The most powerful government in the world falsified their alleged greatest accomplishment. They did indeed fake the moon landing.
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The INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE Podcast
'You're Full Of S!' Piers Morgan Takes Down Moon Landing Denier Artemis II Debate - Piers Morgan Uncensored (1080p, h264, youtube)
Speaker
Bart Sibrel
Speaker
Brian Keating
Speaker
Piers Morgan
Speaker
Charlie Duke
Piers Morgan debates moon landing denier Bart Sibrel, featuring insights from Apollo astronaut Charlie Duke and physicist Professor Keating. The conversation explores evidence for the historic Apollo missions, conspiracy theories, and NASA's upcoming Artemis II mission, revealing tensions between scientific truth and skepticism.
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Highlights
“What is the mindset of somebody who said, well, it didn't really happen? That's like the denial of humanity. These crazy individuals shouldn't have our attention.”
“The Artemis II mission to the dark side of the moon will be the furthest human beings have ever traveled from Earth.”
“Post-Truth Era "But in reality, what worries me more is not that people get facts wrong. I mean, that happens all the time.”
“Did We Really Land on the Moon?: "It's never happened in the history of the world that a milestone is technologically occurred, like, let's say flying across the Atlantic in 1927 or breaking the sound barrier or splitting the first atom. It's never happened in the history of the world that more than 50 years later, no one could accomplish it.”
“Well, it was one of the most exciting adventures that I've ever had in my life.”
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Full transcript
I want to treat Bart as a colleague, maybe not as an equal with our father.
Oh, my goodness.
If you would let me teach you some physics, then you could make your argument stronger.
Charlie Duke is an Apollo astronaut, the 10th and youngest man to walk on the surface of the moon. What do you feel about the conspiracy theorists who think the moon landings were all invented? They never happened, they're fake.
You're willfully ignorant if you don't believe that we landed on the moon.
What is the mindset of somebody who said, well, it didn't really happen? That's like the denial of humanity. These crazy individuals shouldn't have our attention.
Given this is the furthest that NASA have ever sent a rocket, presumably you think this must be fake, too. The Artemis II mission to the dark side of the moon will be the furthest human beings have ever traveled from Earth. It's a precursor to a full return to the lunar surface and perhaps even reaching Mars. But for this trip, historic though it is, there will be no landing, no walking, no flags planted, very much unlike the Apollo mission of 50 years ago. In a moment, we'll talk to the man who says he's on a CIA hit list because he blew the whistle on what he says are the original moon landings being fake. But first, let's talk to the Chancellor's distinguished Professor of Physics at UC San Diego and host of the into the Impossible podcast. Welcome to you, Professor Keating, how are you?
Good to see you again, Piers.
Well, good to see you. I'm obviously about to talk to Bart Sibrel. He's made himself pretty infamous by ending up being punched by Buzz Aldrin for questioning to his face that he'd walked on the moon. And being part of that, of course, that first immortal trip. Before we get to him, what is your view of people that just don't want to believe this has ever happened?
I think it's something we need to take very seriously, but not literally. In other words, there are reasons. You could say there could be reasons why NASA and maybe the US Government, maybe even the CIA, would want to put a whack on Bart. As I've heard him describe it. Perhaps there are some mistruths that our government tell from time to time, but in order to believe the moon landings in the 1960s and 70s were fake, you need to believe a whole host of things that not only require vast conspiracy numbers involving hundreds of thousands of people, you need to Suspend your scientific reasoning and your ability to search for truth. You know, Piers, we live in an age that's sometimes called post truth or post fact, where you're entitled to your own ideas and theories. But in reality, what worries me more is not that people get facts wrong. I mean, that happens all the time.
Happens to me all the time as a scientist. But it's that we undermine the process of truth seeking that no society can withstand. So I'm hoping to talk to Bart. He knows about me. I've invited him to chat on my podcast, and he's turned it down for reasons that I don't understand. So I'm eager to talk to him because I think it's instructive for the public to see not only the great triumphs, but why we know for certain that these things happen and why it speaks to not only American exceptionalism, but humanity's exceptionalism.
Well, you know what? We'll come back and discuss Artemis specifically in a bit. But given you've teed this up very nicely, and we have Bart Sibal waiting. Joining me now is Bart Cyril, who has been what many viewers, a conspiracy investigator about the moon landing, saying they're fake. He even confronted, as I said, Buzz Aldrin. Let's take a look at what happened then.
Yeah, you got to keep shooting, man. Okay, well, if you can put it on your shoulder. Don't be shy.
Just come with me first.
You really like attention, don't you? You're the one who said you walked moon when you didn't. Calling the kettle black if I ever thought of it. Saying I misrepresented myself.
Get away from me.
You're a coward and a liar and a thief.
Well, Bart Sibel joins me now. Welcome to Uncensored. I've actually met Buzz Aldrin. All I remember is he had one of the hardest handshakes I've ever encountered on any human being. Ever. So you were quite courageous there, Barster, Albeit as you were calling one of the great modern heroes a coward. Why are you so obsessed about branding the lunar landings fake?
Well, because one of the most historic events in human history isn't putting a man on the moon. It's that the most powerful government in the world that hypocritically claims to represent truth and justice falsified their alleged greatest accomplishment. They did indeed fake the moon landing. And, Brian, first time I've ever seen you speak. He's obviously highly intelligent and a very reasonable person. Unfortunately, people want to believe a tantalizing lie like their team ran or Won the Super Bowl. What he's, you know, he claims, I'm denying scientific reasoning, but actually he's doing that because it's never happened in the history of the world that a milestone is technologically occurred, like, let's say flying across the Atlantic in 1927 or breaking the sound barrier or splitting the first atom. It's never happened in the history of the world that more than 50 years later, no one could accomplish it.
What would hopefully happen today?
Well, you know, let me, let me. I'm up against. We've heard your side of the story for 57 years.
I would love to just comment on that. I have actual experience with an event that happened and it was separated by 60 years. I reached the South Pole twice in 2007 and 2009. Do you know who the first people to reach the South Pole were, Bart?
Well, Amundsen, Scott?
Yeah, that's right. And you know, Amundsen was from Norway. Hold on, hold on a second. Amundsen was the first.
They went to the moon ahead of us.
Reach it. And we didn't go back for 50 years until 1964. We didn't go back for 50 years. Exactly. Like what happened? Was it harder? Have I never been to the South Pole, Bart?
I don't know. I mean, I presume that you have
video evidence of me there interviewed by.
Here we are with six. I'm not denying that. The, the fact is we have.
You just made a claim that nothing gets hard, nothing gets easier, unless this is technologically true.
Well, I can offer. I would like to offer my own. Well, hang on, Bob.
I'm not getting much time to share my side of the story.
But hang on. I'd like to offer my own contribution to that debate because I personally went on the last Concorde flight, which was about 20 years ago, and we have gone backwards in the speed of passenger air travel because it now takes twice as long for me to get to New York as it did 20 years ago. So there's another example.
The question is, are there aircraft that fly higher and faster than the Concorde and there are not with.
Not with passengers.
Well, people are on board the airplane.
They're not with. There's no commercial plane. There's no commercial plane that can get to New York in about.
There's no commercial plane. That's about six and a half hours.
Royce Concorde did it in 2058. So the premise of your argument is flawed because you've already heard one example from Brian. You've heard one from me. I'm sure there are a myriad other examples, but I'm just keen before we get too far into the weeds on that part of it, you said here about the lunar landings. In order to appreciate the full absurdity of the lie, it bears repeating what both the US government and NASA claimed in the 60s on the very first attempt to an all. With one millionth computing power of a cell phone, they've been able to send astronauts to orbit and land on the surface of the moon. A distance that is 1,000 times farther than they can achieve with human spaceflight today. To buy into your conspiracy theory about this and it never happened.
The sheer volume of people who must have signed up to this conspiracy. Right. Is overwhelming. Why is none of them. Why have none of the people that were part of the lie. Why have none of them broken ranks to say this was all faked?
Well, first of all, you're incorrect. I spoke to Eugene Kranz, flight Director. He said that someone in the command center cannot tell the difference between a quote, rehearsal flight and a, quote, a real flight. Just because there's 400,000 bank tellers at bank of America. What a bank teller knows about corruption in the bank and what the CEO knows are completely different. There's only three eyewitnesses to every program, and who knows where they're really going? The fact is, we did have someone come forward. Two people came forward. Betty Grissom, the widow of the man who was going to be the first man to walk on the moon.
I interviewed her for four hours before she died. I bet Brian did not do that. She told me that her husband called her on January 26, 1967, from NASA and said, han. For some strange reason, the CIA is over the launch pad today, inspecting the equipment. I've been here eight years, never seen him before. Why did they show up?
That never happened.
The very never happened.
Even your own testimony.
Well, allow Brian to respond to that, please. Brian.
She never said that. Speaking.
He interrupted me. Allow me to.
You just made a claim about CIA. I want to do you a favor. I think what you do is important. I think, as I said originally, I think it's important to question things. Certainly. Certainly the government lies to us.
Oh, thank you so much.
Hold on one second. But what Betty Grissom said. She said they were all over the CIA, was in the mission command center. She never said that. If you go back and look at your own transcripts. She said, didn't say they were on the launch pad. Had access to the launch pad because it was full of rocket Fuel, so they wouldn't even let the technicians near it, as you know. But Bart, I think you have much stronger evidence and I don't know why you're leading with the things that are most easily deflated.
I'd love to talk about what you claim.
Betty Grissom for four hours before she
died, did you say. I've read your transcripts. I've read transcripts by you and by her. She did say that they were CIA. She never said they were crawling over the launch pad. And does that prove that? The movie.
You weren't even alive at the time. That's what she told me in a foreign interview.
Let me ask you, Bob. Let me bo. Let me ask you. What is the. What is the most convincing piece of evidence you had that it was faked?
Well, I have the crew of Apollo 11 faking being halfway to the moon using a one foot model of the earth. And I have the CIA on a third track of audio telling to fake a four second radio delay from Earth orbit. And then we have the eyewitness testimony of a deathbed confession of Cyrus Eugene Anchors who saw them film it at Cannon Air force base in 1968, even confessed to killing somebody to cover it up because the NSA asked him to do so. That's a strange thing to be saying.
You've also claimed. Also. You've also claimed. I'll come to you, Brian, in a second. But you've also claimed you describe what you call as anomalous shadows that are not parallel, suggesting multiple artificial light sources in the studio rather than a single distant sun. So these photographs that we're looking at now you think are indicative of fakery.
Well, let me also say I went from being the biggest fan, greater fan than Brian. I had a shrine of Apollo pictures in my house for decades and a filmmaker's job is to make fake scenes look real. Go back to the picture and look how shadows should be in sunlight. The sun, it's a million times bigger than the Earth in volume. It's 93 million miles away. It's going to cast shadows in the same direction on the Earth or the Moon. There's two telephone poles about five feet apart. The shadows are parallel.
Here's a picture they claim was taken on the moon, of objects five feet apart. The astronaut shadows at 12 o', clock, the rock five feet away. The shadows at 9 o'.
Clock.
That can only happen with a close electrical light, which we just proved with one photograph that they faked the moon landing. Despite what anybody says, despite what the corrupt federal Government says that picture cannot be duplicated in sunlight. It can only be duplicated with the lens here on Earth. Which means they didn't go to the moon. Okay, I'm sorry to bring you the bad news.
No, no, that's your claim. Brian Keating, your response.
Well, again, I want to treat Bart as a colleague. Maybe not as an equal, but I want to treat him fairly. I don't want to say, bart, you have much better evidence than I've heard you talk about.
Oh, my goodness.
Well, I don't think you're a trained scientist, Bart. I mean, if I go to my
Wikipedia page, I don't think you're a trained cinematographer, either.
When I go to my Wikipedia page,
it says electrical light.
Okay, Bart, when I go to my Wikipedia page, people can see that I'm listed as a professor of astrophysics with 40 years of experience. When they go to your page, it says conspiracy theorist. So I don't want to say that we're equal, because we're not. We're not in the same league. I will treat you like a peer. I will give you an expert review of what you're talking about. But what I want to tell you
very clearly is you deceived your league, is parroting back what you're told.
I want to know. I want to use your own words. I want to treat you seriously, Bart. I want to say that you have talked to Candace Owens on her podcast, and you describe what she later called the firmament, the asteroid belt, and then later, the Van Allen belts. This is one key piece of qualitative but quantitative evidence that you have presented which I think deserves attention. You have a claim the Van Allen belts are deadly and they are not survivable, and NASA knew that themselves. Correct or incorrect, Bart?
Well, show the clip. What a clip number is it here? Right. Let's hear it in NASA's own mouth.
Well, we've got the clip. Hang on, hang on. We've got the clip. Let's play the clip. So the. The Van Allen radiation belts. You've argued the radiation surrounding Earth is so extreme, it would have been lethal for any human to pass through, making the journey impossible. So let's take a look.
We're gonna play the clip.
My name is Kelly Smith, and I work on navigation and guidance for Orion. We are headed 3,600 miles above Earth, 15 times higher from the planet than the International Space Station. As we get further away from Earth, we'll pass through the Van Allen Belts, an area of dangerous radiation. Radiation like this could harm the guidance Systems, onboard computers or other electronics on Orion. Naturally, we have to pass through this danger zone twice. Once up and once back. We must solve these challenges before we send people through this region of space. We must solve these challenges before we send people through this region of space.
We must solve these challenges.
So that's your claim, Bart. Professor Keating, what's your response to that?
Well, it's not my claim. It's NASA's claim. He said, we must solve these challenges before we send people through this region of space. Meaning? The radio.
Very carefully. He doesn't say, because we've never done it before. He never asked me. Do you interrupt?
Because I'm not in the same league as you and you're better than me that you.
No, we just played an extended clip that you produced about a certain theory. So Professor Keating would not respond.
Right, So, a whiteboard sketch by some NASA engineer who is, to my knowledge, not sketching the exact schematics of the trajectory he shows and he describes. The Van Allen belts are deadly. And you're right, Bart, they are deadly. And NASA knew that because. Who did Van Allen work for? John Van Allen worked for NASA. So in order for us to believe it, and he testified that the Van Allen belts, if traversed safely, were no threat to the astronauts beyond getting a few chest X rays, which you and I probably do every year. Right. So I have a model of the Van Allen belts here.
Here's a plasma globe which has electron plasma in it.
I thought you bought that.
30,000. Hold on now. You're not letting me present scientific evidence.
Okay.
There are electrons in here that are at 30,000 degrees Kelvin, far hotter than the temperature of the melting point of aluminum, which you talk about in that documentary, which I've seen many times, to debunk it inside of this plasma globe. The reason I don't get melted is because the electron density is tiny. It is anisotropic. If you go at different regions through the Van Allen belts, it's completely safe. And one last thing that NASA engineer mentioned. He said it could be dangerous to the navigation systems, the electronics. Correct. That means that according to you, we never even sent electronics, telemetry, anything through the Van Allen belts.
But you know who else agrees that we did? The Soviets. Our arch nemesis. Piers, you may not know this. The same day that we landed on the moon, the Russians had a probe that they were trying to return samples from the Moon. Like this moon rock that I have here. And they were trying to return it to Earth to beat us. And they ended up crashing that spacecraft. On July 21, 1969, they failed to reach it from, but they agreed to coordinate with NASA.
So they didn't hit the Apollo lander because they agreed that would be a much worse thing. Now appears. Can you imagine us coordinating with Ayatollah Khomeini right now? And he's gonna congratulate us tomorrow or tonight when the Artemis mission lands. That's what goes around the moon. That's exactly what happened. So the best evidence bar doesn't come from America even. It comes from the Chinese, from the Indians, from the Russians, who are our nemesis at the time, proving that we went there with their own images, data and scientific evidence. So that's the way we do things as a scientifically literate society.
And your theory, Your theory, Bob.
Hang on, scientists. One of the facts you're ignoring is that. What is his name? Rotajin Dmitry. He was the former commander of the Soviet equivalent of NASA. He said as soon as he retired the moon missions were fake. And then I have a friend who works at the Chinese Space agency. He says that they're blackmailing NASA in exchange for technology that Congress forbid them to receive.
So we have retroactively to the Soviet Union, which doesn't exist anymore.
He has. Wait a minute. We have the Russian space director saying the moon missions are fake. And we have an employee of the Chinese space agency saying they know the missions are fake and are being blackmailed by the United States.
And your theory, your theory about motivation, your argument is that the they were faked to ensure a Cold War victory for the US over the Soviet Union. You contend that NASA was under immense pressure to fulfill President Kennedy's goal of landing a man on the moon by the end of the 60s, but they lacked the ability technologically to do it. According to you, the risk of high profile failure and subsequent national humiliation led the US Government and CIA to stage the events in a studio instead. To which my obvious question would be a look. Full disclosure. I don't believe a word of it. However, let's just assume for a moment your theory is correct. Which studio? Where? Where did they do this?
Well, I guess you weren't paying attention when I said they filmed it at Cannon air Force Base, June 1, 2nd and 3rd of 1968, according to an eyewitness who confessed to killing a coworker to cover up the moon landing fraud.
Sorry, I did hear what you said, but there were a number of lunar landings. So you're saying that it was all done in this one studio?
Well, no, we know. We know that the first one. The TV images were filmed at Cannon Air Force Base, according to an eyewitness who confessed to a homicide that was investigated by the military police, the United States Senate Intelligence Committee and the FBI. And when they investigated, they asked him, why did he kill this co worker at Cannon Air force base in 1968? He said to cover up the moon landing fraud. He took an oath by the NSA for secrecy. His co worker was going to tell the public and he killed him to keep it a secret. And back to whether the radiation belts are lethal or not. Don't take my opinion.
Don't take Brian's opinion. Go to sabrell.com and read Van Allen's opinion, his document that he published after sending probes up into the radiation belts in 1958. Scientific American article. And he says they are 250 times a lethal dose. So when they say we have.
That is depending on how you go through it, Bart. If you go through a rainstorm through the eye of a hurricane, it's much different than going through the outskirts of it where it's a nice light London fog, perhaps. It's very different. Your Van El belts are highly anisotropic. I want to teach you some physics.
Hard.
If you. If you would. If you would let me teach you some physics, then you can make your argument stronger, perhaps. Okay. There's multiple Van Allen belts. There's an inner Van Allen belt. There's an outer Van Allen bell.
Teach me, professor who? Parents back.
I've heard you refuse to debate me. Bart, this is my only chance to debate you. You refuse to debate me on Joe Rogan. You refuse to debate me on Joe.
I never received an invitation to debate.
Yes, you said you've received the invitation on Danny Jo podcast, and you said you don't want to debate me because I'm a victim. Much like pedophilia victims. It was so bizarre. I want to take my opportunity.
He asked me if I wanted to debate you, and I said no, because you're a victim. You have Stockholm syndrome. You're defending the people who are deceiving you. You're not the perpetrator.
The Russians did. The politburo. The politburo that testified and said, congratulations,
what happened on the moon.
Wait, why did. Why did the Russians.
Do you mind if I just cut to the quick here? Do you think you're just full of shit, mate?
What's that?
Do you think you're just full of shit?
No, I don't think he does.
Is it all just a scam just to make money? Raise your profile.
Well, I mean, come on.
Spewing such obvious bullshit around the world about something that everyone knows happened, and you've made yourself well known.
Let me boil it down for you.
You answer your question, insulted Buzz Aldrin to the point he punched you.
I'm sorry. It's the truth. It, about corruption is insulting to people who are flattered by it in a fallen world. The fact is, JFK's relatives say with 100% certainty he was killed by the CIA. Robert McNamara on his deathbed said they started the Vietnam war and killed 58,220 of their own people on a CIA fabrication. So they're killing tens of thousands of their own people, so presumably killing their own president. Wait a minute. So they're not going to have a problem faking a TV image.
Okay.
The only problem is that. That it's a positive line.
Okay, but just to be clear, then, to extrapolate your theory, given this is the furthest that NASA have ever sent a rocket to the dark side of the moon, presumably you think this must be fake, too?
Oh, no, I hope. I hope they are able to do it. The issue is, how do you think about it?
So do you believe the Artemis rocket is gonna be a genuine mission or a fake?
Does it have to go to the Van Allen Belt?
I would assume it's gonna be genuine.
How does it get through the Van Allen Belt?
Why is it. Listen, the issue.
Hang on. No, how does it get through? How does it get through the Van Allen Radiation Belt?
I got two people not letting me finish this sentence.
How does it get through?
The issue is. The issue is.
That is the issue.
Why is it with six decades of better technology, they can only do 20% of what Apollo did? It's electrical.
So do you accept the Moon, but do you accept now that rocket, space rockets can get through the Van Allen Radiation Belt?
Unmanned ones? And maybe they have protection? We know they didn't have protection as of 2014. He said we must solve these radiation challenges before we send people through this region of space, which anything prior to 2014 did not leave Earth orbit. He said so himself. Okay, I'm sorry.
So do you think Elon Musk is in? Or do you think. Do you think Elon Musk is deceiving himself?
Well, he knows the moon missions are fake. He's playing ball. He didn't want to bite the hand that feeds him.
So he's. He's all part of the conspiracy, is he?
It's not a conspiracy. It's simply they perpetrated a fraud. They did a counterfeit. They cheated. Elon Musk says to return to the moon, they're going to need 15 fuel launches first. I got a clip here. Number five. A guy who works for NASA says it's going to take 30 launches of fuel in order to have enough fuel to go to the moon.
So how did Apollo do it with 1/30 the amount of fuel? I mean, the truth is right there in front of you.
Final words to Professor Technology.
And they can only do 20% of what they claim to did with 1 million.
Okay, Professor Keating can't even land. Professor Keating, final word to you about the Armistice 2 mission.
Well, I just want to say, first of all, to fake the moon landings would have been much more cost prohibitive, difficult, and involve a much larger conspiracy than actually doing them. We have evidence from around the world. Scientific work. Scientists are the most likely people to want to shoot down experts. Bart, this is where I feel like you're not taking advantage of me as a collegial engagement because we're the most interested in proving things wrong. That's what we do for a living, Bart. But on the topic of science, what Artemis is going to do appears is perhaps pave the way for us to extend our consciousness, our civilization, into the solar system, into the universe beyond. Because what happens if a large meteorite, a huge asteroid impacts the Earth, God forbid, or a global pandemic happens again? And all those reasons, by the way, are reasons that Bart should support the mission of NASA, which has provided such a great deal of technology that has enabled him.
If he's ever been on a commercial airliner. I used to work for NASA, working on aviation safety. NASA does a whole lot more than just landing on the moon, as amazing as that is. And they do it all peers for a budget that's equal to what women in America spend on makeup. About 20 to 25 billion dollars. Most people think it's 10 times higher. It's very low amount of money. We're going to go there, we're going to build telescopes.
We're going to explore habitation there. We're going to build rockets. Because the moon is full of ice and its craters that are shadowed. Ice is hydrogen and oxygen.
You know, I think it's going to be great. And I love all this stuff. And I think the answer to the whole thing is that when they actually send people to walk on the moon again, they should send Bart up there. Bart, you should get on the rocket.
Let's do a debate there, Bart.
Yeah, and we can continue the debate on the surface of the moon. And then Bart, my opening line would be, see? Told you got to leave it there. Thank you all very much. Bart, thank you. Thank you, Professor Keating, thank you very much.
Thank you, Piers. Thank you, Bart.
Well, let's turn now to too many, most certainly no fact from fiction when it comes to space travel. Charlie Duke is an Apollo astronaut, the 10th and youngest man to walk on the surface of the moon. A legendary actor and part time astronaut, William Shatner, sometimes known as Captain Kirk of the USS Enterprise, particularly by men of my generation who were weaned on that glorious character. Welcome to both of you. Charlie Duke, what an amazing thing to have walked on the moon. Just we've got some footage of you which I'll just show my viewers to remind them of your great moment. Let's have a look at this.
Hey John, while you're sampling there, you might look around and see if you see any of that vesicular basalt.
That's what I'm looking at.
Good. Joe, I told him you were.
Whoop.
Okay, we see that one went all the way in.
Not quite
my first thought watching that Charlie, was a couple of months ago I tripped and broke my hip. And if I'd been in an airless environment like that, I probably would have escaped without injury. So I'm very jealous of the fact that you were falling over there in such conditions. But to be serious for a Moment, you were 36 when you walked on the moon, the youngest to do it at the time. And it's 1972. Just a basic question, what was it like?
Well, it was one of the most exciting adventures that I've ever had in my life. Of course we enjoyed every moment of it. We had three excursions out on the surface. We had a tremendous opportunity to explore the lunar highlands for three days. And John and I didn't want to come home. We were having so much fun. But they said, get back inside guys, it's time to come back. Anyway, we did a great job, I thought, corrected 200 pounds of moon rocks and did a lot of good experiments and left a lot of experiments up there to operate.
So it was a tremendous opportunity for us.
You also had another extraordinary role in the first lunar landing when you famously responded to Neil Armstrong saying the Eaglers landed with the words Roger Twang. Tranquility, we copy you on the ground. You've got a bunch of guys about to turn blue. We're breathing again. Thanks a lot. Which was fantastic.
I was so excited that Tranquility came out twang at first, and so I corrected myself. Neil had told me that he was changing a call sign to tranquility from Apollo 11 or whatever, Eagle. And so I was prepared for it. But it was so exciting a moment there, you know, we landed with maybe 20 seconds fuel remaining, and so there was a lot of tension. And when Neil said, well, Buzz said, contact engine stop and we're there on the ground, it was just excitement got me. And twang came out instead of tranquil.
William Shatner, welcome back to Uncensored. Always great to talk to you. You obviously went to space recently and you were very emotional, I remember about the experience, understandably. How much would you have liked to have walked on the moon like Charlie? And how envious are you of this latest mission, which is the precursor potentially to people doing it again?
Well, these guys, like test pilots and explorers and people who venture out into essentially the unknown, enjoy it like it's a thrill, like, I mean, falling like you described. You fell on Earth and you had difficulty, you broke your hip. He falls on the moon and there's nobody there to help him up, right? And he's got a pack on his back. It's awkward. He's alone. These explorers, these test pilots, these astronauts, they get off on the adventure. We ordinary people have to imagine what it's like to see flame going past your window, wondering whether the shields are going to hold or not, whether 20 seconds of fuel is enough to get back up. And there's this whole exploration mentality that requires, I mean, it's insanity, really, to want to do that.
And they're insane in a great way, furthering us. But these people going up in Artemis, they're in the same tentative position. They don't know whether that shield is going to hold. They don't know whether the. The hydrogen is going to explode. And I, when I went up and I, on my way up the gantry, I passed by the off gassing. I said, what's that? They said, it's hydrogen. I said, hydrogen? That's one of the most explosive, elusive gases we have.
They're dealing with the unknown, they're dealing with exploration, they're dealing with death. Have they come to grips with what death is? What's on the other side? All those enormous questions are, I don't know whether the astronauts are sitting in the Artemis thing right now, but you can imagine them leaning back, looking up into the sky, waiting for this explosion under them, wondering whether they're going to live or die, and see their children
and their Loved ones again, I feel exactly the same way. I just want to show viewers a couple clip of you in space because it was great. Let's take a look at this. God, weightlessness.
Oh, Jesus. No description can equal this. Wait, this is nuts. Oh,
This is Earth.
Oh.
Oh,
holy hell. I mean, amazing experience. And you, like I said, you got emotional afterwards. But I, you know, I do remember very vividly I was born in 65 and I remember watching the original series of Star Trek, which I think, I think there were three series, weren't there, of the original television show.
Three years.
Yeah, three years. And you know, it was, the mission statement was to boldly go where no man has gone before. And what I just remember being struck by, and particularly is, now I look back on it was how kind of multicultural the starship Enterprise was. You had Mr. Sulu, Chekhov, Uhuru. It was, this was a real visionary thing that you guys were putting on tv.
It was, it was visionary television, but it reflected what the visionary was happening on Earth. That was the time when things were being built and the concept of going into space was new and exciting. This shot, this thing, this Artemis thing, I think is even more precarious than any of the others because there's so many unknowns. These are ships that haven't been flown that way before. There's technology that hasn't been used. There's four inexperienced, trained but inexperienced astronauts. The trepidation on this thing that's happening in our lifetime and in, in our present day is ranks with Shackleton and Scott and exploration of the South Pole, which I was at. And I sat on a ice cap that was a desert.
There was nothing around. There was nothing. Imagine nothing around you.
You're forlorn.
It's one of the airport.
We have a man sitting here still, Charlie Duke, who can not only imagine it, he was on the moon on his own.
I know. So you need to explore that mind, that mindset. When he fell over, did he think, I'm going to die?
Well, let's ask him. And what, Let me ask him, Charlie, Like a turtle.
Like a turtle on his back.
Well, let me, let me ask the man himself. Unable to get up. We can ask him, Charlie, what did you feel when you fell over?
Well, when I fell down, I said, I gotta get up. We practiced and practiced and practiced. We'd been in the zero G airplane, we've done that on Banner, I've fallen on my back, I've ditched this. And we had, we practiced all of that. And so we were prepared for these unusual eventualities. But it wasn't like it was something that we hadn't thought about.
Yeah, but it's one thing.
How do we get up?
It's one thing.
We pray for it.
It's one thing to practice and practice and practice. And somebody says, are you okay? Yeah, I'm okay. I'm practicing. It's another thing to be forlorn on a planet that there's no. There's no way out. You're. You're fallen and you can't get up. I mean, that's just one of the things.
20 seconds of fuel. You gotta get back up there and rendezvous. I mean, the things are extraordinary.
I mean, on that point. I mean, it's a great point. By. By Bill. I mean, Charlie, obviously, this.
Wait a minute. We had.
Well, the question I'm going to ask you is it obviously carries enormous risk, Obviously. And this Artemis 2 is the most powerful rocket that NASA have ever fired up. And it's going the furthest distance in terms of the sort of dark side of the moon, literally that we've sent people in relation to the moon. So this carries with it enormous obvious jeopardy. How do you. When you were doing this, how do you deal with the potential of not coming back, of just something terrible going wrong?
We never thought about it. I can't believe that we were sitting on the.
I can't believe.
Charlie. I can't believe that. Okay, that was a.
That was an astronaut.
We never thought about not coming back. We had. We had. We had trained. If you got caught, if it exploded, it exploded. We had an out. An escape system on top of the spacecraft for liftoff. If the thing exploded.
I mean, NASA had thought about all of those things. You just know that if it was going to happen in some way and the suit split open and you got hit by a meteorite, it just wasn't your day. Yeah, but you were going to make it.
You got to remember, the Challenger. The Challenger is before us. All those of us who haven't trained and have your mindset, think Challenger and Artemis. And if Artemis fails, what a psychological blow that would be to the space program. I mean, there are so many complex things happening here. To those of us who don't have your ability to deny the potential of death.
Do you remember Apollo 1? Apollo 1 blew up on the pad in a training accident.
Fire.
They were killed.
I remember that.
Because of some. All right, but it didn't stop us.
No.
We said, we got to fix this thing. We got to fix it and do it right. And so it took a year in the spacecraft.
I'm, I'm talking about your frame of mind. I mean, the Challenger set back psychologically, the space program for a long while. Well, if Artemis fails, what a psychological blow that is. If Artemis is successful, what a glorious thing for the space program and progress to the moon.
Let me tell you, if it fails, we're going to try again. We're not going to stop. That is just the attitude of the space program, attitude of the United States of America and an attitude with the astronauts. We're going to make it successful. It might not be right away, but we're going to make it successful. It's something that we're committed to and we're going to do it right. If it doesn't work right, then we're going to fix it, just like we did on Apollo. After Apollo 1 caught fire, just after a couple others that almost didn't make it back.
Apollo 13, mission control and the crews came through and made a spacecraft that was built for two guys for three days, made it last for three, four guys, for no, three guys for five days. So, I mean, there's just, you know,
Charlie, as you're talking, as you're talking, Charlie, all I can think is to Bill Shatner, you know, who would be 100% in agreement with everything Charlie is saying, Captain James T. Kirk. He would have exactly the same mindset. Because actually it's the never, never stop dreaming, you know, boldly go where no one's been before. It's that that motivates people. I mean, Charlie, just to ask you, I mean, if we do get back on the moon, what advice would you give for the astronauts who make that next amazing.
Drink a lot of water. Drink a lot of water. Well, if just they haven't the first landings on the moon, whatever Artemis that is, in a couple of years, I hopefully have a chance to be around to give them some advice if they want it. And it's just train, be prepared. That's what we did over and over and over again. It was like doing it in your sleep. We had trained so much, we'd work with mission control, we'd work with the crew, we'd work with the rover. We trained and trained and trained.
And so that is the motivation behind Apollo crews. And what Artemis is, those guys, they're not just going out into the, into the ether with no training. They're. And Charlie, out of interest, be well prepared.
Out of interest, what do you feel about the conspiracy theorists who think that all the moon. The moon Landings were all invented. They never happen. They're fake.
Well, the moon landed. The evidence is overwhelming that we landed on the moon. You're willfully ignorant if you don't believe that we landed on the moon five, six times and the evidence is there. We left experiments packages. Every landing spike has been photographed by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. You can see the descent stage, you can see the experiments package. You can see the cars on the last three missions and. The experiments have been operating or they operated for five years and got tons of data.
We've got 600 pounds of moon rocks. Where did they come from? They just didn't know and we brought them.
What's the mindset of somebody who says to these brave individuals and all the taxpayers money that went to making that happen. What is the mindset of somebody who said, well, it didn't really happen? I mean, that's nihilistic. That's like the denial of humanity. These crazy individuals shouldn't have our attention. It's. It's absurd.
Charlie, do you have any of the moon at home? Did you keep a bit?
No. They gave me a moon rock after 40 years, but I had to give it away. So I gave it to my prep school down in Admiral Farragut Academy. Two moonwalkers graduated from there, me and Alan Shepard. Alan Shepard first and then me.
That's amazing.
I have a watch with Moondust on it.
Really fantastic design. I've got a Captain James T. Kirk baseball cap. That's all I can contribute to this debate. Gentlemen, what a fascinating time talking to you all. I can think of looking at both of you, I know your ages, I don't need to repeat them. But I hope I have half the vitality for life and curiosity and excitement about what we don't know. As you two guys have.
You are an inspiration to all of us mere 61 year olds. So thank you very much indeed to both of you.
Thank you for having us. It's great. It's great to see you, Charlie.
Bye bye. I hope I'm still around when we make that first landing. And that next to me too.
That would be.
That would be very much for having me.
Charlie and I walk hand in hand to greet them.
That would be brilliant, wouldn't it? I would love that. Can I come too?
Yeah, you may.
Thank you.
I told NASA I'm still feel. I am still at 90. I'm still physically qualified to go into space.
Really?
NASA says don't call us, we'll call you. So I'm not expecting a call.
Great. To talk to you both. Thank you both very much indeed.
Pleasure. Thank you. Pleasure to see you both.
Been a pleasure. Thank you, Pierre.
Thanks, Charlie. Take care. Piers Morgan Uncensored is proudly independent. The only boss around here is me. If you enjoy our show, we ask for only one simple thing. Hit subscribe on YouTube and follow Piers Morgan Uncensored on Spotify and Apple podcasts. And in return, we will continue our mission to inform, irritate and entertain, and we'll do it all for free. Independent, Uncensored media has never been more critical and we couldn't do it without you.
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🔖 Titles
Piers Morgan vs Moon Landing Denier: Artemis II Debate with Brian Keating and Charlie Duke
Moon Landing Conspiracy Thrashed: Piers Morgan, Brian Keating, Charlie Duke Discuss Artemis II
Debunking Moon Landing Myths with Piers Morgan, Brian Keating, and Apollo Astronaut Charlie Duke
Artemis II and Apollo Truths: Piers Morgan Challenges Moon Landing Denial
Moon Landing Denier Confronted: Artemis II Mission Debate with Piers Morgan and Experts
Brian Keating and Charlie Duke Defend Apollo Missions Against Conspiracy Theories
Piers Morgan Uncensored: Debating Artemis II and Moon Landing Conspiracies
Into the Impossible: Artemis II, Moon Landings, and Conspiracy Theories Unpacked
Apollo Astronaut Charlie Duke Responds to Moon Landing Conspiracy on Artemis II Discussion
Exploring Artemis II and Moon Landing Denial on Into the Impossible Podcast
💬 Keywords
moon landing, Apollo mission, NASA, Artemis II, Van Allen radiation belts, conspiracy theories, moon landing hoax, South Pole expedition, Buzz Aldrin, lunar surface, Cold War, CIA, Eugene Kranz, Betty Grissom, lunar rocks, Cannon Air Force Base, artificial light sources, shadows on the moon, lunar photography, astronaut training, Maxwell's equations, space exploration, lunar highlands, lunar rover, Orion spacecraft, guidance systems, radiation challenges, hydrogen fuel, Challenger disaster, Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter
💡 Speaker bios
Kelly Smith is an expert in navigation and guidance for the Orion spacecraft. Tasked with leading Orion through a journey 3,600 miles above Earth—15 times higher than the International Space Station—Kelly faces unique challenges. As Orion travels farther from Earth, it must pass twice through the Van Allen Belts, a dangerous zone of radiation capable of damaging guidance systems and onboard electronics. Kelly is dedicated to solving these critical hurdles to ensure Orion is safe for future human missions through this region of space.
💡 Speaker bios
Brian Keating is a scientist who urges people to approach extraordinary claims with healthy skepticism and critical thinking. Throughout his career, Brian has addressed controversial topics, like conspiracies surrounding the moon landings, reminding audiences that accepting such theories requires suspending scientific reasoning and ignoring overwhelming evidence. He believes that in today’s “post-truth” world, it’s more important than ever to search earnestly for truth rather than merely accept popular ideas or unfounded claims. Brian encourages others to take misinformation seriously—not literally—while always using science as a guide to discern fact from fiction.
💡 Speaker bios
William Shatner Bio (Summarized Story Format):
William Shatner has always been fascinated by explorers, test pilots, and astronauts—those who venture into the unknown for the sheer thrill of adventure. While ordinary people might only imagine the terror and excitement of seeing flames outside a spacecraft window or worrying about having just enough fuel to return home, Shatner admires the mindset that drives individuals to face such peril head-on. He appreciates the loneliness and awkwardness that comes with exploration—like falling on the moon with no one around to help—and recognizes the unique courage it takes to embrace such insanity. Through his life and work, Shatner celebrates the spirit of adventure and the extraordinary drive that pushes humanity to explore beyond what’s familiar.
💡 Speaker bios
Charlie Duke’s journey to the Moon stood out as one of the most exciting adventures of his life. Alongside John Young, Charlie spent three days exploring the lunar highlands, filled with exhilarating excursions across the surface. The experience was so thrilling that neither wanted to leave, but mission control eventually called them back. During their time on the Moon, Charlie and his crewmate collected around 200 pounds of moon rocks, conducted numerous experiments, and left scientific equipment behind to operate. It was a remarkable mission, blending discovery, fun, and achievement for Charlie Duke.
💡 Speaker bios
Piers Morgan: Short Bio in Summarized Story Format
Piers Morgan is a renowned British broadcaster who has built his career as a provocative interviewer and outspoken commentator on current affairs. Morgan has long been known for tackling controversial subjects and engaging high-profile guests, often steering conversations toward the heart of public interest debates. In one of his signature segments, he delved into the historic Artemis II mission, discussing its significance as the furthest journey NASA has ever undertaken—exploring themes of skepticism about space travel and comparing it to the celebrated Apollo missions. Morgan also introduces polarizing figures, such as whistleblowers who challenge mainstream narratives, before turning to expert voices like distinguished physicists to ground discussions in scientific fact. Through his compelling storytelling and fearless questioning, Morgan continues to connect audiences with the events and people shaping our world.
💡 Speaker bios
Bart Sibrel is a documentary filmmaker and outspoken critic of the official story of the Apollo moon landings. He believes that one of history’s most significant events was not the achievement of sending humans to the moon, but rather the revelation that the United States government falsified what it claimed was its greatest accomplishment. According to Sibrel, the moon landings were faked, and he argues that the continued inability to recreate such a milestone more than 50 years later adds to his doubts. Despite criticism and controversy, Sibrel remains committed to questioning scientific reasoning around the moon landings, provoking debates by challenging mainstream beliefs and encouraging people to reconsider what they accept as truth.
ℹ️ Introduction
Welcome to The INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE Podcast. In today's lively episode, we dive headfirst into one of the most controversial debates in science and history: did humans really walk on the moon, or was the entire Apollo program an elaborate hoax? Host Brian Keating is joined by NASA engineer Kelly Smith, legendary Apollo astronaut Charlie Duke, iconic actor and space enthusiast William Shatner, acclaimed broadcaster Piers Morgan, and notorious moon landing denier Bart Sibrel for a no-holds-barred confrontation.
You'll hear first-hand accounts from those who were there, passionate defenses of scientific achievement, sharp-tongued challenges to the skeptics, and a deep exploration of humanity’s drive to explore the cosmos. From the legacy of Apollo to the future of Artemis II, prepare for a conversation that spans hard evidence, personal belief, and the vibrant spirit of human discovery. Buckle up—it’s going to be a wild ride into the impossible!
📚 Timestamped overview
📚 Timestamped overview
❇️ Key topics and bullets
Sequence of Topics Covered
1. Introduction to the Moon Landing Debate
Bart Sibrel claims the moon landing was faked by the US government 00:00:00
Brian Keating responds, suggesting a collegial tone, offering to teach physics 00:00:08
Piers Morgan introduces Charlie Duke, an Apollo astronaut, and poses questions about conspiracy theories 00:00:17
Charlie Duke dismisses denial of moon landings as willful ignorance 00:00:29
William Shatner comments on the mindset of deniers 00:00:34
2. The Artemis II Mission and Contemporary Context
Piers Morgan introduces Artemis II as NASA’s furthest mission 00:00:43
Goals and distinctions from Apollo missions 00:00:54
Brian Keating is introduced as a guest expert 00:01:25
3. Nature and Impact of Moon Landing Denial
Piers Morgan asks Brian Keating about the persistence of conspiracy beliefs 00:01:49
Brian Keating outlines dangers to truth-seeking and post-truth culture 00:01:55
Importance of engaging with deniers constructively 00:03:01
4. Bart Sibrel and Evidence Claims for a Faked Moon Landing
Bart Sibrel details motivations and rationale for his views 00:04:30
Historical comparison: why haven’t we returned in 50 years? 00:05:23
Brian Keating counters with the South Pole analogy 00:05:38
Piers Morgan and Bart Sibrel discuss regressions in technology (e.g., Concorde jet) 00:06:37
Scope of conspiracy needed for a moon landing hoax 00:08:04
5. Alleged Whistleblowers and Arguments for Conspiracy
Bart Sibrel references people who allegedly broke ranks: Eugene Kranz, Betty Grissom 00:08:20
Brian Keating disputes interpretations and timelines 00:09:30
Bart references supposed photographic and testimonial evidence (shadows, “confessions,” etc.) 00:10:39
Discussion on inconsistent shadow angles in lunar photos 00:12:08
6. Scientific Debates and the Van Allen Belts
Brian Keating engages Bart Sibrel about the Van Allen radiation belts 00:13:16
Clip played of Kelly Smith explaining Van Allen belt challenges for Orion 00:14:08
Bart Sibrel argues this is NASA’s admission of danger 00:15:03
Brian Keating provides scientific rebuttal: electron density, safe paths, Soviet and international corroboration 00:15:28
Bart Sibrel retorts with Russian and Chinese officials’ alleged statements 00:17:43
Brian Keating counters with international scientific validation 00:18:10
7. Motives and Logistics of Moon Landing Hoax Theories
Piers Morgan questions alleged motives: Cold War, Kennedy’s deadline, technical limitations 00:18:25
Bart claims filming at Cannon Air Force Base, “deathbed confessions” 00:19:08
More details on feasibility and logistical improbabilities 00:19:28
8. Continuing Debate on Lunar Technology and Artemis Mission
Piers Morgan asks if Artemis is also a hoax 00:22:32
Bart Sibrel expresses hope Artemis will be genuine, questions technological regression 00:22:44
Fuel requirements and advancement discrepancy 00:24:03
Brian Keating on cost/complexity of faking vs. actually going 00:24:47
Scientific method and future goals for Artemis 00:25:12
9. Panel Reflections: Astronaut and Cultural Commentary
Piers Morgan interviews Charlie Duke and William Shatner 00:26:42
Charlie Duke: personal experiences, Apollo memories, what lunar exploration was like 00:28:19
William Shatner: experience in space, human psychology and exploration risks 00:30:40
Commentary on the diversity and vision of space adventure (Star Trek, Artemis) 00:34:10
10. Coping with Danger and Perseverance in Space Exploration
Piers Morgan and William Shatner probe Charlie Duke on mindset, risk, training 00:36:56
Importance of training, mindset, and resilience 00:38:59
Notable incidents: Apollo 1 fire, Challenger disaster 00:39:09
Commitment to continued exploration despite setbacks 00:39:50
11. Advice for Future Lunar Astronauts
Piers Morgan asks Charlie Duke for advice to Artemis personnel and future moonwalkers 00:41:27
Charlie Duke emphasizes training, preparation, teamwork 00:41:31
12. Evidence & Refutation of Moon Landing Conspiracies
Piers Morgan asks Charlie Duke directly about moon landing denial 00:42:31
Charlie Duke describes vast evidence: photos, experiments, moon rocks 00:42:43
William Shatner critiques conspiracy mindset 00:43:32
13. Personal Mementos and Closing Reflections
Piers Morgan, Charlie Duke, William Shatner share artifacts and closing thoughts 00:43:56
Inspiring words about curiosity, adventure, and perseverance 00:44:46
Charlie Duke’s physical fitness and wish to return to space 00:45:15
Light-hearted conclusion and production credits 00:45:36
👩💻 LinkedIn post
LinkedIn Post
🚀 Just finished hosting a powerful episode on The INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE Podcast with legendary guests debating the authenticity of the moon landings and the future of space exploration.
We witnessed Bart Sibrel make his case for conspiracy, while scientific experts like Brian Keating and real astronauts including Charlie Duke set the record straight. Legendary actor William Shatner shared his emotional perspective on venturing into the unknown.
Three key takeaways:
Extraordinary Evidence: Charlie Duke, who walked on the moon, emphasized overwhelming physical and scientific proof—including lunar experiments, moon rocks, and orbiter photos—making denial of these achievements an act of "willful ignorance" 43:43.
Truth-Seeking Matters: As Brian Keating reminded us, questioning is important, but undermining the scientific process threatens society’s pursuit of truth 02:50. Fact-based reasoning is vital, especially in a world flooded with misinformation.
Boldly Go Forward: Artemis II is about extending human presence beyond Earth for longevity and innovation. Failures and risk are part of the journey, but—echoing both Charlie Duke and William Shatner—never stop dreaming and striving for the impossible 40:50.
🌑 Whether you’re a space enthusiast or a skeptic, the real message is clear: Let’s support fearless exploration, rigorous inquiry, and the relentless pursuit of knowledge!
#SpaceExploration #MoonLanding #Artemis #ScienceCommunication #DreamBig
🧵 Tweet thread
🚀 The Moon Landing Debate: Live Showdown Between Scientists, Astronauts & Conspiracy Theorists 🌕
1️⃣ "The most powerful government in the world falsified their alleged greatest accomplishment." — Bart Sibrel drops the bomb on live TV, claiming the moon landings were faked! 00:00:00
2️⃣ Brian Keating, physics professor, counters the conspiracy: "You need to believe a whole host of things…no society can withstand undermining truth-seeking." 00:02:50
3️⃣ Bart Sibrel insists he's got evidence: Apollo 11 crew faked being halfway to the moon, the CIA coached astronauts, plus deathbed confessions. 00:10:39
4️⃣ Charlie Duke, Apollo astronaut: "You're willfully ignorant if you don't believe that we landed on the moon." He recalls the thrill of lunar exploration & leaving experiments on the surface. 00:43:01
5️⃣ William Shatner, Captain Kirk himself, weighs in: "Denying the moon landings is like the denial of humanity." 00:43:43
6️⃣ Bart Sibrel points to anomalous shadows in photos as 'proof' of studio fakery. 00:12:08 Brian Keating responds with science: Van Allen belts are always cited, but the evidence from NASA and global agencies says otherwise. 00:16:10
7️⃣ Charlie Duke shares: "We brought back 600 pounds of moon rocks. Where did they come from?" 00:43:23
8️⃣ William Shatner on the mindset of doubters: "These crazy individuals shouldn't have our attention. It's absurd." 00:43:50
9️⃣ Bart Sibrel declares even Elon Musk ‘knows the moon missions are fake’: "He’s playing ball. He didn’t want to bite the hand that feeds him." 00:23:57
🔟 Brian Keating, putting it simply: "To fake the moon landings would have been much more cost-prohibitive, difficult, and involve a much larger conspiracy than actually doing them." 00:24:47
👨🚀 Charlie Duke and William Shatner agree: Space exploration is about courage, relentless training, and humanity's drive to "boldly go." If Artemis fails? "We're going to try again. We're not going to stop." 00:39:50
Which side are you on?
Moon magic or moon madness? 🌑🔬
👇 Dive into the debate, drop your favorite quote, and let’s see who wins the Twitter universe! #MoonLanding #SpaceDebate #PiersMorganUncensored
🗞️ Newsletter
INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE: Newsletter
🌕 “You're Full Of S!” Piers Morgan Takes Down Moon Landing Denier | ARTemis II Debate
This week on INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE, our host Brian Keating joined Piers Morgan on Uncensored for a no-holds-barred debate that pushed conspiracy theories to the limits—and then some. Here’s your digest of the seismic moments, scientific insights, and, yes, plenty of spirited back-and-forths.
🚀 Moon Landing: Myth vs. Monument
Charlie Duke, Apollo astronaut and the youngest person to walk on the moon, joined the discussion to confront conspiracies head-on. His take?
“You're willfully ignorant if you don't believe that we landed on the moon.” 00:29
Supporting him, William Shatner tapped into the psychology of denialism:
“What is the mindset of somebody who said, well, it didn't really happen? That's like the denial of humanity. These crazy individuals shouldn't have our attention.” 00:34
🌑 THE CONTROVERSY: Bart Sibrel’s Claims
Conspiracy theorist Bart Sibrel revisited his infamous moon landing denial, including supposed “anomalous” photographs, the Van Allen radiation belt, and alleged CIA cover-ups.
But Brian Keating set the record straight:
Pointed out the vast scientific and international evidence supporting the Apollo missions
Highlighted how even the Soviets (US enemies in the Space Race) coordinated with NASA and recognized the landings as genuine 16:47
Debunked the Van Allen belt argument: “Van Allen testified that the belts, if traversed safely, were no threat to astronauts beyond getting a few chest X rays” 15:46
“To fake the moon landings would have been much more cost prohibitive, difficult, and involve a much larger conspiracy than actually doing them.” 24:47
🛰️ Artemis II and the Future of Deep Space
The Artemis II mission will soon send humans further from Earth than ever before. Both Charlie Duke and William Shatner reflected on the courage required, paralleled to the earliest space missions and test pilots’ legacy.
“We're going to make it successful... That's the attitude of the space program.” — Charlie Duke 40:10
🪨 Evidence That Endures
From 600 pounds of moon rocks to high-res lunar images of Apollo landing sites, the flood of scientific proof is overwhelming. As Charlie Duke bluntly put it:
“We left experiments packages. Every landing site has been photographed... The evidence is overwhelming that we landed on the moon.” 42:43
✨ Final Word
With Artemis II poised for history and memories of Apollo still fresh for those who dared the journey, INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE reminds us: skepticism is healthy—but facts, evidence, and insatiable curiosity will always propel humanity forward.
Want more?
Make sure you’re subscribed—because next week, we’re going even further.
Listen to the full episode on
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Stay curious,
The INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE Team
❓ Questions
Discussion Questions
Bart Sibrel claims the U.S. faked the moon landings due to technological limitations and Cold War pressure. What evidence does he present for this claim, and how is it challenged by Brian Keating and Piers Morgan? (00:04:30, 00:07:37)
Brian Keating draws a parallel between delayed returns to the South Pole and gaps in moon missions. How effective is this analogy in debunking conspiracy claims about technological regression? (00:05:41)
The Van Allen radiation belts are central to moon landing denial arguments. How do Bart Sibrel and Brian Keating interpret NASA engineer Kelly Smith's comments differently? (00:14:08, 00:15:28)
Both Piers Morgan and Charlie Duke refer to photographic evidence and physical artifacts (like moon rocks) from the Apollo missions. What kind of evidence do you find most convincing in settling historical scientific debates? (00:43:01)
The episode discusses the psychological risk-taking and mindset of astronauts, as explored by William Shatner and Charlie Duke. How do their perspectives shape your view of space exploration and risk? (00:30:40, 00:38:59)
Bart Sibrel suggests that conspiracy theories persist due to public mistrust toward government and past deceptions. What role does institutional trust play in shaping acceptance or denial of scientific achievements? (00:22:04)
What impact do you think televised confrontations, such as Bart Sibrel being punched by Buzz Aldrin, have on the public understanding of scientific truth and conspiracy claims? (00:01:35)
Piers Morgan raises the issue of technological progress—for example, Concorde’s retirement as a regression in air travel speed. Are there non-conspiratorial reasons why we might see apparent backward steps in technology or exploration? (00:06:37)
William Shatner reflects on the unknowns and dangers of new missions like Artemis II. How do fear and uncertainty impact public support for ambitious science initiatives? (00:32:15)
Charlie Duke calls those who deny the moon landings “willfully ignorant.” What, if any, are the productive ways to engage with or debate those who hold fringe scientific views? (00:42:43)
curiosity, value fast, hungry for more
✅ The greatest accomplishment in human history—or the most elaborate hoax ever?
✅ Piers Morgan and Brian Keating go head-to-head with moon landing denier Bart Sibrel on The INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE Podcast.
✅ From shadowy conspiracies to the future of spaceflight, this episode dives deep with real astronauts, NASA engineers, and legendary guests.
✅ Decide for yourself: Is doubt proof of curiosity, or just a symptom of a post-truth world? Listen and challenge your assumptions.
Conversation Starters
Conversation Starters for "You're Full Of S!" Piers Morgan Takes Down Moon Landing Denier | INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE Podcast
Was the Moon landing real or fake? After hearing Bart Sibrel and Brian Keating debate, do you think the moon landings were successfully achieved or staged? Why?
Van Allen Belts Debate: Kelly Smith says NASA must solve challenges posed by the Van Allen radiation belts before sending humans through them (14:08). Do you agree this proves the moon landings couldn't have happened, or was this about new missions?
Conspiracy Scale: How plausible is it that hundreds of thousands of NASA employees and international scientists would keep a moon landing hoax secret for decades? Is Bart Sibrel's analogy of "eyewitnesses vs. bank tellers" convincing?
Moon Rocks & Evidence: Charlie Duke describes collecting 600 pounds of moon rocks and leaving experiments on the lunar surface (43:23). Do you think these are compelling evidence for real lunar missions?
Risk & Courage: After hearing Charlie Duke and William Shatner discuss the risks of space exploration (35:12), what do you think motivates astronauts to embark on such dangerous missions?
Technological Regression: Bart Sibrel claims it's suspicious we can't repeat Apollo's accomplishments with better technology today (12:12). Do you agree, or are there valid technical/economic reasons for the gap?
Cold War Motivation: Does Bart Sibrel’s theory about staging the moon landings to win the Cold War over the USSR (18:25) make sense given the historical context?
International Confirmation: Brian Keating cites evidence from Soviet, Chinese, and Indian space agencies supporting the legitimacy of the Apollo missions (17:08). Does international recognition strengthen your belief in the moon landings?
Artemis II Excitement: Are you excited for NASA’s Artemis II mission as described in the episode (01:08)? What are your hopes and fears for humanity’s next steps in space?
Moon Landing Denial Mindset: William Shatner asks: "What is the mindset of somebody who said, well, it didn't really happen?" (43:40). Why do you think some people remain skeptical or outright deny the moon landings?
Feel free to pick a topic, share your thoughts, and start the discussion!
🐦 Business Lesson Tweet Thread
Moon Landing Debates: What We Can Learn About Truth, Risk, and Progress 🚀
1/ The moon landing debate isn’t just about space—it’s about how we choose truth. Bart Sibrel says it’s all a lie; others say the evidence is overwhelming. 00:00:00
2/ To build anything big, you need people to trust something—if everyone is skeptical, nothing gets made. Brian Keating warns that undermining the truth-seeking process is fatal for society. 00:02:50
3/ The toughest critics force us to explain better. Conspiracy, science, or “willful ignorance”—Charlie Duke calls it. 00:00:29 Pushback isn't a bug; it's the system testing itself.
4/ Don't pretend mistakes or failures never happen. Look how astronauts deal with real risk: prep, train hard, then boldly go anyway. Charlie Duke: “We never thought about not coming back.” 00:37:38
5/ Progress isn’t linear. Maybe the tech gets better, maybe not, but the mindset is everything. William Shatner: “There’s insanity in wanting to do this. But these explorers, they get off on the adventure.” 00:31:43
6/ You can debate facts, but unless you’re willing to face risk—and learn from it—nothing actually moves forward. Charlie Duke: “If it fails, we’re going to try again…That is just the attitude.” 00:39:50
7/ The lesson? Building—truth, products, anything—is about confronting doubt, prepping for disaster, and refusing to quit.
8/ If you want impossible things, you’ll need resilience and curiosity. The rest is just noise.
END
✏️ Custom Newsletter
🚀 THE INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE PODCAST NEWSLETTER
Subject: Was the Moon Landing Faked? Piers Morgan vs. Conspiracy – New Episode Alert!
Introduction
Hey space enthusiasts, truth seekers, and conspiracy debunkers!
Our latest episode just dropped, and it’s guaranteed to spark debate, laughter, and genuine awe. Piers Morgan plays referee as moon landing denier Bart Sibrel goes head-to-head with astrophysicist Brian Keating, legendary Apollo astronaut Charlie Duke, actor-astronaut William Shatner, and NASA engineer Kelly Smith. Welcome to unparalleled banter, hard science, and off-the-wall claims – all uncensored.
5 Keys You’ll Learn
Conspiracy Logic – Bart Sibrel lays out his moon landing hoax evidence, from NASA clips to supposed CIA cover-ups (00:05:29), and you’ll hear how these theories unravel when faced with scientific scrutiny.
Apollo Astronaut’s Perspective – Charlie Duke recounts what it was REALLY like to walk on the moon, from training to collecting moon rocks (00:28:19), and his answer to everyone doubting the landings.
How NASA Engineers Solve for "Impossible" – Kelly Smith explains the Van Allen radiation belt challenge and tells us exactly what needs to be overcome to send people safely beyond Earth (00:14:08).
Cold War Context: Why the Moon mattered – Discover how the lunar race wasn’t just science—it was national pride, politics, and immense pressure (00:18:25).
What’s Next: Artemis II and Beyond – Hear about the most powerful NASA rocket ever built, and why Artemis missions mark a new era for exploration (00:25:12).
Fun Fact
Did you know? Charlie Duke was just 36 years old when he became the youngest human ever to walk on the moon. He also left experiments behind that operated for years—and yes, the lunar rover (and their tracks!) were photographed by orbiting satellites decades later (00:43:05).
Outtro
Whether you're passionate about science, love a wild conspiracy, or just want to figure out how to get to New York faster than Concorde, this episode is for you. Expect facts, figures, and even a call-out for Bart Sibrel to settle the debate ON THE MOON itself (00:26:23). Seriously!
Call to Action
Ready to dive in?
👉 Listen to the full episode now on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube.
If you enjoyed the ride, hit subscribe, share it with your friends, and keep dreaming BIG with us into the impossible.
Stay curious,
The [Into the Impossible] Podcast Team 🚀
🎓 Lessons Learned
1. Moon Landing Conspiracies Debated
Arguments for and against moon landing authenticity were explored, highlighting skepticism and the burden of proof.
2. Scientific Reasoning and Evidence
Scientific methodologies and evidence were discussed as critical tools to challenge conspiracy theories and search for truth.
3. Van Allen Belts Explained
Understanding the radiation belts’ risks and how space missions plan trajectories to safely pass through them.
4. The Importance of Truth-Seeking
Undermining scientific inquiry threatens society; truth-seeking is paramount even amidst widespread misinformation.
5. Legacy of Apollo Astronauts
Firsthand accounts from moonwalkers showcase personal experience, rigorous training, and humanity’s milestones in space.
6. Artemis II Mission Significance
Artemis II represents a step toward returning humans to the moon and possibly Mars, continuing exploration.
7. International Cooperation in Space
Recognition that space exploration involved coordination—even between Cold War adversaries—for safe missions.
8. Technology’s Limits and Progress
Why major achievements can sometimes be difficult to replicate, due to shifting priorities, resources, or technological constraints.
9. Psychological Risks of Exploration
Astronauts and explorers confront enormous risks, uncertainty, and the possibility of failure in pursuit of breakthroughs.
10. Perseverance After Setbacks
Failure does not halt progress; the space program’s mindset emphasizes fixing issues and persistently striving for success.
10 Surprising and Useful Frameworks and Takeaways
Ten Most Surprising & Useful Frameworks and Takeaways
1. Conspiracy Logistics: The Scale Problem
Brian Keating argues that believing the moon landings were faked requires accepting that hundreds of thousands of people were part of the conspiracy, an implausible logistical feat (02:11).
Takeaway: Large-scale conspiracies are impractical due to sheer numbers and diversified expertise.
2. Post-Truth Society Framework
In the age of "post-truth," entitlement to personal theories does not equate to facts. Brian Keating warns that undermining truth-seeking endangers society (02:35).
Takeaway: Facts and truth-seeking processes must be protected to maintain societal stability.
3. Historical Analogy — Technical Milestones and Gaps
Bart Sibrel claims it's unprecedented that a technological feat (moon landing) can't be replicated after 50 years, comparing it to other breakthroughs (05:04).
Brian Keating rebuts with the South Pole analogy, showing gaps between initial achievement and repeat attempts don't imply falsity (05:46).
Takeaway: Long gaps in repeating achievements can occur and don’t inherently prove fraud.
4. Radiation Belt Safety Navigation
The Van Allen belt debate, with Kelly Smith outlining engineering challenges for safe passage (14:08), and Brian Keating explaining varied belt intensity and safe paths (16:28).
Takeaway: Scientific understanding and navigation strategy can mitigate apparent dangers.
5. International Verification Framework
Brian Keating highlights global corroboration: Soviet, Chinese, and Indian scientists independently verified lunar landings (17:28), not just Americans.
Takeaway: Rival or independent nations’ data offers powerful external validation.
6. Motivation Analysis for Suspected Fraud
Piers Morgan probes Bart Sibrel's theory about Cold War motivation—staging moon landings for national image (18:36).
Takeaway: Suspected fraud in major events should be deeply interrogated for plausible motivation and risk analysis.
7. Failure Resilience Mindset
Both Charlie Duke and William Shatner explain that space exploration teams expect failure but see it as reason to innovate, not quit (40:15).
Takeaway: Resilience after setbacks is essential for progress in exploration and technology.
8. Preparedness and Training Model
Charlie Duke stresses exhaustive training ("doing it in your sleep") as key for handling unknowns (41:54).
Takeaway: Deep, repeated simulation and mental preparation reduce risk and increase success chances.
9. Mindset of Explorers vs. Public
William Shatner distinguishes the explorer/test pilot mindset (“insanity”) from ordinary people's risk aversion (31:19).
Takeaway: Understanding the psychological makeup of adventurers is crucial when evaluating extraordinary achievements.
10. Photographic Evidence and Interpretation
The discussion on shadow angles (Bart Sibrel vs. Brian Keating) demonstrates the importance of expertise when evaluating alleged “smoking gun” photo evidence (12:07, 13:00).
Takeaway: Proper expertise (science vs. cinematography) is required to assess visual evidence in technical disputes.
Bonus: Budget Reality for Space Exploration
NASA's annual budget equals what American women spend on makeup, debunking myths of astronomical costs (25:54).
Takeaway: Major scientific achievements often operate under surprisingly modest funding.
These frameworks and takeaways can be applied broadly to critical thinking, evaluation of claims, conspiracy assessment, and risk management.
Clip Able
Clip 1: "Moon Landing Conspiracy Showdown"
Timestamps: 00:00 - 03:00
Caption:
Bart Sibrel boldly claims the moon landing was faked, sparking a heated debate with Brian Keating and Piers Morgan about government mistruths, the scale of conspiracy required, and the importance of truth-seeking in science.
"To believe the moon landings were fake, you need to suspend scientific reasoning and believe in vast conspiracies. Is it possible?"
Clip 2: "Concorde, South Pole & Technological Progress: Does History Repeat?"
Timestamps: 06:30 - 09:30
Caption:
Piers Morgan, Brian Keating, and Bart Sibrel clash over whether technological milestones are always repeatable. Concorde’s retired speed, the South Pole’s long gap between visits, and the complexity of moon landings all come under scrutiny.
"Does human progress always move forward, or can society step back? And what does it mean for space exploration?"
Clip 3: "Van Allen Belts: Did Radiation Make the Moon Landing Impossible?"
Timestamps: 14:00 - 17:00
Caption:
A viral NASA engineer clip prompts Bart Sibrel and Brian Keating to debate the dangers of the Van Allen radiation belts. Is passing them truly a fatal challenge, or can spacecraft navigate safely? The scientific breakdown gets passionate.
"If NASA says we must solve the radiation problem before sending people—did Apollo ever really go beyond Earth orbit?"
Clip 4: "Artemis II & the Spirit of Exploration"
Timestamps: 27:00 - 30:00
Caption:
Piers Morgan, Charlie Duke, and William Shatner reflect on human risk, adventure, and the next era of moon missions. From falling on the lunar surface to emotional space flights, the thrill and challenge of going further than ever before is front and center.
"What does it feel like to explore the unknown—and how do astronauts prepare for the possibility they may not return?"
Clip 5: "Evidence & Mindset: Why Apollo Astronauts Believe"
Timestamps: 42:30 - 45:30
Caption:
Charlie Duke and William Shatner tackle skeptics: why the evidence for moon landings is overwhelming and why denial is 'willfully ignorant.' Photos, rocks, experiments, and the mindset of pioneers come together for a stirring defense of human achievement in space.
"600 pounds of moon rocks, lunar vehicles, experiment packages—how much proof do you need? And what kind of thinking denies humanity's greatest accomplishments?"
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