The Men Who Walked on the Moon

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Published 2017-12-03
The last surviving astronauts that explored the moon during NASA's Apollo Program in 1969 are Neil Armstrong, Eugene Cernan, and Jim Lovell.

All Comments (21)
  • @DirkLeinert
    Thank you for the great documentary 👍
  • @MissMarinaCapri
    I remember that happening so very long ago. I was so affraid for them. So glad they made it home safe.
  • @Imransavage2
    It’s sad how only 10% had heard what Neil said when today, more than 50% of the population have heard a particular song
  • @JoelsStuff
    you need millions of horsepower to shift 6 balls of steel into orbit
  • Absolutely brilliant! I love it when cernan and schmitt start bouncing around like kangaroos. It’s so funny!
  • @stevestarr9769
    The shot at 3:35 I don' think is from Apollo 11.....I think they started using colored bands/stripes on their suits in latter missions to differentiate who was who.
  • I wonder why we don’t go back, they could put some equipment up there.
  • @tom7601
    The actual script was "That's one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind."
  • @rf-bh3fh
    A time long past. Have we learned much since? Why can’t we all just get along? Why is our political process infected with a infection called greed? Why is our population infected with hate ? When can man learn to forgive? Please ponder our humanity.
  • @NZtrillion
    i wonder who panned the camera up when they took off from the moon?
  • The reason there are hardly any photo’s of Neil Armstrong walking on the Moon is that his co-pilot “Lunar Module pilot” Buzz Aldrin didn’t take them. When NASA developed the film and saw what Buzz had “NOT” done they were stunned. He had no good answers for not thinking to capture this history making moment of the First Man to set foot on the Moon. Buzz did a few other things that after NASA had a chance to review the entire mission blew some minds in the program. He took it upon himself to start up the abort rendezvous radar which drained the computer software to the point that it had to begin dropping tasks “1201 and 1202 alarms” almost costing an abort of the flight.