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#1
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Hello all,
Today I started a petition suggesting additional live coverage on NASA TV and/or web-based streams of JPL Mission Control. The motivation for this came from folks hanging out in the Maestro [1] IRC channel (irc.freenode.net, #maestro). There seemed to be a broad consensus that the live Mission Control coverage on the night of the Opportunity landing was both compelling and valuable programming. If you are interested in reading and possibly signing the petition, please see: http://www.petitiononline.com/mercov/petition.html The petition will be forwarded to NASA/JPL after a suitable number of signatures have been gathered. Feel free to repost this URL and/or message in any appropriate venue... Regards, David [1] Maestro is available at: http://mars.telascience.org/ |
#2
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"David Fred" wrote in message
... Hello all, Today I started a petition suggesting additional live coverage on NASA TV and/or web-based streams of JPL Mission Control. The motivation for this came from folks hanging out in the Maestro [1] IRC channel (irc.freenode.net, #maestro). There seemed to be a broad consensus that the live Mission Control coverage on the night of the Opportunity landing was both compelling and valuable programming. If you are interested in reading and possibly signing the petition, please see: http://www.petitiononline.com/mercov/petition.html The petition will be forwarded to NASA/JPL after a suitable number of signatures have been gathered. Feel free to repost this URL and/or message in any appropriate venue... Regards, David [1] Maestro is available at: http://mars.telascience.org/ I've been going on about this for some time. We have the Mars landers and all the excitement but where is the two-hour Mars TV spectacular with all the images and a couple of scientists hosting the show and explaining the technology and the significance of the images to the viewers? No point in hiding the light of such a great success. I'd watch the repeats of it too. Alan Bedford. |
#3
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Stephen Ondine wrote:
"David Fred" wrote in message ... Hello all, Today I started a petition suggesting additional live coverage on NASA TV and/or web-based streams of JPL Mission Control. The motivation for this came from folks hanging out in the Maestro [1] IRC channel (irc.freenode.net, #maestro). There seemed to be a broad consensus that the live Mission Control coverage on the night of the Opportunity landing was both compelling and valuable programming. If you are interested in reading and possibly signing the petition, please see: http://www.petitiononline.com/mercov/petition.html The petition will be forwarded to NASA/JPL after a suitable number of signatures have been gathered. Feel free to repost this URL and/or message in any appropriate venue... Regards, David [1] Maestro is available at: http://mars.telascience.org/ I've been going on about this for some time. We have the Mars landers and all the excitement but where is the two-hour Mars TV spectacular with all the images and a couple of scientists hosting the show and explaining the technology and the significance of the images to the viewers? No point in hiding the light of such a great success. I'd watch the repeats of it too. Alan Bedford. Depending on production, I'd think such a show could range from very interesting to hideously boring. However, I'd think there'd be a few competent folks that'd help out. IIRC Colliers and Disney helped ignite early interest in space. Today, I'd think folks like Spielberg would be happy to be a part of this. A partnership between NASA and competent film makers could produce some salable products. A way to generate revenue for space exploration? -- Hop David http://clowder.net/hop/index.html |
#4
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"Hop David" wrote in message
... Stephen Ondine wrote: "David Fred" wrote in message ... Hello all, Today I started a petition suggesting additional live coverage on NASA TV and/or web-based streams of JPL Mission Control. The motivation for this came from folks hanging out in the Maestro [1] IRC channel (irc.freenode.net, #maestro). There seemed to be a broad consensus that the live Mission Control coverage on the night of the Opportunity landing was both compelling and valuable programming. If you are interested in reading and possibly signing the petition, please see: http://www.petitiononline.com/mercov/petition.html The petition will be forwarded to NASA/JPL after a suitable number of signatures have been gathered. Feel free to repost this URL and/or message in any appropriate venue... Regards, David [1] Maestro is available at: http://mars.telascience.org/ I've been going on about this for some time. We have the Mars landers and all the excitement but where is the two-hour Mars TV spectacular with all the images and a couple of scientists hosting the show and explaining the technology and the significance of the images to the viewers? No point in hiding the light of such a great success. I'd watch the repeats of it too. Alan Bedford. Depending on production, I'd think such a show could range from very interesting to hideously boring. However, I'd think there'd be a few competent folks that'd help out. IIRC Colliers and Disney helped ignite early interest in space. Today, I'd think folks like Spielberg would be happy to be a part of this. A partnership between NASA and competent film makers could produce some salable products. A way to generate revenue for space exploration? -- Hop David http://clowder.net/hop/index.html If you think it would be boring you are on the wrong newsgroup. Why the constant striving for audience figures? Why pollute pure true scientific fact by invoking the name of Disney and Spielberg? Have you people lost all contact with reality? This is exactly what is wrong with both entertainment and popular science at the moment. Everything has to be coated with a sugary gel of populist rubbish. I was referring to a couple of one-hour episodes of well presented scientific fact and footage from the Mars rovers a lá the _best years_ of "Horizon" (which has now deteriorated) or "Nova". The ordinary man in the street appreciates the display of genuine scientific achievement and they don't have to be babified or translated into the sort of Spielbergish idiom which will mislead the viewer with the previous baggage they have already accumulated from that source. Looks to me like modern day America can't provide a good informative science documentary any more. What happened? Have the boundaries between fact/fiction/propaganda/public information completely disappeared? If the world loses interest in the Mars project and the good positive publicity which America could rightfully bask in because of this fine achievement is wasted IT'S BECAUSE YOU DIDN'T SHOW IT TO US! If I was "Opportunity" I'd radio home and sack my agent. NMH. |
#5
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456nmh wrote:
If you think it would be boring you are on the wrong newsgroup. Why the constant striving for audience figures? Why pollute pure true scientific fact by invoking the name of Disney and Spielberg? Have you people lost all contact with reality? This is exactly what is wrong with both entertainment and popular science at the moment. Everything has to be coated with a sugary gel of populist rubbish. I was referring to a couple of one-hour episodes of well presented scientific fact and footage from the Mars rovers a lá the _best years_ of "Horizon" (which has now deteriorated) or "Nova". The ordinary man in the street appreciates the display of genuine scientific achievement and they don't have to be babified or translated into the sort of Spielbergish idiom which will mislead the viewer with the previous baggage they have already accumulated from that source. Looks to me like modern day America can't provide a good informative science documentary any more. What happened? Have the boundaries between fact/fiction/propaganda/public information completely disappeared? If the world loses interest in the Mars project and the good positive publicity which America could rightfully bask in because of this fine achievement is wasted IT'S BECAUSE YOU DIDN'T SHOW IT TO US! If I was "Opportunity" I'd radio home and sack my agent. Absolutely God-Damned Right! Now, I think that Mars Flight Reality Show....say sort of a "Survivor on Mars" would have real appeal to the television audience of America; each week they will tune in to see who goes out the airlock on _this_ show; later, the ones who reach Mars can engage in a talent contest- and we, the viewers, will be the ones to vote on who wins -and will be allowed to return to Earth- as the "Sole Survivor" of the Mars mission. Truffaut, you hit it right on the nose with "Fahrenheit 451"; between that and Chayefsky's "Network", a prophecy of our 21st century was written with more accuracy than Nostradamus ever dreamed of....unfortunatly. Pat |
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