1. Six, five, four,
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2. three, two, one, zero.
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3. All engine running.
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4. Liftoff.
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5. The time is spring 1969.
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6. The place is Ed White Elementary School
in El Lago, Texas,
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7. a South Houston suburb
right down the road from NASA.
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8. The occasion on this fateful day
that put everything in motion?
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9. Fourth grade recess.
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10. No, that's not me.
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11. That's Ricky Rodriguez,
one of my many ne'er-do-well buddies.
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12. They had changed the rules,
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13. so you weren't supposed
to throw the ball at people,
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14. which was kind of the most fun thing
about kickball.
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15. It was taking some gettin' used to.
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16. And that's Mr. St. George, our PE coach,
walking Ricky over to the wall.
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17. He was a very specific disciplinarian,
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18. drawing you a little circle
on the nearest wall.
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19. Here. Put your nose in there
and keep it in there.
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20. And it was always just a little higher
than was comfortable,
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21. so you'd be up on your tippy-toes
until the end of the class.
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22. The one time he was sticking my nose
to the wall, I was ready for him.
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23. The key, I figured,
was to imperceptibly spread your stance
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24. and slump ever so slightly lower
at the crucial moment of his calculation.
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25. Put your nose there.
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26. So that's me. Stanley.
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27. Everyone just called me Stan,
unless I was in trouble, of course,
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28. or on the first day of class
when they read roll.
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29. In kickball, I was kind of a shortstop
and general field rover,
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30. instructed by teammates
to try and catch everything I could.
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31. And, you know,
I was a pretty impressive kicker as well.
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32. But back to how it all got started.
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33. It was those guys
that changed my life forever.
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34. There's our kid.
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35. We scouted you on the kickball field,
we spoke with your teachers.
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36. We're impressed with…
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37. a few of your science reports,
and we like that you've earned
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38. a Presidential Physical Fitness Award
three years running.
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39. We've selected you
as the perfect candidate for this mission.
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40. Mission? For what?
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41. Listen, time's a factor here,
so we're gonna be very blunt.
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42. We accidentally built the lunar module
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43. a little too small.
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44. But we're not gonna let that set us back.
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45. How'd that happen?
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46. Are you good at math?
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47. - Yeah.
- Do you get a perfect 100 on every test?
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48. - No.
- Okay.
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49. We are this close,
but we need to test this…
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50. …accidentally smaller version
on the lunar surface, and soon.
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51. And we need a kid like you to help us out,
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52. so we can beat those damn Russians
to the moon.
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53. Why don't you just send a chimpanzee?
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54. Because you speak
more actual words of the English language.
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55. Stan, you're our only hope.
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56. Come on. What do you say?
Do it for your country.
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57. Do it for the free world!
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58. Okay.
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59. Great. Secret training starts
end of school year.
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60. Secret?
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61. Top secret, Stan.
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62. This is a covert operation.
It does not exist. Get it?
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63. This meeting? This never happened.
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64. No one can know about this.
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65. Not your parents.
Not your brothers. Not your sisters.
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66. - No one.
- Wait.
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67. How will we get away with this?
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68. Where will everyone think I am?
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69. Summer camp.
You were recommended, accepted,
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70. and received a scholarship
to Camp Grizzly,
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71. a special outdoor camp
just outside of Lake Traverse, Michigan.
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72. You went up in late May
and stayed through almost all of June.
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73. I'm not gonna lie, the weather and bugs
were arduous, but you had a great time.
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74. Hmm.
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75. - A great time indeed.
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76. Some things you never forget, Stan.
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77. Okay, pause!
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78. Let's forget about all this for now.
We'll come back to this part later.
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79. First, let me tell you about
life back then.
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80. It was a great time and place to be a kid.
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81. Living in the Houston area
in the late '60s,
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82. and especially near NASA,
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83. was like being
where science fiction was coming to life.
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84. The optimistic technological future
was now,
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85. and we were at the absolute center
of everything new and better.
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86. Leading the way was,
of course, the space program.
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87. The goal of going to the moon
had been declared
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88. when President Kennedy gave his speech
at Rice University in Houston.
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89. But why, some say, the moon?
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90. Why choose this as our goal?
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91. And they may well ask,
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92. "Why climb the highest mountain?"
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93. "Why, 35 years ago, fly the Atlantic?"
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94. "Why does Rice play Texas?"
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95. We choose to go to the moon.
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96. We choose to go to the moon in this decade
and do the other things,
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97. not because they are easy,
but because they are hard.
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98. The Space Center was relocated
to the outskirts of town in 1962.
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99. That same year, Houston started to build
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100. the world's first dome stadium.
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101. The eighth wonder of the world.
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102. The Astrodome.
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103. When they did the groundbreaking,
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104. instead of ceremonial digs
in the earth with shovels,
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105. all the officials shot Colt.45 pistols
into the ground instead.
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106. And the dome
had the first animated scoreboard
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107. with all kinds of fun, lit-up graphics.
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108. But the best
was when an Astro hit a home run,
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109. or, as they like to say,
put the ball into Astro orbit,
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110. which set off this huge,
electronic fireworks display.
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111. And this was the place
that first had Astroturf.
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112. The artificial surface would need
no watering, mowing, or weeding,
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113. and be the perfect expression of this era
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114. when everything was new
and man-made and therefore better.
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115. Even though Joe Namath said
it was like playing on concrete,
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116. it felt like nature
and all her earthly restrictions
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117. were being conquered.
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118. And no one doubted that, in our lifetimes,
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119. we'd have the option to live on the moon,
or maybe a nearby planet,
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120. probably in some kinda domed space colony.
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121. And, given the rate
of all this technological innovation,
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122. it was easy to imagine
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123. that we'd all probably be livin'
well past the age of a hundred.
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124. For example,
just over at the medical center,
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125. DeBakey and Cooley
were perfecting the heart transplant.
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126. And even closer to home,
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127. we were one of the first regions
in the country to get push-button phones.
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128. Y'all, listen to this.
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129. It was the coolest. No more dialing.
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130. - And you could play songs with the tones.
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131. My sister Vicky
was the musical one in the family.
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132. She was the oldest, followed by Steve,
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133. then Jana, Greg, Stephanie, and then me.
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134. Okay. Show your moves.
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135. Okay, good.
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136. Hello? Hello?
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137. Sure, our country was at war.
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138. Cities were on fire,
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139. and all hell was breaking loose
everywhere.
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140. But from a kid's perspective,
out in the suburbs,
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141. it was all confined to the television.
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142. And as a kid,
you just figure it's all normal.
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143. Another riot.
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144. Another famous leader assassinated.
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145. I guess that's just how adults act.
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146. In our family, it seemed
that only Vicky embodied
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147. the so-called generation gap of the time.
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148. She was the only one of us who seemed
o know or care very much
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149. about what was going on in the world.
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150. The closest we ever got to the action
was when we were in Houston with Mom
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151. near the college where it seemed she was
forever in grad school during this time.
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152. - Look at how they're dressed.
- Those?
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153. See, kids,
this is why we moved to the suburbs.
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154. To get away from these kinds of people.
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155. The squares are scared.
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156. No. Your sister is full of crap.
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157. - We moved here because of your dad's job.
- Mm-hmm.
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158. He was sick of commuting an hour each way.
Got it?
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159. - Okay. Okay, Mom.
- Got it.
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160. Got it. Um, Mom, is that one a hippie?
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161. Yeah. Yeah, that's a hippie.
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162. How about that one?
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163. No. His hair's not long enough.
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164. But he's wearing bell-bottoms.
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165. Oh.
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166. Okay. Yeah. Yeah, that's a hippie.
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167. I think I like hippies.
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168. And in those new suburbs
expanding south of Houston,
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169. housing divisions were springin' up
all over the place.
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170. Our neighborhood
was full of houses under construction.
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171. The land was totally flat.
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172. The only thing remotely resembling a hill
was the overpass out on the interstate.
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173. We're talking coastal plains,
a mere 30 or so feet above sea level.
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174. Of course,
they hadn't put in enough drainage,
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175. so every time it rained for
any length of time, everything flooded.
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176. - Look! It's a water moccasin!
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177. Every time!
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178. There was no sense of history here,
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179. for everything as far as you could see
was brand new.
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180. New and endless shopping centers
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181. with grocery stores, burger restaurants,
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182. and, best of all,
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183. a bowling alley and arcade.
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184. At least once a week, we'd walk
or ride bikes over to the bowling alley.
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185. We'd bowl when our parents were paying,
but on our own,
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186. the arcade was where the action was.
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187. We developed a self-sustaining system
that extended our meager allowance.
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188. For an investment of a quarter each,
we could get an RC Cola for 15 cents
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189. and a pinball game for a dime.
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190. We'd concentrate on the games
we'd mastered, like Aquarius.
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191. All the pressure would,
of course, be on the first game.
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192. Immediately winning,
not only to keep playing,
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193. but to eventually
fill up the machine with free games.
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194. Then when it was time to go home,
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195. we could usually sell them off
for 50 cents to some older person
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196. who thought that was a good deal.
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197. Maybe part of the allure
of the bowling alley
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198. was it was
where the local hoodlums hung out.
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199. We would marvel at their swagger
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200. and the methods they used
to beat the system,
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201. whether crudely lessening
the gravitational pull of the machine
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202. or deftly getting a game
without putting in any money.
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203. When done just right, the machine would
apparently start a new game.
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204. It was masterful.
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205. I tried that maneuver
for the next several years
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206. but never figured it out.
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207. We'd been one of the first houses
completed on our street,
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208. and it felt like the entire neighborhood
was a construction site and up for grabs.
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209. You could build a whole fort
out of the throwaway wood piles.
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210. That would have to suffice,
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211. because tree houses
were probably a couple decades away.
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212. Dad, isn't this stealing?
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213. Well, the way I figure it,
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214. they charged us way too much
for the house,
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215. so technically, they owe us.
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216. It's just a piece of plywood.
They'll never miss it.
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217. I'm still not sure
if my dad was in the frugal,
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218. struggling-to-make-ends-meet category
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219. or closer to a scam artist.
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220. Pull it back. Tighten the net. There.
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221. But it was clear our family's sole mission
was to save as much money as possible.
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222. Nice.
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223. Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa!
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224. You're not finished.
Put the nozzle back in my gas tank.
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225. Now squeeze the handle completely open.
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226. Now lift the hose from back to front.
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227. That's my gas in the hose.
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228. - I paid for it.
- Dad…
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229. He knows that.
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230. Even though my dad was in charge
of shipping and receiving at NASA…
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231. You go beat those Russkies.
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232. Roger that, comrade.
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233. …and apparently made a good enough living
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234. to more or less raise a family
with six kids,
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235. I was embarrassed
he was more of a paper pusher
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236. than someone who had
anything to do with the missions.
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237. There is and there isn't
a possibility of advancement…
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238. He felt as far away from being
an astronaut as you could get.
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239. My dad targets the coordinates
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240. so that when the astronauts
splashdown in the ocean,
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241. the navy can come pick them up.
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242. He's the guy that when the countdown
finally gets to blast off,
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243. my dad's the one actually
pushing a button launching everything.
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244. When I was walking home from school…
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245. I guess I was
what you'd call a fabulist,
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246. which is just a nicer way of saying
"persistent liar."
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247. So I got a little closer.
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248. That's when I realized
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249. there were wires attached to him,
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250. stretching up to, like, outer space.
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251. He was some kind of robot.
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252. I was hoping I could bring him here today,
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253. but suddenly,
he just got pulled up by the wires.
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254. Mrs. Ulrich said you didn't bring
anything to show and tell.
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255. You know, I just did the "tell" part,
hoping they'd imagine the "show" part.
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256. She says you told the entire class
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257. that your father's scheduled to go
on Apollo 14 or 15 in 1972.
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258. Honey. Honey, is that true?
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259. Why can't Dad do something important
at NASA?
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260. - It's a little bit embarrassing.
- Stan.
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261. Your father has worked very hard
to make it to the top of his department.
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262. He's in charge of everything
that goes into that place,
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263. from a pen to a space suit.
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264. He is important. Okay?
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265. Okay.
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266. I was just wondering why he couldn't be
an astronaut or something actually cool.
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267. Honey,
not everyone gets to be an astronaut.
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268. Everyone does their part,
and it takes a lot of people.
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269. Including your father. Got it?
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270. - Got it.
- Good.
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271. It was true. A neighbor behind us
worked on the helmets.
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272. Several friends' dads
were engineers at NASA.
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273. A girl in my class's mom
helped make the suits.
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274. It was like everyone was doin'
somethin' for NASA one way or another.
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275. My dad was doin' his part, too,
however meager in my eyes.
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276. Like I said, I was the last of six
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277. in our own
Brady Bunch configuration of a family,
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278. - and the only one born in the '60s.
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279. By the time I came around,
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280. my parents were largely done with
documenting everything their kids did.
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281. Aw!
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282. I was incorporated into
the existing system,
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283. but that was about it.
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284. I'm hardly in any family photos
or home movies.
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285. My siblings used to mess with me about it.
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286. See?
See how you're not in any of these?
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287. They're afraid to tell you,
but you were adopted.
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288. Mom and Dad are too broken to tell you,
but we got you in an orphanage.
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289. They picked you
out of a crowd of screaming babies.
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290. Har-di-har-har. Very funny.
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291. I learned later that after I was born,
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292. my mom got on this new thing
called the pill
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293. but never told our priest,
for fear of being excommunicated.
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294. - Dad, you're it.
- You're it!
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295. Gotcha!
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296. - Aah!
- Got you. You're it!
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297. Then there were
our next-door neighbors, the Pateks,
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298. who were clearly not using contraception
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299. because they were still kickin' out
a kid about every year.
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300. Their mother was so overworked,
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301. she'd sometimes just give the kids
rubber bands to chew on between meals.
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302. And she was obsessed with cleanliness.
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303. She kept their house spick and span,
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304. and to aid in this, she'd put
all her kids outside almost all day long.
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305. Except the newborn, of course.
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306. No!
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307. She'd put the next-to-youngest outside
in the care of the older kids
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308. while she stayed inside
with the youngest and cleaned.
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309. Every now and then,
somethin' like this would happen.
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310. But we all seemed
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311. - to somehow survive our childhoods.
- Stop, stop!
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312. Wait, wait, wait!
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313. After the Pateks' dad got off work,
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314. he'd usually just sit in the open garage
most of the evenin' smokin' cigars.
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315. I guess he was also doin' his part
in keepin' the house clean.
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316. The six of us
formed quite an army of workers,
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317. keepin' the house and yard clean
and executing our systems with precision.
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318. In addition to endless outdoor work,
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319. my biggest indoor job
was to empty all the trash cans.
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320. I'm not even sure
if they had plastic trash bags yet,
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321. but it wouldn't have mattered,
because we only used old grocery bags
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322. which were prone to leaking,
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323. depending on whatever liquid-y crap
everyone threw away.
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324. And, of course, it was my job
to clean up the floor after.
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325. Maybe because we couldn't afford it,
we hardly ever went out to a restaurant.
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326. Mom was a genius at conjuring up meals
and carryin' 'em out for days.
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327. The canned ham would have brown sugar
and pineapple on it Sunday.
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328. Monday, there'd be ham casserole.
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329. Tuesday, ham sandwiches,
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330. and Wednesday's navy bean soup
would have the rest of the ham in it.
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331. Other staples included
tomato soup and grilled cheese,
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332. tuna casserole with potato chips,
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333. pot pies, meatloaf,
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334. endless variations of chicken,
and, of course, a lot of creamed corn.
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335. The fun stuff was deviled eggs,
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336. homemade Popsicles, Vienna sausages,
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337. - and on special occasions, Jiffy Pop.
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338. It was also the first wave
of the Jello mold craze.
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339. Aah!
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340. School lunches were their own production.
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341. Every Sunday night,
we'd all be Mom's helpers
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342. as we'd systematically make a week's worth
of sandwiches for school lunches,
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343. and then freeze 'em
to be thawed out overnight
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344. before each day of the school week.
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345. Sometimes the thawing wasn't complete,
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346. and you'd end up with a half-frozen,
soggy white bread bologna sandwich.
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347. My dad's parents lived in
an old neighborhood in Houston,
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348. - and we'd go visit on weekends.
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349. You just keep tappin' it lightly…
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350. until it straightens out.
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351. See there?
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352. A nail will last forever,
so you don't ever want to throw 'em away.
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353. Just make sure
you got a good place to store 'em.
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354. - Mm-hmm.
- My grandparents' reaction
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355. to havin' lived through the Depression
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356. was to feel it was goin' to happen again
at any moment.
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357. Don't hit your fingers.
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358. They saved everything
that had the slightest value
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359. - and reused everything they could.
- See? I think you got it.
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360. They even reused paper towels,
which begged the question,
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361. what the hell's the point of a paper towel
as opposed to, like, a rag?
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362. But none of us
ever said anything.
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363. We're not going to…
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364. And I swear my grandmother took us
to see The Sound Of Music
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365. about every six months.
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366. I'm not sure if the movie
was playing for years and years
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367. - or if they kept bringin' it back.
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368. - It was just another outing with Grandma…
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369. - …who, like her movie choices,
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370. was a very sweet lady
you couldn't find much fault in.
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371. My other grandmother
was much more edgy and paranoid,
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372. but very entertaining.
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373. She would stay with us for long stretches
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374. and regale us
with various conspiracy theories
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375. and doom and gloom scenarios.
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376. We now know
JFK didn't die that day in Dallas.
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377. Mm-mm.
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378. Poor man was rendered a vegetable
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379. due to the severe brain trauma
from the bullets.
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380. But they are keepin' him alive
in seclusion on a Greek island.
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381. They didn't think we could handle
seeing the president as a vegetable,
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382. so they are shieldin' us
from the true facts.
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383. It's Aristotle Onassis's
island.
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384. Which explains his marriage to Jackie.
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385. To her,
the world was goin' down the tubes,
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386. and fast.
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387. Overpopulation is chokin' the planet.
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388. And within a few years,
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389. we are gonna be past
the point of no return.
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390. Scientists say
that the Earth cannot technically handle
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391. more than 3.5 billion people,
and at some point in the '70s,
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392. food supply's just gonna collapse
for most of the world's inhabitants,
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393. which leads to mass starvation
and war and famine.
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394. Don't know how they'll keep up
with the dead bodies—
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395. Enough already, Mom.
You gotta stop with the paranoia talk.
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396. You're scarin' the kids.
You're drivin' me nuts.
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397. You won't shut up. Please stop.
Copy !req
398. Stop. Stop.
Copy !req
399. It costs over $4.5 billion
every year to cart the mess away…
Copy !req
400. Yes, with such threats looming,
the future was often terrifying.
Copy !req
401. We were told
if everything continued as it was going,
Copy !req
402. we'd be knee-deep in trash
and wearing gas masks just to breathe.
Copy !req
403. They did a great job
of scarin' the hell out of everyone.
Copy !req
404. It must've worked.
Copy !req
405. President Nixon signed the Clean Air Act
and the Clean Water Act,
Copy !req
406. and it soon became unacceptable to litter.
Copy !req
407. Now, that, young Steven, is the difference
between a redneck and white trash.
Copy !req
408. A redneck's gonna throw his cans on the
floor of his car, the back of his truck.
Copy !req
409. White trash,
he's gonna throw his cans out the window
Copy !req
410. and be a litterbug.
Copy !req
411. That's no good.
Copy !req
412. So we're rednecks?
Copy !req
413. Oh, no, no, no, no, no.
Copy !req
414. A redneck would just leave the cans
just laying there.
Copy !req
415. You're gonna clean those up
when we get back to the house.
Copy !req
416. - Sh!
Copy !req
417. Oh.
Copy !req
418. Take the wheel.
Copy !req
419. - What?
- Drive.
Copy !req
420. That's right.
Copy !req
421. It wasn't against the law
to drink and drive back then.
Copy !req
422. You just couldn't be legally intoxicated.
Copy !req
423. Make a wish.
Copy !req
424. Dad, I just—
Copy !req
425. I remember how he'd drop the tab
into the beer itself.
Copy !req
426. And I wasn't sure if it was a ritual
or if it was Dad's anti-littering effort.
Copy !req
427. Either way, it was appreciated,
Copy !req
428. 'cause those tabs are on the ground,
and they could really slice up your feet.
Copy !req
429. - However, I heard…
- How'd you do?
Copy !req
430. …that six people a year died by choking
Copy !req
431. when the tab came back out
and they swallowed it.
Copy !req
432. I would always think that
maybe this could be the day.
Copy !req
433. But like so many
of the doomsday scenarios,
Copy !req
434. it thankfully never happened.
Copy !req
435. But all the dissonance
was a lot to process for a young mind.
Copy !req
436. On the one hand, okay,
the world was goin' to hell.
Copy !req
437. We were in a war in Vietnam,
Copy !req
438. but even more scary was the Cold War
we were in with the Soviet Union,
Copy !req
439. who we were told at any minute
could be dropping a hydrogen bomb on us.
Copy !req
440. Anyway, we were the last
of the duck-and-cover generation.
Copy !req
441. - It's a bomb. Duck and cover.
Copy !req
442. - I thought bein' under a desk
Copy !req
443. wasn't gonna do much good
on the vaporization or radiation front.
Copy !req
444. - But what the hell.
Copy !req
445. You did the drill.
Copy !req
446. But on the other hand,
the future was so cool and optimistic.
Copy !req
447. - We were heading to the moon and beyond.
Copy !req
448. It was easy to be swept up
in the promise of the future
Copy !req
449. and the thought
that science and technology
Copy !req
450. - would ultimately fix almost everything.
Copy !req
451. At the top of the heap, the embodiment
of all these positive feelings was NASA
Copy !req
452. and, of course, the astronauts themselves.
Copy !req
453. - The names still roll off the tongue.
Copy !req
454. The original Mercury guys,
Copy !req
455. John Glenn, Scott Carpenter, Alan Shepard,
Copy !req
456. Walter Schirra, Gordon Cooper,
Copy !req
457. Gus Grissom, Deke Slayton.
Copy !req
458. Then the Apollo names became familiar.
Copy !req
459. Pete Conrad, Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin,
Copy !req
460. Michael Collins, Frank Borman,
Copy !req
461. James Lovell, Gene Cernan,
Copy !req
462. John Young, Alan Bean.
Copy !req
463. They were the bravest. The best.
Copy !req
464. This is a CBS News
special report.
Copy !req
465. America's first three Apollo astronauts
were trapped and killed by a flash fire
Copy !req
466. that swept their moon ship early tonight
during a launch pad test…
Copy !req
467. When Gus Grissom,
Copy !req
468. Roger Chaffee, and Ed White died
during a test for Apollo 1,
Copy !req
469. - I remember my mom crying.
Oh my God.
Copy !req
470. Our school was named Ed White Elementary
even before the tragedy.
Copy !req
471. After, it became kind of a memorial.
Copy !req
472. But the world was changing,
and so was how we saw ourselves in it.
Copy !req
473. When Apollo 8 snapped
the famous Earthrise photo
Copy !req
474. over the moon on Christmas Eve,
Copy !req
475. it gave us Earthlings
a perspective we'd never had.
Copy !req
476. There we were, all together
on this floating blue ball in space.
Copy !req
477. It was said that someday soon,
when humans fully grasped what this meant,
Copy !req
478. there would be a shift in consciousness,
and there would be no more wars.
Copy !req
479. And back in our little part
of that blue ball,
Copy !req
480. everywhere you looked,
Copy !req
481. there were reminders of NASA
and the manned space program.
Copy !req
482. On our playground,
there was a rocket slide
Copy !req
483. you could climb up and pilot.
Copy !req
484. I think everyone knew
spaceships didn't have steering wheels,
Copy !req
485. but no matter.
Copy !req
486. The space race was such
an all-pervasive element of our culture.
Copy !req
487. It found its way into everything,
Copy !req
488. including advertising and promotion,
however ridiculous.
Copy !req
489. Howdy, folks! I'm Sam the Rocket Man!
Copy !req
490. We're shootin' the moon
with out-of-this-world savings!
Copy !req
491. The closer they get to the moon,
the lower our prices are.
Copy !req
492. We'll trade anything.
Copy !req
493. Used spaceships,
lunar modules, or even used cars!
Copy !req
494. At school on launch days,
it was always the same ritual.
Copy !req
495. The teacher would wheel in a TV.
Copy !req
496. We'd watch the rocket on the launchpad
Copy !req
497. - for five minutes…
- Fifteen…
Copy !req
498. …and then all count down in unison
with the TV for the last ten seconds.
Copy !req
499. - Ten, nine, eight, seven…
- Ignition sequence started.
Copy !req
500. Six, five, four…
Copy !req
501. - We have ignition.
- Three, two, one, blastoff!
Copy !req
502. - We have liftoff. We have liftoff.
Copy !req
503. And then just stare at the screen
as the rocket took off into the sky.
Copy !req
504. Science class was so exciting,
because it felt like current events.
Copy !req
505. It was all astronomy,
cosmology, and Apollo related.
Copy !req
506. Until Edwin Hubble
proved otherwise in 1922,
Copy !req
507. humans thought the entire universe
might only consist of our galaxy.
Copy !req
508. Now we know we are
but one of 100 billion galaxies.
Copy !req
509. As of yet,
we have no proof of other solar systems
Copy !req
510. revolving around distant stars
or planets outside our nine.
Copy !req
511. But the odds that we're
the only nine planets in the universe
Copy !req
512. and that we're
the only one with life on it,
Copy !req
513. we've calculated out
at ten billion trillion to one.
Copy !req
514. Yes, whatever was going on
in the formation of our solar system
Copy !req
515. is undoubtedly going on in others, right?
Copy !req
516. It's the same material,
gravity, and conditions everywhere.
Copy !req
517. In other words,
there's just no way that we're alone.
Copy !req
518. It's just a matter of time
before we have an encounter
Copy !req
519. with other beings from other places
in the universe, if we haven't already.
Copy !req
520. We'd already gone to Jupiter
and beyond in the movie 2001,
Copy !req
521. and there was no doubt
we'd be there soon enough.
Copy !req
522. I remember bein' so entranced by the film,
Copy !req
523. I would try to describe
the deeper meaning of it
Copy !req
524. to anyone who would listen.
Copy !req
525. And then as he goes past Jupiter,
Copy !req
526. he goes through
this kind of crazy time warp.
Copy !req
527. There are
all these bright lights flashing by,
Copy !req
528. and suddenly he's in this old room,
Copy !req
529. and then he's this old man.
Copy !req
530. Then he sees the black slab,
Copy !req
531. the same one from Jupiter,
Copy !req
532. at the foot of his deathbed.
Copy !req
533. Or is it?
Copy !req
534. He reaches out, trying to touch it,
Copy !req
535. and then he turns into a baby
that hasn't even been born yet!
Copy !req
536. Go back, go back!
Copy !req
537. - No, it's going— Run, run!
- Back, back, back, back!
Copy !req
538. Well, like I said,
it was all around us.
Copy !req
539. We were being told that people our age
Copy !req
540. would one day be able
to have our honeymoons on the moon.
Copy !req
541. And by the end of the century,
Copy !req
542. we could be a paying customer
on the six-month flight to Mars.
Copy !req
543. It was all so close.
Copy !req
544. We literally had the astronauts themselves
buzzing above us in jets
Copy !req
545. because Ellington Air Force Base
was down the road.
Copy !req
546. - It wasn't at all unusual
Copy !req
547. to suddenly hear a whoosh low in the sky,
Copy !req
548. see a jet streak by and disappear quickly,
Copy !req
549. and then hear the sonic boom
of the sound barrier bein' broken.
Copy !req
550. We'd run home as quickly
as we could from school
Copy !req
551. to watch Dark Shadows,
a show we all got obsessed with.
Copy !req
552. It was a truly bizarre and scary tale
Copy !req
553. of an old patrician family
livin' in a castle by the sea
Copy !req
554. and one ageless vampire…
Copy !req
555. - Ugh!
- …Barnabas Collins.
Copy !req
556. TV itself felt like an ongoing battle.
Copy !req
557. First off, just gettin' decent reception
Copy !req
558. in this era of antennas
and three major networks was a challenge.
Copy !req
559. Then, in our family at least,
you had to stake out your territory
Copy !req
560. and often bodily defend
what would be coming out of the tube
Copy !req
561. for the next 30 minutes.
Copy !req
562. There were so many great shows
going all evening.
Copy !req
563. It was often hard to choose,
and they never let you down.
Copy !req
564. - The Beverly Hillbillies,
Copy !req
565. Gunsmoke,
Copy !req
566. My Three Sons,
Copy !req
567. The Munsters, Bonanza,
Copy !req
568. Bewitched,
Copy !req
569. Star Trek,
Copy !req
570. Adam-12, Get Smart,
Copy !req
571. Gomer Pyle, Batman,
Copy !req
572. - Gilligan, Flipper…
Copy !req
573. …Petticoat Junction, Andy Griffith,
Copy !req
574. I Dream of Jeannie, The Addams Family,
Copy !req
575. Dick Van Dyke,
Copy !req
576. The Green Hornet, McHale's Navy,
Copy !req
577. Impossible,
Copy !req
578. Green Acres, Hogan's Heroes,
Copy !req
579. Dragnet and Hawaii Five-O,
to name but a few.
Copy !req
580. Then there were the shows
that never made it past one season
Copy !req
581. and are mostly forgotten, but not by me.
Copy !req
582. In The Time Tunnel,
two scientists are lost in time,
Copy !req
583. always landing
at choice moments in history.
Copy !req
584. The Titanic,
Little Bighorn, Ford's Theatre.
Copy !req
585. Then there was a show called
It's About Time,
Copy !req
586. a comedy about two astronauts
that, upon reentry,
Copy !req
587. find themselves in a time warp,
Copy !req
588. now living in prehistoric times
Copy !req
589. - with cavemen and dinosaurs.
- I don't believe it!
Copy !req
590. - I believe it!
- I do too!
Copy !req
591. It was also
the first wave of syndication…
Copy !req
592. - It's so tasty!
- …where shows from slightly earlier eras
Copy !req
593. - were also on all the time.
- I'm Mister Ed.
Copy !req
594. And late at night, there would still be
Copy !req
595. Twilight Zone episodes.
Copy !req
596. When I was really little,
before I knew what it was,
Copy !req
597. I called it The Scary Flying Eyeball Show.
Copy !req
598. A dimension of sight.
A dimension of mind.
Copy !req
599. You're moving into a land of both shadow
and substance, of things and ideas.
Copy !req
600. - Then there were Saturday mornings.
Copy !req
601. We'd get up early
and stare at the test patterns
Copy !req
602. and wait for the fun to begin.
Copy !req
603. Late on Saturday nights,
there was a local show called Weird
Copy !req
604. - that opened with a creepy theremin piece.
Copy !req
605. Welcome to Weird.
Copy !req
606. They showed movies like the
Attack of the 50 Foot Woman,
Copy !req
607. - The Incredible Shrinking Man…
Copy !req
608. …The Thing, The Beginning of The End…
Copy !req
609. - …The Blob,
Copy !req
610. - Attack of the Mushroom People.
Copy !req
611. Basically, anything
with atomic bomb-induced mutations.
Copy !req
612. - This concludes our broadcasting.
- Good night.
Copy !req
613. - And now our national anthem.
Copy !req
614. - It would come to an end around midnight…
- Hey.
Copy !req
615. - …and the stations would go off the air.
- Hey. Turn everything off.
Copy !req
616. By Sunday nights during the school year,
a feeling of outright dread set in.
Copy !req
617. - The Wonderful World of Color,
Copy !req
618. which is what it was called before it was
The Wonderful World of Disney,
Copy !req
619. was lathered in this melancholy feeling.
Copy !req
620. With school looming the next morning,
Copy !req
621. - no matter how good that particular show…
- Hey.
Copy !req
622. …the freedom and fun of the weekend
was coming to a close.
Copy !req
623. And then, once a year,
Copy !req
624. there would be a special screening
of The Wizard of Oz on TV.
Copy !req
625. We would all gather around and watch.
Copy !req
626. - It's gonna go to color real soon, and it…
- No!
Copy !req
627. It was so much more than a movie.
Copy !req
628. Until we got a color TV,
everything had been in black and white,
Copy !req
629. even Oz.
Copy !req
630. But whether in color or black and white,
Copy !req
631. the flying monkeys
always sent my sister Stephanie…
Copy !req
632. - …either under the covers
Copy !req
633. - or out the door.
- Now fly! Fly!
Copy !req
634. Fly!
Copy !req
635. - The latest casualties…
- On the news,
Copy !req
636. the war in Vietnam was a constant,
Copy !req
637. and found its way
into almost everything goin' on.
Copy !req
638. The US Command reports
148 Americans killed in the war last week…
Copy !req
639. For a kid, it was confusing.
Copy !req
640. Adults were always guilt-tripping us.
Copy !req
641. Everyone, finish every bite on your plate.
There are starving kids in Vietnam.
Copy !req
642. We were at war with them, bombing them,
Copy !req
643. but we cared about
their starving children?
Copy !req
644. - Pass, pass!
- Go, go, go.
Copy !req
645. - Gimme!
- Here!
Copy !req
646. - Pass, pass!
- Here! Throw it!
Copy !req
647. What made it
a perfect neighborhood to grow up in
Copy !req
648. was there were a ton of young families
with kids in our age range.
Copy !req
649. It was no problem gettin' a game goin'.
Copy !req
650. We'd play in someone's front yard,
the street, or, for some things,
Copy !req
651. we'd go down
to where the housing development ended,
Copy !req
652. and there was a big field
with a water treatment plant.
Copy !req
653. We called it Sewer Park.
Copy !req
654. When it was raining or at night,
Copy !req
655. my brother Greg and I invented
a baseball game
Copy !req
656. we could play in the garage.
Copy !req
657. Astros superstar Jim Wynn is up to bat.
Copy !req
658. Home run!
Copy !req
659. The Toy Cannon!
Copy !req
660. And the scoreboard is going crazy
on the line drive!
Copy !req
661. We'd have a baseball card draft
and create a team,
Copy !req
662. with all roads
leading to our own World Series.
Copy !req
663. This was just before the Nerf ball
was invented and changed everything.
Copy !req
664. Occasionally,
there'd be a bench-clearing brawl.
Copy !req
665. Next up, Boog Powell!
Copy !req
666. That's it!
Copy !req
667. - Charge!
- Aah!
Copy !req
668. I'll never forget
all the kids in the neighborhood.
Copy !req
669. There was Larry,
who had a severe case of ringworm.
Copy !req
670. It seemed like everyone
in the neighborhood took turns
Copy !req
671. bein' the kid with a cast on.
Copy !req
672. Of course, there was Byron,
the son of a NASA scientist
Copy !req
673. and the local pyromaniac chemistry set kid
Copy !req
674. who was always building
little rocket-like propulsion devices.
Copy !req
675. Occasionally,
he'd put a grasshopper in the pilot seat.
Copy !req
676. - Three, two, one!
Copy !req
677. Then there was Tony, the witty
smart aleck who would get you in trouble.
Copy !req
678. - He specialized in changing the lyrics
Copy !req
679. - to songs in music class…
- Now to page 24.
Copy !req
680. …from traditional to, of course, dirty.
- Old Dan Tucker.
Copy !req
681. Balls!
Copy !req
682. Stan, Tony, go stand out in the hall.
Copy !req
683. One of the downsides
of bein' a kid during this era
Copy !req
684. was they still thought it was a great idea
to train children like they were animals,
Copy !req
685. which required constant reminders
of what was incorrect conduct.
Copy !req
686. You were always one little screw-up
away from a beating
Copy !req
687. from any number
of the adults in your life.
Copy !req
688. Parents, principals, coaches,
Copy !req
689. even your friends' parents
who had these convenient
Copy !req
690. "You can paddle my kid
and I can paddle yours" agreements.
Copy !req
691. But nobody was more scary
than our principal,
Copy !req
692. the Grim Reaper himself,
Copy !req
693. Mr. Cowan.
Copy !req
694. Are you boys out here
for disciplinary reasons?
Copy !req
695. Again.
Copy !req
696. Follow me.
Copy !req
697. - No. No, no, no, no.
- All right. Get back to class.
Copy !req
698. Tony, Stan,
Copy !req
699. get in here.
Copy !req
700. I guess it fit the times.
Copy !req
701. Life was cheaper.
Copy !req
702. We were all more expendable,
Copy !req
703. and no one thought too deeply
about safety.
Copy !req
704. For instance, there we are, drivin' down
the Gulf Freeway at 70 miles an hour,
Copy !req
705. with a truck bed full of kids
on the way to the beach.
Copy !req
706. It never crossed anyone's mind
Copy !req
707. that we were all just one slight collision
or rollover away from being roadkill.
Copy !req
708. Just all of us gettin' Popsicles
at the pool could turn into a disaster.
Copy !req
709. - Aah… Aah! Aah!
Copy !req
710. Something about the way they were frozen
had turned them into dry ice,
Copy !req
711. - and they stuck to all of our tongues.
Copy !req
712. Also, our neighborhood swimming pool
was routinely over chlorinated,
Copy !req
713. absolutely roasting everyone's eyes.
Copy !req
714. They just hadn't perfected
the chemical thing yet,
Copy !req
715. and it hadn't entered our minds that
anything they were doing could be harmful.
Copy !req
716. And we were definitely the last
of maybe two generations of kids
Copy !req
717. who thought it was great fun
Copy !req
718. to chase after
those DDT-spewing mosquito trucks.
Copy !req
719. And it wasn't at all uncommon
to return home
Copy !req
720. to find they'd nerve-gassed
the entire house with poison
Copy !req
721. to kill that occasional roach
that had been spotted.
Copy !req
722. And check out my Little League coach's
unique motivational technique.
Copy !req
723. For every error you committed
in the previous game,
Copy !req
724. you had to stand
before three of your teammates,
Copy !req
725. firing squad style,
trying to peg you with the ball.
Copy !req
726. My strategy was to try and catch
the one from the most accurate thrower,
Copy !req
727. dodge one,
and just hope the other guy missed.
Copy !req
728. You might just get out alive.
Copy !req
729. Yep. Amongst all the fun,
Copy !req
730. it always seemed like punishment,
pain, or injury were never too far away.
Copy !req
731. Like this game we used to play
called Red Rover.
Copy !req
732. Red rover, red rover
Let Stan come over
Copy !req
733. Red rover, red rover
Let Ronnie come over
Copy !req
734. We'd keep playin' certain games
until somethin' like this happened.
Copy !req
735. That simply meant
we'd now matured to a new level,
Copy !req
736. and it was time to quit playin' that game
and pick up a new one.
Copy !req
737. If it wasn't baseball,
football, or basketball,
Copy !req
738. it was goin' off on a big bike adventure.
Copy !req
739. We all got good at bike repair,
Copy !req
740. especially fixing flat tires.
Copy !req
741. And it seemed like
every longer car ride anywhere
Copy !req
742. included an obligatory changing of a flat.
Copy !req
743. It might have been that we were
in the pre-steel-belted radial era,
Copy !req
744. and they just
weren't very good at tires yet,
Copy !req
745. or the fact that Dad had
a penchant for buying used tires.
Copy !req
746. - Come on.
- Ever thought about gettin' a new tire?
Copy !req
747. Then it wouldn't match the other three,
and it would look funny, Steven.
Copy !req
748. We had all kinds of neighborhood games,
depending on who was playing.
Copy !req
749. If there were a lot of girls around,
all the guys' sisters, usually,
Copy !req
750. there was this game we played
called Statue Maker…
Copy !req
751. Watch out.
Copy !req
752. …where you'd have to say
what you were a statue of.
Copy !req
753. Pancake.
Copy !req
754. A phoenix.
Copy !req
755. A wave.
Copy !req
756. Astronaut.
Copy !req
757. At night, the games moved indoors
Copy !req
758. or on the back porch.
Copy !req
759. So many classic board games.
Copy !req
760. - Five…
- Five, six, seven…
Copy !req
761. Sometimes when my folks
would be entertaining
Copy !req
762. and other families would be visiting,
Copy !req
763. we'd get all elaborate and set up
other games like bobbing for apples.
Copy !req
764. Watch and learn.
Copy !req
765. New world record right now.
Copy !req
766. Three, two, one, go.
Copy !req
767. At some point, Greg came up with
a foolproof way to win every time.
Copy !req
768. He was so dominant and adamant about it,
we all just sort of quit playing.
Copy !req
769. That's how you do it!
Copy !req
770. While my three sisters were,
for the most part, the opposition,
Copy !req
771. they weren't without some advantages.
Copy !req
772. Vicky had gotten a job at Baskin-Robbins…
Copy !req
773. - All right.
- …the revolutionary ice-cream shop
Copy !req
774. that offered a mind-blowing
31 different flavors,
Copy !req
775. and she got two free scoops a shift.
Copy !req
776. I think I'll have the banana nut fudge.
Copy !req
777. Good choice.
Copy !req
778. For the first two or three months
she worked there, she ate them herself.
Copy !req
779. But eventually, she got sick of ice cream
and started givin' 'em away,
Copy !req
780. so you wanted to be there
when she was gettin' off work.
Copy !req
781. Thank you.
Copy !req
782. Need I guess what flavor I must serve up
to earn my ride home?
Copy !req
783. Just…
Copy !req
784. You can say it.
Copy !req
785. Vanilla, please.
Copy !req
786. - Vanilla?
Yeah, vanilla.
Copy !req
787. - You want vanilla?
- Yes.
Copy !req
788. - Of all these flavors, you want—
- Yes.
Copy !req
789. Just scoop it.
Copy !req
790. Okay.
Copy !req
791. Yeah.
Copy !req
792. I don't remember my brother Steve
ever getting a flavor besides vanilla.
Copy !req
793. A waste of all those exotic flavors,
obviously,
Copy !req
794. but I guess I admired
his contentment and consistency.
Copy !req
795. My sisters also seemed to set the tone
musically in the house,
Copy !req
796. and between them,
they covered a lot of ground.
Copy !req
797. The youngest, Stephanie,
liked whatever was popular.
Copy !req
798. I remember her listening to her 45
of The Archies' "Sugar Sugar"
Copy !req
799. over and over again.
Copy !req
800. The Archies were characters
out of a comic book,
Copy !req
801. but that didn't keep 'em
from havin' the biggest hit of 1969.
Copy !req
802. All right.
Copy !req
803. - Last time, all right?
Copy !req
804. - Fine.
- I've had enough of this.
Copy !req
805. My middle sister, Jana, loved The Monkees
and, come to think of it,
Copy !req
806. pretty much any group
that had cute guys in it.
Copy !req
807. My tastes were, let's say, maturing.
Copy !req
808. To Herb Alpert, for instance.
Copy !req
809. Or at least
one particular album cover of his.
Copy !req
810. Vicky had
the coolest taste in music, of course,
Copy !req
811. and would happily lecture us
on the deeper meanings of songs.
Copy !req
812. It's like the true meanings
are snuck in there,
Copy !req
813. and we have to decipher them,
like "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds."
Copy !req
814. LSD.
Copy !req
815. It's right there for those who are
tuned in, but the straights…
Copy !req
816. they don't get it.
Copy !req
817. Oh God! Turn it off,
turn it off, turn it off!
Copy !req
818. - Oh no!
- Breathe. Okay.
Copy !req
819. Oh, Jana!
Copy !req
820. - Jana was always having mishaps.
- Stop, stop. I'm pulling it.
Copy !req
821. She was the first to have to get stitches,
the first to break a bone.
Copy !req
822. - Oh!
- Stuff just happened to her.
Copy !req
823. And it seemed like a lot of extra work
bein' a girl.
Copy !req
824. Straight hair was the look
everyone was goin' for at the time,
Copy !req
825. but it was so difficult
in the humidity of Houston.
Copy !req
826. And this was before
all the hair products and blow dryers.
Copy !req
827. The curlers were so small back then,
they took to usin' orange juice cans.
Copy !req
828. My sisters were not only more resourceful
but much more dramatic.
Copy !req
829. Ouija, are you with us?
Copy !req
830. - Yes!
- Oh my gosh!
Copy !req
831. Shh.
Copy !req
832. That's good.
Copy !req
833. Does Robert have a crush on me?
Copy !req
834. - Yes!
Copy !req
835. In our bedroom, Steve, Greg,
and I were in agreement
Copy !req
836. that the ultimate woman was Raquel Welch,
Copy !req
837. as seen in such movies as
One Million Years BC,
Copy !req
838. Fantastic Voyage, and Bandolero!
Copy !req
839. Steve had a stash of Playboys
hidden under the desk.
Copy !req
840. We never found out
which sister ratted us out.
Copy !req
841. - The radio was always on,
Copy !req
842. - playing the hits.
Copy !req
843. One of my favorites was "In The Year 2525"
with its ominous dystopian future.
Copy !req
844. I noticed a lot of girls I knew
had songs with their names in them.
Copy !req
845. There was one notable song
with a guy's name in it,
Copy !req
846. but his name was Sue.
Copy !req
847. We loved the ending
where they had to bleep out a curse word.
Copy !req
848. It has to be said that this was
the height of the prank call era,
Copy !req
849. more than a decade before caller ID.
Copy !req
850. We ranged from the basics, like…
Copy !req
851. Do you have Prince Albert in the can?
Copy !req
852. Well, you'd better let him out.
Copy !req
853. To the much more elaborate…
Copy !req
854. Hello. It's Tommy O at KRB
and Name That Tune.
Copy !req
855. Who am I speaking with?
Copy !req
856. Um, my name is Martha.
Copy !req
857. Martha? It's your lucky day, Martha!
Copy !req
858. Our jackpot's up to $285,
Copy !req
859. and it's all yours
if you can name this tune
Copy !req
860. after hearing five seconds of the song.
Copy !req
861. Are you ready?
Copy !req
862. Um, I guess so.
Copy !req
863. Name this tune.
Copy !req
864. Martha, can you name that tune?
Copy !req
865. Is that "Wichita Lineman?"
Copy !req
866. Yes! "Wichita Lineman"!
You've won the jackpot!
Copy !req
867. Jana, go get that. Tell 'em we're eating.
Copy !req
868. - Who is that?
Copy !req
869. - So rude.
- I know.
Copy !req
870. - Conversely, Dad had the answer…
- Hello?
Copy !req
871. …when our household was the continual
target of one prank caller.
Copy !req
872. It's him again.
Copy !req
873. I got something for that little shit.
Copy !req
874. Hello?
Copy !req
875. Oh, that's, uh… that's very interesting.
Copy !req
876. Well, you listen carefully to this.
Copy !req
877. - Dad!
Copy !req
878. That should split his eardrum.
Copy !req
879. I remember actually feeling
a little sorry for the prankster.
Copy !req
880. Not sure the punishment fit the crime.
Copy !req
881. When we weren't playing
in the Little League ourselves,
Copy !req
882. we'd hang out at the fields
to watch our friends play
Copy !req
883. and pretty much just fart around
and chase foul balls.
Copy !req
884. Bring that foul ball back
for a free snow cone!
Copy !req
885. - Okay.
- I'll have strawberry.
Copy !req
886. - That's one foul ball.
- And a Chick-O-Stick.
Copy !req
887. There's yours.
Copy !req
888. And yours.
Copy !req
889. Thank you, sir.
Copy !req
890. You could also get a free snow cone
by pickin' up a bag of trash.
Copy !req
891. I trust in God.
Copy !req
892. I love my country
Copy !req
893. - and will respect its laws.
Copy !req
894. I will play fair and strive to win.
Copy !req
895. But win or lose, I will always do my best.
Copy !req
896. Now look to the flag in center field
as we play our national anthem.
Copy !req
897. I felt so moved
by the Little League pledge
Copy !req
898. and the national anthem
that I felt it wasn't important
Copy !req
899. if we won or lost.
Copy !req
900. That sentiment usually lasted
until about the first pitch of the game.
Copy !req
901. But there was no better babysitter
than a triple feature at the Majestic,
Copy !req
902. which, despite its name,
was a pretty seedy theater.
Copy !req
903. I remember one line-up that featured
a sci-fi movie called Countdown
Copy !req
904. where the moon race ends
with us gettin' there,
Copy !req
905. only to find
the Russians had made it there, too,
Copy !req
906. but had, of course, died
in a crash landing of some kind.
Copy !req
907. As a gesture,
the American astronaut puts out the flags
Copy !req
908. of both the United States
and the Soviet Union.
Copy !req
909. Now a mad world!
Copy !req
910. And then
there were two scary movies.
Copy !req
911. - The Frozen Dead…
- I must!
Copy !req
912. …where a mad Nazi scientist plans
to revive a number of frozen Nazi leaders.
Copy !req
913. And It,
Copy !req
914. in which a crazed museum assistant,
played by Roddy McDowall,
Copy !req
915. brings a 16th-century golem to life
by putting a little scroll in its mouth.
Copy !req
916. It's indestructible,
according to the prophecy,
Copy !req
917. and becomes his accomplice
in murder and lots of mayhem.
Copy !req
918. Kill him!
Copy !req
919. The movie ends
with the golem walking into the sea.
Copy !req
920. There weren't really sequels back then,
Copy !req
921. so as far as I know,
the golem never came walking back out.
Copy !req
922. I'll never forget
the New Year's Eve party my parents had
Copy !req
923. as it was becoming
that fateful year of 1969.
Copy !req
924. While the adults partied inside,
Copy !req
925. most of us were in the backyard
where the Roman candle wars were raging.
Copy !req
926. And Byron's pyromania
Copy !req
927. had reached a new height
with a large chunk of drainage pipe,
Copy !req
928. a small explosion,
Copy !req
929. and a flaming softball across the sky.
Copy !req
930. Are you guys ready
for the countdown?
Copy !req
931. Okay. Here we go.
Copy !req
932. Ten, nine,
Copy !req
933. eight, seven,
Copy !req
934. six,
Copy !req
935. five, four,
Copy !req
936. three, two, one.
Copy !req
937. - Happy New Year!
Copy !req
938. I guess this is as good a place
as any to return to where we left off.
Copy !req
939. Yeah, yeah. Laugh all you want.
Copy !req
940. But here's what they told me…
Copy !req
941. Good job, Stan. You didn't pass out.
Copy !req
942. Don't worry about the vomit.
Copy !req
943. Every astronaut, from John Glenn
to Neil Armstrong, they all upchuck.
Copy !req
944. At least the first time.
Copy !req
945. So while my childhood
had been fairly normal,
Copy !req
946. my time at NASA sure as hell wasn't.
Copy !req
947. I found myself in some intense training.
Copy !req
948. This one was actually called
the Vomit Comet.
Copy !req
949. I kind of loved 1/6th gravity,
Copy !req
950. but it was like learning to move around
with a whole new body.
Copy !req
951. And there was lots of classwork.
Not very exciting but necessary, I guess.
Copy !req
952. Underwater training
had been invented by Buzz Aldrin
Copy !req
953. after the failed Gemini space walk.
Copy !req
954. It was pretty scary.
Copy !req
955. And they had all kinds
of survival scenarios to think about,
Copy !req
956. train in, and plan for just in case,
Copy !req
957. from gettin' stranded in a jungle
to havin' to tromp through a desert.
Copy !req
958. You had to be able to make clothes
and protective cover from your parachute.
Copy !req
959. I remember thinkin'
that if this ended up my fate,
Copy !req
960. it would be the least of my problems,
like one of those Twilight Zone episodes.
Copy !req
961. After I finished training,
they put me through a crash course…
Copy !req
962. Probably not the best term for it,
I guess.
Copy !req
963. …on how to fly all aspects
of what was now secretly being called
Copy !req
964. Apollo 101/2.
Copy !req
965. First, I had to learn every control,
even while blindfolded.
Copy !req
966. - Altitude?
Copy !req
967. - Check.
- Event timer?
Copy !req
968. - Check.
Temp in?
Copy !req
969. Check.
Copy !req
970. Simulation was one thing,
Copy !req
971. but to see what it felt like
to actually land a craft in 1/6th gravity,
Copy !req
972. they created this monster.
Copy !req
973. The Lunar Landing Training Vehicle,
Copy !req
974. or LLTV.
Copy !req
975. [engine roaring[
Copy !req
976. Neil Armstrong had almost died
tryin' to land this thing.
Copy !req
977. He bailed out just seconds
before it crashed and exploded,
Copy !req
978. and he went to lunch
like nothing had happened.
Copy !req
979. That was Neil.
Always cool as a cucumber.
Copy !req
980. After you learned
everything about the ship,
Copy !req
981. it was time for integrated simulation.
Copy !req
982. Kranz, Bostick, and everybody
was at the mission control,
Copy !req
983. I was in the simulator,
Copy !req
984. and we were all being tested
by the simulation supervisors.
Copy !req
985. These ominous voices
behind a two-way mirror.
Copy !req
986. Leak started in CSM propulsion.
Copy !req
987. S-IVB engine shut down
during abort mode, overlap.
Copy !req
988. They were known
as "sim sups" for short.
Copy !req
989. They'd sit behind their dark window
at mission control
Copy !req
990. and come up with the most diabolical
scenarios you could imagine,
Copy !req
991. so that no matter what happened
out there in space, you'd be ready.
Copy !req
992. I heard, during the Gemini program,
they had a controller fake a heart attack
Copy !req
993. to see how everyone would respond.
Copy !req
994. Everyone pretty much hated him.
Copy !req
995. Okay, last simulation.
Copy !req
996. Let's knock this out,
land safely, and call it a day,
Copy !req
997. hopefully in time for some beers
at the Singing Wheel.
Copy !req
998. Well, Coke for you, Stan.
Copy !req
999. Tang's good for me, Flight.
Copy !req
1000. All right. You are a go for power descent.
Copy !req
1001. Okay. Engine start. 10% thrust.
Copy !req
1002. Lookin' good.
Copy !req
1003. You are go for full throttle.
Copy !req
1004. Full throttle.
Copy !req
1005. Thousand feet.
Copy !req
1006. Getting a 1201 program alarm.
Copy !req
1007. - 1201? Bales, what the hell is that?
- Hold on.
Copy !req
1008. 750 feet.
Copy !req
1009. "Computer overload.
Can't complete all tasks."
Copy !req
1010. All systems seem in order.
Copy !req
1011. Jack, what's goin' on here?
Copy !req
1012. It's a bailout alarm. The computer's
overloaded for some reason.
Copy !req
1013. 500 feet. Looks fine on my end.
Copy !req
1014. 400 feet.
Copy !req
1015. Wait!
Copy !req
1016. 1202 alarm!
Copy !req
1017. 1202?
Copy !req
1018. I— I can't see a thing wrong,
but this isn't good.
Copy !req
1019. I— I think it's time to abort.
Copy !req
1020. Flight guidance, something's wrong
with the computer. Abort.
Copy !req
1021. Are we gonna abort flight?
Copy !req
1022. - Flight abort.
- Darn it! Abort!
Copy !req
1023. This was not an abort!
Copy !req
1024. - If you'd read the manual thoroughly,
Copy !req
1025. you would have known
to continue on the landing.
Copy !req
1026. Instead, we now have astronauts
Copy !req
1027. comin' back to Earth
with their tail between their legs,
Copy !req
1028. a billion tax dollars wasted,
Copy !req
1029. and front-row seats watching the Russians
Copy !req
1030. plant their flags up there in August!
Copy !req
1031. You happy?
Copy !req
1032. By the time I was really up there,
ready for liftoff,
Copy !req
1033. I was actually very calm,
because I felt I had already done it.
Copy !req
1034. They had whipped me into fighting shape.
Copy !req
1035. I remember
bein' more excited than nervous.
Copy !req
1036. Maybe too calm, come to think of it.
Copy !req
1037. Stan, are you ready?
Copy !req
1038. Ready.
Copy !req
1039. So it was off to the moon and back.
Copy !req
1040. We carried out Apollo 101/2's
secret mission without a hitch.
Copy !req
1041. But then it was like it never happened.
Copy !req
1042. No headlines.
No ticker-tape parade for me.
Copy !req
1043. I couldn't tell anyone, even my family.
Copy !req
1044. When Apollo 11 launched on July 16th
and landed on the moon four days later,
Copy !req
1045. I was watching it on TV
like everyone else around the world.
Copy !req
1046. But to me,
it felt like it was some kind of dream.
Copy !req
1047. I was the only person on Earth who knew
exactly what they were experiencing.
Copy !req
1048. It was like I was up there with them.
Copy !req
1049. But I wasn't.
Copy !req
1050. I was here.
Copy !req
1051. You see the Saturn V right there?
Copy !req
1052. They put it on a barge in Huntsville,
Alabama, where they built it.
Copy !req
1053. Then it goes up to Tennessee and Ohio,
then shoots on down the Mississippi.
Copy !req
1054. Goes across the Gulf of Mexico,
rounding the tip of Florida,
Copy !req
1055. then they drop it off at Cape Kennedy.
Copy !req
1056. Now, of course, if it was to come here,
you'll wanna take a right at the Gulf,
Copy !req
1057. then it's pretty much
Galveston Bay, then Clear Lake,
Copy !req
1058. and then we could walk across
Road 1 and pick it up from there.
Copy !req
1059. …check of all the systems
aboard the spacecraft…
Copy !req
1060. - And you're in charge of all that?
- …ready to go…
Copy !req
1061. If that's not shipping and receiving,
I don't know what is.
Copy !req
1062. …Eastern time.
That huge, 36-story-high launch vehicle…
Copy !req
1063. But, no, Kyle in Florida
takes care of most of the details.
Copy !req
1064. T-minus 34 minutes and counting,
with everything going well.
Copy !req
1065. Astronauts fit as a fiddle,
according to the report,
Copy !req
1066. as they wait there
for the launch of Apollo 11.
Copy !req
1067. The spacecraft systems
Copy !req
1068. are checking out perfectly
in these final checkouts.
Copy !req
1069. The weather is good,
Copy !req
1070. and it seems
that man will get off this morning
Copy !req
1071. in this great adventure
to land finally on the moon…
Copy !req
1072. Are you nervous at all?
Copy !req
1073. No, not really.
Why would Dad be nervous?
Copy !req
1074. I'm not!
Copy !req
1075. Well, hon, your dad is a part of this too.
Copy !req
1076. So many people are.
Copy !req
1077. …we really don't have a language
to… to describe this thing.
Copy !req
1078. Uh, how do you say, uh…
"high as the sky" anymore?
Copy !req
1079. "The sky's the limit."
What does that mean?
Copy !req
1080. Does the moon
seem strange and far away to you?
Copy !req
1081. No, not really.
There's things further out than the moon.
Copy !req
1082. And is it true
that the young people…
Copy !req
1083. So now, of course,
I'm thinking about the next thing.
Copy !req
1084. Mars and beyond.
Copy !req
1085. You're thinking of Mars and beyond?
We haven't gotten to the moon yet, Arthur!
Copy !req
1086. That's the nature
of you science-fiction writers, I suppose.
Copy !req
1087. We'll find some surprises on the moon.
Copy !req
1088. Not necessarily on this first flight,
but I'm sure eventually.
Copy !req
1089. I don't know if they'll find a large
black monolith waiting for us on the moon.
Copy !req
1090. A reference to 2001…
Copy !req
1091. - Would you like to—
- Stan! Get in here! It's about to launch!
Copy !req
1092. Well, the, uh, engines
that generate that thrust
Copy !req
1093. have a combined horsepower
equal to 543 jet fighter planes.
Copy !req
1094. They burn 5,662,000 pounds of fuel,
Copy !req
1095. the equivalent of 98 railroad tank cars,
Copy !req
1096. the capacity of a small town's water tank.
Copy !req
1097. Their launch vehicle there weighs
as much as the submarine Nautilus.
Copy !req
1098. Liftoff, the noise reaches 120 decibels
and has been compared
Copy !req
1099. to eight million hi-fi sets
playing at once.
Copy !req
1100. Controllers,
we need a go-no-go for launch.
Copy !req
1101. - Go, flight controllers.
- Go.
Copy !req
1102. - Okay. Retro.
- Go.
Copy !req
1103. - FIDO. Guidance.
- Go.
Copy !req
1104. - Go.
- Control.
Copy !req
1105. - Go.
- Telcom.
Copy !req
1106. - GNC.
Copy !req
1107. - Eecom. Surgeon.
- Go.
Copy !req
1108. CapCom, we're go to continue.
Copy !req
1109. T-minus 60 seconds and counting.
Copy !req
1110. All right, 64-zero-five.
Copy !req
1111. As tonight's report, it feels good.
T-minus 25 seconds.
Copy !req
1112. - Move! Your head's in the way.
- 20 seconds and counting.
Copy !req
1113. Yeah, come on.
Copy !req
1114. T-minus 15 seconds.
Copy !req
1115. - Guidance is internal.
- A little lower.
Copy !req
1116. Twelve. Eleven.
Copy !req
1117. Ten. Nine. Ignition sequence start.
Copy !req
1118. Six. Five.
Copy !req
1119. Four. Three.
Copy !req
1120. Two. One.
Copy !req
1121. Zero. All engine running.
Copy !req
1122. Liftoff.
Copy !req
1123. We have a liftoff.
Copy !req
1124. The program, of which Apollo 11…
Copy !req
1125. Buildings shaking.
Copy !req
1126. We're getting that buffeting
we've become used to.
Copy !req
1127. What a moment. Man on the way to the moon.
Copy !req
1128. It's looking good, Flight.
Right down the middle.
Copy !req
1129. Flight, they all look good.
Copy !req
1130. Looks like a good trajectory
so far, doesn't it, Wally?
Copy !req
1131. Very good. Very good.
Copy !req
1132. Downrange one mile.
Copy !req
1133. - Three, four miles.
- …it's confirmed…
Copy !req
1134. 2,195 feet per second.
Copy !req
1135. Everything fell into place.
Copy !req
1136. - Still see it?
- Yes, indeed.
Copy !req
1137. - Okay.
Copy !req
1138. First separation, get ready.
Copy !req
1139. Bird, you're looking good.
Copy !req
1140. But you know what? This terrific
bikini was made by a paper company.
Copy !req
1141. Confil's fantastic!
Copy !req
1142. It is like paper in one way.
So cheap, you can just throw it away.
Copy !req
1143. - Confil.
Copy !req
1144. Well, on that note…
Copy !req
1145. …I've got things to do.
Copy !req
1146. This is the coffee.
Copy !req
1147. It doesn't care that it looks different.
Copy !req
1148. It's the way coffee is—
Copy !req
1149. This is Jethro Bodine calling space people
by mental telepathy.
Copy !req
1150. You're probably lookin'
for a big Earth brain
Copy !req
1151. to take back to Venus or Mars or wherever…
Copy !req
1152. They must be Martians!
Copy !req
1153. - Eh, cosi, cosa.
Copy !req
1154. - What are they saying?
- Okay. Wait a sec.
Copy !req
1155. What is this crap? Jethro!
Copy !req
1156. Where is the coverage?
Copy !req
1157. - This third stage…
- Come on. It's a historic day.
Copy !req
1158. …five minutes and 47 seconds
to increase their speed…
Copy !req
1159. Historically boring day.
Copy !req
1160. - Pardon?
- …put them on the way to the moon.
Copy !req
1161. Nothing.
Copy !req
1162. 26,000 feet per second.
Copy !req
1163. - Burn is going well.
Copy !req
1164. Ignition came right at the moment
when it was expected to.
Copy !req
1165. Apparently,
the full thrust has been monitored.
Copy !req
1166. Telemetry and radar tracking both solid.
Copy !req
1167. Velocity now exceeds
35,000 feet per second.
Copy !req
1168. Altitude, one, seven, seven
nautical miles.
Copy !req
1169. You are now out of orbit, Stan.
Copy !req
1170. Seem to have trouble
raising the Apollo at the moment.
Copy !req
1171. So an engine cutoff, they confirmed.
We haven't heard from the spacecraft.
Copy !req
1172. These minutes give us great concern.
Copy !req
1173. - Apollo 101/2, this is Houston.
Copy !req
1174. Do you read?
Copy !req
1175. Roger, Houston. This is Apollo 101/2.
Copy !req
1176. - That was a magnificent ride.
Copy !req
1177. Roger, Apollo 101/2.
We'll pass that on.
Copy !req
1178. And it looks like
you are well on your way.
Copy !req
1179. And that was
the beginning of my trip to the moon.
Copy !req
1180. Even though I was movin'
at 7,500 miles per hour…
Copy !req
1181. …it sure felt to me like
three and a half very long travel days.
Copy !req
1182. Three. Two…
Copy !req
1183. The coverage continued
on the TV, of course,
Copy !req
1184. and the growing anticipation
Copy !req
1185. of what was going to happen
in a few days was ever present.
Copy !req
1186. Not this time!
Copy !req
1187. But a few days flyin' to the moon
is a long time.
Copy !req
1188. - And it was summer.
- Dark Shadows is starting without us!
Copy !req
1189. All right! Bye, guys!
Copy !req
1190. Bye. Tomorrow.
Copy !req
1191. - That night we went to the drive-in.
Copy !req
1192. - Hi.
- Deploying Dad's money-saving scheme.
Copy !req
1193. Four adults. And then two of them…
Copy !req
1194. are children that are under 12,
Copy !req
1195. so if they're under 12,
that's, you know, free.
Copy !req
1196. Okay. That's $6.
Copy !req
1197. You better believe it is.
Copy !req
1198. - Come on!
Copy !req
1199. Quick!
Copy !req
1200. Come up!
Copy !req
1201. - Oh jeez!
- Sh, sh!
Copy !req
1202. - I'm in!
Copy !req
1203. - We wanna see Hellfighters!
- No. No movie with the word "hell".
Copy !req
1204. - It's filmed in Houston with John Wayne!
- I want Swiss Family Robinson!
Copy !req
1205. You can stay here
and watch Swiss Family Robinson.
Copy !req
1206. We're going to see Hellfighters.
Copy !req
1207. - Okay, fine.
- All right, fine.
Copy !req
1208. The car will stay on the Shakiest Gun
in the West, Swiss Family Robinson side.
Copy !req
1209. Just get back when it's over!
Copy !req
1210. - Yes, Dad!
- Okay!
Copy !req
1211. - What did he just say?
- Get back when it's over!
Copy !req
1212. - Thank you.
Copy !req
1213. Hold on. Settle in.
Copy !req
1214. Oh yeah. That's real nice.
Copy !req
1215. It was always fun
to just roam around.
Copy !req
1216. We'd go lookin' for couples
makin' out in their cars.
Copy !req
1217. The best giveaway was a car
that's brake light was goin' on and off.
Copy !req
1218. …section of drill pipe
you see sticking out of the hole
Copy !req
1219. has to be cut off right at the well head
before they can move in with the nitro.
Copy !req
1220. It's spreading the flame…
Copy !req
1221. This was the last phase
of childhood where I experienced
Copy !req
1222. that special comfort
of falling asleep in the car.
Copy !req
1223. You could drift off,
knowing everything was going to be fine.
Copy !req
1224. And you'd wake up the next morning
in your bed.
Copy !req
1225. In space, it was a little more lonely.
Copy !req
1226. The next day, we all went to the beach
in our friend's pickup.
Copy !req
1227. It was about a one-hour drive.
Copy !req
1228. Galveston, oh, Galveston.
It was the only beach we knew.
Copy !req
1229. But it was always so fun.
Cars and gritty hot dogs be damned!
Copy !req
1230. And just by goin' in the water, we were,
to some degree, risking our lives
Copy !req
1231. because there was an undertow
that would gladly pull you underwater
Copy !req
1232. and kick you out somewhere in Louisiana.
Copy !req
1233. If that didn't get you,
Copy !req
1234. there were jellyfish floatin' around
everywhere, ready to sting you,
Copy !req
1235. and barnacles on the random posts
sticking out of the water,
Copy !req
1236. ready to rip you to shreds.
Copy !req
1237. It seemed like
there was always an oil spill
Copy !req
1238. somewhere out in the Gulf of Mexico,
resulting in little tar balls everywhere.
Copy !req
1239. At the end of the day,
Copy !req
1240. we'd scrub our tar-blackened feet clean
with gasoline.
Copy !req
1241. And during these days,
because of the moon mission,
Copy !req
1242. - the TV was full of classic sci-fi movies.
Copy !req
1243. The most memorable
Copy !req
1244. was maybe the 1950 version
of Robert Heinlein's Destination Moon
Copy !req
1245. which predicted nearly 20 years in advance
Copy !req
1246. so much of what would actually happen
in 1969.
Copy !req
1247. It's amazing everything it got right.
Copy !req
1248. The initial failed launch.
Copy !req
1249. A Texan demanding it all be built here.
Copy !req
1250. Well, all I gotta say is
we'd better build it in Texas.
Copy !req
1251. G-forces.
Copy !req
1252. Weightlessness.
Copy !req
1253. Looking back at Earth.
Copy !req
1254. - Whoa, whoa, whoa. What—
- What are you doing?
Copy !req
1255. - Janis Joplin's on Dick Cavett.
- …was all over…
Copy !req
1256. - No, uh…
- Yeah, the movie's not even over yet.
Copy !req
1257. The boys have dominated the TV all night.
It's our turn.
Copy !req
1258. May I light your fire, my child?
Copy !req
1259. That's my favorite singer. How'd you know?
Copy !req
1260. - I guess not.
- Apparently not, no.
Copy !req
1261. Well, I would have bet against it myself…
Copy !req
1262. Oof! Stan!
Copy !req
1263. - Get off!
- No!
Copy !req
1264. - To get down and really get into music…
- No, no. Stop it!
Copy !req
1265. - …get on the bottom floor of music…
- No!
Copy !req
1266. …instead of fiddling on the top
like most chick singers do.
Copy !req
1267. I think they…
…on the top of the melody
Copy !req
1268. instead of getting into the feeling
of the music, I don't know.
Copy !req
1269. - That's a good enough answer for me.
Copy !req
1270. We spent a good part
of the next day,
Copy !req
1271. like so many other hot summer days,
Copy !req
1272. just hangin' out at the pool.
Copy !req
1273. We all had our diving board specialties.
Copy !req
1274. I had perfected the jackknife,
Copy !req
1275. the cannonball,
and the lesser-known preacher's seat.
Copy !req
1276. Greg was good at creating
some dives of his own.
Copy !req
1277. But the highlight was probably
gettin' to have a Frito pie for lunch,
Copy !req
1278. which was just a bag of Fritos
with the side split open
Copy !req
1279. and a bunch of chili mixed in.
Copy !req
1280. By the time I entered lunar orbit,
Copy !req
1281. I was traveling at 2,287 miles per hour
Copy !req
1282. and around a celestial body
that's never had an Earthling on it.
Copy !req
1283. I looked down as I was passing over
the Sea of Tranquility.
Copy !req
1284. It didn't look too tranquil to me.
Copy !req
1285. Where in the world was I gonna land?
Copy !req
1286. Hello. I'm Johnny Cash.
Copy !req
1287. When we got home
from the pool that night,
Copy !req
1288. we all watched The Johnny Cash Show.
Copy !req
1289. Ladies and gentlemen, the Monkees!
Copy !req
1290. - It's them, it's really them!
- Oh my gosh!
Copy !req
1291. Davy is so cute!
Copy !req
1292. We'd rushed home
because Stephanie and Jana said
Copy !req
1293. - the Monkees were gonna be on.
Copy !req
1294. There was Micky, Davy, and Mike,
but where was Peter?
Copy !req
1295. And then later,
there was Joni Mitchell
Copy !req
1296. singin' a duet with Johnny.
Copy !req
1297. - She has the most interesting voice.
Copy !req
1298. She's such a versatile artist.
She's a painter too.
Copy !req
1299. Then the big day came.
July 20th, 1969.
Copy !req
1300. They were going to land on the moon
some time in the afternoon
Copy !req
1301. and walk on it in the evening.
Copy !req
1302. But Dad had a surprise option for us.
Copy !req
1303. Okay. We've been given
Copy !req
1304. - some discounted tickets to AstroWorld.
Copy !req
1305. - But they're only good for today.
Copy !req
1306. So you can go, obviously,
Copy !req
1307. or you can stay here with us and watch
the news coverage of the moon landing.
Copy !req
1308. AstroWorld!
Copy !req
1309. But won't we miss the landing?
Copy !req
1310. No, they're not scheduled to walk
until later today, so you'll be home.
Copy !req
1311. - Yes!
- I'll tell you what. Let's vote.
Copy !req
1312. - Vicky, what's your day lookin' like?
- I'm working till five.
Copy !req
1313. - Steve?
- I have a couple of yards.
Copy !req
1314. Of course.
Copy !req
1315. And you four?
Copy !req
1316. - Who's up for some AstroWorld?
- Yeah!
Copy !req
1317. No one could pass up a trip
to AstroWorld.
Copy !req
1318. It was the greatest place of all.
Copy !req
1319. It was a huge amusement park right across
the freeway from the Astrodome,
Copy !req
1320. and Houston's version of Disneyland.
Copy !req
1321. A place of non-stop adventure
and excitement.
Copy !req
1322. Seemed like everything was "Astro."
The Astro Wheel.
Copy !req
1323. The Astro Needle.
Copy !req
1324. Astro Way.
Copy !req
1325. Then there was the Black Dragon.
Copy !req
1326. The Bamboo Chute.
Copy !req
1327. And the Spin Out car ride.
Copy !req
1328. The Lost World jungle boat ride
featured alligators
Copy !req
1329. and restless natives firing arrows at you.
Copy !req
1330. Our usual strategy was to get there early,
right when the gates opened,
Copy !req
1331. and then sprint to the Alpine sleigh ride
near the back of the park.
Copy !req
1332. It was by far the most popular ride.
Copy !req
1333. Maybe you could ride it a
few times real quick
Copy !req
1334. before the line started gettin' too long
and there'd be a 45-minute wait.
Copy !req
1335. The ride was exhilarating.
Copy !req
1336. There was a big waterfall.
Copy !req
1337. An avalanche room.
Copy !req
1338. An echo tunnel
Copy !req
1339. where what you yelled out in one place,
you'd hear again in the next cave.
Copy !req
1340. - Hello to the future!
- Davy Jones forever!
Copy !req
1341. Miss you!
Copy !req
1342. Hello to the future!
Copy !req
1343. Davy Jones forever!
Copy !req
1344. Miss you!
Copy !req
1345. And it all led up
to this crazy finale.
Copy !req
1346. You'd be goin' along all pleasant-like,
Copy !req
1347. then you'd come around a corner,
the car would slow down,
Copy !req
1348. and you'd realize you were headin'
Copy !req
1349. into a dark, foreboding mine shaft-lookin'
opening in the side of the mountain.
Copy !req
1350. And just when you thought
things had returned to normal…
Copy !req
1351. The Abominable Snowman
was probably some college drama student.
Copy !req
1352. One time,
we even caught him takin' a smoke break.
Copy !req
1353. Faker!
Copy !req
1354. - Grr!
Copy !req
1355. We'll be going off air
shortly, and we'll pick you up for sure.
Copy !req
1356. It's 40 minutes
before the landing on the moon,
Copy !req
1357. and it is now nine minutes
before we should begin to hear
Copy !req
1358. from the command module
coming around on this pass,
Copy !req
1359. the 14th revolution of the moon.
Copy !req
1360. This landing
is not just as simple as… as it sounds.
Copy !req
1361. They've got to come in
over some rather high features
Copy !req
1362. before they make that set down
on a fairly flat point in the moon.
Copy !req
1363. The hard part is to get that close
and then have to commit to leaving,
Copy !req
1364. after all this work.
Copy !req
1365. I think that pressure is probably
Copy !req
1366. the greatest amount of pressure
any crew will ever have.
Copy !req
1367. - They roll now to the windows up position.
Copy !req
1368. Our position downrange…
Copy !req
1369. We gotta be a go
before we start this burn.
Copy !req
1370. - Go/no go for a lower descent. Retro.
- Go!
Copy !req
1371. - FIDO. Guidance.
- Go.
Copy !req
1372. - Control.
- Go.
Copy !req
1373. - Telcom.
- Go.
Copy !req
1374. - GNC.
- Go.
Copy !req
1375. - Eecom.
Go.
Copy !req
1376. - You are a go to continue power descent.
- It looks good.
Copy !req
1377. - Yeah it's still on.
- Roger.
Copy !req
1378. Pitch 212, yaw 537…
Copy !req
1379. It's another major milestone.
Copy !req
1380. - Altitude, 40,000.
Copy !req
1381. Getting a program alarm. 1202 alarm.
Copy !req
1382. - Flight—
- We're go on that alarm?
Copy !req
1383. Roger. 1202. We copy it.
We are go on that alarm.
Copy !req
1384. - Converging on Delta-H.
- Flight control, we have velocity.
Copy !req
1385. What's this alarm?
Copy !req
1386. It's a go case
that's just apparently some…
Copy !req
1387. …Eagle, we'll monitor to Delta 8…
Copy !req
1388. …function.
Copy !req
1389. - It's coming up on the computer…
- Delta 8, look good now.
Copy !req
1390. Well, at least this is more fun
than the simulator.
Copy !req
1391. - I think that's given.
Copy !req
1392. Okay. Roger.
Copy !req
1393. They could abort the landing
at that point.
Copy !req
1394. We're down to just minutes.
Copy !req
1395. - Now reading 760 feet per second.
Copy !req
1396. Okay, we've still got
landing radar guidance.
Copy !req
1397. - So far.
- Okay.
Copy !req
1398. - Velocity 9,100 feet per second…
- Going fast.
Copy !req
1399. Switchover time, please, Houston.
Copy !req
1400. 760 feet per second.
On their way down.
Copy !req
1401. - Altitude, 4,200.
Copy !req
1402. - Radar test.
- You are a go for landing, Eagle.
Copy !req
1403. - Roger.
Copy !req
1404. - Confirmed.
- 3,000 feet.
Copy !req
1405. We're go. 2,000 feet, 47 degrees.
Copy !req
1406. - Roger.
- Roger, Eagle. Lookin' good. You are a go.
Copy !req
1407. How's America lookin', Bob?
Copy !req
1408. - It's okay.
Copy !req
1409. - Okay.
- We're on a high.
Copy !req
1410. Altitude, 1,600.
Copy !req
1411. - Up to the— Let's go.
- 1,400.
Copy !req
1412. You're lookin' good.
Copy !req
1413. They've got a good look
at their site now.
Copy !req
1414. - This is the critical time. They'll hover.
- 1,400 feet.
Copy !req
1415. They're gonna make the decision.
Copy !req
1416. 750 feet.
Copy !req
1417. We look good here.
Copy !req
1418. 540 feet.
Copy !req
1419. The data's
coming in beautifully.
Copy !req
1420. 100 feet. Down at 19.
Copy !req
1421. Big crater. Very rocky.
Copy !req
1422. Phew. Well…
Copy !req
1423. looks like you're gonna have to take over
the controls and land her yourself.
Copy !req
1424. - Good.
Copy !req
1425. That's 20 feet.
Copy !req
1426. - Sixty. Sixty seconds.
- Sixty seconds.
Copy !req
1427. Lights on.
Copy !req
1428. Down two and a half. Forward.
Copy !req
1429. Forward.
Copy !req
1430. Forty feet.
Copy !req
1431. Pickin' up some dust.
Copy !req
1432. Thirty feet.
Copy !req
1433. Big shadow.
Copy !req
1434. Guys, lookin' good. Down a half.
Copy !req
1435. Pitch forward.
Copy !req
1436. - No level?
- No level.
Copy !req
1437. Less than 20 seconds of fuel left.
Copy !req
1438. Forward. Drifting right.
Copy !req
1439. - Contact light.
Copy !req
1440. Engine stopped.
Copy !req
1441. Engine arm off.
Copy !req
1442. - Engine arm off.
- We're home.
Copy !req
1443. - 4-13 is in.
Copy !req
1444. Man on the moon!
Copy !req
1445. Eagle, we copy. You down?
Copy !req
1446. Houston, Tranquility Base here.
Copy !req
1447. The Eagle has landed.
Copy !req
1448. - Roger, Tranquility.
Copy !req
1449. We copy you on the ground.
Copy !req
1450. You got a bunch of boys
about to turn blue.
Copy !req
1451. - We're breathin' again. Thanks a lot.
Copy !req
1452. Oh boy!
Copy !req
1453. Hmm.
Copy !req
1454. - Phew! Boy!
We're gonna be busy for a minute.
Copy !req
1455. - That's real good.
- Wally, I'm speechless.
Copy !req
1456. - Whoo!
- I'm just trying to hold onto my grub.
Copy !req
1457. Boy, oh boy, oh boy.
Copy !req
1458. We were way up in the air
on the Astro Way when we got the news.
Copy !req
1459. - They landed!
- They're on the moon!
Copy !req
1460. Cool, man! They did it!
Copy !req
1461. Yes, they did!
Copy !req
1462. They did it!
Copy !req
1463. - They landed on the moon!
- Yeah, they made it!
Copy !req
1464. Yay!
Copy !req
1465. They were on the moon,
but nobody was sure when they would walk,
Copy !req
1466. so we just stayed close by,
glued to the screen.
Copy !req
1467. The Times yesterday ran an editorial
Copy !req
1468. saying Mr. Nixon was trying
to use this politically…
Copy !req
1469. It's lost to history, but at the time,
a lot of folks had a big problem
Copy !req
1470. with how much it was costing
to go to the moon.
Copy !req
1471. What else we could be doing
with the money and what it represented.
Copy !req
1472. …more like 15th-century Spain.
We're discovering a new world.
Copy !req
1473. But, uh, I wonder if we don't have
our own Inquisition going in Vietnam,
Copy !req
1474. in the name of that great religion
of anti-communism…
Copy !req
1475. What the hell is she doin' on TV,
on today of all days?
Copy !req
1476. - Who put her on?
- I wonder…
Copy !req
1477. I'll bet the phones
are ringin' off the hook at CBS.
Copy !req
1478. I think she looks cool.
Copy !req
1479. I love her hair.
Copy !req
1480. When you look at Cape Kennedy, you find it
surrounded by a good deal of poverty.
Copy !req
1481. When you look at the Houston Center,
Copy !req
1482. less than 4%
of the employees there are Black…
Copy !req
1483. Is that true, Dad?
Copy !req
1484. How many Black kids are in your class,
Greg? One? Of course it's true.
Copy !req
1485. …is somewhat disturbing.
Copy !req
1486. When are they gonna
walk on the moon?
Copy !req
1487. - Yeah. What are they waiting for?
- I feel it's a great achievement
Copy !req
1488. as far as science is concerned.
Copy !req
1489. But cash they wasted, as far
as I'm concerned, in gettin' to the moon
Copy !req
1490. could've been used
to feed poor Black people
Copy !req
1491. in Harlem and all over the place,
all over this country.
Copy !req
1492. So never mind the moon.
Let's get some of that cash in Harlem.
Copy !req
1493. Right on.
Copy !req
1494. As Dr. Paine said earlier
on the earlier Apollo flight,
Copy !req
1495. this was a triumph for the squares.
Copy !req
1496. I suppose that's one reason
people find this a little distasteful…
Copy !req
1497. After the day at AstroWorld,
Copy !req
1498. it was hard to keep your eyes open
as the coverage droned on and on.
Copy !req
1499. - This was done…
- There was so much waiting
Copy !req
1500. as the astronauts
struggled to get suited up
Copy !req
1501. - and the cabin depressurized.
- …haven't had an estimate…
Copy !req
1502. - I felt their pain.
- …as to how far they are…
Copy !req
1503. But I also couldn't help but think
of all the years of dreams and effort
Copy !req
1504. that were just now minutes away
from becoming a reality.
Copy !req
1505. - …an estimate of that.
- Hey. They're about to step out.
Copy !req
1506. That's okay. That's good.
Copy !req
1507. He can't see where he's going.
He's backing out of the hatch.
Copy !req
1508. - So close… You're doin' fine.
- He didn't wanna
Copy !req
1509. catch on the side of that opening.
Copy !req
1510. Delicate suit and backpack.
Copy !req
1511. Okay, Houston,
I'm on the porch.
Copy !req
1512. Roger, Neil.
Copy !req
1513. We're gettin' a picture on the TV.
Three more steps, then a long one.
Copy !req
1514. - Okay.
- There's a foot…
Copy !req
1515. There he is.
There's a foot coming down the steps.
Copy !req
1516. Neil, we can see you
coming down the ladder now.
Copy !req
1517. We can see you coming.
Copy !req
1518. I'm at the foot of the ladder.
Copy !req
1519. The LEM footpads are only, uh, depressed
Copy !req
1520. one or two inches,
Copy !req
1521. although the surface
appears to be very, very fine-grained
Copy !req
1522. as you get close to it,
it's almost like a powder.
Copy !req
1523. Look at those pictures.
Copy !req
1524. I'll step off the LEM now.
Copy !req
1525. - Armstrong is on the moon.
- I'll step off the LEM now.
Copy !req
1526. There he is.
Copy !req
1527. 38-year-old American
standing on the surface of the moon.
Copy !req
1528. Yes. Yes, sir. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
1529. It's one small step for man,
Copy !req
1530. one giant leap for mankind.
Copy !req
1531. The surface is fine and powdery.
Copy !req
1532. I can…
I can pick it up loosely with my toe.
Copy !req
1533. It does adhere in fine layers, uh…
Copy !req
1534. like powdered charcoal to the…
Copy !req
1535. to the sole and sides of my boots.
Copy !req
1536. The footprints of my boots and the treads
Copy !req
1537. in the fine, sandy particles.
Copy !req
1538. Hey, look at the bounding step.
Copy !req
1539. Oh, look at that. Yes.
Copy !req
1540. Okay, ready for me to come out?
Copy !req
1541. Talk about being super casual.
Copy !req
1542. Yeah!
Copy !req
1543. - Boy, looks like fun, doesn't it?
- All right. That's got it.
Copy !req
1544. Are you ready?
Copy !req
1545. - Beautiful view.
- Isn't that somethin'?
Copy !req
1546. Magnificent sight out here.
Copy !req
1547. Magnificent desolation.
Copy !req
1548. We can kind of see
the footprints
Copy !req
1549. of man leaving footprints on the moon.
Copy !req
1550. Without any atmosphere there,
no wind, no rain to wear them away,
Copy !req
1551. they might stay there
for quite a long time.
Copy !req
1552. Houston,
Columbia on the high gain. Over.
Copy !req
1553. Roger.
The EVA is progressing beautifully.
Copy !req
1554. They're setting up the flag now.
Copy !req
1555. They've got the flag up now,
Copy !req
1556. - You can see the Stars and Stripes.
Yeah.
Copy !req
1557. You can see the Stars and Stripes
on the lunar surface.
Copy !req
1558. Beautiful. Just beautiful.
Copy !req
1559. So-called kangaroo hop.
Copy !req
1560. They're beginning
to get pretty frisky up there.
Copy !req
1561. Tranquility Base, this is Houston.
Copy !req
1562. Can we get both of you
on the camera, please?
Copy !req
1563. The President of the United States
Copy !req
1564. would like to say
a few words to you, over.
Copy !req
1565. That would be an honor.
Copy !req
1566. I'm talking to you by telephone
from the Oval room at the White House,
Copy !req
1567. and this certainly has to be
Copy !req
1568. the most historic telephone call
ever made.
Copy !req
1569. I just can't tell you how proud we all are
of what you have done.
Copy !req
1570. This has to be
the proudest day of our lives.
Copy !req
1571. Because of what you have done,
Copy !req
1572. the heavens have become
a part of man's world.
Copy !req
1573. And as you talk to us
from the Sea of Tranquility,
Copy !req
1574. it inspires us to redouble our efforts
to bring peace and tranquility to Earth.
Copy !req
1575. For one priceless moment
Copy !req
1576. in the whole history of man,
Copy !req
1577. all the people on this Earth
are truly one.
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1578. One in their pride in what you have done,
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1579. and one in our prayers
that you will return safely to Earth.
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1580. Okay. Good night.
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1581. Good night, hon.
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1582. - Thank you, Mr. President…
- Good night, ladies.
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1583. - It's a great honor and privilege…
- Good night, sweet peas.
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1584. - Good night. See you in the morning.
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1585. …glad there are no chimpanzees
standing there…
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1586. - I think I'm gonna go to bed too.
- Okay.
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1587. - Steven?
- Hey.
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1588. - What a day we've seen…
- Let him go to sleep.
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1589. - I'm tired. Good night.
- …day such as man has never seen before.
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1590. A day that has been played out
before our very eyes
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1591. by this miracle that happily came along
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1592. at the same time as man's exploration
of space - television.
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1593. We have seen the men
exploring the moon in…
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1594. oh, they're magnificent pictures,
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1595. considering that they come from
a quarter of a million miles out
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1596. and on the surface of the moon,
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1597. man has landed there,
and man has taken his first steps there.
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1598. I wonder, Eric Sevareid,
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1599. just what there is to add to that.
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1600. Uh, somehow,
they found a strange beauty there
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1601. that I suppose they could
never really, uh, describe to us.
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1602. It may not be a beauty that can
pass on to future beholders either.
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1603. Well, for thousands of years now,
it's been man's dream to walk on the moon.
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1604. Right now, after seeing it happen,
knowing that it happened,
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1605. it still seems like a dream.
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1606. And it is, I guess, a dream come true.
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1607. - Greg.
What?
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1608. Go to bed.
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1609. Night.
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1610. Good night.
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1611. Wow.
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1612. Congratulations. You did it.
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1613. Well, we all did it.
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1614. Oh, that's nice of you to say.
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1615. Was Stan awake
when he took the first steps?
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1616. I don't know. They were tired.
AstroWorld took it out of them.
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1617. I just want him
to be able to tell his grandkids
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1618. he saw the first steps on the moon.
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1619. Well, you know how memory works.
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1620. Even if he was asleep,
he'll someday think he saw it all.
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1621. T-minus ten… nine…
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1622. eight…
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1623. …seven… six… right up into it…
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1624. five… four…
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1625. …three… two…
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1626. one…
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1627. We have liftoff!
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1628. T-minus ten… nine…
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1629. more fuel… eight…
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1630. seven… I'm steppin' on… six…
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1631. five…
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1632. …four… three…
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1633. …two…
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1634. one…
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1635. We have liftoff!
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1636. T-minus ten… nine…
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1637. more fuel… eight…
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1638. seven… I'm steppin' on… six…
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1639. five…
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1640. …four… three…
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1641. …two…
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1642. one…
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1643. We have liftoff!
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