Multivac
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It's notis nonsense. The evidence that the missions werefakedreal is crushing.
Fixed your post. Hope you don't mind.
It's notis nonsense. The evidence that the missions werefakedreal is crushing.
Link to original threadThe following may or may not be relvant to this matter but may have some bearing on just how the moon hoax thing got started.
In the editorial ("7/20/69") for the November 1969 (Vol. LXXXIV No. 3) issue of Analog, then editor John W Campbell Jr wrote of the Apollo Eleven footage:
(November 1969 Analog, Page:6)It added to my feeling that this whole thing was a rather primitive science-fiction movie-poorly photographed on old-fashioned black-and-white film and with too much unexplained and seemingly pointless action. We're used to such slick lighting, and efficient choreography and editing in our movies, that the real thing seemed pretty artificial!
This comparision between the actual Apollo footage and the output of Hollywood is also made at an earlier point in the editorial:
(November 1969 Analog, Page: 4)I have just finished watching the greatest show ever staged; if absolutely nothing ever came of it, that magnificent science-fiction movie...
Now these were the thoughts of a well known science-fiction author, and more to the point someone who knew that the landings were genuine:
(November 1969 Analog, Page:5)...Sol isn't a binary, so filming on location we were stuck with one-source lighting.
I'm therefore wondering just how many people had thoughts similar to the one expressed in the first quote and then discussed that impression amongst friends, given the way rumor spreads I'm quite sure that at some point, "It (the footage) gave me the impression I was watching a movie..", became "I'm sure the footage (of the moon landing) I saw was a movie..."
Of course I could be totally wrong...
By the way, I hope it hasn't escaped anyone's attention that Patrick claims to remember discussing Apollo hoax ideas with his Italian relatives and their friends on the very first time he travelled to meet them in 1989. This despite the fact that early in his hoax megathread he claimed to be an Apollo hoax ingénue, who only started looking into it three months previously.
An educated Italian is much more likely to doubt Apollo than an uneducated one.
There must have been many people doubting Apollo from the get go. It would be interesting to look into that.
I wasn't smart enough to doubt it from the get go...
However it was given a new lease on life when the FOX network aired a moon hoax program, largely pushed by Sibrel, IIRC, around 2000.
However it was given a new lease on life when the FOX network aired a moon hoax program, largely pushed by Sibrel, IIRC, around 2000.
one of my friends who is a physicist but works primarily as a programmer, said his main source of doubt was that the Americans never went back.....for this Chinese man, not going back to the moon was like not going back to Antarctica
How much of an influence was "Capricorn One", I wonder: while it fed on a pre-existing idea, did it give it a bit more attention?
I was 13 when I saw it and knew it was bs, innately. Haven't seen it since it was in the theater- wasn't one of Big Tells was the fact they were communicating instantaneously with the JPL (or whatever) while on Mars?
I kinda want to see it again!
There are some watchable performances by Sam Waterston and Elliott Gould in Capricorn One.
The use of Apollo-era hardware was mostly a budgetary choice, allowing the filmmakers to use stock NASA footage (which is almost always royalty-free) and to borrow some actual NASA hardware instead of designing and building their own. However, Peter Hyams later said that it turned out to be a good choice because the verisimilitude offered by actual NASA machinery (however inapplicable from the engineering standpoint) made the story more believable.
I believe in the director's commentary, Hyams says he shopped this project around Hollywood in the early 1970s but had a hard time convincing producers that people would buy the story of a deep government coverup. But after Watergate Hollywood changed its mind dramatically and embraced the "huge coverup" plot line, with all its absurdities.
What I find most absurd is the initial premise that the ECS contractor delivered a faulty product that wasn't identified as such until delivery, and that with two months between delivery and launch the only escape was fraud.
First, the alleged monetary incentive of the contractor is invalid. These are not usually "lowest bidder" contracts but usually "cost-plus" contracts, meaning the contractor makes a fixed profit negotiated ahead of time. This removes the incentive to cut costs dangerously in order to maximize profit.
Second, NASA embeds inspectors and engineers with the major contractors. It is highly unlikely that a major component could make it to acceptance and qualification test with no prior indication of failure.
Third, two months is two months. A lot can be solved in two months. If they put as much energy and resources into fixing the life-support system (or switching to the Plan B, as they did on Apollo when various Plan As didn't pan out in time) as they did into cooking up the hoax, they'd have probably been okay.
Bookmarked. Some very good points that us laymen don't consider.
I still think the 'only one person in MCC would notice the signal discrepancy' is the worst plotline. Then his total disappearance as well with nobody noticing?
There, there. It's all going to be alright. Mommy's here.It's not nonsense. The evidence that the missions were faked is crushing.
NOT safe for work!If for no other reason, then just to see Jill St. John.![]()
There are some watchable performances by Sam Waterston and Elliott Gould in Capricorn One.
The use of Apollo-era hardware was mostly a budgetary choice, allowing the filmmakers to use stock NASA footage (which is almost always royalty-free) and to borrow some actual NASA hardware instead of designing and building their own.
However, Peter Hyams later said that it turned out to be a good choice because the verisimilitude offered by actual NASA machinery (however inapplicable from the engineering standpoint) made the story more believable.
First, the alleged monetary incentive of the contractor is invalid. These are not usually "lowest bidder" contracts but usually "cost-plus" contracts, meaning the contractor makes a fixed profit negotiated ahead of time. This removes the incentive to cut costs dangerously in order to maximize profit.