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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:36,649 --> 00:00:38,617 [Music playing] 2 00:00:56,335 --> 00:00:59,668 [Radio chatter] 3 00:00:59,772 --> 00:01:02,206 [Electronic beeps] 4 00:01:10,083 --> 00:01:13,280 [Radio chatter] 5 00:01:22,295 --> 00:01:25,059 Man: I kind of have two moons in my head, I guess, 6 00:01:25,164 --> 00:01:27,189 whereas most people just have one moon. 7 00:01:31,237 --> 00:01:35,264 I look at the Moon just like everybody else who's never been there 8 00:01:35,374 --> 00:01:39,310 and, you know, there it is and I've always thought it was interesting... 9 00:01:39,412 --> 00:01:43,212 Whether it's full or a sliver, or what have you. 10 00:01:44,417 --> 00:01:46,681 But every once in a while, I do think of a second moon, 11 00:01:46,786 --> 00:01:48,947 you know, the one that I recall from up close 12 00:01:49,055 --> 00:01:53,287 and, yeah, it is kind of hard to believe that I was actually up there. 13 00:01:57,029 --> 00:01:58,496 Man: I want to promise you, I'm human. 14 00:01:58,598 --> 00:02:02,762 I pinched myself to find out whether it was really happening. 15 00:02:07,673 --> 00:02:12,167 I called the Moon my home for three days of my life 16 00:02:12,278 --> 00:02:14,041 and I'm here to tell you about it. 17 00:02:14,147 --> 00:02:15,774 That's science fiction. 18 00:02:21,120 --> 00:02:24,487 Man: My father was born shortly after the Wright brothers. 19 00:02:29,362 --> 00:02:34,595 He could barely believe that I went to the Moon. 20 00:02:37,370 --> 00:02:40,601 But my son, Tom, was five. 21 00:02:40,706 --> 00:02:43,300 And he didn't think it was any big deal. 22 00:02:43,409 --> 00:02:45,377 [Music playing] 23 00:03:10,002 --> 00:03:12,061 Capcom: Lift-off, we have a lift-off. 24 00:03:12,171 --> 00:03:14,571 32 minutes past the hour. 25 00:03:41,767 --> 00:03:43,564 Capcom: The tower is clear. 26 00:04:08,327 --> 00:04:09,885 # Woke up this morning # 27 00:04:09,996 --> 00:04:11,827 # With light in my eyes... # 28 00:04:11,931 --> 00:04:14,092 Man: One day, under secret orders, 29 00:04:14,200 --> 00:04:16,896 a group of us at the Test Pilot Center 30 00:04:17,003 --> 00:04:20,404 were ordered to go to Washington to get a briefing. 31 00:04:22,475 --> 00:04:25,672 And they talked about the Atlas booster 32 00:04:25,778 --> 00:04:30,340 and putting a capsule on top of that with a man in it, 33 00:04:30,449 --> 00:04:34,317 Uh, to... To try to put a man into space. 34 00:04:34,420 --> 00:04:36,183 And of course, at that time, 35 00:04:36,289 --> 00:04:41,556 the Atlas boosters were blowing up every other day down at Cape Canaveral. 36 00:04:43,696 --> 00:04:47,496 # Hey Mr. Spaceman # 37 00:04:47,600 --> 00:04:49,932 # Won't you please take me along # 38 00:04:50,036 --> 00:04:53,233 # I won't do anything wrong # 39 00:04:53,339 --> 00:04:57,503 And it looked like a very, you know, quick way to have a short career. 40 00:04:57,610 --> 00:04:59,942 # ... Take me along for a ride # 41 00:05:01,881 --> 00:05:03,473 # Woke up this morning # 42 00:05:03,582 --> 00:05:05,880 # I was feeling quite weird # 43 00:05:05,985 --> 00:05:07,577 # I had flies in my beard # 44 00:05:07,687 --> 00:05:10,281 # My toothpaste was smeared # 45 00:05:10,389 --> 00:05:14,450 # Over my window they'd written my name # 46 00:05:14,560 --> 00:05:17,723 # Said, "So long, we'll see you again" # 47 00:05:19,332 --> 00:05:23,166 # Hey Mr. Spaceman # 48 00:05:23,269 --> 00:05:25,533 # Won't you please take me along # 49 00:05:25,638 --> 00:05:27,970 # I won't do anything wrong # 50 00:05:28,074 --> 00:05:32,033 # Hey Mr. Spaceman # 51 00:05:32,144 --> 00:05:36,444 # Won't you please take # me along for a ride 52 00:05:37,483 --> 00:05:39,451 [Radio chatter] 53 00:05:46,058 --> 00:05:47,320 [Applause] 54 00:05:53,999 --> 00:05:57,127 Kennedy: Now it is time to take longer strides, 55 00:05:57,236 --> 00:06:00,694 time for a great new American enterprise, 56 00:06:00,806 --> 00:06:05,038 time for this nation to take a clearly leading role 57 00:06:05,144 --> 00:06:06,873 in space achievement. 58 00:06:06,979 --> 00:06:10,380 Politically, it was about beating the Russians, 59 00:06:10,483 --> 00:06:12,917 but those of us with a science bent 60 00:06:13,018 --> 00:06:15,919 or a curious bent, knew it was more than that. 61 00:06:16,021 --> 00:06:19,081 I believe that this nation should commit itself 62 00:06:19,191 --> 00:06:23,628 to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, 63 00:06:23,729 --> 00:06:27,460 of landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to the Earth. 64 00:06:27,566 --> 00:06:30,000 It was beautiful in its simplicity. 65 00:06:30,102 --> 00:06:32,002 Do what? Moon! 66 00:06:32,104 --> 00:06:33,765 When? End of decade! 67 00:06:33,873 --> 00:06:35,101 He challenged us to do 68 00:06:35,207 --> 00:06:38,665 what I think most people thought was impossible, including me. 69 00:06:38,778 --> 00:06:44,148 We go into space because whatever Mankind must undertake, 70 00:06:44,250 --> 00:06:46,616 free men must fully share. 71 00:06:49,054 --> 00:06:50,919 Kennedy: But in a very real sense, 72 00:06:51,023 --> 00:06:54,288 it will not be one man going to the Moon. 73 00:06:54,393 --> 00:06:56,623 We make this judgment affirmatively; 74 00:06:56,729 --> 00:06:59,061 It will be an entire nation. 75 00:06:59,165 --> 00:07:02,157 For all of us must work to put him there. 76 00:07:02,268 --> 00:07:04,236 [Music playing] 77 00:07:22,888 --> 00:07:26,756 Collins: I did the usual thing of making model airplanes. 78 00:07:26,859 --> 00:07:29,521 Most of them, little balsawood contraptions. 79 00:07:29,628 --> 00:07:34,224 Some of them actually flew and I liked that. 80 00:07:34,333 --> 00:07:39,202 So I'd been interested in mechanical objects in the sky, 81 00:07:39,305 --> 00:07:42,069 I guess, from as long as I could remember. 82 00:07:49,181 --> 00:07:52,878 Mitchell: I was always awed by flight. 83 00:07:52,985 --> 00:07:55,283 When I was a young lad, 84 00:07:55,387 --> 00:07:59,517 a barnstormer flying a World War I airplane 85 00:07:59,625 --> 00:08:07,896 landed on our farm and Dad helped him refuel and I got a ride, 86 00:08:08,000 --> 00:08:13,028 and he took me for a circle of the field and that was my first airplane ride, 87 00:08:13,138 --> 00:08:14,503 at about four years of age. 88 00:08:15,741 --> 00:08:17,936 Newsreader: The Mustangs dropped their wing tanks 89 00:08:18,043 --> 00:08:20,034 and plunged into the fight. 90 00:08:20,145 --> 00:08:23,546 Cernan: Maybe it was the movies, maybe it was the real life news, 91 00:08:23,649 --> 00:08:27,745 but I knew that someday, sometime, 92 00:08:27,853 --> 00:08:29,878 that's what I wanted to do. 93 00:08:31,257 --> 00:08:34,590 I knew I wanted to fly airplanes. 94 00:08:36,161 --> 00:08:41,622 In '61, I had just graduated from the Test Pilot School 95 00:08:41,734 --> 00:08:46,831 and I had a job flying fighters in fighter tests at Edwards. 96 00:08:46,939 --> 00:08:48,998 Newsreader: At the Flight Test Center 97 00:08:49,108 --> 00:08:51,076 is the fastest school in the world: 98 00:08:51,176 --> 00:08:54,509 The United States Air Force Flight Test School, 99 00:08:54,613 --> 00:08:57,173 from whose doors upon graduation 100 00:08:57,283 --> 00:08:59,478 come the men destined to push back 101 00:08:59,585 --> 00:09:02,019 the frontiers of aeronautical knowledge. 102 00:09:02,121 --> 00:09:04,089 [Music playing] 103 00:09:18,203 --> 00:09:20,262 Mitchell: Test pilot experience was critical. 104 00:09:21,506 --> 00:09:25,203 It was a profession with a lot of esprit de corps 105 00:09:25,311 --> 00:09:28,974 and a lot of danger and a pioneering spirit. 106 00:09:29,081 --> 00:09:31,049 [Music playing] 107 00:09:41,560 --> 00:09:43,460 [Radio chatter] 108 00:09:49,935 --> 00:09:53,666 Mitchell: And when you're at supersonic speeds and high altitudes, 109 00:09:53,772 --> 00:09:57,208 learning to survive that and bring your machine back down, 110 00:09:57,309 --> 00:10:02,975 it's the fundamental task and the higher and faster you flew, 111 00:10:03,082 --> 00:10:05,516 the more dangerous and more exciting it became. 112 00:10:14,827 --> 00:10:17,193 Man: I thought I had the best job in the world 113 00:10:17,296 --> 00:10:20,629 from the day I entered flight training until I looked on TV 114 00:10:20,733 --> 00:10:23,395 one day and Al Shepherd goes up in a rocket. 115 00:10:23,502 --> 00:10:25,936 Newsreader: The rocket performs perfectly! 116 00:10:26,038 --> 00:10:30,065 He's gone higher than I've ever gone and faster than I've ever gone 117 00:10:30,175 --> 00:10:32,643 and most important, he's made more noise doing it. 118 00:10:32,745 --> 00:10:34,542 He's even on TV doing it! 119 00:10:34,647 --> 00:10:37,639 How do l... How do I get that job? 120 00:10:41,220 --> 00:10:43,381 Announcer: "I've Got A Secret!" 121 00:10:43,489 --> 00:10:45,184 Brought to you tonight by... 122 00:10:45,290 --> 00:10:47,656 Dream Whip! 123 00:10:47,760 --> 00:10:49,694 The light, delicious topping 124 00:10:49,795 --> 00:10:52,730 that won't wilt on your desserts. 125 00:10:52,831 --> 00:10:54,264 Dream Whip! 126 00:10:54,366 --> 00:10:57,597 Host: Now, if you'll whisper your secret to me, Mr. And Mrs. Armstrong, 127 00:10:57,703 --> 00:10:59,534 We'll show it at the same time to our audience at home. 128 00:10:59,638 --> 00:11:00,832 If you'll both lean in and whisper. 129 00:11:02,708 --> 00:11:05,734 [Applause] 130 00:11:05,844 --> 00:11:10,042 Everybody put their application in to every NASA request. 131 00:11:10,149 --> 00:11:13,243 I mean, it was just, sort of a peer kind of thing. 132 00:11:13,352 --> 00:11:18,688 So NASA put out a request for a third group of astronauts in early '63, 133 00:11:18,791 --> 00:11:24,024 and of course everybody in my test pilot class put their application in 134 00:11:24,129 --> 00:11:26,723 because it was another opportunity for a new challenge. 135 00:11:26,832 --> 00:11:31,860 It certainly sounded very challenging and something that if... 136 00:11:31,970 --> 00:11:35,098 if other people wanted to be a part of this 137 00:11:35,207 --> 00:11:40,144 and this was a noble national effort, why, I wanted to be a part of it. 138 00:11:40,245 --> 00:11:42,406 Now how would you feel, Mrs. Armstrong, 139 00:11:42,513 --> 00:11:44,344 If it turned out... Of course, nobody knows; 140 00:11:44,450 --> 00:11:47,908 But if it turns out that your son is first man to land on the Moon, 141 00:11:48,020 --> 00:11:49,954 What... How would you feel? 142 00:11:52,324 --> 00:11:54,656 Well, I guess I'd just say God bless him 143 00:11:54,760 --> 00:11:58,491 and I wish him the best of all good luck. 144 00:11:58,597 --> 00:11:59,689 [Applause] I'll bet you. 145 00:12:01,900 --> 00:12:03,868 [Music playing] 146 00:12:12,344 --> 00:12:16,280 Collins: That group of astronauts was far and away the best group 147 00:12:16,381 --> 00:12:18,440 I had ever been associated with. 148 00:12:19,952 --> 00:12:22,546 There weren't any really weak sisters in the bunch. 149 00:12:22,654 --> 00:12:27,148 They were just an amazingly competent, hardworking, 150 00:12:27,259 --> 00:12:30,160 really good bunch of people. 151 00:12:30,262 --> 00:12:34,995 One day... you're just Gene Cernan, 152 00:12:35,100 --> 00:12:36,897 young naval aviator, whatever, 153 00:12:37,002 --> 00:12:39,334 and the next day, you're an American hero. 154 00:12:39,438 --> 00:12:42,464 Literally. And you have done nothing. 155 00:12:42,575 --> 00:12:46,978 When Tom Wolfe wrote "The Right Stuff", 156 00:12:47,079 --> 00:12:49,172 I thought, "Boy! That sounds good. 157 00:12:49,281 --> 00:12:51,715 People are going to think I have the right stuff! 158 00:12:51,817 --> 00:12:56,652 I'm the same guy I always was, but now, I've got the right stuff!" 159 00:12:56,755 --> 00:13:01,089 It's sort of an unshakeable belief in your own infallibility. 160 00:13:01,193 --> 00:13:03,320 That's what the right stuff is. 161 00:13:03,428 --> 00:13:04,588 That you're immortal, 162 00:13:04,696 --> 00:13:07,631 that you can do anything that is thrown at you. 163 00:13:19,546 --> 00:13:21,537 Scott: Nobody knew really how to go to the Moon, 164 00:13:21,647 --> 00:13:23,774 there was a lot on paper. 165 00:13:23,882 --> 00:13:28,182 And we didn't know how to do things and we didn't know how things would work. 166 00:13:28,287 --> 00:13:30,949 It was just a matter of putting them together, 167 00:13:31,056 --> 00:13:33,286 making them work and then correcting deficiencies. 168 00:13:34,693 --> 00:13:36,661 And as pilots, astronauts, 169 00:13:36,762 --> 00:13:38,923 why, we participated in all of these things, 170 00:13:39,031 --> 00:13:41,898 along with management and the engineers. 171 00:13:43,802 --> 00:13:45,565 Collins: What we did in the early days 172 00:13:45,671 --> 00:13:48,697 was take the overall spacecraft 173 00:13:48,807 --> 00:13:50,638 and divide it up like a pie. 174 00:13:50,742 --> 00:13:55,441 We sliced that pie up into 10 or 15 different pieces 175 00:13:55,547 --> 00:13:59,074 and we handed each slice to one of the astronauts 176 00:13:59,184 --> 00:14:02,779 and said, "This is yours, we want you to learn that slice." 177 00:14:07,326 --> 00:14:09,692 Kennedy: We shall send to the Moon, 178 00:14:09,795 --> 00:14:14,289 240,000 miles away, 179 00:14:14,399 --> 00:14:16,128 a giant rocket 180 00:14:16,235 --> 00:14:19,466 more than 300 feet tall, 181 00:14:19,571 --> 00:14:22,062 made of new metal alloys, 182 00:14:22,174 --> 00:14:26,235 some of which have not yet been invented, 183 00:14:26,345 --> 00:14:28,176 fitted together with a precision 184 00:14:28,280 --> 00:14:32,182 better than the finest watch, 185 00:14:32,284 --> 00:14:34,684 on an untried mission 186 00:14:34,786 --> 00:14:37,254 to an unknown celestial body, 187 00:14:37,356 --> 00:14:41,520 and then return it safely to Earth, 188 00:14:41,627 --> 00:14:43,356 re-entering the atmosphere 189 00:14:43,462 --> 00:14:46,898 at speeds of over 25,000 miles per hour, 190 00:14:46,999 --> 00:14:50,526 causing heat about half that of the temperature of the Sun, 191 00:14:50,636 --> 00:14:52,763 Almost as hot as it is here today. 192 00:14:52,871 --> 00:14:55,635 And do all this... And do all this 193 00:14:55,741 --> 00:14:58,301 and do it right and do it first, 194 00:14:58,410 --> 00:15:00,435 before this decade is out, 195 00:15:00,544 --> 00:15:02,535 then we must be bold. 196 00:15:04,516 --> 00:15:06,347 Cernan: I look back at Kennedy, 197 00:15:06,451 --> 00:15:08,783 was he a visionary, was he a dreamer, 198 00:15:08,887 --> 00:15:11,185 was he politically astute? 199 00:15:11,290 --> 00:15:12,848 The chances are, yes, 200 00:15:12,958 --> 00:15:14,858 he was probably... probably all three. 201 00:15:14,960 --> 00:15:16,450 We'll never know. 202 00:15:23,502 --> 00:15:27,233 Nor will we ever know whether he really fully appreciated 203 00:15:27,339 --> 00:15:32,072 The challenge that he had laid down in front of... the American people. 204 00:15:34,146 --> 00:15:36,808 Kennedy: And therefore, as we set sail, 205 00:15:36,915 --> 00:15:38,746 we ask God's blessing 206 00:15:38,850 --> 00:15:43,150 on the most hazardous and dangerous and greatest adventure 207 00:15:43,255 --> 00:15:45,382 on which man has ever embarked. 208 00:15:50,095 --> 00:16:08,572 [Music playing] 209 00:16:08,680 --> 00:16:10,477 Scott: Things were moving very quickly 210 00:16:10,583 --> 00:16:14,815 and I was assigned as a back-up crew to the first Apollo mission. 211 00:16:16,488 --> 00:16:19,548 Things were in sort of a turmoil, there were a lot of problems, 212 00:16:19,658 --> 00:16:23,594 and Gus Grissom was doing the best he could, 213 00:16:23,695 --> 00:16:26,994 with his crew of Ed White and Roger Chaffee, to straighten them out, 214 00:16:27,099 --> 00:16:31,433 try to get the spacecraft ready to fly. 215 00:16:34,272 --> 00:16:37,867 Collins: We were incredibly intelligent 216 00:16:37,976 --> 00:16:41,707 about some of the hazards that we faced. 217 00:16:41,813 --> 00:16:44,543 And we thought long and hard about them 218 00:16:44,649 --> 00:16:47,948 and we did everything we could to ward them off, 219 00:16:48,053 --> 00:16:54,049 but the business of 100% oxygen environment inside the spacecraft, 220 00:16:54,159 --> 00:16:56,150 we really had not thought that through. 221 00:17:00,732 --> 00:17:04,168 Man: And the wires were really bad in there. 222 00:17:04,269 --> 00:17:07,295 I'd asked Gus, I said, 223 00:17:07,406 --> 00:17:09,033 "Gus, why don't you say something about this wiring? " 224 00:17:09,141 --> 00:17:11,974 I said, "It's really terrible, they ought to do something about this wiring, 225 00:17:12,077 --> 00:17:14,477 it's really bad." and he said, "l don't..." 226 00:17:14,578 --> 00:17:17,138 And he said, "l can't say anything about it or they'll fire me." 227 00:17:18,283 --> 00:17:21,275 That's what he told me. I couldn't believe it. 228 00:17:24,990 --> 00:17:28,517 Cernan: The crew were conducting this test on the ground, 229 00:17:28,627 --> 00:17:30,720 they weren't going to fly. 230 00:17:30,829 --> 00:17:34,424 I guess we, and I think of all of us in the NASA family, 231 00:17:34,533 --> 00:17:36,057 never gave it a second thought. 232 00:17:36,168 --> 00:17:39,501 what would happen if you got a spark 233 00:17:39,604 --> 00:17:45,270 in a 16 psi, 100% oxygen environment? 234 00:17:45,377 --> 00:17:47,345 [Music playing] 235 00:17:55,854 --> 00:17:57,719 Bean: I picked up the phone 236 00:17:57,823 --> 00:18:01,190 and they said... "Who's this? " 237 00:18:01,293 --> 00:18:02,453 I told them Alan Bean, 238 00:18:02,561 --> 00:18:06,156 he said, "Well, we're down here, we're doing this test 239 00:18:06,264 --> 00:18:09,165 and we've lost the crew." 240 00:18:09,267 --> 00:18:12,395 And I said... 241 00:18:12,504 --> 00:18:16,133 "Where'd they go? You've lost them? " 242 00:18:16,241 --> 00:18:19,574 Because I thought they just needed to run the test 243 00:18:19,678 --> 00:18:21,339 and they can't find them. 244 00:18:21,446 --> 00:18:24,813 "No" they said, "We've lost the crew." 245 00:18:24,916 --> 00:18:28,317 I said, "Maybe they're down at the beach house." 246 00:18:28,420 --> 00:18:31,753 And they said, "No, there was a fire." 247 00:18:31,857 --> 00:18:36,089 And then it dawns on me that maybe they're talking about 248 00:18:36,194 --> 00:18:38,321 something different than I think. 249 00:18:38,430 --> 00:18:40,421 Newsreader: We interrupt our regular programming 250 00:18:40,599 --> 00:18:42,294 to bring you this special report. 251 00:18:42,400 --> 00:18:45,198 Here's ABC's science editor, Jules Bergman. 252 00:18:47,506 --> 00:18:50,703 Top space agency officials are flying to Cape Kennedy tonight 253 00:18:50,809 --> 00:18:54,301 to begin the official investigation into what caused the flash fire 254 00:18:54,412 --> 00:18:58,280 that killed the nation's first three Apollo astronauts earlier tonight. 255 00:18:59,718 --> 00:19:04,121 They died at t-minus ten minutes into a simulated launch countdown, 256 00:19:04,222 --> 00:19:06,713 [Voice breaking] helplessly trapped inside their spacecraft. 257 00:19:06,825 --> 00:19:22,662 [Music playing] 258 00:19:22,774 --> 00:19:24,469 Cernan: The accident occurred in January, 259 00:19:24,576 --> 00:19:26,544 the end of January 27th. 260 00:19:26,645 --> 00:19:29,170 And we're burying our guys at Arlington 261 00:19:29,281 --> 00:19:32,512 and I wasn't sure whether we were burying the entire Apollo program 262 00:19:32,617 --> 00:19:35,211 or three... of our buddies. 263 00:19:35,320 --> 00:19:37,288 [Music playing] 264 00:19:53,205 --> 00:19:55,298 Bean: That was the period, the late '60s, 265 00:19:55,407 --> 00:19:57,602 when we were fighting in Vietnam 266 00:19:57,709 --> 00:20:01,577 and when a lot of racial issues were going around. 267 00:20:05,750 --> 00:20:07,581 Collins: I was not really in tune 268 00:20:07,686 --> 00:20:10,018 with what was going on in the country. 269 00:20:12,824 --> 00:20:16,089 Our whole culture was changing markedly in this period. 270 00:20:16,194 --> 00:20:18,162 [Music playing] 271 00:20:24,169 --> 00:20:25,693 The Civil Rights Movement, 272 00:20:25,804 --> 00:20:27,203 the Women's Movement, 273 00:20:27,305 --> 00:20:31,105 the whole movement toward a greater openness of society. 274 00:20:34,546 --> 00:20:39,643 Collins: I think we were very aware of the situation in Vietnam 275 00:20:39,751 --> 00:20:46,520 because a lot of our friends were flying airplanes in combat in Vietnam. 276 00:20:48,059 --> 00:20:50,926 And there would we have been, 277 00:20:51,029 --> 00:20:52,894 had we not been in the space program. 278 00:20:58,637 --> 00:21:01,231 I guess I can sort of admit it now, 279 00:21:01,339 --> 00:21:03,603 I've admitted it a little bit to a few friends. 280 00:21:03,708 --> 00:21:07,109 That... I've always had a guilt complex to some degree. 281 00:21:11,916 --> 00:21:15,079 That was my war, good or bad. 282 00:21:15,186 --> 00:21:17,120 Whether it was a good war or a bad war, 283 00:21:17,222 --> 00:21:21,056 we're not discussing that, but that was my war, to fight for my country, 284 00:21:21,159 --> 00:21:25,493 and my buddies were getting shot at and shot down 285 00:21:25,597 --> 00:21:27,030 and in some cases captured. 286 00:21:27,132 --> 00:21:31,159 And I was getting my picture on the front page of the paper. 287 00:21:33,305 --> 00:21:38,208 And I've always felt that they fought my war for me. 288 00:21:39,611 --> 00:21:42,375 They look at it totally different. 289 00:21:42,480 --> 00:21:44,141 They said, "You were doing something 290 00:21:44,249 --> 00:21:47,616 that this country needed more than anything else at the time. 291 00:21:47,719 --> 00:21:48,913 You were part of a program, 292 00:21:49,020 --> 00:21:52,888 the only thing we had to hold our head high and be proud of." 293 00:21:56,094 --> 00:21:58,062 [Music playing] 294 00:22:03,735 --> 00:22:06,465 Lovell: 1968, in this country, 295 00:22:06,571 --> 00:22:08,801 was a disastrous year. 296 00:22:11,576 --> 00:22:13,908 We had several assassinations, 297 00:22:15,380 --> 00:22:16,938 Uh, not too good... 298 00:22:17,048 --> 00:22:18,310 [Mouthing] 299 00:22:18,416 --> 00:22:21,681 So we needed something really to cap it up that was positive, 300 00:22:21,786 --> 00:22:25,222 to give the American people a sense of... of accomplishment 301 00:22:25,323 --> 00:22:27,154 or at least satisfaction of something. 302 00:22:29,494 --> 00:22:32,258 If you were a scriptwriter for the movies, 303 00:22:32,364 --> 00:22:36,425 you couldn't have picked a better scenario than Apollo 8! 304 00:22:36,534 --> 00:22:38,502 [Music playing] 305 00:22:42,941 --> 00:22:44,909 We hear from the CIA 306 00:22:45,009 --> 00:22:47,637 that the Russians are going to send a spacecraft 307 00:22:47,746 --> 00:22:51,978 around the Moon with a person in it and upstage us. 308 00:22:52,083 --> 00:22:55,610 If they orbit the Moon before we land on the Moon, 309 00:22:55,720 --> 00:22:58,314 then they've gotten there first. 310 00:23:01,726 --> 00:23:03,887 Lovell: We changed our plans on Apollo 8. 311 00:23:03,995 --> 00:23:07,692 They changed the mission from an Earth orbital type 312 00:23:07,799 --> 00:23:09,994 to a flight to the Moon. 313 00:23:11,736 --> 00:23:16,901 And it was a bold move, it had some risky aspects to it, 314 00:23:17,008 --> 00:23:20,444 but it was a time when we made bold moves. 315 00:23:20,545 --> 00:23:22,513 Capcom: The engines are off. 316 00:23:22,614 --> 00:23:27,051 Four, three, two, one, zero. 317 00:23:27,152 --> 00:23:29,177 We have commenced... 318 00:23:29,287 --> 00:23:31,187 [Radio chatter] 319 00:23:57,382 --> 00:23:58,440 Capcom: Apollo 8, Houston. 320 00:23:58,550 --> 00:24:01,110 Your trajectory and guidance are go, over. 321 00:24:01,219 --> 00:24:02,652 Man: Thank you, Michael. 322 00:24:02,754 --> 00:24:04,551 Capcom: Yeah, you're looking real good... 323 00:24:05,623 --> 00:24:07,818 Lovell: It wasn't until we rolled over 324 00:24:07,926 --> 00:24:10,087 that we actually saw the Moon for the first time. 325 00:24:10,195 --> 00:24:12,891 We were just 60 miles above the craters, 326 00:24:12,997 --> 00:24:15,158 and, you know... 327 00:24:15,266 --> 00:24:17,894 we were sort of like three school kids looking in a candy store window, 328 00:24:18,002 --> 00:24:21,733 and we forgot the flight plan, here we are, just 60 miles away. 329 00:24:24,943 --> 00:24:27,070 Man: Oh my God, look at that picture over there! 330 00:24:27,178 --> 00:24:28,145 Wow, is that pretty! 331 00:24:28,246 --> 00:24:29,213 [Shutter clicking] 332 00:24:29,314 --> 00:24:32,010 You got a colour film, Jim? 333 00:24:32,116 --> 00:24:33,674 Hand me a roll of colour, quick. 334 00:24:33,785 --> 00:24:36,948 [Mixed chatter] 335 00:24:37,055 --> 00:24:39,080 Just grab me a colour. 336 00:24:39,190 --> 00:24:40,657 A colour exterior. 337 00:24:42,559 --> 00:24:44,527 Lovell: We took photographs as much as we could 338 00:24:44,629 --> 00:24:47,223 and, of course, we took the photograph 339 00:24:47,332 --> 00:24:50,324 of the famous Earth rise around the Moon 340 00:24:50,435 --> 00:24:55,168 and I have to credit Bill Anders for taking the picture. 341 00:24:55,273 --> 00:24:57,935 Uh, he claims it all the time, anyway! 342 00:24:59,010 --> 00:25:00,875 Man: Calm down, Lovell! 343 00:25:00,979 --> 00:25:02,071 Lovell: Well, I got it right... 344 00:25:02,180 --> 00:25:03,909 Oh, it's a beautiful shot! 345 00:25:06,184 --> 00:25:08,084 Lovell: And of course, Christmas Eve, 346 00:25:08,186 --> 00:25:09,881 being around the Moon on Christmas Eve, 347 00:25:09,988 --> 00:25:14,391 we thought this would be a very auspicious time to say something. 348 00:25:14,492 --> 00:25:18,155 The three of us selected to read from the Old Testament, 349 00:25:18,263 --> 00:25:22,222 and we had it in fireproof paper in the back of our flight manual. 350 00:25:26,938 --> 00:25:28,565 Man: "In the beginning, 351 00:25:28,673 --> 00:25:32,302 God created the Heaven and the Earth 352 00:25:32,410 --> 00:25:36,210 and the Earth was without form and void. 353 00:25:36,314 --> 00:25:39,215 And darkness was upon the face of the deep. 354 00:25:41,986 --> 00:25:47,083 And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters 355 00:25:47,191 --> 00:25:50,456 and God said, 'let there be light'. 356 00:25:54,065 --> 00:25:56,226 And there was light." 357 00:26:01,372 --> 00:26:03,340 Collins: I thought it was a very nice touch, 358 00:26:03,441 --> 00:26:08,242 it fit very nicely into getting away from all this machinery, 359 00:26:08,346 --> 00:26:11,110 and let's get down into, sort of, the fundamentals 360 00:26:11,215 --> 00:26:14,343 of what makes all this happen, why are we here. 361 00:26:14,452 --> 00:26:15,544 I liked it. 362 00:26:17,188 --> 00:26:20,351 Man: We close with good night, good luck; 363 00:26:20,458 --> 00:26:24,690 A merry Christmas and God bless all of you, 364 00:26:24,796 --> 00:26:27,788 all of you on the good Earth. 365 00:26:29,000 --> 00:26:30,331 Lovell: When we came back, 366 00:26:30,435 --> 00:26:33,529 there was a lady in Dallas, Texas, 367 00:26:33,638 --> 00:26:36,198 who was an atheist, 368 00:26:36,307 --> 00:26:38,070 and I don't have anything against atheists, 369 00:26:38,176 --> 00:26:41,407 but she sued us. 370 00:26:41,512 --> 00:26:47,815 For the mixing of... Church and State, 371 00:26:47,919 --> 00:26:51,377 and she said that was inappropriate. 372 00:26:52,624 --> 00:26:54,285 Maybe it was, I don't know. 373 00:26:59,197 --> 00:27:01,165 [Music playing] 374 00:27:12,443 --> 00:27:14,638 Bean: At that time, we were all practicing 375 00:27:14,746 --> 00:27:19,115 to go to the Apollo 11 site, Sea of Tranquillity. 376 00:27:19,217 --> 00:27:22,311 Because we had three different crews training. 377 00:27:23,755 --> 00:27:26,986 Apollo 11 was going to make the try in July 378 00:27:27,091 --> 00:27:30,754 and then two months later, we'd make it if they didn't make it, 379 00:27:30,862 --> 00:27:32,124 and then if we didn't make it, 380 00:27:32,230 --> 00:27:34,721 two months later in November, Apollo 13. 381 00:27:34,832 --> 00:27:38,859 So we had three chances to get to the Moon by the end of the decade. 382 00:27:40,872 --> 00:27:45,309 And so when Neil and Buzz and Mike were assigned to Apollo 11 383 00:27:45,410 --> 00:27:47,424 we knew they were going to make the first shot. 384 00:27:47,524 --> 00:27:49,639 They were a really, really good crew, 385 00:27:49,747 --> 00:27:52,079 they got along really well. 386 00:27:53,351 --> 00:27:55,581 Aldrin: Mike was always the easy-going guy 387 00:27:55,687 --> 00:27:57,951 who brought levity into things. 388 00:27:58,056 --> 00:28:03,153 And I felt kind of bad that he wasn't going to have the opportunity of being to... 389 00:28:03,261 --> 00:28:06,890 Being able to be in a Lunar Lander and make a landing, 390 00:28:06,998 --> 00:28:08,556 but that was a decision that... 391 00:28:08,666 --> 00:28:11,100 [Clears throat] certainly was way over my head. 392 00:28:11,202 --> 00:28:14,035 One guy had to stay in the command module 393 00:28:14,138 --> 00:28:16,470 and the other two were going to go to the Moon 394 00:28:16,574 --> 00:28:20,305 and I was... Pigeonholed, if that's the right word, 395 00:28:20,411 --> 00:28:22,709 as a command module pilot and so that... 396 00:28:22,814 --> 00:28:25,578 I lost my chance of... of walking on the Moon 397 00:28:25,683 --> 00:28:31,019 but in return for that, I gained a chance to... 398 00:28:31,122 --> 00:28:32,555 A: Fly to the Moon 399 00:28:32,657 --> 00:28:37,788 and perhaps be a member of the first crew to land on the Moon. 400 00:28:39,097 --> 00:28:40,826 Bean: One thing I know about Buzz, 401 00:28:40,932 --> 00:28:44,197 he's one of these guys that's a lot smarter than most of us. 402 00:28:44,302 --> 00:28:47,328 He had a nickname, Dr. Rendezvous. 403 00:28:47,438 --> 00:28:52,432 He loves to talk about technical stuff, 404 00:28:52,544 --> 00:28:53,602 particularly rendezvous. 405 00:28:53,711 --> 00:28:56,009 I mean, he'll get this orbit going this way 406 00:28:56,114 --> 00:28:58,048 and that orbit going the other way 407 00:28:58,149 --> 00:29:00,879 and he really grooved on those things. 408 00:29:00,985 --> 00:29:03,249 You didn't want to sit near him in a party 409 00:29:03,354 --> 00:29:05,948 because he would start talking about rendezvous. 410 00:29:06,057 --> 00:29:07,718 And you would want to be talking 411 00:29:07,825 --> 00:29:10,225 about that good-looking girl across the room. 412 00:29:10,328 --> 00:29:13,855 He could care less, he wanted to talk about rendezvous. 413 00:29:13,965 --> 00:29:17,492 And he'd been talking to you about it all... all week long. 414 00:29:17,601 --> 00:29:21,560 That's right, that was what I was really interested in. 415 00:29:23,908 --> 00:29:27,105 Duke: I always respected Neil Armstrong highly. 416 00:29:27,211 --> 00:29:31,648 He was probably the coolest under pressure 417 00:29:31,749 --> 00:29:36,049 of anyone that I had ever had the privilege of flying with. 418 00:29:36,154 --> 00:29:38,122 [Engines power up] 419 00:29:40,258 --> 00:29:42,749 He was just Mr. Coolstone, if you will. 420 00:29:44,561 --> 00:29:47,325 One of the oddities in Neil's training 421 00:29:47,431 --> 00:29:50,992 was this thing we lovingly called "the flying bedstead". 422 00:29:51,102 --> 00:29:53,195 It was an ungainly- looking contraption 423 00:29:53,304 --> 00:29:57,001 and it was meant to imitate the L.M., the Lunar Module. 424 00:30:02,980 --> 00:30:07,417 Neil, he and I were in adjoining offices, same secretary. 425 00:30:08,652 --> 00:30:11,052 I remember one day I came in in the morning, 426 00:30:11,155 --> 00:30:13,419 I run into a couple of guys, they say, 427 00:30:13,524 --> 00:30:19,190 "Do you know that Neil bailed out of the LLTV this morning? " 428 00:30:30,041 --> 00:30:32,942 Bean: I said, "no way." He said, whoever it was, 429 00:30:33,044 --> 00:30:34,602 Two or three guys said, "Yeah!" 430 00:30:34,712 --> 00:30:36,703 I said, "Okay, I'm going in there and ask him." 431 00:30:36,814 --> 00:30:37,838 So I go in there and Neil... 432 00:30:37,949 --> 00:30:40,679 Neil's fooling around, nothing going on. 433 00:30:40,785 --> 00:30:42,844 I said, "those guys out in the office 434 00:30:42,954 --> 00:30:45,787 Said you bailed out of the LLTV this morning." 435 00:30:45,890 --> 00:30:47,084 He said, "Yeah." 436 00:30:47,191 --> 00:30:49,125 That was all he said, "Yeah." 437 00:30:49,227 --> 00:30:51,559 I mean this guy had been a second and a half 438 00:30:51,662 --> 00:30:54,153 from being killed and that was it. 439 00:30:54,265 --> 00:30:57,132 He didn't say, "l nearly got killed", 440 00:30:57,235 --> 00:30:59,726 "l nearly, you know..." I don't know what we... 441 00:30:59,837 --> 00:31:02,965 "Yeah." that was it, that was it! 442 00:31:03,074 --> 00:31:05,133 I mean, what was he supposed to do? 443 00:31:05,243 --> 00:31:06,574 I mean, maybe he could have gone out 444 00:31:06,677 --> 00:31:08,372 and gotten roaring drunk or something 445 00:31:08,479 --> 00:31:10,640 but that's not Neil, you know? 446 00:31:10,748 --> 00:31:13,546 He went back and shuffled paper. That's what you had to do. 447 00:31:13,651 --> 00:31:17,087 You know, the program goes on! 448 00:31:17,188 --> 00:31:19,156 [Music playing] 449 00:31:35,773 --> 00:31:40,574 Tomorrow we, the crew of Apollo 11, are... 450 00:31:42,947 --> 00:31:48,044 privileged to represent the United States 451 00:31:48,152 --> 00:31:51,553 in our first attempt 452 00:31:51,656 --> 00:31:56,025 to take Man to another heavenly body. 453 00:32:31,829 --> 00:32:34,593 [Sigh] 454 00:32:37,001 --> 00:32:37,968 Um... 455 00:32:41,205 --> 00:32:44,197 Well, I'd given up smoking the pipe 456 00:32:44,308 --> 00:32:46,367 maybe three weeks before launch. 457 00:32:48,312 --> 00:32:51,281 That's my best recollection, 458 00:32:51,382 --> 00:32:55,079 maybe having a drink, three days before. 459 00:32:58,389 --> 00:33:01,017 I don't think anybody really slept too well 460 00:33:01,125 --> 00:33:03,593 the night before, you're just wondering 461 00:33:03,694 --> 00:33:09,826 about whether you can... get enough rest 462 00:33:09,934 --> 00:33:12,698 for what you need to possibly do. 463 00:33:12,803 --> 00:33:13,770 [Music playing] 464 00:33:25,016 --> 00:33:28,782 Newsreader: This is CBS News colour coverage of... 465 00:33:35,559 --> 00:33:38,551 Sponsored by Kellogg's. 466 00:33:38,662 --> 00:33:41,392 Kellogg's puts more in your morning. 467 00:33:41,499 --> 00:33:43,865 Here from CBS News Apollo headquarters 468 00:33:43,968 --> 00:33:47,631 at Kennedy Space Center, correspondent Walter Cronkite. 469 00:33:47,738 --> 00:33:48,932 Good morning. 470 00:33:49,040 --> 00:33:51,008 It's t-minus one hour, 471 00:33:51,108 --> 00:33:54,544 29 minutes and 53 seconds and counting. 472 00:33:54,645 --> 00:33:57,580 In just an hour and a half, if all goes well, 473 00:33:57,681 --> 00:34:01,310 Apollo 11 astronauts Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins 474 00:34:01,419 --> 00:34:04,752 are to lift off from pad 39-a out there, 475 00:34:04,855 --> 00:34:08,382 on the voyage Man always has dreamed about. 476 00:34:08,492 --> 00:34:10,926 Next stop for them: The Moon. 477 00:34:11,028 --> 00:34:12,996 [Music playing] 478 00:34:16,467 --> 00:34:18,367 [Applause] 479 00:34:28,879 --> 00:34:31,211 Collins: Well, on launch days, it's kind of strange, 480 00:34:31,315 --> 00:34:33,579 you go out in a van to the launch pad, 481 00:34:33,684 --> 00:34:35,948 and you're... you're kind of used to that. 482 00:34:36,053 --> 00:34:38,180 Riding in a van is the American way, 483 00:34:38,289 --> 00:34:40,780 so that's not a problem. 484 00:34:40,891 --> 00:34:46,022 When you get out to the base of this gigantic gantry, 485 00:34:46,130 --> 00:34:49,930 it's... it's empty, there's nobody there, it's deserted. 486 00:34:50,034 --> 00:34:54,471 And you're accustomed to scores of workers, 487 00:34:54,571 --> 00:34:57,438 you know, swarming like ants all up and down and around it, 488 00:34:57,541 --> 00:35:00,840 and, you know, you're in with a crowd of people. 489 00:35:00,945 --> 00:35:04,210 And then suddenly there's nobody there 490 00:35:04,315 --> 00:35:07,512 and you think, "God, you know, maybe they know something I don't know!" 491 00:35:12,323 --> 00:35:15,952 Aldrin: We got out there to the launch pad. 492 00:35:16,060 --> 00:35:19,291 So I had about ten minutes to look out 493 00:35:19,396 --> 00:35:22,524 and see the Sun rise, see the waves coming in 494 00:35:22,634 --> 00:35:26,400 and see the evidence of the people out on the side. 495 00:35:26,504 --> 00:35:29,871 Just... And thinking about the fact 496 00:35:29,974 --> 00:35:32,670 that this was something I wanted to remember. 497 00:35:35,946 --> 00:35:38,005 So it is now, before they go, 498 00:35:38,115 --> 00:35:42,381 as their gleaming vehicle sits poised and peaceful 499 00:35:42,486 --> 00:35:45,011 out there behind me on pad 39-a, 500 00:35:45,122 --> 00:35:48,649 that there is time to think of those three men 501 00:35:48,759 --> 00:35:50,522 and the burdens and the hopes 502 00:35:50,627 --> 00:35:54,529 that they carry on behalf of all Mankind. 503 00:36:00,204 --> 00:36:03,503 Collins: I had the feeling the whole world was watching us. 504 00:36:06,643 --> 00:36:10,545 So, not only do I have a lot of things I can do wrong, 505 00:36:10,647 --> 00:36:14,583 but the consequences should I do them wrong 506 00:36:14,685 --> 00:36:18,917 are going to be immediately obvious to three billion people 507 00:36:19,023 --> 00:36:22,515 and... that's a worrisome thought. 508 00:36:22,627 --> 00:36:26,028 Capcom: T-minus ten minutes and counting, t-minus ten. 509 00:36:26,130 --> 00:36:28,030 We're aiming for our planned lift-off 510 00:36:28,132 --> 00:36:30,225 at 32 minutes past the hour. 511 00:36:30,334 --> 00:36:32,097 This is Kennedy launch control. 512 00:36:32,203 --> 00:36:35,229 Aldrin: I don't know why people who have not been on rockets 513 00:36:35,339 --> 00:36:39,275 continue to ask "You were not scared? " 514 00:36:39,376 --> 00:36:41,503 No, we were not scared! 515 00:36:41,611 --> 00:36:44,944 Until something happens, then it's time to get scared. 516 00:36:45,049 --> 00:36:47,313 Capcom: We're just past the two minute mark in the countdown, 517 00:36:47,418 --> 00:36:49,443 t-minus 1 minute, 54 seconds. 518 00:36:49,552 --> 00:36:52,749 Collins: The countdown is a very negative thing. 519 00:36:52,856 --> 00:36:54,448 You just hope nothing goes wrong. 520 00:36:54,558 --> 00:36:56,458 You think, "oh, whoosh, we got by that one 521 00:36:56,561 --> 00:36:57,858 and maybe we'll get by that one..." 522 00:36:57,962 --> 00:37:00,988 and then when you get very close to launch, 523 00:37:01,098 --> 00:37:04,898 suddenly, it's like someone turned on a big electric light bulb, 524 00:37:05,002 --> 00:37:08,494 You think, "You know, I think we're really going to go, you know, 525 00:37:08,605 --> 00:37:11,369 I think it's going to happen. We're going to leave!" 526 00:37:11,475 --> 00:37:13,238 Capcom: 30 seconds and counting. 527 00:37:15,679 --> 00:37:17,510 Astronauts report it feels good. 528 00:37:17,615 --> 00:37:19,583 T-minus 25 seconds... 529 00:37:22,219 --> 00:37:24,312 20 seconds and counting. 530 00:37:26,423 --> 00:37:28,118 T-minus 15 seconds. 531 00:37:28,225 --> 00:37:30,090 Guidance is internal. 532 00:37:30,194 --> 00:37:33,994 12, 11, 10, 9... 533 00:37:34,098 --> 00:37:36,726 Ignition sequence starts. 534 00:37:36,834 --> 00:37:38,961 Six, five, four, 535 00:37:39,069 --> 00:37:43,597 Three, two, one, zero. 536 00:37:43,707 --> 00:37:45,675 [Engines roaring] 537 00:37:49,679 --> 00:37:51,510 Aldrin: At the moment of lift-off, 538 00:37:51,615 --> 00:37:54,641 There were numbers changing on the dashboard, 539 00:37:54,752 --> 00:37:58,745 there were sounds indicating in the voice loop 540 00:37:58,856 --> 00:38:03,725 that we'd had lift-off, but what did we feel? 541 00:38:03,827 --> 00:38:07,558 I think we felt, in those early moments, 542 00:38:07,665 --> 00:38:11,396 that we were not attached to the ground any more, 543 00:38:11,502 --> 00:38:14,960 but there was a slight hunting, maybe, 544 00:38:15,072 --> 00:38:16,937 of the guidance system. 545 00:38:17,041 --> 00:38:20,943 I'd describe it as a nervous novice 546 00:38:21,045 --> 00:38:23,775 driving a wide car down a narrow alley. 547 00:38:23,881 --> 00:38:26,281 You know, you've got to make corrections, you're not quite sure. 548 00:38:26,383 --> 00:38:27,907 You zig this way and that way... 549 00:38:28,018 --> 00:38:31,215 And what it is, it's those big motors underneath 550 00:38:31,322 --> 00:38:33,517 "gimbaling", you know, swivelling back and forth 551 00:38:33,624 --> 00:38:34,716 to keep you in balance. 552 00:38:34,825 --> 00:38:37,453 This thing is a pencil as it goes up 553 00:38:37,561 --> 00:38:41,327 and it has to be balanced very precisely. 554 00:38:41,432 --> 00:38:45,163 And the gimbaling of the motors, you feel in the seat of your pants 555 00:38:45,269 --> 00:38:50,730 and thinking, "Gee, that launch tower is just a few feet off to one side. 556 00:38:50,841 --> 00:38:54,436 I hope this sucker ain't gonna gimbal over in that direction too much." 557 00:38:54,544 --> 00:38:59,345 And then when they tell you launch tower clear, 558 00:38:59,450 --> 00:39:00,974 you kind of say, "Oh, whoosh, 559 00:39:01,085 --> 00:39:04,111 that's good. We don't have to worry about hitting that moose." 560 00:39:04,221 --> 00:39:06,280 And then off you go from there. 561 00:39:06,824 --> 00:39:08,348 [Music playing] 562 00:41:07,644 --> 00:41:11,171 Will metal stand this kind of vibration? 563 00:41:11,281 --> 00:41:14,978 Have the engineers realized how this thing shakes? 564 00:41:15,085 --> 00:41:17,280 Because it shakes and vibrates 565 00:41:17,387 --> 00:41:19,719 so much more than I ever imagined. 566 00:41:22,226 --> 00:41:24,057 Lovell: When they open up the fuel manifolds, 567 00:41:24,161 --> 00:41:28,291 we could hear the fuel rumble down these huge pipes. 568 00:41:28,398 --> 00:41:31,492 Then it dawned on me, from an emotional point of view, 569 00:41:31,601 --> 00:41:33,262 that we're going to go to the Moon. 570 00:41:36,173 --> 00:41:37,868 Mitchell: The sound and the reverberations 571 00:41:37,975 --> 00:41:38,999 coming from those engines, 572 00:41:39,109 --> 00:41:40,804 those five engines when they're ignited, 573 00:41:40,911 --> 00:41:44,074 it shakes the whole body, the reverberations from it. 574 00:41:44,181 --> 00:41:45,307 It's very emotional. 575 00:41:48,151 --> 00:41:50,483 Scott: You're not just riding along. 576 00:41:50,587 --> 00:41:52,748 A lot of people think you're just lying on your back 577 00:41:52,856 --> 00:41:54,153 waiting for it to happen. 578 00:41:54,258 --> 00:41:56,556 But not really, because every second 579 00:41:56,660 --> 00:41:59,288 is something of significance. 580 00:42:01,798 --> 00:42:03,993 Duke: I found out from the flight surgeon later on 581 00:42:04,101 --> 00:42:09,164 that my heartbeat was a 144 at lift-off. 582 00:42:10,807 --> 00:42:13,367 John's was 70. 583 00:42:13,477 --> 00:42:15,377 Yeah, well, I told him. 584 00:42:15,479 --> 00:42:18,312 I said mine was too old to go any faster. Yeah. 585 00:42:19,750 --> 00:42:23,516 I was wondering, why did we do all these launch simulations? 586 00:42:23,621 --> 00:42:26,954 If I had had to reach a switch with all of that vibration going on 587 00:42:27,057 --> 00:42:30,322 I wouldn't have quite been sure where I was putting my hand. 588 00:42:36,366 --> 00:42:38,800 Cernan: We were on our way. 589 00:42:38,902 --> 00:42:40,927 Man: [On radio] What a ride, babe, what a ride! 590 00:42:41,038 --> 00:42:44,735 Cernan: I had control of that vehicle right in the palm of my hands. 591 00:42:44,841 --> 00:42:47,456 If the guidance failed or started to stray 592 00:42:47,556 --> 00:42:49,807 or went somewhere we didn't like, or the Ground didn't like, 593 00:42:49,913 --> 00:42:53,178 I could flip a switch and I could control seven... 594 00:42:53,283 --> 00:42:55,444 over seven and a half million pounds 595 00:42:55,551 --> 00:42:58,111 of rocket thrust with this handle 596 00:42:58,221 --> 00:42:59,518 and fly the thing to the Moon myself. 597 00:42:59,622 --> 00:43:02,182 And I guarantee you, I had practiced it 598 00:43:02,292 --> 00:43:06,353 and trained for it so many times, I almost dared... 599 00:43:06,463 --> 00:43:08,294 I almost dared her to quit on me. 600 00:43:11,969 --> 00:43:14,529 Every breath she breathed, I breathed with her. 601 00:43:14,639 --> 00:43:17,665 She was uniquely something special 602 00:43:17,774 --> 00:43:20,504 and what a hell of a ride she gave us. 603 00:43:20,612 --> 00:43:22,580 [Music playing] 604 00:43:47,671 --> 00:43:50,139 Duke: We had been warned about shutdown with the Saturn 605 00:43:50,240 --> 00:43:51,969 because you go from four and a half Gs 606 00:43:52,075 --> 00:43:53,702 to zero just like that. [Finger snap] 607 00:43:56,581 --> 00:43:59,049 And this big fireball 608 00:43:59,149 --> 00:44:02,641 comes roaring up the length of that booster... 609 00:44:02,753 --> 00:44:06,189 And just... Out in front of you 610 00:44:06,289 --> 00:44:07,984 then the second stage fires 611 00:44:08,091 --> 00:44:09,615 and you fly right through the fireball 612 00:44:09,726 --> 00:44:11,193 and you're on your way again. 613 00:44:11,294 --> 00:44:13,660 Capcom: Roger, Houston, you are go for staging. 614 00:44:13,764 --> 00:44:15,732 [Music playing] 615 00:44:20,437 --> 00:44:22,337 [Radio chatter] 616 00:44:25,375 --> 00:44:27,104 Capcom: [On radio] Houston, thrusters go, all engines. 617 00:44:27,210 --> 00:44:29,110 You're looking good. 618 00:44:29,212 --> 00:44:31,146 Man: [On radio] Roger, hearing you loud and clear, Houston. 619 00:44:31,248 --> 00:44:46,289 [Music playing] 620 00:44:52,002 --> 00:44:52,969 Man: [On radio] Tower's gone. 621 00:44:53,070 --> 00:44:54,469 Capcom: Roger, tower. 622 00:44:54,571 --> 00:44:57,199 Man: [On radio] Yeah! They finally gave me a window to look out! 623 00:45:02,112 --> 00:45:04,012 Collins: You go up into Earth orbit 624 00:45:04,114 --> 00:45:06,844 and you go around the Earth once 625 00:45:06,950 --> 00:45:08,850 and again that's a busy time, 626 00:45:08,952 --> 00:45:10,715 because you want to make sure 627 00:45:10,821 --> 00:45:14,222 that everything on board is working properly 628 00:45:14,324 --> 00:45:17,020 before you set sail for the Moon. 629 00:45:18,929 --> 00:45:21,022 Capcom: [On radio] Apollo 11, this is Houston. 630 00:45:21,131 --> 00:45:23,258 You are go for TLI. Over. 631 00:45:24,568 --> 00:45:26,832 Man: [On radio] Apollo 11, thank you. 632 00:45:26,937 --> 00:45:30,168 Collins: And then you get the word you're go for TLI 633 00:45:30,273 --> 00:45:33,538 and that means you can ignite the motor 634 00:45:33,644 --> 00:45:36,169 and head on off to the Moon and you do, 635 00:45:36,279 --> 00:45:38,543 and you go, and that's it! 636 00:45:50,160 --> 00:45:52,025 Man: [On radio] Ignition. 637 00:45:58,468 --> 00:46:01,460 We confirm ignition and the thrust is go. 638 00:46:03,106 --> 00:46:04,266 Just a second. 639 00:46:06,276 --> 00:46:08,403 Apollo 11, out. 640 00:46:08,512 --> 00:46:10,639 35,000 feet per second. 641 00:46:10,747 --> 00:46:12,715 [Music playing] 642 00:46:17,287 --> 00:46:18,549 Get out. 643 00:46:22,926 --> 00:46:28,330 Climb velocity 35,570 feet per second. 644 00:46:28,431 --> 00:46:31,889 Altitude, 177 nautical miles. 645 00:46:34,871 --> 00:46:36,463 Man: [On radio] Houston, Apollo 11, 646 00:46:36,573 --> 00:46:40,532 that Saturn gave us a magnificent ride. 647 00:46:40,644 --> 00:46:42,771 Capcom: Uh, roger, 11, we'll pass that on. 648 00:46:42,879 --> 00:46:45,473 And it kind of looks like you're on your way now. 649 00:46:45,583 --> 00:46:47,483 [Music playing] 650 00:47:24,187 --> 00:47:27,520 In Earth orbit, the horizon's just slightly curved. 651 00:47:27,624 --> 00:47:30,889 When you head on out to the Moon, in very short order, 652 00:47:30,994 --> 00:47:33,224 and you get a chance to look back at the Earth, 653 00:47:33,330 --> 00:47:36,265 that horizon slowly curves around in upon itself 654 00:47:36,366 --> 00:47:37,958 and all of a sudden, you're looking at something... 655 00:47:38,068 --> 00:47:41,231 that's very strange but yet is very, very familiar 656 00:47:41,338 --> 00:47:45,172 because you're beginning to see the Earth evolve. 657 00:47:46,642 --> 00:47:48,633 I was able to look out the window 658 00:47:48,745 --> 00:47:51,680 to see this incredible sight 659 00:47:51,781 --> 00:47:54,079 of the whole circle of the Earth. 660 00:47:56,119 --> 00:47:58,349 Oceans were crystal blue, 661 00:47:58,455 --> 00:48:00,787 the land was brown, 662 00:48:00,891 --> 00:48:03,382 and the clouds and the snow were pure white 663 00:48:03,493 --> 00:48:04,892 and that jewel of Earth 664 00:48:04,995 --> 00:48:08,692 was just hung up in the blackness of space. 665 00:48:13,671 --> 00:48:17,163 The only people that have seen the whole circle of the Earth 666 00:48:17,274 --> 00:48:20,107 are the 24 guys that went to the Moon. 667 00:48:25,181 --> 00:48:28,344 Mitchell: When you see Earth like that, it's powerful. 668 00:48:28,451 --> 00:48:31,818 Not... Not even bigger than that, way up there. 669 00:48:36,693 --> 00:48:40,993 Collins: How peaceful and calm and quiet and serene it looked, 670 00:48:41,097 --> 00:48:43,361 how fragile it appeared. 671 00:48:43,466 --> 00:48:46,060 That was the... oddly enough... 672 00:48:46,169 --> 00:48:50,128 the overriding sensation I got looking at the Earth was, 673 00:48:50,240 --> 00:48:54,734 "My God, that little thing is so fragile out there." 674 00:48:58,548 --> 00:49:00,175 Mitchell: You get to see the Earth receding, 675 00:49:00,283 --> 00:49:03,218 you get to see the Moon coming towards you... 676 00:49:03,320 --> 00:49:06,551 And it's awe-inspiring. 677 00:49:06,655 --> 00:49:10,091 And you start to identify, "Hey, we're going to be up there pretty soon, 678 00:49:10,193 --> 00:49:12,423 and, bye-bye, back there." 679 00:49:12,529 --> 00:49:14,497 [Music playing] 680 00:49:25,075 --> 00:49:27,168 Man: [On radio] This transmission is coming to you 681 00:49:27,277 --> 00:49:30,838 approximately halfway between the Moon and the Earth. 682 00:49:30,947 --> 00:49:35,247 We've been 31 hours, about 20 minutes into flight. 683 00:49:35,352 --> 00:49:37,115 We have about, uh, 684 00:49:37,220 --> 00:49:40,519 less than 40 hours left to go to the Moon. 685 00:49:40,623 --> 00:49:42,420 We journeyed on our way. 686 00:49:42,525 --> 00:49:43,958 We set up a course, 687 00:49:44,060 --> 00:49:46,858 we took our suits off at this point, stowed them, 688 00:49:46,963 --> 00:49:50,865 we ate a meal and then just went into our flight plan. 689 00:49:53,470 --> 00:49:55,233 Cernan: You know, wasn't Grandma's cooking, 690 00:49:55,338 --> 00:49:56,600 but it was worth it. 691 00:49:58,743 --> 00:50:01,610 We did have hot water on the command module 692 00:50:01,711 --> 00:50:03,303 and so we took, uh... 693 00:50:03,413 --> 00:50:06,348 a regular little shaving cream 694 00:50:06,449 --> 00:50:08,849 and a razor and had a tissue paper, 695 00:50:08,952 --> 00:50:10,920 And I can't tell you how good, 696 00:50:11,021 --> 00:50:14,980 after three or four days, it feels to shave. 697 00:50:19,095 --> 00:50:20,392 Duke: In our checklist, 698 00:50:20,497 --> 00:50:24,433 it turned out that my little boys and my wife, 699 00:50:24,534 --> 00:50:26,968 had these little greetings, if you will, 700 00:50:27,070 --> 00:50:29,231 were inserted into the flight plan. 701 00:50:30,606 --> 00:50:33,666 This one was from my son, Charles. 702 00:50:33,777 --> 00:50:37,770 It says, just in crayon, 703 00:50:37,881 --> 00:50:40,111 "From Charles. We love you." 704 00:50:40,216 --> 00:50:43,117 And on the other side, he sort of had his idea 705 00:50:43,219 --> 00:50:47,747 of what the... Lunar Module looks like. 706 00:50:49,559 --> 00:50:52,687 And Tom, that was not quite five, 707 00:50:52,796 --> 00:50:57,358 and he wrote "Dear Daddy, 708 00:50:57,467 --> 00:51:04,100 have a safe trip home. Love, Tom." 709 00:51:08,812 --> 00:51:12,578 Collins: It's not fear, it's worry. 710 00:51:12,682 --> 00:51:16,448 And I think there's a legitimate distinction between the two. 711 00:51:16,553 --> 00:51:19,078 So, it's not a question of you're scared all the time, 712 00:51:19,189 --> 00:51:23,091 but it is you're mildly worried all the time, or at least, I was. 713 00:51:23,193 --> 00:51:26,026 You know, you're not sure all these things are going to work properly, 714 00:51:26,129 --> 00:51:30,532 and there's a hell of a lot of them coming in a very fragile daisy-chain 715 00:51:30,632 --> 00:51:33,430 and you don't want any of those links in the chain to break 716 00:51:33,536 --> 00:51:37,802 because downstream from that broken link, they're all useless. 717 00:51:37,907 --> 00:51:40,569 So yes, you're worried, you're concerned. 718 00:51:41,778 --> 00:51:46,181 I always thought of myself as one of the more fearful astronauts, really. 719 00:51:48,218 --> 00:51:50,209 And when I'd look out of the window of the spacecraft, 720 00:51:50,320 --> 00:51:52,914 I would think, "If that window blows out, 721 00:51:53,022 --> 00:51:55,547 I'm going to die in about a second." 722 00:51:55,658 --> 00:51:58,491 There's death right out there about an inch away. 723 00:52:00,596 --> 00:52:02,257 Capcom: [On radio] All your systems are looking good. 724 00:52:02,365 --> 00:52:03,354 Going around the corner. 725 00:52:03,466 --> 00:52:05,627 We'll see you on the other side, over. 726 00:52:07,070 --> 00:52:10,096 Man: [On radio] Everything looks okay up here. 727 00:52:10,206 --> 00:52:12,470 Capcom: [On radio] Roger, out. 728 00:52:12,575 --> 00:52:16,067 Cernan: We... We didn't see the Moon until after we were there. 729 00:52:16,179 --> 00:52:18,272 It's like some of these science-fiction movies 730 00:52:18,381 --> 00:52:21,373 where you see this big meteorite just slowly moving. 731 00:52:21,484 --> 00:52:23,179 You could feel the Moon's presence. 732 00:52:23,286 --> 00:52:25,413 You couldn't see it. 733 00:52:27,357 --> 00:52:28,688 We went into darkness, 734 00:52:28,791 --> 00:52:32,591 after being in daylight the whole time 735 00:52:32,695 --> 00:52:35,027 on the way to the Moon. 736 00:52:35,131 --> 00:52:37,565 And then we went into darkness. 737 00:52:40,737 --> 00:52:44,173 And we're in the shadow of the Moon. 738 00:52:44,274 --> 00:52:46,242 [Music playing] 739 00:53:25,415 --> 00:53:27,576 Collins: When the Sun is shining on the surface 740 00:53:27,685 --> 00:53:29,653 at a very shallow angle, 741 00:53:29,753 --> 00:53:32,619 the craters cast long shadows 742 00:53:32,722 --> 00:53:36,556 and the Moon's surface seems very inhospitable. 743 00:53:36,659 --> 00:53:38,456 Forbidding, almost. 744 00:53:44,200 --> 00:53:47,795 I did not sense any great invitation 745 00:53:47,904 --> 00:53:51,897 on the part of the Moon for us to come into its domain. 746 00:53:52,008 --> 00:53:55,808 I sensed more, almost a hostile place... 747 00:53:55,912 --> 00:53:58,346 A... a scary place. 748 00:53:58,448 --> 00:54:00,416 [Music playing] 749 00:54:21,538 --> 00:54:22,698 Bean: It was tense, 750 00:54:22,805 --> 00:54:26,366 because even though they'd practiced it in the simulator cockpit, 751 00:54:26,476 --> 00:54:29,536 they didn't always make a successful landing. 752 00:54:31,481 --> 00:54:34,712 You've got to end up down there with just the right amount of fuel. 753 00:54:34,817 --> 00:54:38,082 Like, three minutes, you've got to be at a certain altitude and air speed. 754 00:54:38,187 --> 00:54:39,381 It didn't work... 755 00:54:39,489 --> 00:54:42,390 Sometimes the update from the landing radar didn't work, 756 00:54:42,491 --> 00:54:46,052 and this was when we were trying to do it right, 757 00:54:46,162 --> 00:54:48,027 just to find a way to do it right. 758 00:54:48,131 --> 00:54:50,497 This was a big deal. 759 00:54:50,600 --> 00:54:52,397 Capcom: [On radio] Okay, it's go there, Capcom, 760 00:54:52,502 --> 00:54:53,662 on the hot fire, okay? 761 00:54:53,771 --> 00:54:55,238 All flight controllers going on the horn. 762 00:54:55,338 --> 00:54:57,033 Go, no-go for undocking! 763 00:54:57,140 --> 00:55:00,473 Various: [On radio] Retro? Go! Fido? Go! Guidance? Go! 764 00:55:00,577 --> 00:55:03,205 Control? Go! Delcom? Go! GNC? Go! 765 00:55:03,313 --> 00:55:05,247 Ecom? Go! Surgeon? Go! 766 00:55:05,348 --> 00:55:06,940 Capcom, we're go for undocking. 767 00:55:08,251 --> 00:55:09,775 Man: [On radio] Apollo 11, Houston, 768 00:55:09,886 --> 00:55:11,114 We're go for undocking, over. 769 00:55:23,132 --> 00:55:26,295 Duke: Capcom was the capsule communicator 770 00:55:26,402 --> 00:55:28,700 and it was always an astronaut. 771 00:55:28,805 --> 00:55:31,296 and he was the only one that was allowed 772 00:55:31,407 --> 00:55:34,570 to speak directly to the crew. 773 00:55:34,676 --> 00:55:36,974 Tell him to go... [Indistinct] over. 774 00:55:37,080 --> 00:55:38,911 And so I was very, very excited 775 00:55:39,015 --> 00:55:43,179 to be part of that historic event. 776 00:55:43,286 --> 00:55:44,685 If... we pulled it off, 777 00:55:44,787 --> 00:55:47,381 was going to be a tremendous honour. 778 00:55:57,900 --> 00:55:59,868 [Music playing] 779 00:56:22,191 --> 00:56:24,716 Man: [On radio] Capcom, we're go to continue PDI. 780 00:56:24,827 --> 00:56:26,454 You're go to... [Static] 781 00:56:26,562 --> 00:56:28,257 You're go to continue powered descent. 782 00:56:28,364 --> 00:56:30,423 You're go to continue powered descent. 783 00:56:33,603 --> 00:56:34,900 Man 1 : [On radio] Okay, everybody. Let's hang tight, 784 00:56:35,004 --> 00:56:36,130 look for landing radar. 785 00:56:36,239 --> 00:56:37,206 Man 2: [On radio] Flight guns? 786 00:56:37,306 --> 00:56:38,739 Man 1: [Indistinct] 787 00:56:38,841 --> 00:56:40,433 Man 2: We'll meet that landing radar by 18,000 with this down-track. 788 00:56:40,609 --> 00:56:41,576 Man 1: Rog. 789 00:56:42,645 --> 00:56:46,547 Aldrin: The landing radar was now beginning to receive signals 790 00:56:46,649 --> 00:56:51,609 and being Dr. Rendezvous, no matter what the checklist said, 791 00:56:51,720 --> 00:56:56,248 I was going to leave the rendezvous radar on and active 792 00:56:56,359 --> 00:57:00,056 so if we had to abort, it was on and working 793 00:57:00,163 --> 00:57:04,293 and we could reacquire mic as soon as possible 794 00:57:04,400 --> 00:57:05,924 if we had to go back up. 795 00:57:06,035 --> 00:57:07,400 Capcom: [On radio] Houston, we got data dropout, 796 00:57:07,503 --> 00:57:08,868 you're still looking good. 797 00:57:08,971 --> 00:57:11,303 Duke: Then we had a computer alarm. 798 00:57:11,407 --> 00:57:14,308 "Computer Problem, 1202". 799 00:57:14,410 --> 00:57:16,344 And well, what's 1202? 800 00:57:20,316 --> 00:57:24,047 1202, 1202! 801 00:57:24,153 --> 00:57:26,144 Duke: So when the crew reported this alarm, 802 00:57:26,255 --> 00:57:27,620 my heart sank, really. 803 00:57:27,723 --> 00:57:31,921 "Oh no, we've got a main, primary computer problem. 804 00:57:32,028 --> 00:57:34,019 Armstrong: [On radio] 1202 alarm. 805 00:57:37,200 --> 00:57:39,225 Capcom: [On radio] Yeah, and same thing we had. 806 00:57:46,242 --> 00:57:48,540 Aldrin: So the landing radar is feeding information, 807 00:57:48,643 --> 00:57:50,304 the rendezvous radar is, 808 00:57:50,413 --> 00:57:56,875 and evidently that combination was not anticipated by the guys at M. I.T. 809 00:57:56,986 --> 00:57:58,180 They're pretty narrow-minded. 810 00:57:58,287 --> 00:58:01,654 You're making a descent, you need the radar, landing radar! 811 00:58:01,757 --> 00:58:03,554 You're making a rendezvous, you need the rende... 812 00:58:03,659 --> 00:58:05,149 But you don't need to mix the two. 813 00:58:05,261 --> 00:58:06,592 [Chuckling] 814 00:58:06,695 --> 00:58:08,686 But they didn't think the same way I did. 815 00:58:14,670 --> 00:58:18,128 Duke: The guidance guy, Steve Bales, responded... 816 00:58:18,241 --> 00:58:20,266 Man: [On radio] We're go on that flight! 817 00:58:20,376 --> 00:58:22,606 Duke: I heard him say that to flight control 818 00:58:22,713 --> 00:58:25,147 and I just voiced right up, 819 00:58:25,248 --> 00:58:27,375 "We're go, we're go, Eagle." 820 00:58:27,483 --> 00:58:29,246 And we were go. 821 00:58:29,352 --> 00:58:31,820 Capcom: [On radio] Eagle, Houston, you are go for landing, over. 822 00:58:31,921 --> 00:58:33,115 Man: [On radio] Roger, understand. 823 00:58:33,222 --> 00:58:34,712 Going for landing, 3000 feet. 824 00:58:34,824 --> 00:58:37,088 Look out for alarm: 1201. 825 00:58:37,193 --> 00:58:38,251 Capcom: [On radio] 1201? 826 00:58:38,361 --> 00:58:39,589 Man: [On radio] Roger, 1201. 827 00:58:39,695 --> 00:58:40,719 Same type, we're go, flight. 828 00:58:40,830 --> 00:58:42,161 - Okay, we're go. - We're go. 829 00:58:42,265 --> 00:58:43,732 Same type, we're go. 830 00:58:43,833 --> 00:58:45,460 Man: [On radio] 47 degrees. 831 00:58:45,568 --> 00:58:47,092 Roger. 832 00:58:47,203 --> 00:58:49,228 Capcom: [On radio] Descent, two fuel only. 833 00:58:49,338 --> 00:58:52,307 Man: [On radio] Fuel critical. They didn't want to say critical. 834 00:58:52,408 --> 00:58:54,239 Collins: And then it seemed like Neil 835 00:58:54,343 --> 00:58:59,076 was having a difficult time finding a suitable spot to put it down 836 00:58:59,181 --> 00:59:02,048 and I got a little worried then 837 00:59:02,151 --> 00:59:04,176 because they didn't have a lot of extra fuel. 838 00:59:04,287 --> 00:59:06,448 Man: [On radio] I think we better be quiet, Mike. 839 00:59:06,556 --> 00:59:08,183 Man 2: [On radio] 400 feet, down at 9. 840 00:59:08,291 --> 00:59:10,953 Capcom: [On radio] Okay, the only call-outs from now on will be fuel. 841 00:59:11,060 --> 00:59:14,655 Duke: The guidance system was carrying them into a big boulder field 842 00:59:14,764 --> 00:59:16,857 and it wasn't suitable to land. 843 00:59:16,966 --> 00:59:18,991 So we noticed the trajectory level off 844 00:59:19,101 --> 00:59:22,559 and he just started flying almost horizontal 845 00:59:22,672 --> 00:59:25,505 across the Moon at a high rate of speed. 846 00:59:25,607 --> 00:59:28,201 One of the worst things you can do for gas 847 00:59:28,311 --> 00:59:30,939 is stop your rate of descent 848 00:59:31,047 --> 00:59:33,982 because then you have to take time flying level, 849 00:59:34,083 --> 00:59:36,643 then you have to get your rate of descent built up again. 850 00:59:36,752 --> 00:59:38,777 All that takes gas, okay? 851 00:59:38,888 --> 00:59:42,881 So when he levelled off, I thought, "l wonder if he's going to make it." 852 00:59:42,992 --> 00:59:45,859 If... If there was a boulder field and a crater 853 00:59:45,962 --> 00:59:47,930 that we wanted to avoid, 854 00:59:48,030 --> 00:59:50,828 there are four things you can do. 855 00:59:50,933 --> 00:59:52,400 You can land short, 856 00:59:52,501 --> 00:59:55,561 you can land left, right, or land long. 857 00:59:55,671 --> 00:59:58,504 All right, to land short, you've got to pitch up like this 858 00:59:58,608 --> 01:00:01,133 and you lose sight of where you're going. 859 01:00:01,243 --> 01:00:03,177 And... Either left or right 860 01:00:03,279 --> 01:00:05,543 is also a pretty drastic manoeuvre. 861 01:00:05,649 --> 01:00:09,016 The easiest thing to do is to just pitch forward a little bit 862 01:00:09,118 --> 01:00:10,676 and fly over and land long. 863 01:00:10,786 --> 01:00:13,414 Some of these boulders were the size of Volkswagens 864 01:00:13,522 --> 01:00:16,491 and you don't want to land with one gear on top of one 865 01:00:16,592 --> 01:00:18,184 and one gear down in a hole. 866 01:00:18,294 --> 01:00:20,285 That would not have been good. 867 01:00:20,396 --> 01:00:24,594 So, it was a little... Iffy right there at the very end. 868 01:00:24,700 --> 01:00:29,000 [Radio chatter] 869 01:00:29,105 --> 01:00:32,768 We had two calls that we were to give from mission control. 870 01:00:32,875 --> 01:00:37,209 The first was "Eagle, 60 seconds", 871 01:00:37,313 --> 01:00:40,214 that meant he got 60 more seconds to land 872 01:00:40,316 --> 01:00:42,614 and at the end of that 60 seconds, 873 01:00:42,718 --> 01:00:46,552 by mission rule, I would call abort. 874 01:00:46,656 --> 01:00:49,284 Bean: I never imagined that he wasn't going to land by then 875 01:00:49,392 --> 01:00:51,326 because I think he would have dropped it in 876 01:00:51,427 --> 01:00:53,122 from wherever the engine quit. 877 01:00:53,229 --> 01:00:54,924 He wasn't coming home and saying, 878 01:00:55,031 --> 01:00:58,330 "l got low on fuel so I decided to abandon it." 879 01:00:58,434 --> 01:01:00,129 I don't think any astronaut would do that, 880 01:01:00,236 --> 01:01:01,567 that wouldn't be the right stuff! 881 01:01:01,671 --> 01:01:04,572 Man: [On radio] 300 feet down. Three and a half. 47 forward. 882 01:01:04,674 --> 01:01:07,302 Aldrin: Neil thinks things through thoroughly 883 01:01:07,410 --> 01:01:09,344 and then does what he thinks is right 884 01:01:09,445 --> 01:01:12,346 and usually it's the right thing to do. 885 01:01:12,448 --> 01:01:15,440 I don't think anybody can come close 886 01:01:15,551 --> 01:01:18,452 to touching the skills that he had. 887 01:01:18,554 --> 01:01:22,490 Various: [On radio] 75 feet, just down a half. Roger, over. 888 01:01:22,591 --> 01:01:24,923 60. 60 seconds. 889 01:01:25,027 --> 01:01:27,860 Duke: The tension mounted in mission control 890 01:01:27,963 --> 01:01:31,228 and it was like you could feel it. 891 01:01:31,333 --> 01:01:34,860 You couldn't see it, but you could sense the tension. 892 01:01:34,970 --> 01:01:39,236 And it was... I remember dead silence. 893 01:01:39,341 --> 01:01:41,366 [Ticking] 894 01:01:45,114 --> 01:01:46,741 Man: [On radio] Three feet down, two and a half. 895 01:01:46,849 --> 01:01:48,976 Picking up some dust. 896 01:01:49,085 --> 01:01:50,950 Man: [On radio] Three feet, two and a half down. 897 01:01:51,053 --> 01:01:54,750 [Radio chatter] 898 01:01:54,857 --> 01:01:56,654 Man: [On radio] Pull forward. Just into the right a little. 899 01:01:56,759 --> 01:01:58,283 Capcom: [On radio] 30 seconds! 900 01:02:06,302 --> 01:02:07,360 Man: [On radio] Contact light. 901 01:02:11,507 --> 01:02:13,202 Okay, engines stop. 902 01:02:13,309 --> 01:02:14,276 [Indistinct] Descent. 903 01:02:15,544 --> 01:02:16,636 Remote control, both on. 904 01:02:16,746 --> 01:02:18,873 Descent engine Command override off. 905 01:02:18,981 --> 01:02:20,676 Engine arm off. 906 01:02:20,783 --> 01:02:23,581 413 is in. 907 01:02:23,686 --> 01:02:25,278 We've had shut down. 908 01:02:25,387 --> 01:02:27,287 Capcom: [On radio] We copy you down, Eagle. 909 01:02:27,389 --> 01:02:30,290 Okay, everybody, t-1, stand by for t-1. 910 01:02:31,460 --> 01:02:32,825 Armstrong: [On radio] Tranquillity Base here. 911 01:02:32,928 --> 01:02:34,293 The Eagle has landed! 912 01:02:34,396 --> 01:02:36,421 Duke: Roger, twang... Tranquillity, 913 01:02:36,532 --> 01:02:37,692 We copy you on the ground. 914 01:02:37,800 --> 01:02:39,700 You've got a bunch of guys about to turn blue. 915 01:02:39,802 --> 01:02:41,463 We're breathing again, thanks a lot. 916 01:02:42,606 --> 01:02:43,766 Armstrong: [On radio] Thank you. 917 01:02:43,873 --> 01:02:44,931 I was so excited, 918 01:02:45,040 --> 01:02:47,031 I-I couldn't even get out "Tranquillity". 919 01:02:47,143 --> 01:02:49,668 It was "twang-quillity" or something like that. 920 01:02:49,945 --> 01:02:51,742 [Music playing] 921 01:02:58,653 --> 01:03:00,450 Whew! Boy! [Chuckle] 922 01:03:02,391 --> 01:03:04,154 Stadium announcer: Special announcement! 923 01:03:04,260 --> 01:03:06,125 You will be happy to know 924 01:03:06,228 --> 01:03:10,460 that the Apollo 11 has landed safely. 925 01:03:10,565 --> 01:03:13,898 [Roaring cheer] 926 01:03:14,003 --> 01:03:16,665 [Speaking foreign language] 927 01:03:16,772 --> 01:03:18,740 [Music playing] 928 01:03:22,077 --> 01:03:23,772 I think it's just wonderful 929 01:03:23,879 --> 01:03:27,371 to be on Earth and to live what's going on on the Moon. 930 01:03:27,483 --> 01:03:29,212 It's marvellous! 931 01:03:29,318 --> 01:03:31,411 And as a French woman, how do you think about it? 932 01:03:31,520 --> 01:03:32,612 Oh, I think it's wonderful. 933 01:03:32,721 --> 01:03:35,622 I always trusted America and I knew they couldn't fail. 934 01:03:37,226 --> 01:03:39,387 I think we might have gone and had a beer. 935 01:03:39,495 --> 01:03:41,554 But l... 936 01:03:41,664 --> 01:03:43,632 So we were real happy and it was... 937 01:03:43,732 --> 01:03:45,029 Real pleased we'd done it 938 01:03:45,134 --> 01:03:48,695 and so it was a great feeling of accomplishment and pride, 939 01:03:48,804 --> 01:03:52,262 For the... President Kennedy and for the nation, 940 01:03:52,374 --> 01:03:54,399 we did what we said we were going to do. 941 01:04:05,187 --> 01:04:06,984 Capcom: [On radio] Roger. We read you five-by, Columbia. 942 01:04:07,089 --> 01:04:09,114 He has landed. Tranquillity Base. 943 01:04:09,225 --> 01:04:12,353 Eagle is at Tranquillity, over. 944 01:04:12,461 --> 01:04:13,951 Collins: [On radio] Yeah, I heard the whole thing! 945 01:04:14,063 --> 01:04:16,361 Capcom: [On radio] Well, it was a good show. 946 01:04:16,465 --> 01:04:18,194 Collins: [On radio] Fantastic. 947 01:04:23,105 --> 01:04:24,163 Collins: I discovered later 948 01:04:24,273 --> 01:04:29,142 that I was described as the loneliest man ever 949 01:04:29,245 --> 01:04:33,773 in the universe or something, which really is a lot of baloney. 950 01:04:33,883 --> 01:04:37,046 I mean, l... I had mission control 951 01:04:37,152 --> 01:04:41,213 yakking in my ear half the time. 952 01:04:42,625 --> 01:04:45,719 Capcom: [On radio] Columbia, Houston. How did it go? Over. 953 01:04:45,828 --> 01:04:47,386 Collins: [On radio] Listen, babe, 954 01:04:47,496 --> 01:04:49,623 everything is going just swimmingly, it's beautiful. 955 01:04:51,166 --> 01:04:52,360 Collins: I rather enjoyed it. 956 01:04:52,468 --> 01:04:54,834 I certainly was aware of the fact 957 01:04:54,937 --> 01:04:57,201 that I was by myself, 958 01:04:57,306 --> 01:05:00,400 particularly when I was over on the back side of the Moon. 959 01:05:00,509 --> 01:05:03,342 You know, I can remember thinking, "God, you look over there 960 01:05:03,445 --> 01:05:06,505 and there's 3 billion people, 961 01:05:06,615 --> 01:05:09,914 plus two, somewhere down there, 962 01:05:10,019 --> 01:05:14,319 and then over here there's one plus... 963 01:05:14,423 --> 01:05:15,822 God only knows what!" 964 01:05:15,925 --> 01:05:18,519 So, l... I know I felt that strongly, 965 01:05:18,627 --> 01:05:21,653 but I didn't feel it as loneliness 966 01:05:21,764 --> 01:05:23,595 and I certainly didn't feel it as fear, 967 01:05:23,698 --> 01:05:26,223 I felt it as awareness, 968 01:05:26,335 --> 01:05:28,303 almost a feeling of exaltation. 969 01:05:28,404 --> 01:05:30,304 I... I liked it. It was a good feeling. 970 01:05:31,941 --> 01:05:34,068 Everything was going well with the command module, 971 01:05:34,176 --> 01:05:37,577 I had my happy little home, I had the bright lights on. 972 01:05:37,680 --> 01:05:39,773 Everything was fine. I enjoyed that time. 973 01:05:44,386 --> 01:05:48,914 They're going to probably open the hatch of the Lunar Module 974 01:05:49,024 --> 01:05:51,117 around 9:00 o'clock Eastern Daylight time, 975 01:05:51,226 --> 01:05:53,854 just two hours from now and shortly after that, 976 01:05:53,963 --> 01:05:56,898 38-year-old Neil Armstrong, civilian, 977 01:05:56,999 --> 01:05:58,466 of Wapakoneta, Ohio, 978 01:05:58,567 --> 01:06:01,035 the Commander of this successful Moon mission 979 01:06:01,136 --> 01:06:04,936 will begin to step down the nine steps of the Lunar landing Module 980 01:06:05,040 --> 01:06:07,338 to the surface of the Moon itself. 981 01:06:07,443 --> 01:06:09,104 And what a moment that will be! 982 01:06:09,211 --> 01:06:11,805 Capcom: [On radio] And we're getting a picture on the TV. 983 01:06:11,914 --> 01:06:14,382 There's a great deal of contrast in it 984 01:06:14,483 --> 01:06:17,577 and currently, it's upside down on our monitor 985 01:06:17,686 --> 01:06:20,416 but we can make out a fair amount of detail. 986 01:06:20,522 --> 01:06:23,116 Scott: I realised, of all the science-fiction writers 987 01:06:23,225 --> 01:06:25,125 who ever wrote about going to the Moon, 988 01:06:25,227 --> 01:06:27,957 I don't believe any of them ever dreamed 989 01:06:28,063 --> 01:06:30,759 about the world watching it on television. 990 01:06:30,866 --> 01:06:34,563 [Mixed chatter] 991 01:06:34,670 --> 01:06:36,194 Capcom: [On radio] Neil, this is Houston, 992 01:06:36,305 --> 01:06:39,138 loud and clear. Break, break, Buzz, this is Houston, 993 01:06:39,241 --> 01:06:42,074 Uh, radio check, and verify TV circuit breaker. 994 01:06:43,644 --> 01:06:45,578 Aldrin: [On radio] Roger, TV circuit breaker's in. 995 01:06:45,681 --> 01:06:54,282 [Music playing] 996 01:06:54,390 --> 01:06:55,448 Capcom: [On radio] Okay, Neil, 997 01:06:55,556 --> 01:06:57,456 we can see you coming down the ladder now. 998 01:07:00,262 --> 01:07:03,322 Scott: Every place I go, everybody I see, meet, 999 01:07:03,432 --> 01:07:07,095 even people who were children, tiny babies at the time, 1000 01:07:07,202 --> 01:07:09,966 watched Neil put his first step on the Moon, 1001 01:07:10,072 --> 01:07:11,801 the whole world participated. 1002 01:07:11,907 --> 01:07:13,238 Newsreader: ... Que l'homme pour la premiere fois, 1003 01:07:13,342 --> 01:07:15,071 prenne pied sur la lune. 1004 01:07:15,177 --> 01:07:16,940 Les Russes sont loin... [Indistinct] naturellement. 1005 01:07:17,046 --> 01:07:27,183 [Music playing] 1006 01:07:27,289 --> 01:07:28,950 Armstrong: [On radio] Stand by. 1007 01:07:29,058 --> 01:07:31,026 [Music playing] 1008 01:07:38,767 --> 01:07:41,600 I'm at the foot of the ladder. 1009 01:07:41,703 --> 01:07:46,163 The L.M. footpads are only, uh... 1010 01:07:46,275 --> 01:07:50,575 Depressed in the surface about... one or two inches, 1011 01:07:50,679 --> 01:07:55,275 although the surface appears to be 1012 01:07:55,384 --> 01:07:58,876 very, very fine-grained as you get close to it. 1013 01:07:58,987 --> 01:08:02,650 It's almost like a powder down there. 1014 01:08:02,758 --> 01:08:04,282 It's very fine. 1015 01:08:12,101 --> 01:08:14,228 Okay, I'm going to step off the L.M. now. 1016 01:08:14,336 --> 01:08:16,304 [Music playing] 1017 01:08:23,612 --> 01:08:26,376 That's one small step for Man... 1018 01:08:28,884 --> 01:08:32,047 One giant leap for Mankind. 1019 01:08:33,754 --> 01:08:36,848 Newsreader: "That's one small step for Man, 1020 01:08:36,959 --> 01:08:40,827 One giant leap for Mankind." 1021 01:08:40,929 --> 01:08:42,829 [Mixed chatter] 1022 01:08:59,681 --> 01:09:01,205 Scott: It was like Neil, 1023 01:09:01,316 --> 01:09:03,876 but deeper than I thought 1024 01:09:03,986 --> 01:09:06,682 that he would come up with. 1025 01:09:06,788 --> 01:09:10,781 I wouldn't have had the self-control to do that. 1026 01:09:10,893 --> 01:09:11,951 I'd have... 1027 01:09:12,060 --> 01:09:13,789 To me, I'd have been jumping up and down, 1028 01:09:13,896 --> 01:09:16,126 "Yahoo!" You know? "Man, I'm here!" 1029 01:09:16,231 --> 01:09:19,257 It was... That's the kind of response that I think I would have had. 1030 01:09:19,368 --> 01:09:23,532 But he was very, very controlled 1031 01:09:23,640 --> 01:09:26,438 and those words came out 1032 01:09:26,542 --> 01:09:29,602 and they were very appropriate and... Perfect. 1033 01:09:31,446 --> 01:09:33,175 Capcom: [On radio] That looks beautiful from here, Neil. 1034 01:09:33,282 --> 01:09:35,443 Armstrong: [On radio] It has a stark beauty all its own, 1035 01:09:35,552 --> 01:09:40,012 it's like much of the high desert of the United States. 1036 01:09:40,122 --> 01:09:43,489 It's different but it's very pretty out here. 1037 01:09:43,591 --> 01:09:46,082 We had it in our flight plan 1038 01:09:46,195 --> 01:09:50,154 that we'd take the first 10-15 seconds 1039 01:09:50,265 --> 01:09:51,857 down at the bottom of the ladder, 1040 01:09:51,967 --> 01:09:54,868 sort of hold on to the edge of the landing gear 1041 01:09:54,970 --> 01:09:58,667 and just sort of check our stability and so forth. 1042 01:09:58,775 --> 01:10:00,402 Aldrin: [On radio] Okay, I'm on the top steps 1043 01:10:00,509 --> 01:10:02,636 and it's a very simple matter to hop down 1044 01:10:02,744 --> 01:10:04,109 from one step to the next. 1045 01:10:04,213 --> 01:10:05,976 Aldrin: So that's when I decided 1046 01:10:06,081 --> 01:10:08,777 to take that period of time to, ah... 1047 01:10:08,884 --> 01:10:12,149 [Clears throat] To... 1048 01:10:12,254 --> 01:10:13,949 Take care of a bodily function 1049 01:10:14,056 --> 01:10:16,923 of slightly filling up the urine bag, 1050 01:10:17,025 --> 01:10:21,291 so that I wouldn't be troubled 1051 01:10:21,396 --> 01:10:23,455 with having to do that later on. 1052 01:10:24,533 --> 01:10:26,125 Armstrong: [On radio] There you go. 1053 01:10:26,235 --> 01:10:29,329 So, anyway, everybody has their firsts on the Moon. 1054 01:10:29,438 --> 01:10:31,303 [Chuckling] 1055 01:10:31,406 --> 01:10:34,466 And that one hasn't been disputed by anybody. 1056 01:10:34,576 --> 01:10:36,544 [Music playing] 1057 01:10:40,449 --> 01:10:42,417 Bean: The only change that I noticed they made 1058 01:10:42,517 --> 01:10:45,884 prior to their flight was they'd come to them 1059 01:10:45,988 --> 01:10:48,183 about a month ahead of time, as I remember. 1060 01:10:48,290 --> 01:10:50,349 And they said to them, 1061 01:10:50,459 --> 01:10:53,121 "You're going to plant the American flag." 1062 01:10:53,228 --> 01:10:58,131 So, we got the flag out and put it in the ground 1063 01:10:58,233 --> 01:11:02,135 and we'd never really practiced that one before. 1064 01:11:02,237 --> 01:11:04,205 [Music playing] 1065 01:11:19,254 --> 01:11:21,347 Aldrin: Here we were on the surface 1066 01:11:21,456 --> 01:11:26,120 and I knew this was what people were watching. 1067 01:11:26,228 --> 01:11:27,889 More people were watching us 1068 01:11:27,996 --> 01:11:31,432 than had ever watched two human beings before in history 1069 01:11:31,533 --> 01:11:35,435 and yet we're further away, not just in distance 1070 01:11:35,538 --> 01:11:38,200 but in things we've got to do to get back home. 1071 01:11:38,307 --> 01:11:40,707 We've got to do some difficult things 1072 01:11:40,809 --> 01:11:43,107 to get out of this desolate place 1073 01:11:43,211 --> 01:11:45,076 and get back home again. 1074 01:11:52,587 --> 01:11:54,555 [Radio chatter] 1075 01:12:10,806 --> 01:12:12,296 Capcom: [On radio] Thank you, 13. 1076 01:12:12,407 --> 01:12:15,103 13, we've got one more item for you when you get a chance. 1077 01:12:15,210 --> 01:12:18,008 We'd like you to stir up your cryo tanks. 1078 01:12:20,816 --> 01:12:21,942 Man: [On radio] Stand by. 1079 01:12:22,050 --> 01:12:25,019 [Rumble/static] 1080 01:12:25,120 --> 01:12:26,610 When the explosion occurred, of course, 1081 01:12:26,722 --> 01:12:29,054 I didn't know what happened. 1082 01:12:29,157 --> 01:12:32,217 Lovell: [On radio] Houston, we've had a problem. 1083 01:12:32,327 --> 01:12:34,192 Capcom: [On radio] Stand by 13, we're looking at it. 1084 01:12:37,532 --> 01:12:40,729 Lovell: We saw the oxygen go to zero 1085 01:12:40,836 --> 01:12:42,633 And then come up to the top 1086 01:12:42,738 --> 01:12:44,069 and then went down to zero again. 1087 01:12:53,348 --> 01:12:54,940 We were in serious trouble. 1088 01:12:57,886 --> 01:13:00,081 I thought when I saw that oxygen system leaking down, 1089 01:13:00,188 --> 01:13:02,486 I figured we'd lost them. I really did. 1090 01:13:02,591 --> 01:13:04,081 I didn't think we'd make it. 1091 01:13:05,761 --> 01:13:07,888 Lovell: We were as calm as could be. 1092 01:13:07,996 --> 01:13:11,090 We didn't panic. Uh, if we did, 1093 01:13:11,199 --> 01:13:12,598 we'd still be up there, 1094 01:13:12,701 --> 01:13:15,295 or we could have bounced off the walls for ten minutes 1095 01:13:15,404 --> 01:13:17,599 and be back where we started from. 1096 01:13:17,706 --> 01:13:20,334 So the first thing that went through our mind was: 1097 01:13:20,442 --> 01:13:22,740 "What do we have to work with to get home? " 1098 01:13:22,844 --> 01:13:26,007 And of course, we had the Lunar Module. 1099 01:13:26,114 --> 01:13:29,447 It was like, abandon ship, get into the lifeboat 1100 01:13:29,551 --> 01:13:31,985 and we'll come back in the lifeboat. 1101 01:13:34,356 --> 01:13:36,119 Capcom: [On radio] We figure we've got about 15 minutes 1102 01:13:36,224 --> 01:13:37,657 worth of power left in the Command Module 1103 01:13:37,759 --> 01:13:40,887 so we want you to start getting over in the L.M., 1104 01:13:40,996 --> 01:13:43,055 and getting some power in it. 1105 01:13:43,165 --> 01:13:45,133 And you ready to copy your procedure? 1106 01:13:45,233 --> 01:13:46,461 Man: [On radio] Okay. 1107 01:13:53,375 --> 01:13:56,776 I worked on the problem of using the Lunar Module 1108 01:13:56,878 --> 01:14:01,338 as the prime propulsion vehicle, as a tugboat. 1109 01:14:01,450 --> 01:14:05,250 and how they could fly it manually, stick and rudder stuff, 1110 01:14:05,353 --> 01:14:08,288 if they'd lost the prime guidance system. 1111 01:14:09,458 --> 01:14:10,948 Duke: John and l, with others, 1112 01:14:11,059 --> 01:14:13,391 had worked on this manoeuvre to get them back 1113 01:14:13,495 --> 01:14:16,328 on what was called a free return trajectory, 1114 01:14:16,431 --> 01:14:17,489 so they would come back 1115 01:14:17,599 --> 01:14:21,000 and come right back into Earth's atmosphere 1116 01:14:21,102 --> 01:14:23,332 on the correct angle and velocity. 1117 01:14:24,940 --> 01:14:28,808 Man: Apollo 13, 2 minutes away now from scheduled time of ignition. 1118 01:14:28,910 --> 01:14:31,640 Lovell: And so we used the Earth's terminator 1119 01:14:31,746 --> 01:14:33,475 to figure out our attitude, 1120 01:14:33,582 --> 01:14:37,541 we had to get the Earth in the window of the Lunar Module. 1121 01:14:37,652 --> 01:14:39,552 Man: [On radio] Confirmed ignition. 1122 01:14:39,653 --> 01:14:41,382 Lovell: I knew when that engine went on, 1123 01:14:41,490 --> 01:14:45,483 without an autopilot, I'd never be able to keep the Earth in the window by myself, 1124 01:14:45,594 --> 01:14:47,858 so Fred-O kept the Earth from going sideways, 1125 01:14:47,963 --> 01:14:49,624 I kept it from going up and down... 1126 01:14:52,868 --> 01:14:55,063 I had to learn to... manoeuvre all over again 1127 01:14:55,170 --> 01:14:56,728 in a very short period of time. 1128 01:14:56,838 --> 01:14:59,238 But you'd be surprised how quickly you learn. 1129 01:15:00,709 --> 01:15:02,540 Capcom: [On radio] Houston, you're looking good. 1130 01:15:02,643 --> 01:15:05,134 Duke: My attitude went from, "We ain't going to make it" 1131 01:15:05,247 --> 01:15:08,148 to, "If we don't foul up and they don't foul up, 1132 01:15:08,250 --> 01:15:10,878 and we don't have any other disaster, 1133 01:15:10,986 --> 01:15:11,975 we're going to make it." 1134 01:15:16,324 --> 01:15:18,292 [Applause/whistling] 1135 01:15:21,696 --> 01:15:24,722 Bean: It was NASA's greatest moment, I'm convinced. 1136 01:15:24,832 --> 01:15:28,529 And that crew, to keep calm and responsive 1137 01:15:28,637 --> 01:15:30,605 and do things right the first time, 1138 01:15:30,705 --> 01:15:34,266 that's important, it was just great. They were great. 1139 01:15:34,376 --> 01:15:38,335 It was a case of survival and certainly landing on the Moon 1140 01:15:38,446 --> 01:15:42,712 and surviving to see the next sunrise are two different things. 1141 01:15:42,817 --> 01:15:46,651 And it wasn't until I got comfortably back on Earth 1142 01:15:46,755 --> 01:15:49,315 that I became very much disappointed 1143 01:15:49,424 --> 01:15:52,325 in not making a landing on the Moon. 1144 01:15:52,427 --> 01:15:53,587 [Music playing] 1145 01:16:06,174 --> 01:16:07,334 Man: [On radio] Boy, that's a big mountain 1146 01:16:07,442 --> 01:16:08,841 when you're down here looking up, isn't it? 1147 01:16:08,944 --> 01:16:10,309 Scott: We all of a sudden realized 1148 01:16:10,412 --> 01:16:12,539 that we were below the tops of the mountains. 1149 01:16:12,647 --> 01:16:14,945 Man: [On radio] I can't believe it. Amazing! 1150 01:16:15,050 --> 01:16:16,881 Bean: And then I look out at the horizon 1151 01:16:16,985 --> 01:16:18,577 and I thought to myself, 1152 01:16:18,687 --> 01:16:22,282 "God, I hope Pete doesn't land over there because we'll tip over." 1153 01:16:22,390 --> 01:16:23,755 Man: [On radio] Here comes the shadow. 1154 01:16:23,858 --> 01:16:26,349 We were blowing lunar dust everywhere. 1155 01:16:26,461 --> 01:16:28,486 It was like landing through the fog. 1156 01:16:32,367 --> 01:16:33,800 Man: [On radio] Well, we is here! 1157 01:16:33,902 --> 01:16:36,268 Man, is we here! How's that look? 1158 01:16:36,371 --> 01:16:38,100 Cernan: And if there's any one moment 1159 01:16:38,206 --> 01:16:40,834 in my whole flight when time stood still, 1160 01:16:40,942 --> 01:16:44,503 it was those first few seconds when we touched down 1161 01:16:44,613 --> 01:16:47,707 and everything came to a screeching halt. 1162 01:16:47,815 --> 01:16:49,305 And there we were. 1163 01:16:49,417 --> 01:16:51,385 [Music playing] 1164 01:16:57,125 --> 01:16:58,786 Mitchell: The first feelings were, 1165 01:16:58,893 --> 01:17:01,589 "Wow, this is, uh... What am I doing here? 1166 01:17:01,696 --> 01:17:03,823 This is a different world!" 1167 01:17:03,932 --> 01:17:06,560 And, uh, there's a part of it of... 1168 01:17:06,668 --> 01:17:10,104 "You dumb ass... You've really got yourself into something here!" 1169 01:17:17,078 --> 01:17:19,478 Bean: When you land on the Moon and you stop, 1170 01:17:19,581 --> 01:17:22,345 and you get out, nobody's out there. 1171 01:17:22,450 --> 01:17:25,886 This little L.M. and then the two of you, you're it, 1172 01:17:25,987 --> 01:17:28,421 on this whole big place. 1173 01:17:28,522 --> 01:17:33,721 And that's a weird feeling, it's a weird feeling to be... 1174 01:17:33,828 --> 01:17:36,126 Two people and that's it. 1175 01:17:41,870 --> 01:17:46,466 Man: [On radio] Oh, my golly. Unbelievable! 1176 01:17:46,574 --> 01:17:47,563 Unbelievable. 1177 01:17:47,676 --> 01:17:50,736 But is it bright in the Sun. 1178 01:17:50,845 --> 01:17:52,506 Oh, look at that. 1179 01:17:52,614 --> 01:17:54,582 Isn't that something? 1180 01:17:54,683 --> 01:17:56,275 We're up on a slope, Joe, 1181 01:17:56,384 --> 01:17:57,976 and we're looking back down into the valley. 1182 01:17:58,086 --> 01:18:01,715 It's beautiful. That is spectacular. 1183 01:18:01,823 --> 01:18:03,791 [Music playing] 1184 01:18:11,066 --> 01:18:14,467 Dad, this is really a rock and rolling ride, isn't it? 1185 01:18:15,937 --> 01:18:18,667 Never been on a ride like this before. 1186 01:18:18,773 --> 01:18:21,799 Schmitt: The Rover was very useful, 1187 01:18:21,910 --> 01:18:25,038 very comfortable ride for the most part, 1188 01:18:25,146 --> 01:18:28,081 but any time you hit a bump in one-sixth gravity, 1189 01:18:28,183 --> 01:18:30,208 you're going to be off the surface for a little ways. 1190 01:18:34,756 --> 01:18:37,452 Cernan: I hold the world's speed record downhill in a Rover. 1191 01:18:37,559 --> 01:18:40,995 I think it was 17 kilometres per hour, downhill. 1192 01:18:44,132 --> 01:18:47,624 I think even Gene Cernan with all his test pilot macho 1193 01:18:47,736 --> 01:18:49,704 felt that that was a little fast! 1194 01:18:49,804 --> 01:18:51,169 Man: [On radio] There are a lot of craters 1195 01:18:51,272 --> 01:18:52,796 and it's just sporty driving. 1196 01:18:52,907 --> 01:18:55,034 I've just got to keep my eye on the road every second. 1197 01:18:56,645 --> 01:18:57,612 What really saves you up there 1198 01:18:57,712 --> 01:19:00,272 is there's nobody coming down the road from the other way. 1199 01:19:00,381 --> 01:19:02,246 Man: [On radio] Oh, look at this baby climb the hill. 1200 01:19:02,350 --> 01:19:04,318 [Music playing] 1201 01:19:11,226 --> 01:19:13,854 Duke: I think the feeling that I had was the whole time 1202 01:19:13,962 --> 01:19:16,192 was the feeling of awe. 1203 01:19:16,297 --> 01:19:21,826 The Moon was the most spectacularly beautiful desert you can ever imagine. 1204 01:19:21,936 --> 01:19:24,803 Unspoiled, untouched. 1205 01:19:26,975 --> 01:19:30,035 It had a vibrancy about it 1206 01:19:30,145 --> 01:19:32,170 and the contrast between the Moon 1207 01:19:32,280 --> 01:19:35,147 and the black sky was so vivid and... 1208 01:19:35,250 --> 01:19:38,048 It just made this impression, you know, 1209 01:19:38,153 --> 01:19:41,350 of excitement and wonder. 1210 01:19:48,429 --> 01:19:50,454 Schmitt: We were true scientific explorers. 1211 01:19:50,565 --> 01:19:53,591 We were looking at things that human beings 1212 01:19:53,701 --> 01:19:56,727 had never seen before or if they had seen them, 1213 01:19:56,837 --> 01:19:58,805 they weren't thinking about them 1214 01:19:58,907 --> 01:20:00,602 in terms of understanding our Earth 1215 01:20:00,708 --> 01:20:03,040 and our solar system and indeed the universe. 1216 01:20:07,248 --> 01:20:08,875 And that's what we were. That's what we were doing. 1217 01:20:08,983 --> 01:20:10,610 We were scientific explorers 1218 01:20:10,718 --> 01:20:14,154 right from the moment we stepped out of the spacecraft. 1219 01:20:17,859 --> 01:20:21,056 Man 1: [On radio] Roger, Dave. Let's do a little geology. 1220 01:20:21,162 --> 01:20:23,653 Man 2: [On radio] Going to document the area first here, Joe. 1221 01:20:23,764 --> 01:20:26,562 Man 1: If you come around there, 1222 01:20:26,668 --> 01:20:28,431 there's a rock in the near field on this rim... 1223 01:20:28,536 --> 01:20:30,902 I'd like you to pick it up as a ground sample. 1224 01:20:32,340 --> 01:20:35,468 I say, John, just look at that footprint. 1225 01:20:35,577 --> 01:20:37,875 Look underneath that [Indistinct] when you picked that up. 1226 01:20:37,979 --> 01:20:41,142 ...a centimetre or so under, it's white! 1227 01:20:41,249 --> 01:20:43,308 Absolutely white right here. 1228 01:20:43,418 --> 01:20:45,181 Man 2: Gee, you got a bag? 1229 01:20:45,286 --> 01:20:47,413 All set. 1230 01:20:47,522 --> 01:20:48,989 Okay, I'm going to get the... 1231 01:20:49,090 --> 01:20:53,117 shadowed material... 1232 01:20:53,228 --> 01:20:56,755 Man 1: Look, this is a real beauty! 1233 01:20:56,865 --> 01:20:58,833 [Music playing] 1234 01:21:33,034 --> 01:21:35,434 Collins: l-I didn't have any great feeling of... 1235 01:21:35,536 --> 01:21:37,128 "Oh, we've done it!" 1236 01:21:37,238 --> 01:21:40,799 I mean, we've done part of it, but, uh... 1237 01:21:40,909 --> 01:21:44,743 I was a lot more worried, I guess, 1238 01:21:44,846 --> 01:21:47,041 about getting them up off the Moon 1239 01:21:47,148 --> 01:21:49,912 than I was about getting them down onto the Moon. 1240 01:21:51,753 --> 01:21:56,281 The motor on the Lunar Module was one motor 1241 01:21:56,391 --> 01:21:59,053 and if something went wrong with it, 1242 01:21:59,160 --> 01:22:01,128 you know, they were dead men, 1243 01:22:01,229 --> 01:22:04,426 there was no other way for them to leave. 1244 01:22:07,468 --> 01:22:08,560 Announcer: Ladies and gentlemen, 1245 01:22:08,670 --> 01:22:11,969 the President of the United States. 1246 01:22:12,073 --> 01:22:15,042 Good evening, my fellow Americans. 1247 01:22:15,143 --> 01:22:16,872 Tonight, I want to talk to you 1248 01:22:16,978 --> 01:22:20,175 on a subject of deep concern to all Americans 1249 01:22:20,281 --> 01:22:23,079 and to many people in all parts of the world. 1250 01:22:23,184 --> 01:22:24,276 Collins: "Fate has ordained 1251 01:22:24,385 --> 01:22:27,286 that the men who went to the Moon to explore in peace 1252 01:22:27,388 --> 01:22:30,789 will stay on the Moon to rest in peace. 1253 01:22:30,892 --> 01:22:34,521 These brave men, Neil Armstrong and Edwin Aldrin, 1254 01:22:34,628 --> 01:22:37,529 know that there is no hope for their recovery, 1255 01:22:37,632 --> 01:22:42,331 but they also know that there is hope for Mankind In their sacrifice." 1256 01:22:44,205 --> 01:22:45,695 I mean, this is, you know... 1257 01:22:45,807 --> 01:22:49,265 What a public relations person would have to say. 1258 01:22:51,779 --> 01:22:55,875 Aldrin: [On radio] Nine, eight, seven, six, five... 1259 01:22:55,984 --> 01:22:59,385 Port stage, engine arm, ascent, proceed. 1260 01:22:59,487 --> 01:23:01,455 [Music playing] 1261 01:23:05,760 --> 01:23:10,629 Beautiful. 26-36 feet per second up. 1262 01:23:10,732 --> 01:23:13,064 Armstrong: [On radio] Pitchover. 1263 01:23:13,167 --> 01:23:14,657 Aldrin: [On radio] Very smooth. 1264 01:23:16,404 --> 01:23:18,634 Balance couple, off. 1265 01:23:18,740 --> 01:23:20,765 Very quiet ride. 1266 01:23:25,346 --> 01:23:27,814 Capcom: Eagle, Houston request manual start override. 1267 01:23:31,019 --> 01:23:33,112 Man: [On radio] 2600 feet altitude. 1268 01:23:35,657 --> 01:23:37,648 Capcom: [On radio] Eagle, Houston, one minute. You are looking good. 1269 01:23:40,895 --> 01:23:42,886 Collins: Oh God, look... It's beautiful. 1270 01:23:42,997 --> 01:23:45,056 It's a beautiful little thing, you see the L.M., you know, 1271 01:23:45,166 --> 01:23:47,634 a little golden bug down there among the craters 1272 01:23:47,735 --> 01:23:51,102 and it gets slowly bigger and bigger. 1273 01:23:51,205 --> 01:23:54,641 They seem to be, you know, like riding rails, 1274 01:23:54,743 --> 01:23:57,712 they were very precise. 1275 01:23:57,813 --> 01:24:03,911 And then it got right up next to me and then it was my job, as before, 1276 01:24:04,018 --> 01:24:07,010 to make the connection between the two vehicles. 1277 01:24:07,121 --> 01:24:09,089 [Music playing] 1278 01:24:20,168 --> 01:24:23,194 Finally, they got back into the command module 1279 01:24:23,304 --> 01:24:27,604 and I grabbed Buzz by both ears 1280 01:24:27,708 --> 01:24:29,733 and I was going to kiss him on the forehead, 1281 01:24:29,844 --> 01:24:31,209 I can remember that. 1282 01:24:31,312 --> 01:24:33,075 and I got him to right about here 1283 01:24:33,181 --> 01:24:36,207 and I said, "That's not a very... 1284 01:24:36,317 --> 01:24:38,581 good thing to do somehow," 1285 01:24:38,686 --> 01:24:41,416 so I forgot, whether I clapped him on the back 1286 01:24:41,522 --> 01:24:43,149 or shook his hand or did something. 1287 01:24:43,257 --> 01:24:48,320 And again, you don't have time to sit around and reminisce 1288 01:24:48,429 --> 01:24:50,863 because you've got T. E.L. coming up 1289 01:24:50,965 --> 01:24:54,162 in another... little while, 1290 01:24:54,268 --> 01:24:57,726 so you've got to get ready for that and come home. 1291 01:24:57,839 --> 01:24:59,807 [Music playing] 1292 01:25:08,382 --> 01:25:12,011 Mitchell: The biggest joy was on the way home. 1293 01:25:14,088 --> 01:25:16,386 In my cockpit window, every two minutes, 1294 01:25:16,491 --> 01:25:18,891 the Earth, the Moon, the Sun 1295 01:25:18,993 --> 01:25:23,327 and a whole 360 degree panorama of the heavens. 1296 01:25:23,431 --> 01:25:27,492 And that was a powerful, overwhelming experience. 1297 01:25:29,203 --> 01:25:33,333 And suddenly I realized that the molecules of my body 1298 01:25:33,441 --> 01:25:35,170 and the molecules of the spacecraft 1299 01:25:35,276 --> 01:25:37,972 and the molecules in the bodies of my partners 1300 01:25:38,079 --> 01:25:41,708 were prototyped and manufactured 1301 01:25:41,816 --> 01:25:44,341 in some ancient generation of stars. 1302 01:25:48,523 --> 01:25:53,085 And that was an overwhelming sense of oneness, of connectedness. 1303 01:25:53,194 --> 01:25:57,062 It wasn't them and us, it was, "that's me, that's all of it, 1304 01:25:57,165 --> 01:25:59,656 it's one thing." 1305 01:25:59,767 --> 01:26:02,497 And it was accompanied by an ecstasy, 1306 01:26:02,603 --> 01:26:07,506 a sense of, "oh my God. wow, yes," an insight, an epiphany. 1307 01:26:07,608 --> 01:26:09,576 [Music playing] 1308 01:26:30,697 --> 01:26:33,564 Duke: Re-entry is very critical on Apollo. 1309 01:26:33,668 --> 01:26:36,728 The last time I looked at my computer, 1310 01:26:36,837 --> 01:26:42,298 we were accelerating through 39,000 feet per second, 1311 01:26:42,410 --> 01:26:47,245 which is... uh, translates to over 26,000 miles an hour. 1312 01:26:47,348 --> 01:26:49,873 A rifle bullet only goes 2000 miles an hour. 1313 01:26:53,154 --> 01:26:55,247 Collins: You are literally on fire. 1314 01:26:55,356 --> 01:26:58,757 Your heat shield is on fire and it's streaming... 1315 01:26:58,858 --> 01:27:01,156 Its fragments are streaming out behind you. 1316 01:27:02,997 --> 01:27:05,761 It's like being inside a gigantic light bulb. 1317 01:27:13,407 --> 01:27:16,342 Duke: The re-entry started at 400,000 feet, 1318 01:27:16,444 --> 01:27:18,503 and by the time you've got to 90,000 feet, 1319 01:27:18,613 --> 01:27:22,071 you're basically coming straight down, freefall. 1320 01:27:27,455 --> 01:27:30,947 Collins: Well, then the final link in the daisy chain is the... 1321 01:27:31,058 --> 01:27:32,548 is, well, there... Actually, 1322 01:27:32,660 --> 01:27:34,594 I guess I'd have to say there may be two more, 1323 01:27:34,695 --> 01:27:37,664 but, uh... the important one is that the parachutes open. 1324 01:27:37,765 --> 01:27:39,733 [Explosion] 1325 01:27:41,669 --> 01:27:43,899 Mains coming out, huge explosion again 1326 01:27:44,005 --> 01:27:45,438 and these three chutes come out. 1327 01:27:45,539 --> 01:27:47,473 [Music playing] 1328 01:27:54,482 --> 01:27:58,851 Collins: The three orange and white spheres of reassurance. 1329 01:28:09,463 --> 01:28:10,521 That was the end. 1330 01:28:10,631 --> 01:28:11,859 That was the last of the daisy.... 1331 01:28:11,966 --> 01:28:13,331 Well, then we had to get out. 1332 01:28:16,470 --> 01:28:18,563 I can remember the beautiful water. 1333 01:28:18,673 --> 01:28:21,836 You know, we were out in the deep ocean in the Pacific. 1334 01:28:21,942 --> 01:28:25,400 It was such a startling violet colour. 1335 01:28:25,513 --> 01:28:27,538 I remember looking at the ocean and admiring, 1336 01:28:27,648 --> 01:28:30,481 "Nice ocean you got here, planet Earth." 1337 01:28:30,584 --> 01:28:32,518 [Music playing] 1338 01:28:39,293 --> 01:28:41,090 To me, the marvel of it 1339 01:28:41,195 --> 01:28:45,097 is that it all worked like clockwork, 1340 01:28:45,199 --> 01:28:46,860 I almost said like magic. 1341 01:28:46,967 --> 01:28:51,529 There might be a little magic mixed up 1342 01:28:51,639 --> 01:28:53,470 in the back of that big clock somewhere... 1343 01:28:56,444 --> 01:28:59,845 Because everything worked as it was supposed to. 1344 01:28:59,947 --> 01:29:01,312 Nobody messed up. 1345 01:29:01,415 --> 01:29:03,542 Even I didn't make mistakes. 1346 01:29:03,651 --> 01:29:05,619 [Music playing] 1347 01:29:20,634 --> 01:29:24,536 Aldrin: I knew that anyone who was on the first lunar landing 1348 01:29:24,638 --> 01:29:26,970 was certainly going to be propelled 1349 01:29:27,074 --> 01:29:29,838 into the public view in an enormous way. 1350 01:29:31,579 --> 01:29:34,070 That awareness was troublesome 1351 01:29:34,181 --> 01:29:36,149 and interfered during the mission. 1352 01:29:38,886 --> 01:29:43,152 But it's nothing like what happens after the mission 1353 01:29:43,257 --> 01:29:45,953 and for the rest of your life. 1354 01:29:46,060 --> 01:29:48,290 You are the person now, 1355 01:29:48,396 --> 01:29:50,864 not just an average fighter pilot, 1356 01:29:50,965 --> 01:29:54,366 who did this and that pretty well, 1357 01:29:54,468 --> 01:29:56,732 but, "This guy walked on the Moon." 1358 01:29:56,837 --> 01:30:01,604 And now I have to sort of uphold that image 1359 01:30:01,709 --> 01:30:05,839 for the rest of my life, no matter what I do. 1360 01:30:09,316 --> 01:30:12,444 Bean: Can't think of a negative thing about Neil Armstrong. 1361 01:30:12,553 --> 01:30:15,545 I think it's wonderful that he's been the first man on the Moon. 1362 01:30:16,891 --> 01:30:18,882 Even though he's somewhat reclusive, 1363 01:30:18,993 --> 01:30:21,757 then that helps to preserve the image. 1364 01:30:21,862 --> 01:30:23,420 That's a tough role. 1365 01:30:23,531 --> 01:30:25,590 I'm glad... I'd love to do that, 1366 01:30:25,699 --> 01:30:27,758 but I'd hate to try to fill that role. 1367 01:30:27,868 --> 01:30:29,335 That's a tough role. 1368 01:30:29,437 --> 01:30:31,462 Yeah... Boy! 1369 01:30:31,572 --> 01:30:33,540 [Music playing] 1370 01:30:40,114 --> 01:30:42,014 Collins: After the flight of Apollo 11, 1371 01:30:42,116 --> 01:30:44,846 the three of us went on an around-the-world trip. 1372 01:30:45,986 --> 01:30:48,250 Wherever we went, 1373 01:30:48,355 --> 01:30:51,620 people, instead of saying, "Well, you Americans did it," 1374 01:30:51,725 --> 01:30:53,386 Everywhere, they said, "We did it. 1375 01:30:53,494 --> 01:30:56,622 We Humankind, we the Human race, 1376 01:30:56,730 --> 01:30:58,220 we, people, did it." 1377 01:30:58,332 --> 01:31:02,530 And, I had never heard of, um... 1378 01:31:02,636 --> 01:31:06,834 people in different countries use this word "We, we, we" 1379 01:31:06,941 --> 01:31:10,877 as emphatically as we were hearing 1380 01:31:10,978 --> 01:31:14,971 from Europeans, Asians, Africans... 1381 01:31:15,082 --> 01:31:17,550 Wherever we went, it was, "We finally did it!" 1382 01:31:17,651 --> 01:31:19,482 And I thought that was a wonderful thing. 1383 01:31:19,587 --> 01:31:22,078 Ephemeral, but wonderful. 1384 01:31:23,724 --> 01:31:25,692 [Cheering] 1385 01:31:53,020 --> 01:31:56,114 Cernan: I felt that I was literally standing on a plateau 1386 01:31:56,223 --> 01:31:57,417 somewhere out there in space, 1387 01:31:57,525 --> 01:32:02,155 a plateau that science and technology had allowed me to get to. 1388 01:32:02,263 --> 01:32:05,562 But now, what I was seeing and even more important, 1389 01:32:05,666 --> 01:32:09,067 what I was feeling at that moment in time, 1390 01:32:09,169 --> 01:32:12,297 science and technology had no answers for. 1391 01:32:12,406 --> 01:32:13,566 Literally no answers, 1392 01:32:13,674 --> 01:32:18,270 because there I was and there you are... 1393 01:32:19,446 --> 01:32:23,405 there you are, the Earth, dynamic, overwhelming 1394 01:32:23,517 --> 01:32:26,975 and I felt that the world... there's just too much purpose, 1395 01:32:27,087 --> 01:32:29,146 too much logic and it was just too beautiful 1396 01:32:29,256 --> 01:32:30,883 to have happened by accident. 1397 01:32:30,991 --> 01:32:33,551 There has to be somebody bigger than you 1398 01:32:33,661 --> 01:32:35,288 and bigger than me 1399 01:32:35,396 --> 01:32:38,991 and I mean this in a spiritual sense not a religious sense. 1400 01:32:39,099 --> 01:32:41,727 There has to be a creator of the universe 1401 01:32:41,835 --> 01:32:43,894 who stands above the religions 1402 01:32:44,004 --> 01:32:47,405 that we ourselves create to govern our lives. 1403 01:32:47,641 --> 01:32:49,404 [Music playing] 1404 01:32:53,247 --> 01:32:59,345 Duke: A friend of ours got us to go to a Bible study at a tennis club. 1405 01:32:59,453 --> 01:33:04,891 And after that weekend, I said to Jesus, I said, "l give you my life 1406 01:33:04,992 --> 01:33:07,688 and if you're real, come into my life." 1407 01:33:07,796 --> 01:33:11,596 And I believe and he did and I had... 1408 01:33:11,698 --> 01:33:14,633 I had this sense of peace 1409 01:33:14,735 --> 01:33:18,933 that was... that was hard to describe. 1410 01:33:20,975 --> 01:33:24,467 It was so dramatic that we started sharing our story. 1411 01:33:27,581 --> 01:33:30,175 I say, my walk on the Moon lasted three days 1412 01:33:30,284 --> 01:33:32,184 and it was a great adventure, 1413 01:33:32,286 --> 01:33:35,346 but my walk with God lasts forever. 1414 01:33:39,927 --> 01:33:42,361 Collins: I think if you do something 1415 01:33:42,463 --> 01:33:45,296 that's drastically different 1416 01:33:45,399 --> 01:33:48,459 like flying to the Moon and coming back again, 1417 01:33:48,569 --> 01:33:51,037 everyone tells you how important it is, how wonderful it is 1418 01:33:51,138 --> 01:33:53,106 and how important, important, important. 1419 01:33:53,207 --> 01:33:56,574 Then by comparison a lot of other things 1420 01:33:56,677 --> 01:34:00,807 that used to seem important don't seem quite as much so. 1421 01:34:00,914 --> 01:34:06,250 And I'm not saying that I'm able to face life 1422 01:34:06,353 --> 01:34:08,218 with greater equanimity 1423 01:34:08,322 --> 01:34:12,019 because I've flown to the Moon, but I try to. 1424 01:34:13,260 --> 01:34:15,956 And maybe some of our terrestrial squabbles 1425 01:34:16,063 --> 01:34:19,328 don't seem as important after having flown to the Moon 1426 01:34:19,433 --> 01:34:21,424 than they did before. 1427 01:34:24,204 --> 01:34:25,694 Lovell: We learned a lot about the Moon 1428 01:34:25,806 --> 01:34:30,209 but what we really learned was about the Earth. 1429 01:34:30,310 --> 01:34:34,508 The fact that just from the distance of the Moon 1430 01:34:34,615 --> 01:34:36,139 you could put your thumb up, 1431 01:34:36,250 --> 01:34:38,912 and you can hide the Earth behind your thumb. 1432 01:34:39,019 --> 01:34:41,715 Everything that you have ever known... 1433 01:34:41,822 --> 01:34:46,191 Your loved ones, your business, the problems of the Earth itself, 1434 01:34:46,293 --> 01:34:48,887 all behind your thumb. 1435 01:34:48,996 --> 01:34:52,796 And how insignificant we really all are. 1436 01:34:52,900 --> 01:34:57,234 But then how fortunate we are to have this body 1437 01:34:57,337 --> 01:35:01,296 and to be able to enjoy living here 1438 01:35:01,408 --> 01:35:06,903 amongst the beauty of the Earth itself. 1439 01:35:10,884 --> 01:35:12,715 Scott: It truly is an oasis 1440 01:35:12,820 --> 01:35:15,254 and we don't take very good care of it. 1441 01:35:15,355 --> 01:35:18,415 And I think the elevation of that awareness 1442 01:35:18,525 --> 01:35:22,621 is a real contribution to, you know, saving the Earth, if you will. 1443 01:35:27,000 --> 01:35:29,468 Young: Earth has changed a lot since we started flying in Gemini. 1444 01:35:29,570 --> 01:35:32,266 There's a lot of things like urban pollution 1445 01:35:32,372 --> 01:35:34,772 and you can see that when you hit orbit now. 1446 01:35:34,875 --> 01:35:36,502 You can see the big cities 1447 01:35:36,610 --> 01:35:40,910 all have their own set of unique atmospheres, 1448 01:35:41,014 --> 01:35:42,140 They really do. 1449 01:35:44,118 --> 01:35:46,712 We ought to be looking out for our kids and our grandkids 1450 01:35:46,821 --> 01:35:48,789 and what are we worried about? 1451 01:35:48,889 --> 01:35:51,652 The price of a gallon of gasoline, 1452 01:35:51,758 --> 01:35:55,319 you know, in the United States, they're worried about $3 a gallon gas. 1453 01:35:55,429 --> 01:35:57,056 I said, that's awful, you know? 1454 01:35:59,933 --> 01:36:01,594 Bean: Since that time, 1455 01:36:01,702 --> 01:36:06,332 I have not complained about the weather one single time. 1456 01:36:06,440 --> 01:36:08,340 I'm glad there is weather. 1457 01:36:08,442 --> 01:36:10,501 I've not complained about traffic, 1458 01:36:10,611 --> 01:36:12,203 I'm glad there's people around. 1459 01:36:12,312 --> 01:36:14,337 One of the things that I did when I got home, 1460 01:36:14,448 --> 01:36:18,214 I went down to shopping centres and I'd just go around there, 1461 01:36:18,318 --> 01:36:21,776 get an ice cream cone or something and just watch the people go by 1462 01:36:21,889 --> 01:36:24,881 and think, "Boy, we're lucky to be here, 1463 01:36:24,992 --> 01:36:27,893 why do people complain about the Earth? " 1464 01:36:27,995 --> 01:36:30,327 We are living in the Garden of Eden! 1465 01:36:34,001 --> 01:36:36,333 Collins: As I look back, if I use one word, 1466 01:36:36,436 --> 01:36:37,835 I would use the word "luck". 1467 01:36:37,938 --> 01:36:40,304 I just feel very lucky. 1468 01:36:40,407 --> 01:36:43,240 You know, Neil Armstrong was born in 1930, 1469 01:36:43,343 --> 01:36:45,607 Buzz Aldrin was born in 1930, 1470 01:36:45,712 --> 01:36:48,203 Mike Collins was born in 1930. 1471 01:36:48,315 --> 01:36:50,283 I mean how lucky can you get? 1472 01:36:50,384 --> 01:36:54,252 We just happened along at the right time. 1473 01:36:54,354 --> 01:36:57,915 I feel blessed every single day. 1474 01:36:58,025 --> 01:37:02,519 Not a day goes by that I don't think, "This is great, 1475 01:37:02,629 --> 01:37:06,030 this was wonderful..." 1476 01:37:06,133 --> 01:37:10,001 Somebody had to go and they happened to pick me, 1477 01:37:10,103 --> 01:37:11,400 so it is great. 1478 01:37:11,705 --> 01:37:13,468 [Music playing] 1479 01:37:40,067 --> 01:37:42,501 You know, some of the tabloids 1480 01:37:42,603 --> 01:37:46,334 are saying that we did this In a hanger in Arizona. 1481 01:37:46,440 --> 01:37:48,340 Maybe that would have been a good idea! 1482 01:37:48,442 --> 01:37:50,069 I don't know how I would... 1483 01:37:50,177 --> 01:37:52,668 grab someone by the collar who didn't believe, 1484 01:37:52,778 --> 01:37:54,473 and shake them and somehow change their mind. 1485 01:37:54,581 --> 01:37:56,572 Any significant event in history, 1486 01:37:56,682 --> 01:37:59,583 somebody's had a conspiracy theory one way or the other. 1487 01:37:59,686 --> 01:38:03,486 I don't know two Americans who have a fantastic secret 1488 01:38:03,590 --> 01:38:05,820 without one of them blurting it out to the Press! 1489 01:38:05,926 --> 01:38:10,556 Can you imagine thousands of people able to keep this secret? 1490 01:38:10,664 --> 01:38:13,394 We've been to the Moon nine times. 1491 01:38:13,500 --> 01:38:17,630 I mean, why did we fake it nine times... 1492 01:38:17,738 --> 01:38:19,103 If we faked it? 1493 01:38:19,206 --> 01:38:23,165 Truth needs no defence. 1494 01:38:23,277 --> 01:38:26,371 Nobody, nobody... 1495 01:38:26,480 --> 01:38:31,440 Can ever take those footsteps I made on the surface of the Moon away from me. 1496 01:38:31,551 --> 01:38:33,519 [Music playing] 1497 01:39:10,057 --> 01:39:15,017 Subtitles extracted by LeapinLar 119300

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