Planetary Radio: Space Exploration, Astronomy and Science - Emily Calandrelli becomes the hundredth woman in space
Episode Date: January 8, 2025This week, we celebrate a remarkable milestone as Emily Calandrelli, also known as “the Space Gal,” becomes the 100th woman to venture into space. Emily shares her experiences on the Blue ...Origin voyage, what she took to space, and how motherhood influenced her reaction to seeing Earth from space. Then Planetary Society Chief Scientist Bruce Betts joins for What's Up and a list of fun things to do in zero-g. Discover more at: https://www.planetary.org/planetary-radio/2025-100th-woman-in-space See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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The Space Gal becomes the 100th woman to go to space.
This week on Planetary Radio.
I'm Sarah Al Ahmed of the Planetary Society, with more of the human adventure across our
solar system and beyond.
Sometimes space dreams really do come true.
Emily Calandrelli joins us this week
to discuss her experiences becoming the 100th woman
to venture to space.
Then Bruce Betts pops in for What's Up?
and a new random space fact.
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and want to stay informed about the latest space discoveries,
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filled with new and awe-inspiring ways to know the cosmos and our place within it.
Today we celebrate a remarkable milestone. Emily Kalandrelli, known as the Space Gal,
has become the 100th woman to go to space. Her journey symbolizes the progress made over
the decades thanks to countless women who dared to reach for the stars and overcome systemic barriers.
The path was first paved by Valentina Tereshkova, a Soviet cosmonaut that became the first woman
in space in 1963.
It took nearly two decades before another woman followed, Svetlana Savitskaya.
She became the first woman to go to space more than once, the first to conduct a spacewalk,
and the first to board a space station.
I think a lot about Svetlana when I reflect
on how much attitudes towards women in space have changed.
When Svetlana boarded the Salyut 7 space station in 1984,
the cosmonauts on board gifted her an apron
and asked if she could handle the cooking
and the cleaning for the rest of the mission.
In 1983, American Sally Ride became
the first non-Soviet woman in space,
and in 1992, Mae Jemison inspired millions as the first woman of color to venture beyond Earth.
These trailblazers opened the doors for countless others, and today women all over the world are
contributing to crewed spaceflight. Since 2023, Singapore, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and Tigua and Barbuda have all joined the club.
Now, Emily Calandrelli joins that legacy.
An MIT-trained engineer turned Emmy-nominated science communicator.
Emily has inspired so many through her shows and books.
Some of her TV shows include Exploration Outer Space and Emily's Wonder Lab.
She was also a correspondent on one of our CEO's TV shows,
Del Nye Saves the World.
I was particularly touched by one of Emily's books,
Breach for the Stars,
which she wrote in part for her daughter.
As a longtime fan of Emily's work,
I could not be more thrilled to see her achieve this dream.
On November 22nd, 2024,
Emily blasted off on a Blue Origin New Shepard
suborbital rocket as part of the NS-28 mission. It was the off on a Blue Origin New Shepard suborbital rocket
as part of the NS-28 mission.
It was the 28th flight for the New Shepard program and Blue Origin's ninth human spaceflight.
But what Emily didn't know when she began her journey to try to go to space was that
she would ultimately become the 100th woman to do so.
Hey, Emily!
Hello, hello.
Thanks for joining me.
It is wonderful to meet you for the first time.
Yeah, I'm so excited to be here.
And right after this huge moment in your life, congratulations from me and everyone at the
Planetary Society for becoming the 100th woman in space.
I'm sure you're grappling with ridiculous emotions right now.
Oh, yeah.
Like, during decades in the making, I don't think I'm going to come down from this high for a long time.
What first inspired you to want to, you know, not just love space and try to
communicate it to people, but actually take this step and do everything
you need to do to go to space? Because that's a lot.
Yeah, well to be honest, ever since I started
my education in aerospace engineering and I learned of suborbital spaceflight, that was an area
of spaceflight that I was like, I want to do that. Because when I
was in college, I did a microgravity program, I flew on a
parabolic airplane, the vomit comet, and experience
weightlessness in that way. And I was like, well, the next
logical step after this is suborbital spaceflight. And I was like, well, the next logical step after this is suborbital space flight.
And so ever since I was a college student, this has been a dream and something that I had planned
to try to find a way to do. Yeah, I know there's so much complexity to the way that people think
about commercial space. But then I see instances like this, where it empowers people who are
civilians or just have these dreams of going to space to actually be able to do it.
Setting aside all of those other conversations, it's enabled you to become the 100th woman in space.
When did you realize that you weren't just going to space, but you were going to be hitting this milestone?
Oh, it wasn't until a couple of weeks before.
For the longest time, I thought I was either going to be 99 or 101.
The numbering system is really interesting because there are some people who account
for Krista McCullough, who unfortunately never reach space, but they want to make sure that
she has her flowers for being an astronaut herself.
And so I thought that I was going to be 101 for a while.
And I was like, I'm going to make the 101 Dalmatians.
Dalmatians are going to be my entire personality.
Like 101 is my number.
I'm going to get tattooed.
Like that was going to be my thing.
And then I learned that most official accounts
don't actually count her.
And then for a little while,
I thought it was going to be 99,
depending on how it played out.
But then the Chinese sent up a female taikonaut a couple of weeks before my
space flight. And so I actually had to check with a few different people to be like, no, wait,
what number am I going to be you guys? I, this is, it's all very confusing and complex. And they're
like, no, you're, I had my friend, Suresh Abanla, who is an astronaut with Virgin Galactic, and she was like, no, Emily,
you're officially going to be 100. And I was like, Sarisha, really? Am I really? Is that true? She's
like, yes, I've checked everywhere. And this is somebody who like knows her numbers. And so I
trusted her on that front. And she was the one who officially told me that I was going to be number
100. What a cool moment. I mean, not knowing either way, going to space is a huge achievement,
but it's really wonderful seeing someone who's such a public figure,
who's done so much to inspire women in space,
but also kids who have this passion for space,
to be that face of this moment in history.
I feel like that's really poignant and gives it a little bit more visibility
than it would otherwise.
Yeah, it feels really nice.
And I take it as such an honor to be a bookend to this milestone
that I think, like so many of the women that I know that filled those positions
well through 99, this was a hard fought, hard won milestone
where women for the longest time weren't even allowed to pursue this type of career.
And for so many of the women there, like this was not an easy thing.
They had to fight tooth and nail for their number.
And I feel very honored to follow in their footsteps, to kind of pave the path for numbers 101 through 1000.
And yeah, I, it just,
one of the things that I brought up into space was a picture of the 99 women who came before me as kind of an homage to all of the work that they had done to allow me to be number 100. details because I feel like what you decided to bring up with you is very poignant and I loved your your series of videos on it that was fantastic but you
know that was a huge decision-making point after you'd already been told that
you got to go to space. Did you have to keep it a secret for a little while?
Because I know that's a thing I've heard from other people that go on these
flights. I had to keep the date a secret so I knew when I was flying long before I
was able to share it, which was the
hardest part because people were like, well, what are you going up? Where are you going up? And then
we were allowed to share that we were on the next flight. But when I said that people thought, oh,
the next flight, maybe it's next year, maybe it's, you know, a few months from now. And I was like,
you guys, it's next week. And so when I was finally able to share that I was going up, I was, it was
a very fast turnaround because from the point that I was allowed to share that I was going up, I was already
headed to astronaut training.
So it all happens like very fast for the people who follow me.
How much training did you have to go through in order to go on this flight?
Yeah, see, this is the beauty of suborbital spaceflight and these rockets itself because
this rocket is fully autonomous.
I think something that most people are not aware of
is that there is no pilot on board.
There's no pilot inside the capsule.
There's no Blue Origin employee inside the capsule.
We are all new passengers to this vehicle.
And so there's only three days of training.
Now, of course, the months leading up to getting there,
there's a lot of like virtual training that we do
to sort of understand all of the things that can go right
and all of the things that can go wrong
because they take it very seriously
to have informed consent.
And before you sign on the dotted line,
you really need to know that you are putting yourself
on top of a controlled bomb in a way, like this is not a joy ride,
this is not bungee jumping or skydiving,
like we are participating in the very risky,
very dangerous endeavor of human space flight.
And you have to know that going in,
like you have to really, really want this.
And so we go through all of that informed consent
before we get to the astronaut training facility. But once we're there, we have three days of training where we run
through a mission simulator. They have a mock-up of the capsule there and we go
through all of the nominal scenarios, what to expect and how to get in and out
of your seat, but also all of the emergency scenarios. I was in one of the
seats that you might consider the emergency exit row and it was me in one seat that was responsible for the fire suppression
system and then myself in another seat was also responsible for opening the
hatch in case of like an emergency egress where we would need to very
quickly exit the vehicle and of course like if there's anything where that the
air is compromised in the cabin,
we each have masks to don and they're very, like very cool masks that you can put on with one hand
and there's a special way you're supposed to put it on. So we practice everything to make sure that
there's muscle memory in case there's an emergency scenario. But then after that, on the day of launch,
like you get in your seat and you feel really prepared. Because you not only do you know what to expect, but you know what to do
if there's something that comes up that is unexpected.
This is one of those moments that you look forward to and you prepare for, but
as you said, you're basically strapping yourself to a controlled bomb.
Any moment you go to space is, there's a great deal of risk in it. Did
you feel that bit of tension or fear before it happened or did it hit you at
any point or was with the excitement just to be able to go to space enough to
overpower that feeling? Oh no I was fearful the entire time until I touched
back down on land. I am I'm not someone who like doesn't feel fear like that is not, I am not someone who prepares so much
that I'm just focused on the mission.
I feel fear, I feel it, and then I do it anyway.
And I think that's just sort of my normal human survival
instinct kicking in, but my heart was pounding a mile a minute.
But also there's this emotion in your head where you're just like,
I've dreamed of this moment for decades and now I'm here and now it's happening.
And now the other part of my fear was that the launch was going to get delayed or scrubbed.
And all of a sudden I wouldn't be the 100th woman in space.
Because when Sarisha told me that that was going to be my number,
all of a sudden that became very important to me.
Like I really want that number now.
And so when we get on the launch pad,
I'm just like looking at the countdown clock.
Like, please no delays, no holds, no delays, no delays.
Come on.
And then once it gets to, I think two minutes and 20 seconds,
T minus two minutes and 20 seconds,
that's when the vehicle is fully autonomous.
So at that point, like things can still go awry, but at that point it's mostly on. Like the rocket is fully autonomous. So at that point, like things can still go awry,
but at that point it's mostly on,
like the rocket is gonna go.
And so once we got to that two minutes and 20 seconds,
I had this like sigh of relief of like,
all right, it's happening.
Like we're gonna go,
we're gonna at least head to space, towards space today.
Hopefully, you know, everything goes right
and we actually get there.
But that point I wasn't worried about any delays or holds anymore.
But yeah, when I was sitting on that launch pad, I was sort of running through all of the different
people in my life that I wanted to like, be grateful for and think about. And I thought about
myself as a younger kid. And I thought like, man, like, girl, you did it. Like you freaking did it. You're here.
You did it. And I was thinking of my younger self and I was thinking of my parents and feeling
gratitude for everything that they did that allowed me to be there. And I was thinking of like my
husband and my kids and just like gratitude that I found a support system of people who never made me feel guilty for having these big dreams, but instead
like worked with me to find a way to make it happen. And I knew that all of my friends and
family were really nervous right now. But yeah, it was very, just a very surreal moment.
Mm-hmm. Now in those moments where you're going through something really intense, I think thinking
about all the people that supported you along the way and the people that are most important
to you and how much it took to accomplish that dream is a great way to overcome that
fear because nothing worth doing is ever easy, honestly.
Oh, yeah.
And at that point, it was like, like, I'm going to launch this space no matter what.
I might as well enjoy the ride.
Like there's no way to get out now. There's no turning back. I might as well enjoy the ride. Like there's no way to get out now.
There's no turning back.
I might as well just have fun at this point.
What was the ride actually like?
It was better than I could have imagined.
It was like I'm telling you, before I did the flight,
I thought, you know, this is so risky.
I can only do this like I'm only ever going to try to do this one time,
because I feel so guilty, like not just risking my life, but risking my kids mother's life, risking my husband's wife's life, like this is a
whole whole thing that I can only do once. And then as soon as I got touched back down on earth,
I was like, I will do anything to do that again. Best thing I've ever done in my whole life.
But basically, you know, you had the first couple of minutes you're ascending. So you're accelerating really quickly and you get two to three G's. It's not it doesn't
feel too heavy, but you can feel the pressure like you can feel yourself being pushed back into your
seat. And then you're watching the world fall away below you. And then the thing that's a little bit
unnerving is and I kind of forgot this in the moment, they told us to expect this,
but I forgot this in the moment,
the rocket bends a little bit.
It goes at an angle.
Cause of course it has this like ballistic trajectory.
So it goes like kind of like a rainbow motion.
So there's a little bit of a tilt to the rocket
and you feel that,
you feel that sort of angled acceleration on your body.
And in the moment I was like, oh gosh,
is it tilting? Is it tilting too much? What's happening here? Because on a previous flight,
the rocket had tilted too much and then the emergency escape system ejected the capsule away
from the rocket. And the whole time that's happening, I'm like, please don't let that happen.
I want to make it to space. Please don't let the emergency escape system eject me.
But you know, that was normal.
That was nominal.
And then at two minutes and 18 seconds,
the main engine of the rocket cuts off.
So that's MECO.
This is one of like the biggest moments
in the launch profile.
This is the moment where the flight director,
I asked him, I was like,
at what point during the flight profile,
do you take a breath?
Like, when do you like sort of calm down?
And he was like, at MECO.
MECO is when I calm down.
Because I think a lot of the risky aspects of the flight happened right before then.
And so MECO happened and I'm like, okay, we got it.
We made it to MECO.
And that's when you feel weightless.
So main engine cuts off.
All of a sudden you feel weightless.
You're free floating inside the capsule, but your harness is still on. Ten seconds after that, that's when the capsule is ejected from
the booster. That's the separation point. And you hear it and you feel it. It's like a kick in the
pants and it sounds like, whoomf. And so that's when you're allowed to unstrap from your harness
and float around the capsule. And at that same moment, while you're floating in space,
the rocket is coming down to land on land
to be reused on a future flight.
So at that point, you have about like three and a half,
four minutes to float around the capsule.
We practiced this over and over and over again.
So we knew exactly how we wanted to use
those like three and a half minutes.
And for the first 10 seconds, we came together,
we took a crew photo.
And then for the last three minutes,
every one of us went back to our window,
and we just looked out the window.
This was the advice given to us
by former Blue Origin astronauts.
They were like, don't play with weightless candies,
don't try to drink water or anything.
You can get a weightless experience on the ground
with those parabolic flights.
You don't need to go to space for that. So just spend your time looking out the window. And that's what we did. anything, you can get a weightless experience on the ground with those parabolic flights.
You don't need to go to space for that. So just spend your time looking out the window.
And that's what we did. I said hello to my kids. I said hello to my husband, to my parents.
And then I just went and looked out the window. And it was like, it's so hard to explain because
it's so many extreme emotions happening at once.
For one, my adrenaline is still pumping.
I still have fear that's like latent in the system.
And then two, you're disoriented because you're weightless.
Your feet are on the ceiling and your head is on the floor.
And it's like, your body is trying to orient itself
to understand like what's going on.
But then I'm looking out the window
and I'm seeing new things I've never seen before,
new colors, new details, new contrast.
And my brain is like trying to categorize everything
all at once.
And it's like, what's happening?
What am I seeing?
What am I looking at?
But then at the same time, I'm like, I did it.
I'm here.
I feel the sense of pride and gratitude and just like joy,
like unadulterated joy.
And so you have all of that happening at once.
It's the most overwhelming feeling in the best way possible.
And then the alarm starts going off,
which tells you you have 30 seconds to get back
into your seat and strap in before you descend
back down to earth, which is another pretty extreme part
of the flight profile that you want to be seated.
You get buckled in and then on the way down,
you decelerate so quickly that you feel up be seated, you get buckled in, and then on the way down you decelerate so
quickly that you feel up to 5 Gs. That was part of the flight that I was like, oh this is more
intense than I was expecting. This was, this 5 Gs feels like your face is melting off, it's like a
little bit harder to breathe, and then after a few minutes of that the drogue shoots, the smaller
parachutes deploy, and you hear them eject from the top of the capsule like a woof.
And then those slow it down a little bit farther.
And then after that, 10 seconds after that, you hear the mains,
the main parachutes come out of the capsule.
And then at that point, you're really just floating back down to the ground.
And I looked out the window and I counted one, two,
and I waited for them to rotate a little bit and I saw three mains and I was like, we have three, we've got three parachutes!
Because that former flight only had two parachutes and then once I saw three parachutes I was like,
you guys, we did it, we're safe, we did it, and then you laying back down on land and it's
it's just like the most exhilarating ride of your life. Who were some of the people that went to space with you on this journey and did you make
any friendships along the way?
Yes, I made so many friendships along the way.
I think going through an experience like this, you are bound to be connected for life.
And there was a couple, Sharon and Mark Hegel, who had gone up on a previous flight.
And so they were really helpful in giving us advice for how to best use our time. And they were one of the
ones who had told us to look out the window and they even told us
to flip upside down to get that perspective of your feet being
in space and earth being above you. So very grateful to them.
They were like our space mom and dad, who are kind of giving us
advice. Austin won a raffle to be on the spaceflight. He said
he felt like the luckiest person in the room and he shared a lot of like philosophical
wisdom. I feel like he was very good at sharing wisdom throughout the flight. And
then JD, who was a police officer turned serial entrepreneur, was there. And we
also had Hank, who was a pilot. And they all just have like a wealth of expertise.
They each had different personalities.
And we just all bonded in this really beautiful experience
that we were lucky enough to share together.
Yeah, those are the kinds of friends of chance
that you make and somehow become just deeply
embedded in your life.
I'm sure no matter how separated you get,
you'll probably have a reunion in 10, 20 years.
100%, yeah, exactly.
They all had kids and so I would be like making videos
for their kids saying hello.
And they, yeah, we feel like not only are we connected,
but our families are connected
because we brought like girlfriends and wives
and husbands were there and they were all like interacting
and the kids were there and it was just yeah it was very magical.
And I felt it watching the videos of you in space. Your reaction was I mean
anybody's reaction in that moment is always very poignant and makes me very
emotional but your reaction was so so, so genuine. And then listening to the interviews of you
after the fact, you explained that essentially
it was like the reaction that you felt
after having your children.
Could you talk a little bit about that?
Because I found that that was a whole different context
that it only occurred to me,
could only be provided by a mom going to space.
Not that you're the first, but there haven't been that many.
There haven't been that many.
I mean, there's only been 100 women in total that have gone to space.
And so with childbirth, you have that same feeling of like adrenaline and fear, right?
So you have like those emotions going on as well.
It's also a very physical thing that you're going through.
But also there's this immense joy and this gratitude
and this idea of like, oh my God, I did it.
Like when I was pregnant, the idea of birth was very scary.
Like giving birth to a child is like,
how is my body gonna do that?
That's so scary.
And I thought the same thing with space flight.
Like, this is scary, How am I gonna do this?
And there's also this moment of this thing
that I've thought about, maybe I've seen pictures of,
like on a sonogram, this thing that I've loved
for a long time that I've known for a long time,
but finally being able to see it with your own eyes.
It's this like, hello, I see you, I love you.
This is the first time I get to see you.
Like, and you're like memorizing all of the details
of their nose and eyes and fingers.
And like, I felt the same feeling
when I looked at our planet.
Like, I'm trying to memorize every single detail
because this is the first time I feel like I'm meeting you.
And so it was that overwhelming sense of like fear and and gratitude
and love and just it was very physical as well. So all of those things are going on at once. And
it was wild to me. I didn't expect that when I was coming down, I was trying to like understand all
the feelings that I was having. And that was the closest thing that I could compare it to.
And I was talking to some women in my life and I was like,
going to space is the most magical thing I've ever done,
but it's the same magic that so many women
have known for centuries.
Like this magic is something that women have had
ever since we've been around.
And I was like, maybe that's why the universe sent men first
so that they could feel this magic too.
Talk about overview effect, right? That's a beautiful way to put it. The other side of that,
though, is not just the experience of the Earth and seeing for the first time, but truly grappling
with the darkness around it. I've heard so many people express that, you know, they knew space
was big and dark, but it wasn't until they were actually staring at the blackness
that they fully contextualized what that was.
Exactly. So the first thing that I did when I got to the window
is I flipped upside down.
So my feet were on the ceiling and my head was on the floor.
And so my feet were in space.
And when I looked up, that's when I saw the Earth.
And that's when you really get that sort of off planet feel.
And when I looked down, I was like, that's space. Like, you can hear it in my reaction. I'm like,
that's our planet. And I was like, Oh, my God, that's space. Because it was so immense and so
black. I wasn't expecting to see so much space. I think I just thought like my entire purview
would be filled with the earth,
but it was like 80% space.
And I think that is something that really threw me off
because I was like, ooh, that's spooky.
That's so much space.
And it's so dark, it's so empty.
And it's a color that like can't be replicated
in paint or in a crayon or dot a screen or anything.
And it was it felt like very, very spooky.
I could absolutely see that. I mean, we, we think we're so big, but you take a step back and it really is that that pale blue dot feeling even just in one parabolic arc off of the Earth. Like we are so small and so precious
and spaces. Infinite. It's terrifying and I haven't even personally experienced it yet.
Yes, exactly. Yep. Fingers crossed.
We'll be right back with the rest of my interview with Emily Calandrelli after this short break.
Hi, I'm Asa Stahl, science editor from the Planetary Society.
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planetary.org slash membership. You spoke a little bit about this earlier, about the image you took
to space of the other 99 women that have been there before you, and that was a really beautiful
moment, but you also took so many other things up there with you
that you put so much thought and effort into.
So I wanted to discuss a little bit about those.
Starting off with your father's college ring,
why did you choose to take that with you to space?
Yeah, so I'm from West Virginia,
and my dad is also from West Virginia.
He grew up in poverty.
And poverty in West Virginia is like a different level of poverty.
He just had a really, really rough childhood.
And he was the youngest of four kids to a single mom,
but he was the first person in his family to go to college. He, at the age of 18,
he bought his family their very first car.
And he talked about how that car provided freedom
because before they could only go to places
they could walk or take a bus to.
But that car allowed them to travel
to wherever they wanted whenever they wanted.
And it sort of like opened up their world.
And then when he went to college,
that world expanded a little bit more.
And it was his way of like creating his own dream for himself that wasn't given to him when he was a child.
And in many ways, I feel like my dad ran so that I could fly, so that I could soar, so that I could pursue my dreams.
Because his biggest dream when he was a kid was to not be poor, to be able to afford cereal. Like, he
didn't have these dreams of becoming anything in particular because that is
a privilege afforded to those who have their basic needs covered. And so for
him, his college ring is like this, his most prized possession. It's something
that is this physical manifestation of all of his hard work,
of him believing in himself
that he could get himself to a better place, and he did.
And so I wanted to bring that up with me to space
to be like, we made our world even bigger.
Like, look at the world that we've been given now.
And so that was something that was like meaningful to him and
meaningful to me, meaningful to our family. Ever since I've ever wanted to go to space,
I've known that that was going to be like at least the one thing that I was going to bring with me.
His reaction when you told him was so heartwarming, you could just see it, right? And
that realization of not just the creation of your own dreams and safety,
but the way that he has enabled you and the rest of your family to go out and live these dreams,
all the way to going to space.
Sometimes we don't get to accomplish our dreams, but we get to make better lives for other people.
So it was beautiful to see.
The other thing that I found really meaningful was the bag of pearls or disruptors as you call them. Could you talk a
little bit about that? Yeah, so I wanted to take up something to give away to the women in my life
because I feel like I've been lucky enough to be surrounded by so many women who just break down
barriers in their own life and are often the only women in the rooms that they occupy. And so I was
like, well, what do I want to bring? And I was at a West Virginia jeweler
because one of my missions for my space flight
was to shine a spotlight on West Virginia.
And I was at this local West Virginia jeweler
and I was looking at everything that they had
and they were showing me these pearls.
I was like, oh, these pearls are really pretty.
And I got to thinking, I was like,
well, what is a pearl really?
A pearl is really the result of a disruptor of a system, something that normally
shouldn't be there, something that's often thought of as an
outsider, that is disrupting the system, but creating something
beautiful in the process. And I was like, a lot of the women in
my life are like that they are the disruptors in their own
industries and their own workplaces. And so I just picked out a bunch of pearls to be able to bring them. And so now I'll go back to that West Virginia jeweler and put them on necklaces. And that'll be my my gift to the disruptors in my life. And then the beautiful part is, is that this jeweler in West Virginia is going to make that pearl necklace like they're going to make a replica of it so that anybody who wants to buy it can buy one for the disruptors in their life as well.
So yeah, it was just basically like a gift for a lot of the women in my life.
That's such a beautiful imagery and it's so true.
And here's to all of the disruptors, the women that are integrating into spaces that are
classically not welcoming to us, but all of the underrepresented people in all of these spaces. I'm looking forward to a day
where we can celebrate these 100 milestones for everyone that feels
underrepresented. But in order to do that, we have to increase space
accessibility, which is kind of what commercial space is seeking to do.
Yeah, I think so.
Yeah. Fingers crossed anyway. The last thing I did want
to bring up that you took to space with you and relates to something you said earlier was this
beautiful piece of artwork that you didn't get to take the entire painting up with you obviously
because you only had what was it three pounds you could put in the bag with you. Three pounds in a
little bag, yeah. Yeah, but you spoke a little bit about like thinking about that childhood self
that you envisioned on your way
going to space and how that plays into who you are today and this painting very much reflected that.
Yes, absolutely. So there's this artist that I follow online, Chi Lu. She's at Hello Chi Lu
on Instagram and she just creates the most beautiful effervescence, iridescent star
beautiful effervescence, iridescent, star cloud paintings.
That's so beautiful. She's so talented.
And I talked to her, I was like,
hey, I would love to bring your art to space with me.
Would that be okay?
Do you have something that you would like me to bring?
And she was like, so excited about the idea.
So she was like, what if I just created
an entire custom piece of artwork for you?
I was like, well, sure, sure.
And so she asked me to take pictures of my daughter in a spacesuit, kind of reaching.
And so I took pictures of my daughter sort of reaching upward and she painted this child
in an astronaut suit holding a bunch of iridescent star and heart balloons that are slightly
deflated and itst the background of these
like cotton candy clouds and above it there's the star-studded sky and you see the new shepherd
capsule in the upper right hand corner and the child represents our inner child always reaching
toward our dreams the balloons are slightly deflated to show that the path toward our dreams
is not often easy or perfect, but
we reach for them anyways.
And then the capsule in the upper right is to show that vehicle that brought me to my
dreams, that brought me to my stars.
And it's the most beautiful painting I've ever seen in my whole life.
And now we're selling the prints to raise money for charity.
That's fantastic.
What charity does the money go to?
KS – The charity is going to the National Network of Abortion Funds in the United States.
And then also because the artist is from Sydney, it's going to a children's hospital in Sydney
as well.
AMT – That's beautiful.
You got to involve your children in a lot of these steps.
A lot of the things you took up to space were for them.
And you got to speak with them about this moment.
What has been their reaction to you going to space?
Oh, they will not stop talking about the fact that mommy wrote a rocket to space.
They think it's very cool, but also very normal.
The other day I dropped my daughter off at school and a couple of kids came up asking
for an autograph.
And my daughter looked at me like I was crazy.
And she was like, what are they asking you for? What's an autograph? my daughter looked at me like I was crazy and she was like, what are they asking
you for? What's an autograph? What's that? And I was like, well, they want me to write my name on
this paper. They're like, they want you to write Emily? Why? She like, I think she assumes that all
mommies go to space and that this week her mommy went to space and the next week their mommies will
go to space and that it's just this totally normal thing in the world and I'm excited to see when they get older what they think of it because right
now they're just two and five like they're still so little and I love that they think it's so normal
but I hope eventually they think it's really cool. May it someday be normal for everyone's mommies to
go to space. What about the other kids you come in contact with because you've inspired a whole generation of young people through your television shows.
I saw some videos of like a few
families, especially the ones with little girls watching the rocket launch and there was one in particular that stood out.
There was like two little girls that were wearing astronaut suits and they were screaming the countdown towards the TV.
They were like, five, four, three, two, one.
And I was like, what a beautiful sight this is,
is to see like two little girls sharing girlhood together,
watching a woman fly to space.
Like this is so incredibly beautiful. And so I just I hope this becomes more normal
and that we see more things like that that they have more women to look up to that anybody
any child who sees themselves in the stars can find somebody who looks like them to cheer
on when they're still growing up. Because it's just gosh, it's so impactful. I want to check
in on those kids in like 1015 years to see what they're doing. up, because it's just, gosh, it's so impactful. I want to check in on those kids in like 10, 15 years to see what they're doing,
because I just have to, I hope to imagine that this moment sticks with them.
I'm sure it will, honestly. And it's such a beautiful moment for you and for your family
and for all the other people that have been following along on your journey.
But then in the aftermath of all this, they put the videos up online, your beautiful, passionate, just very real reaction to going to space goes up online, and suddenly you have to grapple with the negativity of the internet.
What happened in the aftermath of those videos going up online, and how have you been doing? Yeah, I mean, it's so funny because when they showed me, we saw all the videos before they
had released them and we all approved of what videos were put out there.
And there was not a dry eye in the house when we all watched those videos back because this
was the realest, like this was our real, like unfiltered emotion.
And I was so proud of it because I was like, this is my dream.
Like every you guys are seeing my dream in action.
And no wonder I had an emotional reaction to it,
because it was something that I had worked toward
for two decades.
And the way that I think about it is like,
we saw something that fewer than 700 humans
out of the 100 billion plus humans
that have been alive on this planet have seen.
If somebody wants to make fun of that,
like their opinion is sort of irrelevant
because they didn't see what I saw.
And so that's the way that I'm framing this
because I'm like, I talked to the other people
who have seen it and they're like,
no, that's our reaction too.
If you go back and listen to many of the other videos,
especially of women seeing this for the first time,
I mean, you just don't often get the full video
of people's reactions.
And it's just a very normal reaction to seeing what we saw.
And so what's funny and what's beautiful
is that those comments, the negative ones are
completely buried by all of the positive ones. And I that's the
part that I find the most beautiful is that the positive
always outweighs the negative 100 to one.
Well, I'm sure a million people have told you this in the last
weeks. But from another woman who's been told many, many times that I'm way too enthusiastic about space, I'm sure a million people have told you this in the last weeks, but from another woman who's been told many, many times that I'm way too enthusiastic about space, I think
your reaction was absolutely valid.
And I'm really glad that it hasn't, you know, in any way dimmed your light.
Blue Origin has been so wonderful throughout this.
And it is my hope that I could, you know, find another sponsor to fly with them again
at any point in time.
And give the trolls another reaction to react to,
because that's just, I will be enthusiastic about space
all day long, and nobody can prevent that.
Yeah.
But it also points to a really unfortunate reality,
which is that when people who are frequently left out
of the conversations around space or anything really enter these
spaces, you end up with negative reactions, right? And this,
while it has been getting better within the space field, this is
something that I have to be honest with other women in my
life when they get into space. You're going to deal with
misogyny, you're going to deal with professors that might not
be ethical, you're going to deal with backlash online if you're too excited. I hope that doesn't stop people from going into it. And I have my own personal advice for it. But what would you say to women who are
reticent to enter these spaces because they're afraid of that kind of backlash?
Well, for one, delete Twitter. Honestly, staying off of Twitter removed 90% of the harassment.
So I would say the most negative harassment and the people who are likely to harass exist
on X.
So that helps a lot.
But then in addition to that, in normal day-to-day non-internet life, creating a community of
people who you resonate with, like for women, creating a community of people who you resonate with,
like for women, creating a community of women around you,
because that will give you some sanity
to show that you are not the crazy one.
They are being awful and you are valid
in whatever you're experiencing.
And then they'll also give you tips and tricks
on what they did when this has happened to them in the past,
because it probably has. And so creating that community of people who are in your field who share whatever community you
feel like you're a part of, that helps immensely. It really does. There are so many conversations
I've had with people over the years that I've been doing this show that I haven't had time to share
online. They're not pertinent to the conversation necessarily, but I tell you, almost every woman I've brought onto this show has had
this the same conversation, you know, join these spaces. There is a support network there
for you. All of us women are in it together. All of us are in it together. You just have
to find those people that are going to bolster you.
Exactly.
Yeah. You've been through so much. But what's next? I mean, this isn't, you know, some people might interpret this as the end of a
journey, but honestly, this is a whole new beginning.
Now you get to share this with everybody else.
Oh, absolutely. I feel like the mission for me, because of course, this is
commercial space flight.
People can either do this and have it be one and done and just never think of it
again, or you can create something really special out of it.
And so I feel like my mission begins now,
and it's my goal to share this
with as many people as possible.
I filmed my entire journey for my show,
Exploration Outer Space,
and so that will be airing this coming year,
but also through social media.
And then my personal goal is to bring this
to as many kids in West
Virginia as I can. Because as a West Virginia girl who made it to the stars, I was able to do that
in part thanks to a sponsorship from Marshall University, which is a university in West Virginia
that has this incredible aviation program that's pumping out the next generation of pilots,
potentially astronauts as well.
And so I want to go back to them and be like,
this is what's possible.
Like I sat in those seats.
I am from West Virginia myself.
This is what is possible for you too.
And just be able to try to uplift those communities who
maybe don't often see themselves in these spaces very often.
And so yeah, basically I have a lot of work to do. You do, but you're always crushing it in this respect. Now you just have like more fuel in your engine to go do that.
That's right. More visuals for the presentation.
Has this trip in any way changed the way that you talk about commercial space to people?
Because I know there are a lot of negative perceptions of this idea that space is only accessible to those who have the money to do so.
Yeah, and I mean, in many ways that can be true, right? It's not like this is a cheap endeavor.
The only way that someone like me was able to do it was with sponsorships from 20 to 30 different
companies who saw value in having me talk about their science and technology
while I'm on this journey to space flight.
But that's the way of many of the technologies
that we've seen in history,
from personal computers to aviation.
It is something that is very expensive at first
and we need the wealthy to buy into it
in order for that innovation to be further innovated upon, made more efficient, made cheaper for
the rest of us. And so I think that there is a lot of
negativity toward commercial spaceflight. But I think that's
more of an indicator of the inequality that currently exists
in our country, not necessarily the inherent devaluation of commercial spaceflight.
And I think we need to be very thoughtful about separating the two because inequality
is an enormously challenging issue that needs to be addressed.
Ending commercial spaceflight would not solve inequality.
And so trying to separate those two, I think, can be very important. But when you see someone like myself, when you see many of the women that I know from Kelly Girardi or Katja or Sarah Sabri, like Suresh Shabamala,
these people who have flown on Virgin or Blue Origin, they're bringing this experience down to kids, down to girls who see themselves in them and inspiring the next generation of scientists and engineers.
So I think it can be what you make of it and that's up to us. You know, we have to figure out what we
want to make of this experience. But I think valuing it at that is very important and trying
to separate that from the very important, very problematic issue that is inequality in this country.
Well said. I'm so glad that you got to have this experience and that we got to go along on the
journey with you. So often people get to go to space and they don't have as much of a social
media presence as you do. So you get to see their reactions here and there. But I really feel like
those of us that follow you online have been on this journey with you for years.
And your triumph feels like in part our
triumph as well. That's the music to my ears. That's what I hope to do because I feel like in
many ways like my dream is only possible because of all those people who have followed me. I would
not have been able to get this flight without all of those people and so they are very much a part
of my journey. I'm very grateful to them. I'm grateful to you all for following me
because my dreams would not be possible without them.
So again, I feel like a responsibility
to share them with everybody
because it's in part theirs too.
People also ask me frequently,
how do you end up with a career in space?
How do you shape the career that you want?
And something I often tell them is
be loud about your dreams. No one is going to help you get to
your dreams unless you are loud about it. And I feel like that
is that has really helped on your journey.
100% I think for so many people like we have these big bold
dreams, but we're not often sure of the exact path to get there.
And when you are vocal about what you want, then other people can reveal the
paths that other people have taken. Yours might be a little bit different. Yours might be like,
start somewhere and then end somewhere else on a different path. But by sharing your end goal with
more people, then the paths start to reveal themselves along the way. Because it's kind of
hard. You shouldn't have to
you know reinvent the wheel every time or pave the way for yourself every time because for someone
like me I'm not the first female commercial astronaut. I'm not the first female social media
commercial astronaut. Like there have been other people before me that have sort of laid the ground
work for me to be able to do this as well. So just that's it.
I have a group of like nine of us,
female astronauts who are in the commercial space
and we share so much knowledge in our little group chat.
They're like my board of directors
and it has been so useful to have that
because sometimes it feels like
if you wanna do something big,
like you've gotta do it by yourself,
or there's some sort of competition involved with other people who are similar to you.
But if you are open to creating that community and sharing knowledge,
like everything will happen much easier.
So that's something that's been really useful to me in my journey too.
None of us do this alone.
And it's beautiful seeing that legacy of
everyone that's gone to space and all of the women that have fought to be in those spaces
culminate in this moment which hopefully is just the beginning of a whole new age as space becomes
more accessible to everyone and with all these dreams of returning to the moon hopefully one
of these days we'll get a reaction video of you and all the other women watching as the first woman steps foot on the moon. Oh gosh, please let that happen still. Fingers crossed. Yeah,
I'm a little nervous too, but whether or not it happens now or in the future, this is a legacy
we're all building together for the rest of humanity. So maybe we won't see it, but someone
will. And somebody will. Somebody will. Somebody will.
Dear God, please let somebody.
Right? Imagine how many people that would inspire.
Well, thank you for joining us to share this journey and everything around it. You've been
so candid and vulnerable. And I think a lot of people would find this very relatable.
And as someone who hopes to go to space someday, lots of good tidbits for how to make it happen.
Absolutely.
Would love to see it.
Well, thanks so much, Emily.
Thank you for having me.
Here's to the next 100 women in space and all of the other trailblazers that are marking
firsts for themselves and others.
And if you happen to have any young people in your life who might want to go to space
someday, Emily's YouTube show, Emily's Science Lab, just got approved for YouTube Kids.
Now it's time for What's Up with our Chief Scientist, Dr. Bruce Betts.
Hey, Bruce.
Hey, Sarah. How's your new year?
It's been pretty good so far. I mean, pretty eventful. New Year's by itself was awesome. But
then getting the news recently that our CEO Bill
Nye got the Presidential Medal of Freedom, that was a big moment this weekend.
Yeah, that's pretty darn impressive.
Right?
And I got to talk to Emily Calandrelli, who I've been following on social media for years.
So that was really cool.
Stalking, I believe, is the technical term.
Stalking.
Is it stalking if you follow them on social media? These are the questions.
No, it's not. It's the other things I'm concerned. Anyway, never mind. Go ahead.
I'm glad you got to talk to her. That's great.
Yeah. It was really cool because I've been following her experiences and so many of these
things that she said during our interview really resonated with me in ways that I haven't heard
them expressed in other interviews from people who have gone to space, which just really
shows how powerful it is to have people from so many different walks of life now have access
to space. And still really weird that after all of these decades of people going to space,
only 100 women have done so. So this was, this is probably an interview I'll remember
for a while. She was telling me basically, they had such a little amount of time in space that they they really had to
strategize what they were going to be doing during that time and they were told that they should
basically not do any of the fun little physics experiments that you can do in zero-g because
you could accomplish that on a zero-g flight, right? So you don't want to use your like three
minutes in space not doing exactly what you want with it. But there are so many things I would love to do in zero G. So I wanted to ask you,
what are some of the cool things that you can do in zero G, maybe not on a suborbital flight,
because you won't have time, but if given infinite time, what could you do?
Oh, my gosh, don't give me infinite time. I'll give you an infinite answer. I would play with all those physics experiments
that I would just, toys, toys are fun, and liquids, which would just make a mess, but maybe water,
floating balls, water, spherical flames, just recreationally, that would make the ground
controllers probably nervous. But liquids and all together by surface tension is super cool.
Of course, you know, just odd little paper airplanes.
What else I, I, I thought of that jello that the jello floating block of
jello floating jello.
Yeah.
And then you poke it. I can see that being a lot of fun.
Like there's so many weird physics things
that you can read about in textbooks,
but you can't really play around with
until you're in that environment.
I know there's a lot of emotional complications
and a lot of like valid criticism of commercial space.
And it's all very important.
But when I look at the log
of people that have gone to space and just how much this new realm of space exploration has opened
up to people, it is kind of cool seeing how much more opportunity there is for people to just kind
of adventure and have those moments of just looking out at the earth. Pretty cool.
out of the earth. Pretty cool. Right? Well, on that note.
We're going to do a, and some way unusual.
Aren't they all unusual? What is it this time?
Well, you know, what's interesting is it's the most usual thing, truly mundane.
It's about earth.
Oh, earth, a planet with a planetary process of magnetic field. And a lot of people probably know this, but I just got reminded again,
how wild it is that our North magnetic pole of the Earth has just been looking across the Earth
in recent decades, whereas it really wasn't moving around much a couple hundred years ago,
but then especially in the crazy seventies,
but when I came on the scene,
maybe that's related,
it started running away from me.
Oh, anyway, it moves like 50 kilometers a year.
It slowed down some on average to maybe 25 kilometers a year,
but it's just headed out, Spent a long time in Canada, had a great time, and now it's
just for some reason booking it across the Arctic Ocean. That's the technical term for
magnetic field pole movement is booking it. It's booking it across past the actual rotational
pole of the earth and headed for Siberia because, you know,
they've heard good things. Yeah, that is really interesting and weird. And the more we learn
about Earth's magnetic field, the more fascinated I am. Yeah, that's it's shockingly something
generated in the outer core of the Earth is complex.
The people who seriously have to think about these things have to keep updating their magnetic
models quite frequently of what the heck's going on.
I'm so glad we live in a modern day where we understand what's going on there so we
can account for it in our navigation.
Because imagine you're on Earth during a time where you have to navigate using magnetic
fields and stars and you have no idea that the magnetic pole moves.
Oh no.
Yeah, it matters, man.
It matters.
So cool.
All right, everybody, go out there, look up in the night sky and think about what you
would do with magnets in zero G. Thank you and good night.
We've reached the end of this week's episode of Planetary Radio, but we'll be back next
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