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Four-part docuseries on the 1986 Challenger space shuttle disaster, unpacking an indelible moment for a generation of Americans.Four-part docuseries on the 1986 Challenger space shuttle disaster, unpacking an indelible moment for a generation of Americans.Four-part docuseries on the 1986 Challenger space shuttle disaster, unpacking an indelible moment for a generation of Americans.
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I can remember this as a kid and always had a fascination with the disaster. And this is a amazing documentary. Brings back so many feelings.
Gripping, informative, and historically significant
Many born in the 90's have no recollection of a time when space exploration failed. This documentary looks at the successes of NASA in terms of inclusion during the 1970's and 80's. Then looked at how NASA got greedy and tried to do too many things at once, 7 great people were sacrificed in this greediness in January of 1986.
I found it interesting that the name "Roger Boisjoly" wasn't mentioned once. The man who probably fought harder than anyone to fix the o-ring problem gets passed by?
While the series held my interest for all four episodes, a little more tech and a little less teacher would have been better, for me at least.
I have spent much of my adult life avoiding thinking about this tragedy. It is a case study on how an organization can become wicked and its members essentially the epitome of evil.
For me it was just horribly sad to watch this and there is a prevalent sense of horror as events move toward the inevitable ending.
What made it worth watching for me was to learn about Feynman's role. I knew the outline of it but not the specifics. It's quite amazing.
What astonishes me is there are these awful, old, gross NASA administrators who are still totally unrepentant, although they are clearly and obviously to blame for what happened.
For me it was just horribly sad to watch this and there is a prevalent sense of horror as events move toward the inevitable ending.
What made it worth watching for me was to learn about Feynman's role. I knew the outline of it but not the specifics. It's quite amazing.
What astonishes me is there are these awful, old, gross NASA administrators who are still totally unrepentant, although they are clearly and obviously to blame for what happened.
Did you know
- TriviaWhile the Challenger crew were the first to die during a mission, they were not the first NASA crew to be killed. The three-man crew of Apollo 204 (aka, Apollo 1), Gus Grissom, Roger B. Chaffee and Edward H. White II were killed in a fire in their capsule during a launch practice run on the launch pad on January 27, 1967. The docuseries makes no mention of this earlier fatality (what the NASA engineer said was that no NASA astronaut had been "killed on their way to space" to fit the narrative of the Challenger deaths, so it was a matter of semantics).
- How many seasons does Challenger: The Final Flight have?Powered by Alexa
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- Runtime45 minutes
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