[MUSIC PLAYING]
Why do you want to be here?
Why do you love space? Why do you love being a part of history? We're going back to the fucking moon. That's why. Ah, CNN.
CNN interviewing a 10-year-old boy, 10-year-old boy. It sounded like he was cursing there. I think it sounded like he was cursing. But I've learned his Chinese. The kid said he's not a party mouth and said the friggin'.
Going back to the friggin' moon.
“That's why I wish we were going to land on the moon”
and walk on the moon and ship golf balls. Bring a dune buggy like we used to do. We brought a dune buggy up to the moon to go bouncing around on the dusty hills, the dusty mounds on the earth's moon. We're the only ones that have ever done that
where the United States America. We sent six different missions to land on the moon. Apollo 11, of course, Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin. Mission commander, Michael Collins, who grew up right down the street here as a matter of fact.
And he went to school at the Cathedral School, the National Cathedral, Michael Collins. Factors, a moon rock from Apollo 11 that is built into a stained glass window in the National Cathedral. Presented to the National Cathedral, while it was under construction
by Richard Nixon and by Michael Collins, who went to school there and became the mission commander of Apollo 11. So two men landed on the moon and walked around.
And it was the most amazing feat in the history of human kind
likely still remains true. Today half century and more later isn't that amazing. And then that was Apollo 11. Apollo 12, Apollo 13, Apollo 14, Apollo 15, Apollo 16 and Apollo 17 also all sent men to go walk on the moon.
They were straight white men. And they got the job done. That was the most amazing stuff. Everybody at the time, 1972 rolled around in the United States American around the world.
People had said, yeah, OK, America. Now you're just showing off. Been there, done that.
“How many times are you going to go do fun stuff on the moon?”
And remind us that we're not on the moon because we're France or Russia or Uganda or wherever nobody else landed on the moon. Nobody else is traveling in space. Our Germans were better than their Germans.
So we got to the moon.
And boy, when they say we got to the moon first, let me,
let me just, that's an understatement. Isn't it? Since it's more than half a century later. And nobody else has even gotten close. Nobody else has even gotten close.
And we, you know, the 1970s, we said, yeah, we're going to send a couple of guys up. Yeah, these three man spacecraft. First, we had the, you know, one man spacecraft then two man spacecraft and you know, the Mercury seven
and all that's the original astronauts. And, and then we landed 12 men on the moon, 12 men. And this is a great fun trivia question for any liberal and a self-destribe liberal.
“Ask him, how many, how many men have walked on the moon?”
Only men have walked on the moon. How many, you can say, how many people and they'll be confused. And ask him from what countries? And as, is stumps him every time?
I promise you, oh, go, that's more complicated than I thought. People from what countries have walked on the moon. And they're, they're very easily confused about all these things. But it's great fun to mock them and ridicule them and expose their ignorance and then laugh
and then you get back to real life. And you get done talking with idiots. But the 12 men to welcome them, they're a couple of them are still alive. And, and they're all Americans, military men.
They are white men. They are all straight men. And not just purportedly, but it's all pretty well established. And the, the Democrats, they're, they're bitter about us having been to the moon and having 12 men.
Apollo 11 through Apollo 17, walking on the moon. And then, we still had more on the pipeline. But it was realized, you know, everybody's just kind of saying, oh, yeah, you're going to do that again. So from 1969 to 1972, we were sending up Apollo moon missions
to send men to go walk on the face of the moon. And I got to say, when I was a kid, I was nine years old in 1969 when Apollo 11 landed on the moon.
It was obviously the most amazing thing
that the world had ever seen anywhere.
“The most extraordinary accomplishment of humankind in history.”
And just extraordinary Neil Armstrong, first man to walk on the moon,
you know, you got that, all that good stuff. Then one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind. And all that. And then we had 11, well, and that's a, buzz Aldrin, of course, right after him, Michael Collins was orbiting the moon
and the, and the, the space capsule, and, you know, he had blast him off of the surface of the moon, rejoined with the spacecraft in space orbiting the moon. Come back to Earth, splash down in the ocean, yet picked up by the Navy and the Marine Corps out in the middle of the ocean.
Amazing, amazing stuff.
The most amazing stuff in the history of humankind.
And now we've sent another spacecraft with four people aboard to grow up and orbit the moon, orbit the moon. The moon, as every child of six can tell you, the, the Earth's moon, the Earth's moon is about, it wobbles a little bit.
But it's about 238,000 miles from Earth, the moon is. And, and sometimes you get a super moon, it's a couple thousand miles closer to the Earth. And then it gets farther away from the Earth also, because it, the, the, the orbit, the Earth's moon,
orbits the Earth, but not in a perfect orbit. So it wobbles, it's going to be a little farther away in a little closer. Super moons and all kinds of fun stuff. And this is a great stuff. And I'm glad that I love the little kid, you know,
because we're going back to the friggin' moon on CNN and CNN didn't know it to do about this. But the kid is excited. And you want to raise generations of Americans, of American boys, and what the heck, American girls to a grow up thinking, well, you know, maybe I want to travel in space and go to Mars and,
and maybe I'll think of doing something that changes the trajectory of human history. And, and it's us again, the United States, America, and nobody else, you know, not only is it us, it's us and nobody else, because we are, we are us. We are the coolest people in the history of the world, just saying. But Neil Armstrong, Great American Buzz Aldrin Apollo 11,
both walked on the moon, kind of an amazing thing.
We were grown, I'm cool back then, that's for sure. Apollo 12, Pete Conrad, and Alan Bean, Alan Bean, just extraordinary. And he got, you know, Navy pilots, Air Force pilots, Air Force pilots, and Navy pilots, just amazing. And, yeah, Alan Bean, then Alan Shepherd, and Edgar Mitchell, Edgar Mitchell.
You know, you can be sitting at a table next to Edgar Mitchell, and there's Mr. Mitchell, your table is ready, you know?
“And that's how it gets me. So, oh, that's Edgar Mitchell.”
The astronaut from Apollo 14, that walked on the moon, not a big thing, just extraordinary stuff. Yes, yes, sir, and Harrison Schmidt, Harrison Schmidt, Jeanne Sernon, and Harrison Schmidt, the Apollo 17, I think Sernon was the last man to walk on the moon. I think that's right, and I have to double check that, but I think that's true. On 1972, walking on the moon, and that was December, it was, you know, coming up on Christmas,
and we put a couple of guys on the moon to go walking around. And, and we're America, we're so cool, it's 1972, it's like, you know, oh, yeah, what's America doing? You guys are fighting communists and Vietnam. How dare you on the Democrats run the side of the communists? And we're landing men on the moon, and the Democrats are screaming, we need money for welfare.
And it's like, what is it? Why do you sound the moon? Remember, why do you sound the moon? I love that, why do you sound the moon, sir? You have that hand, because we got, that's great stuff. That was, that was during the, it was, in New York City. And, to, why do you sound the moon?
Because we were landing on the moon and the left was angry about it.
“And, and they had what's his name? Good old what's his name?”
Where there's funny song, why do you sound the moon? And, I know, I want to play a little bit of it, because we're, we're not, uh, why do you sound quite back on the moon yet? And, there's a, brought a black guy and a lady along too. Gilles Scott here and yeah, Gilles Scott here and, and Gilles Scott here and wrote the, uh, why do you sound the moon?
Because the Democrats were angry. They wanted to steal everybody's money and spend it on drugs and protests or something, uh, welfare program. Uh, why do you sound the moon? Gilles Scott here and, uh, funny song. And, uh, it wasn't intended to be funny. He, he, he, he, Gilles Scott here and didn't think it was funny.
And, if he's still with us, he still doesn't think it was funny.
1970, 1970, shortly after, shortly after, uh, man first landed on the moon. And, he figures maybe
“social welfare programs should have been overfunded instead of, why do you being on the moon?”
Now, you're, welcome to create your own space program. If you don't like our space program. In the meantime, we'll allow you to keep your electricity and your running water no matter how high a floor, uh, you may be on. And, and I got to say there was a, uh, in Great Britain, the United Kingdom, there are a couple of women having a podcast they're talking about, uh, oh, you know, BBC Radio 4, BBC Channel 4, BBC Radio. And, and their upset yesterday,
because the United States put four people into space, including a black man and a woman and a Canadian who went the Canadian in and, and they took off and in the UK, this, this lady is actually making fun of the lefties in the United Kingdom who are making the Gilles Scott here and why he's on the moon argument that we shouldn't be putting people into space. We should be funding left-wing social welfare programs. Redgiffording a permit for moral maids when they're
shows that if it might be on previous hits, it can be quite sensible. But, you know, they talk about the trip to the moon being a troubling, uh, rate-racing troubling moral questions. Okay.
That with poverty disease, there was climate crisis here on Earth. It never stopped a moment to
a proper grandise. Uh, and is this, it should be spending billions going to the moon, but also do we risk repeating the mistakes of colonial expansion? And insane. Now, she's now, the lady's making fun of the lefties, that if, uh, the United States sends, uh, men and women to the moon of multiple races, uh, as that just the, you know, the threat of colonial
“expansion, because colonialism on the moon, but who would be enslaved on the moon?”
Uh, as I understand it, uh, ain't nobody living on the moon. Uh, we should write a song. Ain't nobody living on the moon. And don't need no welfare on the moon. Uh, maybe some mollies should send bags of cash to the moon. But, uh, the Democrat party. So there's that British television presenter, who is actually mocking, the show is called Moral Maze, Moral Maze. And she's actually mocking and laughing at the lefties,
who are going around saying, "Oh yeah, we, uh, we should be paying for, uh, illegal alien gang members from Pakistan, Nehmohamed in London, uh, to live in bigger apartments, uh, and the United States shouldn't be putting people into space. The left is anti-progress. I don't know if you've detected this, but, uh, it seems pretty obvious to me. Uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, all right. Let's go to, uh, let's go. Let's go.
“Let's look at this one. Let's go to Steve calling from Ashburn, Virginia, Steven.”
You're on the Chris Pancho. Good morning, Chris. Excellent show. So many things to talk about when it comes to, to, to the space program, and sad that it's taken since, uh, 1972 to put it. American astronaut on an American rocket fired from American soil to go to the moon. But okay. So we're on top of it. So the one thing I'd like to mention among all kinds of things is one of the people that is very
critical in our development of our man's space flight program was warm up on Brown.
Yep. We developed the V2 rocket in Pinnomund in Germany, and thankfully he came to the U.S. and helped to develop our man's space flight program. He is now looking down from heaven at us. And he is buried in Alexandria, Virginia. Believe it or not, not back in, in Germany. I've, I've been to Pinnomund, uh, to see his, his work. And I've actually met him many years ago. Wow. Of course, to prior to his passing. But I'm just very thankful that that somebody who was instrumental
in developing weapons of war came to the United States and helped to develop our man's space flight program. Thank you. We're in a Pund Bronx. Yeah, man. And I got to tell you, Steve, I don't know if you heard this earlier, but I made passing reference to a line from Dr. Strange Love, where I said, wonderful wonderful film. Wonderful film. Absolutely. Where I said, our Germans are better than their Germans. And it's, uh, you know, the end of World War II, the Soviets were making a mad
grab for all the German scientists. And, uh, the United States and Britain were making mad
grab for all the German scientists because they had developed so much amazing stuff for making
war the ME262, uh, jet fighter jet. And, um, and the V1 and V2 rockets and all that stuff. And we got Werner von Braun and it did help with our space program and getting to the moon. And all that good stuff. And there is a, uh, Steve, there is a, uh, and you obviously look at it the right way. It's fun. It's amazing. And yeah, Werner von Braun, we captured him and and he didn't really want to be, uh, you know, a Nazi all his life. And, uh, you know, he joined
Team America unlike, uh, the Democrats.
said, "You'll make fun of Florida." But it's the only place with direct flights to the moon.
And that's, uh, a true little Florida defensive thing, there, Steve. But that's, uh, that's fun. It's true. Florida is the only place that has, you know, we can catch a direct flight to the moon. That's true. And, uh, you're right. Absolutely about, uh, about Werner von Braun. And I mean, I gotta tell you, the United States America has been technologically superior, uh,
“and economically superior. And, uh, I think we, we excel in the, the arena of bravery,”
fearlessness, our, uh, men who are Air Force fighter pilots and Navy fighter pilots, becoming astronauts, conquering space, uh, walking all over the moon over and over and over again to the point, uh, that the rest of the world just said, "Okay, okay, we know you're, you're all over the moon." Uh, it's cool being us, except for Democrats, you know, they've got problems. As soon as the Werner flew, they showed the launch of the launch. That's rare, and it's still too
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I'm now Jasmine, if you call in today, you're talking to Jasmine to the great Jasmine. And she just shared a story with me that's kind of wild from the New York Post, the New York Post, and it's today, um, April Fool's Day plus one. Team Girl, who went missing an Arizona over 30 years ago, miraculously found alive. Team Girl, she was 13 when she disappeared. More than 30 years ago, she's just been found. And her name is Kristina Plant. Her name is Kristina Plant,
PLA and TE, like my last name. So Kristina Marie Plant has been found after 30 years. But what I wanted to do was not to give you a lot of students. The semester-by-tag lab tabüche soft behind the internet. It's a master's, I'm sorry. They can tell you, they can I'm not the one to run. You're a master, right? But you don't understand. Egal, it's a business trip. Make you really with this story. And if you then work,
you'll be able to catch it. That's right. Save. This story. Hold it, then go back. Now, you're going to try it. And talk to a nice listener, a great American, who pointed out that one of our Apollo astronauts, one of the 12 men that has walked down the moon, Harrison Schmidt Apollo 17. And it turns out he was apparently not a military pilot. He's a scientist, NASA astronaut, he was a geologist,
and all that good stuff. But not an Air Force pilot or a Navy pilot, which you might expect.
“I think you might expect that. That's a thing. Yes, sir. And then he became a United States”
Senator from New Mexico because they tend to be over at Cheevers. No, I'm talking to him. And he's alive at well. He's 90 years old. 90 years old is Harrison Schmidt alive and well. Yes, sir. And that's great. Astronaut Apollo 17, walk on the moon, become a U.S. Senator. I guess he did something with his life. That's pretty good. I, from the time I was a child,
a nine years old in watching Apollo 11 land in 1969, I, of course, always wanted to walk on
the moon. I mean, he doesn't want to go walk on the moon. Everybody wants to go walk on the moon. Land on the moon, walk on the moon. The, you know, your gravity is about your, about one sixth on the moon. If I remember the stuff from my childhood, gravity on the moon is about one sixth of what it is on earth. So if you weigh 600 pounds here on earth, you'd weigh 100 pounds on the moon trying to keep the math easy for Democrats there. You know, and they got that TV show my 600
pound life, which is about Democrats. Do you know that? It's about 10,000. That's a 600 pound life in that wacky. Yeah, and I love, I got, I got to tell you, Jasmine sent me this, this story from the New York Post, teen girl who went missing an Arizona over 30 years ago, miraculously found
Alive.
A 13 year old girl who vanished under suspicious circumstances in Arizona, more than
“30 years ago, has now been found alive, a 30 said, Christina Marie Plant, PLA and T like Planty.”
Christina and my name is Chris and her name is Christina and her last name is Plant, PLA and T and that is my adopted last name as well. Christina Marie Plant was only recently
located after a sudden breakthrough in the case. Decades after she disappeared without a trace
from the tiny town of Star Valley northeast of Phoenix, the Gila County Sheriff's Office revealed on Wednesday. That's yesterday. 30's haven't released any details on what led to her being found, but noted that advanced technology helped develop new leads. So the patriarchy again, and America, as we invent everything, you guys just, you know, live in our draft and must be kind
“of embarrassing. Must intense, I think so. It should be. It also wasn't clear where she was located”
or when the blue-eyed blonde, she was 13 years old at the time, vanished after she set off to see her horse in a stable near her home back in May of 1994. As get it like a little wanting to go horse back, riding Seahorse, missing persons flyers blasted about the about the town around the town. Note that she was spotted wearing a last spotted wearing a white t-shirt, multi-colored shorts, and black tennis shoes, probably not important now. She's probably not wearing the same thing
30 years later when she was 13, but but keep your eyes peeled for those clothes. They might be so the pre-teens disappearance, but it says pre-teens disappearance. But you said she's 13.
That's not pre-teen. That's teen. That's not pre-teen. You're the first one with teen. See? Come on,
dimwits. So the pre-teens disappearance in Acrit was described at the time as suspicious in quotation marks. Yeah, you think? And authorities warned that she was endangered in quotation marks.
“Yeah, I wouldn't be surprising, I think. Christina was entered into the National Missing”
Children database, missing persons flyers were distributed locally, statewide, and in other parts of the country, the Gila County Sheriff's Office said in a statement, "Over the years, the case remained open and active with investigators periodically re-examining evidence and pursuing new information as it became available. After 32 years, Christina Marie Plant, no relation that I'm aware of, has been located alive. The statement said investigators have since
confirmed plants identity. Plants, I didn't. I've already shared it with my brothers that share the name plant." You know, authorities said they weren't releasing any further details about the case out of respect for Christina's privacy and well-being. I've got to say that is a wild and crazy story. And not just because her name is Chris Plant, but maybe that's part of it. I'd like to know more details about this mystery and whether they've arrested anybody and whether
there is a, you know, a Democrat party, Colty, weirdness involved in any of this, but for Chris Plant, now she disappeared 30 years ago, 13. So, as she's, at least, let me do my Gazintas here, Jethrobo Dean's style. I say as she'd have to be at least 43 years old now and that's crazy story. And it's crazy that her name is Christina Plant. There aren't a lot of, I don't know, you know,
I'm gonna see her. Yeah, the Arizona plants never heard about the Arizona plants. That's, that's
why I could do it'll do. I guess it is. I'm gonna, I'm gonna keep my ear to the ground on that when I want to know more about that. Yeah, the pre-teen 13-year-old, everybody in journalism is mental. What happened to journalism? Just crazy. Absolutely not. All right. We've got President Trump audio talking about Iran, the Radical Islamic Republic, the Revolution in Iran, and we've been dropping some bombs on them. They're the bad guys, and they're saying, oh, the bluster that comes
out of there's pretty amazing. We're not talking, we're talking, nobody knows, in Iran, nobody knows who's in charge in Iran. It'll be really nice if this regime went the way of the Nazi party
Because then they just morph into the Democrats.
President Trump on all that, just I'll get you an update on that. In the meantime, let's go to,
let's go to the telephones, Michael, let's go to David calling from Arlington, Virginia. David, you're on the Chris Plant Show. Hey, thanks Chris. Yeah, man. You know, as interesting to listen to all this today, but, you know, I don't know if you remember the Chinese, when they landed on the dark side of the moon, claimed to have seen an obelisk in the head of photograph of an obelisk type thing, very mysterious. And over the years, China and Russia,
the United States have claimed or implied that they were in touch with extraterrestrials.
You know, so the question then, if that's the case, you know, I wonder which extraterrestrial,
or which of the countries the three big powers have received more input from extraterrestrials for our science and space programs, what do you think? Well, you're talking, for people that weren't here earlier in the program, David, and it's great stuff. We played audio, I played audio earlier today of now former Republican congressman, Matt Gates, who threw some pretty
“crazy stuff out there about a US Army official briefing him on a program, and I think he used”
the word program, a hybrid breeding program, where the US military, the US government has space aliens that are alive, and now they're dating, it's like, it's a pretty crazy stuff, isn't it? Maybe this is where monkeypox came from. What do you think? Yeah, it's possible, because they're they're breeding, and now we're breeding and we've got hybrid, and this is because a lot of people that are here at Matt Gates, former congressman on what he was briefed on. I had someone
come and briefed me on the locations of hybrid breeding programs where captured aliens were breeding with humans to create some hybrid race that could engage in intergalactic communication. There you go. I know dating world is tough out there, David, but this is getting pretty well.
A breeding, so the US government, breeding humans was space aliens, pretty amazing stuff,
and you made mention of the Chinese landing on the moon. That was an unmanned. The Chinese didn't put people on the moon, just to be clear. They claimed that they have seen an obelisk out there. They had a picture of it. Right. Kind of a rectangular object out in the distance. Yeah. And the question is, I have one other question, and that is, you know, the world,
our planet, our solar system exists way out in an arm of the galaxy, and all the action is happening toward the interior of the galaxy. It kind of strains that they come way out to the boonies here, aliens, to interact with humans when they would have an easier time of it further in. Well, maybe they're insatiably curious too. You think if there are living beings out there in the galaxy that have the ability to fly to where we are and to even land on earth and insert
anal probes into the rectums of fishermen and Mississippi, you'd think that,
“you know, they have all kinds of technical capabilities way beyond our ability to grasp, right?”
I guess so. Yeah. Why would they, why would they expend the effort to come all the way out here? Yeah. I don't know if you know this, but they're a medieval account of the war in the skies. Well, I know this, these are things that have been discussed back to ancient times, unusual but things happening in the sky and and creatures and critters and and artistic renderings of, and and then, you know, more recently, of course, David just in the last few years here in the United
States, we've had these videos released by the US military with Navy fighter pilots and Air Force fighter pilots that and counter unidentified flying objects in the in the sky when they're flying that that can do things that are aircraft are incapable of doing like darting off in one direction at, you know, 20 times the speed of sound and turning on a dime and going back on the
“other direction, which we don't have the technical capability to to do with our aircraft, right?”
And it sounds like you've been following this stuff and and and you're very curious about it and rightly so. That's true. Thank you for covering NASA for the Washington Times. Oh, is that so? Oh, is that right?
A long time ago.
Real newspaper in Washington, DC. That's great. It's still a great paper. Yeah, it still is. It really is.
“It's great paper. I'll have the Washington Times. Yeah, we're very lucky. We have the Washington Times.”
We have the Washington Examiner. We have the free beacon. The Washington Free beacon. And the Washington Post is just just bird cage liner at this point. And I'm trying to keep it clean. Thanks for taking my call. Yeah, man. Thank you. Thank you, David. That's that's great. Aren't people great? People are great. Yeah. And the Chinese, the communist, they landed something on the moon. But there were no people in it. They would have been happy to kill some people doing it.
But they didn't. They didn't. Yeah, that's great stuff. All right, we haven't got that. Let's get a president Trump. Shall we get to president Trump? Let's go to, um, hmm, hey, wait a minute. It's now somebody burying Connecticut. I got to go to this one. Hang on. Let's, uh, let's go to, uh,
“because uh, you know, when I, people like to correct me. And that's, and that's fair. And that's right.”
And that's good. But let's go to, let's go to Barry, uh, more space program sell. Let's go to Barry
calling from Connecticut. I always love the space program. Uh, Barry, you're on the Chris Plant show.
Thanks a lot Chris. First time caller. Um, yeah, just to correct you. I'm the, uh, what to set about, uh, about, uh, Michael Collins being the commander of Apollo 11. He was, I think you're just mistaken. He was the command module pilot. Uh, not the command. Okay. Uh, and, uh, you know, uh, Neil Armstrong was the commander. But I got a great story for you. I hope you had some time for it because I was present down in 1972. Just after 12 30 at night, watching the Apollo 17 launch from
Titusville, Florida from 10 miles away. And you know what, if anybody has ever been in a, uh, uh,
“a, uh, earthquake, that, that one thing I've never been in, but that's what it felt like when it”
reached the shockwave came all the way across the, the water. 10 miles away, it took about 15 seconds, seconds to get here. Hit just square in the chest. And I'm going to try to try to, uh, amuse you and your listeners by trying to top that little boy from yesterday. I'm going to, and I, and I, and I said it at the time. And it's exactly exactly what I'm going to say right now. It was better than an orgasm. I swear to God. I said it at the time with, to my friend,
Bob, he was 17 years old. I was 18 years old. And my brother was there. And, uh, at present, Bob is working at Goddard's space, space flight center right now. Right, we, we built, uh, Maryland. Yeah. And then we, we got kicked off the bus and we ended up 10 miles away.
We're supposed to be out at the VAV at the time. It was the most incredible feeling a human being
can be subjected to all those newspaper, uh, people out there at the, at the KBS today. They had their socks knocked off because that Saturn 5 was powerful, but not any more powerful than this, this rocket we saw yesterday to SLS. Yeah. It is, uh, and they are truly amazing, uh, things there. And there, Earthshaking, uh, one of my best buddies growing up, uh, Tom, we went to high school together, lives on the space coast and has, has been down there for 30 years now or 70 loves the space
launches and sends pictures and videos. And I love all of that stuff. And the, the VAV, the vehicle assembly building, uh, where they would assemble the Apollo rockets and all that, uh, I'd been inside that building, uh, friend of mine, a Marine Colonel, uh, was, uh, was there at the Space Light Center and my best girl and I got into the, the VAV, uh, an incredibly cool, uh, thing like, you know, a relic of the Cold War and of that great era. Also, I, uh, not to make it all about me,
very, but the, I was, um, I was hired as a courier, uh, for the first landing of the Space Shuttle
at Edwards Air Force Base in California and, and I had a rent a car and I was out on the lake bed going 120 miles an hour with a rooster tail is like two miles long out on the dry lake bed where they landed the Space Shuttle's and, and the first, I was there for the first landing of the Space Shuttle on the lake bed at, at, uh, at Edwards and, uh, and it was, it was just so cool, uh, being out there way ahead of where the TV cameras were and where everything was and,
and for the closer to the landing of the first Space Shuttle than just about anybody and it was, uh, the coolest, coolest thing, I love my Space Shuttle. Uh, Anna, you will not, you will not live until you see one of these Space Launchings right at the cake. Just like I did, I, I, I heard and saw
Two Saturn 5 Launchings.
being launched, okay? We were right at the VAB from three miles away and believe it was spectacular. Yeah, I don't doubt that for a moment, I'd say my stepfather was a CBS News reporter and he covered
the Space Program and the, and the Apollo, uh, launches and and, um, I always, uh, I was, uh, you know,
when he got home, we, uh, make him tell the whole story again and again and he'd bring us home
“Apollo, uh, patches, you know, which I still have a couple at home. I think I still have an original”
Apollo 11 patch, uh, that he brought home and, uh, some other one. Yeah, that Space Program was the coolest thing
in the world, in that time. Um, and I'd like to see a, uh, get back on the moon and then, and then
Mars and, and we'll see where we go from there. Great stuff, Barry. Thank you. Do you know more about working with the US from 1900 or the technology of Gästern? Then come to Newwork Evolution
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Now stick it to Sean. Pam Bundy, Pamela Bundy is the attorney general of the United States of America. And there's stories all over the place today that President Trump is going to fire her is going to let her go, relieve her of her position as attorney general of the United States at the Department of Justice. Uh, oh, we've also got a, uh, a cash petel sound by that. I want to share with you today as well. But, uh, the story is all over the place this morning. Trump is considering
replacing Pam Bundy, uh, according to source, source, only one MS 13. Now, the NBC people see on end. Trump has discussed, outsting attorney general, Pam Bundy sources say they have more than once there are a lot of sources all over the place. And, uh, they also have, uh, some of the reporting has named her replacement already. Uh, I've got that for you. Coming up. on the whole planet. And I'll ask the questions you only dream of other interviewers asking.
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