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originally posted by: DJW001
a reply to: SayonaraJupiter
Funny... this letter makes explicitly clear that the Apollo lunar landing programs were successful. Why did you post it? It proves you 100% wrong!
originally posted by: SayonaraJupiter
I don't think you can continue to push the fallacy that the American public was "bored" with moon landings. It is a f a l l a c y .
originally posted by: choos
originally posted by: SayonaraJupiter
I don't think you can continue to push the fallacy that the American public was "bored" with moon landings. It is a f a l l a c y .
im guessing you have the TV ratings to prove this claim??
But one year after he became the first man on the Moon, surveys in newspapers such as the New York Times and the Philadelphia Sunday Bulletin found that the majority of Americans could not remember his name, says Matthew Tribbe, author of No Requiem for the Space Age.
Tribbe says that changes in culture and philosophy, as well as the geopolitical landscape, throughout the 1960s left the public quickly losing interest in the Apollo moon landing and space exploration in general.
But there were other factors that exacerbated the decline in interest. one was the
sheer strangeness of the events. unlike science fiction writers (and their readers), most
americans had little familiarity with space technology and although tV commentators
struggled mightily to convey the nuts and bolts of the apollo program, arcane concepts
like space rendezvous were, literally and figuratively, over viewers’ heads. in addition,
naSa (and for that matter,the astronauts themselves) tended to emphasize the technical
elements of the program rather than the human experiences that would have been easier
for the public to relate to.then there was lunar science, which increasingly became the
focus of both the astronauts and mission planners as the landings progressed.talk of
breccias and vesicles, of coarse-grained basalt and plagioclase feldspar was not easy for
nonscientists to follow.the cultural divide between scientists and the rest of the populace
was nothing new—it had been described a decade earlier by c.p.Snow in an essay entitled
TheTwo Cultures—but apollo seemed to throw that gap into vivid relief.15
The only time when more than half of the public believed Apollo was worth the expense came at the time of the Apollo 11 lunar landing in 1969, when Neil Armstrong took humanity's first steps on alien soil. Even then, only a lukewarm 53 percent of the public believed such a momentous historical occasion had been worth the cost.
originally posted by: onebigmonkey
a reply to: SayonaraJupiter
Please provide some evidence of popular public support for Apollo all the way through the program up to Apollo 17, including the demonstrations of outrage when it was cancelled.
In your own time.
originally posted by: SayonaraJupiter
My conclusion is that the public was NOT bored with Apollo. The idea that the public were bored is a glittering generality and a fallacy.
originally posted by: choos
the over-exposure is making the glare more prominent.. the gold tint you see is that glare.. hav eyou not been paying attention to the images i have been posting??? they are the same, the glare from the sun makes the darkness of space a different colour, yet further from the sun it is still black..
p.s. out of curiosity, why would the black line where the two gold panes overlap be obvious?? is that where it is thickest so the least amount of light shines through?? you believe light is shining through the two overlapping panes therefore we see a golden tint, so why is it that ONLY the line you claim to see is darker then the rest of the two overlapping panes??
let me put it this way, if i shine a light behind two pieces of over lapping paper it will be darker than shining through one piece of paper, the edge of the paper wont appear darker than the two overlapping pieces of paper.. it wont be light area to very dark line to darker area, if you get what im saying..
infact, if that is light passing through the golden panes as you claimed earlier, why is the overlapping areas NOT darker than the non overlapping areas??
originally posted by: onebigmonkey
They mention it during the broadcast. You are welcome to find it if you are so concerned about it.
Not talking about the ripple there, as I'm fairly sure you know. We're talking about the allegedly gold colour.
originally posted by: onebigmonkey
All the astronauts I have met have said the same thing: the most amazing thing about the trip to the moon was not the moon, it was Earth.
originally posted by: choos
originally posted by: SayonaraJupiter
My conclusion is that the public was NOT bored with Apollo. The idea that the public were bored is a glittering generality and a fallacy.
if you want to make that claim then you should have no problem supporting it.. TV ratings are good enough for me.. as TV ratings is a good indication on whether or not the public were still interested in the Apollo program..
ie. we shouldnt see a decline in the amount of viewers over each mission.
originally posted by: turbonium1
You claim they mention it, so you need to support your claim. It is not my claim, it is yours.
Either support your claim, or admit that your claim is a dud...
01 06 58 07 LMP
We've got a little distortion in the horizontal direction from banding on our monitor. I wonder if they're getting the same thing?
01 06 58 27 CC
Stand by, Buzz. I'll let you know.
01 06 58 29 LMP
I guess it would be more described as a waviness.
originally posted by: onebigmonkey
Earth was the most amazing thing about the trip to the moon. So that must be why they never once filmed the Earth FROM the moon!!
That makes perfect sense to you, right?
originally posted by: turbonium1
Let's review all 4 still frames, shown to you earlier...
In the first still, I noted one pane of glass on the right side overlaps the white area, while another pane on the left side is below it, defined by an edge (the line).
It would only overlap a fraction of an inch, no more than needed. It isn't going to look darker, it only shows the edge.
You say it is space, but space has no such lines. Over-exposing space doesn't render such lines.
originally posted by: turbonium1
These 4 frames show how they did the 'terminator line' effect. A gold-toned glass pane was placed in front of the 'Earth' transparency, with another gold-toned glass pane behind both of them.
www.abovetopsecret.com...
originally posted by: turbonium1
You say the public was bored with Apollo, so that was a primary reason the Apollo program was toasted.
Shuttles were much better - nobody was bored, because that program lasted for about 30 years!
Good one.
originally posted by: choos
also let me get this straight, you believe the terminator is physically being moved slowly to the left right?? thats why the gold panes are overlapping.. and the astronauts are the ones doing this right??
originally posted by: turbonium1
originally posted by: choos
originally posted by: SayonaraJupiter
My conclusion is that the public was NOT bored with Apollo. The idea that the public were bored is a glittering generality and a fallacy.
if you want to make that claim then you should have no problem supporting it.. TV ratings are good enough for me.. as TV ratings is a good indication on whether or not the public were still interested in the Apollo program..
ie. we shouldnt see a decline in the amount of viewers over each mission.
You say the public was bored with Apollo, so that was a primary reason the Apollo program was toasted.
Shuttles were much better - nobody was bored, because that program lasted for about 30 years!
Good one.
originally posted by: SayonaraJupiter
originally posted by: turbonium1
originally posted by: choos
originally posted by: SayonaraJupiter
My conclusion is that the public was NOT bored with Apollo. The idea that the public were bored is a glittering generality and a fallacy.
if you want to make that claim then you should have no problem supporting it.. TV ratings are good enough for me.. as TV ratings is a good indication on whether or not the public were still interested in the Apollo program..
ie. we shouldnt see a decline in the amount of viewers over each mission.
You say the public was bored with Apollo, so that was a primary reason the Apollo program was toasted.
Shuttles were much better - nobody was bored, because that program lasted for about 30 years!
Good one.
Turbo, I appreciate your views in this thread. The Apollo Defenders will never offer any evidence that the American public were "bored" with Apollo.... they will only attack with glittering generalities.
I think that WE, the Apollo Reviewers, have won this round. The American public were never "bored" with Apollo --- I would argue that the public were distracted from Apollo by the cynical media machinations of Nixon between 1969- 1972.
The Apollo Defenders have argued that the American public were "bored" by Apollo moon landings.... which ALL takes place entirely within the Richard Nixon's first term in office. You made an excellent point by showing that the Space Shuttle continued for 40+ years and under 6 administrations... the American public has never been "bored" by the space shuttle.
Good Show, Turbo.