --> 00:41:52,178
it won't have been motivated
by conflict or fear.
897
00:41:52,245 --> 00:41:54,214
We'll go to Mars
for one reason only --
898
00:41:54,280 --> 00:41:58,718
peaceful space exploration
for the benefit of all mankind,
899
00:41:58,785 --> 00:42:01,588
just like it says
in NASA's charter.
899
00:42:02,305 --> 00:43:02,734
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