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The Day the Earth Stood Still

USA Weekend: Where Were You?

July 20, 1969: What a day for America —and the world. With one step on a powdery chunk of lunar surface, we achieved the unachievable: Apollo 11 landed on the moon. Few events have had the same impact on our times, according to these five distinguished Americans.

Neil deGrasse Tyson

Afterward, anything seemed possible.

I watched the moon landing when I was 10 years old with a friend, on a 12-inch black-and-white TV—with a coat hanger for an antenna ear. Then, the next year, that same friend handed me a pair of binoculars, and I looked at the moon, seemingly for the first time in my life. It no longer was a distant object. I had never noticed before how full of valleys and hills it was.

The Apollo missions were great adventures; every one went a bit farther than the one before. With Apollo 7, we circled the Earth. With Apollo 8, we flew around the moon and saw some of our very first images of the Earth. What a picture! We saw our planet as all land and water and clouds—not color-coded countries and states. After Apollo 11, anything seemed possible. A mission to Mars by 1980? Why not?!

But that didn't happen. The missions ended with Apollo 17 in 1972. So did the sense of adventure. Today, we celebrate this era because, frankly, it's dead and on display at a museum near you. By now, I had hoped we'd be celebrating all of the bigger and better explorations we might have achieved after the day we landed on the moon.

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Full Moon Effects

From The Amaz!ng Meeting 6: I, Skeptic—Modern Skepticism in the Internet Age, June 19-22, 2008.

See all clips from this event.

The Planetary Society Radio, March 21, 2005

Interview on The Planetary Society Radio podcast on the Future of Space Exploration

The Leonard Lopate Show, September 28, 2004

New York Public Radio's Leonard Lopate Interview on September 28, 2004 on Cosmic Origins (2004): click here

Listen to the interview (RealAudio)

View the episode website

Point of Inquiry, August 17, 2006

In this interview with DJ Grothe, Dr. Tyson discusses new developments this week in astronomy which may increase the count of planets in our solar system, reveals why he believes it is likely that there is life elsewhere in the universe, examines Intelligent Design and what he calls stupid design, eloquently explains how parents may foster an appreciation for science in children, and also discusses science education’s real-world economic impact for America.

Tavis Smiley, September 27, 2004

Tavis Smiley interview on meeting Carl Sagan, the origins of the universe, and intelligent life.

Go to the interview (RealAudio)

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