StarTalk Radio - Risk is Our Business with William Shatner & Scott Kelly
Episode Date: March 18, 2025What happens when you put Captain Kirk, a NASA astronaut, and Neil deGrasse Tyson on a ship to Antarctica? Recorded on board with William Shatner and Scott Kelly, this episode explores the thrill of d...iscovery — from rough seas to deep space — and what it means to boldly go.This episode of StarTalk, recorded live from Drake Passage during the Space2Sea Voyage of Legends to Antarctica, is presented in collaboration with FUTURE of SPACE.https://futureofspace.io/space2sea-antarctica/Follow or Subscribe to FUTURE of SPACEhttps://futureofspace.ioAbout FUTURE of SPACE:FoS is a media company that produces innovative content, programs, and experiential events that embrace new frontiers, celebrate the human experience, and elevate the conversation, engaging audiences in meaningful and transformative ways.NOTE: StarTalk+ Patrons can listen to this entire episode commercial-free here: https://startalkmedia.com/show/risk-is-our-business-with-william-shatner-scott-kelly/Thanks to our Patrons John Shipe, Kenneth Kapptie, Dan Lee, Mark Randolph, Steven Green, David Pearson, Marius P, Sean Kershaw, Marc Bode, Jon Pulli, Sean Wins, Bessie Comer, alextravaganza, Matt in L.A., brian oakes, Tyler Carpenter, Stephan Spelde, Seymour buttz, Jeff Burton, Micheal Chinnici, stuart kim, Kathleen Ziegelgruber, Karl ryan, Fabio Later, Lorna Leigh, Abi Cats, Anthony Charlier, Zane White, Jonathan Plumb, Matthew Hinterlong, Danny K. , Muhammad Laiq Khan Rind, Khadeer Ahmed, Kathy Ziegelgruber, Bryan Smith, Shawn Nirdlinger, empty0vessel, Ruben Suarez, Jeffrey Roche, James Williams, Jules Victor, livingston ex, and Kora Celine for supporting us this week. Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes of StarTalk Radio ad-free and a whole week early.Start a free trial now on Apple Podcasts or by visiting siriusxm.com/podcastsplus.
Transcript
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This past December 2024, I was on a ship to Antarctica.
That's one of my bucket list items.
And I couldn't resist because there were some notables
on board and I said, this would make a good
Star Talk episode.
So I snared the one and only William Shatner, Captain Kirk.
I don't know if you know, but he is a big fan
of exploration.
That's not a hard stretch, given what he's known for,
crossing the universe during the TV commercials
using warp drives, but he's also a deep thinker
and he loves science.
So I had to get him on the program
and also on board was NASA astronaut Scott Kelly.
You may remember he's a twin with Mark Kelly
and both of them have been in space,
but Scott Kelly in particular was sent into orbit
into the International Space Station for 340 days,
almost an entire year.
He holds the record for continuous time and space
for an American.
He has a lot to say about exploration
and he's a big fan of Shackleton.
And let's remember that every explorer
who goes where no one has gone before is a risk taker.
So if you encounter a challenge where you say,
this might not work, this could be dangerous,
for some people, Captain Kirk included,
risk is their business.
So conversation I'm having with both of them
for Star Talk on board a ship to Antarctica.
Check it out.
Welcome to Star Talk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide.
StarTalk begins right now.
Scott, we're in the Drake passage right now.
Could you give us a little background on that?
Why are we listening?
Why are we feel nausea?
What's going on here on Earth?
Yeah, well, the Drake Passage is the part
of the Southern Ocean where at the tip
between South America and Antarctica.
Cape Horn, the tip, yeah.
But where the Pacific and the Atlantic Oceans meet,
and it's very deep here, which causes,
with the prevailing winds that are generally west to east,
some pretty big swells.
And I think we're seeing about, I don't know,
maybe 14, 15 feet right now,
but they can get as high as 50 feet in this passage.
Ooh, so we're in a cruise ship.
So we're in a cruise ship.
What would this passage have been like in a wooden ship a hundred years ago?
You wouldn't want to do it.
But risk is our business.
Yes, I said that.
Yeah, I think it would be pretty harrowing,
you know, in this kind of, even in this sea
state in a ship like that, but I can't imagine being at the swells of 40 and 50 feet.
I was just talking to my brother on the phone.
This is your twin brother.
Twin brother.
You know, when I last interviewed you on Star Talk, I said, which brother are you?
You said you're the good looking brother.
Yeah, that's still true.
Okay.
Yeah.
But anyway, he was telling me about being in the North
Atlantic on a cargo ship, because we were both,
when we were younger, training to be merchant mariners
in 80 foot seas and losing 20 containers off the ship.
So if you think this is bad, just imagine that.
So now, Mr. Shatner, my dear, your show,
the original Star Trek series in the 1960s,
was coincident with while we were
priming our space program to go to the moon.
But as far as your show is concerned,
we were already there. Space
was not a question about whether it should happen. It had already happened.
It was a matter of learning to speak Klingon. As many fans of the show managed
to. I can't count myself among those who are fluent in nor I
so were you
Just an actor at the time or did you participate?
emotionally in this idea that exploration is in our DNA
Exploration doesn't necessarily mean going to Mars and colonizing Mars you can explore
doesn't necessarily mean going to Mars and colonizing Mars. You can explore, for example, may I spend a moment
on exploration and why exploration?
A while ago, seven years ago, I heard a story
of a ranger in the forest in the Sierras
occupying a cabin and he was there,
I guess, for fire observation. And while he was there I guess for fire observation and while he
was living in the cabin alone a deer came and ate the grass and then one
deer poked his its head in the window to see who was there and and he struck up a
conversation and had a relationship with the herd of deer and discovered that deer had posted types
of personality.
There was the diplomat deer who poked his head into see what was going on.
There was the guard deer.
There was a deer.
So this herd group had assigned roles that he discovered that, my goodness, that's how we organize ourselves.
When we were on the last island with the penguins.
On this voyage, having just returned from Antarctica.
On this voyage of exploration for all of us, for me certainly, of discovering new worlds,
new whatever that, whatever the language was,
and seeing new civilizations, which were the penguins.
And a penguin came up to the group that was standing,
having landed, and the penguin,
Mark, what are you doing here?
Was that what it was saying?
This was the diplomat penguin.
Okay.
And I thought, of course, this whole thing
is a circle of life, and here's a penguin acting
like the deer and the ranger and us,
and this circle, I thought, wow, what a discovery
of we're in this arid land that's rife with life, but
you can't see too much of it.
But it's there, and the penguins are a big part of it.
And it's exploration, and it was a discovery, and I had the best time.
Okay, so what you're saying here, implicitly and explicitly, is that humans aren't the only curious animals out there.
That's right.
The penguin was exploring.
It was exploring in its own way.
No.
It was exploring in a very explicit way.
What are you guys doing here?
You're two-legged.
You don't waddle.
Some of us waddle, but.
You point to me that I waddle.
Let's go back 60 years ago.
You're an actor. By the way,
by the way, I don't know if you knew this,
but William Shatner
appeared in two distinct episodes
of The Twilight Zone.
Yes. And quite memorable episodes at that.
Predating, of course, the Star Trek series.
You're an actor in Hollywood.
Yeah.
And so was there anything in particular that drew you to the part?
You're talking about Star Trek?
Yeah, Star Trek.
I was in New York doing something in New York and they had made a pilot of Star Trek and NBC didn't want to
buy the pilot.
They had faults with it but they loved the idea and they wanted for the first time, I'd
never heard of it before, I've never heard of it since, they said we'll give you another,
whatever the cost was, to make another pilot, recast it all, and they called
me, I was in New York, they called me, when I come to Hollywood to see this thing that
they had made with the idea of playing the captain. So I was like ushered in.
Can I presume you had no idea what impact that would have on our culture at the time?
None whatsoever, and I saw the thing that NBC had turned down.
I thought, that's pretty darn good.
It's a little pedantic.
It's a little, you know, here we are,
we're sailing the five oceans,
but whereas the guys in the capsules are all friendly
and, you know, there isn't this distance between them.
So I suggested a little more camaraderie and humor and and we sold the pilot.
So when I when I look at this, by the way, if I don't know if anybody's ever been to Comic-Con,
the one at least in San Diego, I don't know if they also do this in New York.
The very last session is a Starship Smackdown, where every single Starship, spaceship,
ever appeared in fictional storytelling
is put up on display, like drawings of them,
photos of them, and you vote.
There are people arguing the case of one ship or another
of which is the greatest of ships.
The year the Starship Enterprise won that,
what carried the day was a simple fact.
That no ship before then, ever displayed in storytelling,
was ever designed to just explore.
Every ship you ever see someone get into and out of
in a science fiction movie or story,
it's designed to take you to a destination.
That's why those ships existed.
So this as a concept, it's like, oh my gosh,
exploration was paramount in why the ship existed at all.
Right.
It was designed, I mean, what you've said is valid.
The truth of the matter is the designer of the ship
had designed many versions, put them on a wall
and invited all the executives in to see which aspect of which drawing they loved
and then he combined what everybody loved.
So it was like a potpourri of...
Oh, I didn't know that.
Yeah.
NASA's done that before.
What?
I'll say that again.
NASA's done that before.
That's why they get canceled.
That's a space shuttle.
Space shuttle is an amalgam of ideas
stapled together pretty much.
It's a noble looking ship.
It's got, it looks like it should go someplace.
Unfortunately, it's not powered, right?
The space shuttle orbiter, it's got wings
and jet nozzles out the back.
So it seems to me, wherever you are,
you ought to be able to choose, let's go someplace new.
And in fact, that's what they did in the film Armageddon.
Yes, but in real life, once they start their approach,
they gotta land it.
That's one of the reasons why Armageddon violated
more known laws of physics per minute than
any other film ever made.
So just tell me about the Space Shuttle, what it meant.
If its only job, as fun and versatile as it looked, if its only job was to get you to
orbit, you're-
Well, that's not, that wasn't its only job.
Oh, please.
So, the space shuttle is one of the most,
is the most diverse spacecraft we've ever built,
and probably will be so in our lifetime,
but it has one serious limitation.
It's heavy, and it doesn't carry enough fuel
to get out of low Earth orbit,
but it does launch people, it launches cargo, it can build things, it built an international
space station, it can be its own science laboratory, you can do space walks from it.
And that cargo bay is huge, as far as I can tell, because it deployed the Hubble Space
Telescope and my favorite size analog to this Hubble telescope,
it's about the size of a Greyhound bus,
which means you could lower a Greyhound bus
into the payload of the shuttle.
Yeah, something that weighed up to 50,000 pounds,
whereas the Soyuz, if you use that as the counter example,
the Russian Soyuz spacecraft is really only designed
to launch three people and a very small amount of cargo.
And that's it.
It does it very well, but it doesn't do very much.
You've been up more than once.
Have you been up on each of those craft?
Twice on each.
Twice on each?
Yeah.
So now maybe because the Soyuz is not as complex
as the shuttle and the orbiter
and the solid rocket boosters,
the Soyuz has the best safety record of any space rocket.
They've had two fatal in-flight accidents,
just like the space shuttle, but less people.
Okay.
Similar number of flights, but.
Oh, I thought they had many more flights.
Okay, I didn't know that.
Yeah. they had many more flights. Okay, I didn't know that.
I'm Jasmine Wilson and I support Star Talk on Patreon. This is Star Talk with Neil deGrasse Tyson.
Where does this fit with you?
We know, we learned earlier on this voyage, you gave a marvelous talk reviewing Shackleton,
the explorer to the Antarctic, and the trials and tribulations he went through,
and no one died after he got stuck in the ice.
And he's a bit of a hero of yours, as we all felt.
And mine do.
And yours too.
So here's someone who's gone where no one has gone before.
Oh, I've heard that.
Boldly, boldly.
Boldly gone where no one has gone before. Oh, sorry. He's right.
And he sounds so good on the track. Is that you narrating it? That was me. Boldly go.
Oh my god. That was you though, right? That was me. I'm pretty sure. That was right.
With the very famous split infinitive. Boldly go, go boldly? Yeah. And later in the later
films they said to go boldly. Well, I wrote a book called A Boldly Go.
Yeah, no, we loved that.
When they tried to fix the grammar in a later movie,
it was like, no, that's just, just deal with it.
Doesn't work that way.
Yeah, doesn't work that way.
You were talking about ships and its efficiency.
I was invited to the Cape one time,
we rolled out the right.
It was Cape Canaveral, Florida.
Yeah, yeah, where they would launch all our spaceships.
And in the center of one of those hangars
on a platform was the lunar excursion module, the LEM.
But up the stairs, and they invited me in to the LEM,
which looks like, whatever you call it, you know the... Pergola?
Yes, exactly.
It looks, it's the simplest, and you get inside and they have a hammock to lie down on, they
lay down on the hammock, and it's this ridiculous children's toy, and it's got more instruments, more complications, and that's the result from the shuttle to the spaceship
to the thing in the mud.
They've got a little garden tool thing to land on the moon,
get out there, take a picture, get back in,
and then meet up with the whatever we call it,
the thing circling.
The command module.
Or orbiting the moon.
And then they get out of the LEM,
into the ship that's gonna take them back to Earth.
And this, what happens to the,
oh, that's been left, no, no, what happens to it?
Crashes into the moon.
It crashes into the moon.
That's how we.
Eventually, I guess.
However, if memory serves,
Apollo 13
realized that for their life support,
they needed some of the life support that was on the LEM.
So that in some of the missions subsequent to Apollo 13,
didn't they keep the LEM a little further in
towards Earth to make sure?
Is that what happened?
I don't remember.
They used to use life support systems to save themselves.
The life support systems on the land,
they had to do some modifications,
but they were able to use that to safely get back to Earth.
Can you imagine?
And they say, well, what will we do when the engineers
down on Earth is able to try this and try that,
and you're gonna die.
But when you talk about exploration and the means
of exploration from the what's his name Thor Heidel using papyrus as a raft and then getting
to all Shackleton in a wooden boat and here we are on this modern liner which was
being explained by you that the engines here are of particular make and because
we don't hear the engines propelling this boat as we are right now going back
to Ushuaia we don't hear the engines. Except every so often, and I didn't understand why,
you hear, when we're parked, you hear a rumble.
I think, what is that?
Is that the anchor going down the ground?
It's not.
It's station keeping.
It's the station keeping from...
Yeah, so you could drop an anchor,
but if you don't need to, then why?
And now we know exactly where the boat is.
So we, it's not my boat. All the captain knows.
All the means of exploration going on, the variety of things that we're using to explore.
Let me throw a little monkey wrench in this.
As usual.
As usual. If you know that much about where you're going and it can be done in the safety and comfort
of a luxury ship, then is it really exploration?
If the risks have been reduced to zero.
Well, but you mean if you're rowing in an open boat, you're more exploring than getting a...
If you're going where no one has gone before, that is exploration.
If you're attempting tasks that have never been attempted before, Scott goes into orbit.
He's a guinea pig for the doctors on Earth because he's got a twin brother.
We're going to learn about no one had done that before with a twin brother.
That's incredible.
What an incredible thing.
So your brother was not the guinea pig, you were, because you're in space and you're exposed
to cosmic rays.
What happened to you?
Well, I was exposed to the environment.
He was the guinea pig on Earth that was a complete ball of-
Yeah, keep telling yourself that.
He's chilling on the safety of Earth's surface,
and you're not.
And, you know, he had people following him
around the country and taking all kinds of samples
and having to leave stuff outside his front door,
and also was like the lowest.
Stuff outside his front door,
we figured what that is.
Yeah, for people to pick up.
Lowest paid government employee at the time,
because they had to pay him,
so he was making minimum wage
because he was no longer a NASA astronaut.
So I really have to hand it to him to do that.
Whereas I was like getting all the glory
by being in space,
but also like you mentioned the radiation.
Yeah, but your heart is smaller
than it was when you went in there.
Yeah, stuff happened to you.
It grew back.
It did.
But as my wife Amiko says,
it's a good thing I started with a big heart.
Oh.
That's great.
I just want to understand this.
So even though the exploration was not in the realm of place,
it was in the realm of physiology.
It's exploratory physiology.
That's exploration.
I agree, I agree.
I agree.
So what did we learn by exploring what happens
to your body in orbit for how many days?
On that mission, 340.
340.
They couldn't stay an extra 25 days and call it a year?
I wanted to, but the Russians had a certain schedule
they had to meet, so we had to come back.
Because you came back on the Soyuz?
Yeah.
Let me remind people, the Soyuz does not land in water.
They just land on land.
They crash land on the Pearl.
They crash land.
Yeah.
It's really not a landing.
Well, it's your landage if you walk away.
It's a landage.
It's the ultimate e-ticket ride when that parachute opens.
And if I hated being in space every minute
for that entire 340 days, I'd do it all over again
for that last 20 minutes.
Really?
Just the thrill?
The last 20 minutes of coming back to Earth?
What was that like?
When the parachute opens, you just tumble
and are thrown around like crazy.
And there have been, I know one of one particular person, I'm sure other people have felt this
way, who was an experienced test pilot.
I'm not going to say the person's name because I don't want to embarrass him, but he was
not apparently not briefed on how dynamic the landing is.
Yeah.
And he started screaming because he thought he was going to die.
High pitch or low and guttural. I wasn't there. Yeah
because there's flames coming out of the
Tile right it's like going over Niagara Falls in a barrel, but while you're on fire
And as soon as you're lying the flames are coming up through the windows. Wait, wait, that's...
You're on fire.
That's while you're slowing down on...
Yeah, but...
But not...
The chute opens a little bit later.
The chute opens later than that.
Oh, I understand that.
But in that moment when I was screaming, flames are coming up.
You're burning up and you don't know whether the tiles are glued down and up.
They may be flipping out.
The tiles may be, they lost some tiles.
There's a lot of things you don't know that's going on.
Yeah, right.
You're on the inside.
You don't see what's going on on the outside.
You might not want to know that.
What was it like to have three of you in the ship, right?
And one guy's going, ah!
What's that like?
I wasn't there on that
one it was only you know reported afterwards that this particular person
was he what did they say you can't do that I don't know what going on then you
might not I'm an astronaut and I explore space I'm going to Mars, but when I came down, I saw flames!
But I still want to get to the bottom
of the advancing a space frontier
by learning what's happening to your physiology.
So, your heart shrunk.
Yeah, heart shrunk 25%, changes to my telomeres.
25%, wow.
Telomeres, that's like the end of your DNA or something?
End of your DNA, really an indication of your physical age.
As you get older, they get shorter, more frayed.
Initially NASA thought that was due to the controlled diet
and exercise, later we learned that there were some worms
that the Japanese were doing telomere experiments on too,
and their telomeres got better
while they were on the space station.
Never once saw them working out on the treadmill
or doing any kind of exercise.
So it turns out it was actually the radiation.
Most important result that I always want everyone
to understand and point out is after spending a year
in space, like you mentioned earlier,
I am now not only smarter,
but more handsome than my brother Mark.
Would he agree to that?
Probably not.
Okay.
This idea of pushing the limits of not only what a machine can do,
but what human physiology can do, this is exploration.
And who, you, sir, now the oldest person to ascend above the Carmelite.
Oh, do we go there again?
I am not, my telomeres are very long.
Okay, but let me ask you this.
When I saw you go up the ladder
to go into the,
The slaves.
Into the, to the, the blue origin capsule.
Yes, you know, I passed by.
And I said, this man is 89 years old.
How old were you for that flight?
I don't know, 32, something like that.
No, times three.
No, wait a minute.
I'm walking up the stairs to go and there,
something's venting out of a pipe.
Out of the side of the ship.
Side of the ship, what's that?
Hydrogen.
Hydrogen?
The...
Fuel.
Zeppelin.
The Hindenburg.
The Hindenburg.
Burned.
And hydrogen was what was burning.
Yeah.
And I'm looking at this thing.
Plus there was some coating of aluminum powder
on the surface to make it highly reflective.
Exactly.
That burned also on the skin.
The static electricity up the road.
Had you been in Russia, not only would the thing be venting the fuel, there'd be people
smoking cigarettes right at the bottom of the launch pad.
Let us be candid with ourselves that part of the risk of exploring on some level is
even the risk of even starting the trip.
If you're exploring, you're ready to die because you're going... At some level you got the risk of even starting the trip if you're exploring
You're ready to die because you're going at some level. You got to be ready to die. Here you go
What probability of death?
Would you have accepted?
What's the highest probability of death you would have accepted to do that mission?
Launch on the space shuttle. Yes
well, I launched on the space shuttle, STS-103, and so we had approximately 103 prior missions,
and there was one fatal accident,
so that's a 1% chance of dying.
Yes.
What would I have accepted?
Certainly not 50%.
10%?
Maybe, maybe. Maybe 10%. It would depend on what we were doing.
Well that's an interesting question. Yes. Because death is so permanent, you lose the
bet. It's 10 to 1. You don't just pay up, oh here's the 100 I owe you. It's your life. One percent is not acceptable.
Nothing is acceptable.
I'm going up.
I'm a test pilot.
I've tested this plane.
I've tested this thing.
I know it works.
I'm not going up to die.
I'm going to explore.
Oh, that has to be your attitude.
That has to be your attitude.
And that is what you come to terms with.
Like I would think about it leading up to my first flight with,
you kind of rationalize, hey, for one, I wanna do this.
I think it's important.
I wanna serve my country.
It's my job.
I'm a test pilot.
There is risk.
My brother and I used to exchange those death letters
for our families.
If the thing blows up, give this to my wife and children
and we would do the same, fortunately.
Never had to use those, but it's, you know,
everything has risks.
But is that a thing in NASA?
Is that a thing?
Death letters?
Maybe, I don't know.
It was a thing with my brother and I.
You're a test pilot.
So you've run that, it's a new airplane,
and you're testing the airplane.
So you run that airplane along the runway, the airplane, and you're testing the airplane. So you run that airplane along the runway,
the front, now you're a foot up the ground,
you make a circle, you run it,
and it gets you 10 feet, 20 feet, 30,
then you're 50 feet.
By that time, you know the plane works.
You go up to Mars.
No, you know it worked.
It might not continue to work as you expand out the envelope.
But now you can press a button, you eject,
I mean, the chances of living. Now, can press a button, you eject, I mean the chances of living.
Now let's go to Mars guys, okay?
Shup flames, scream, ah flames!
And then finally you're into orbit
and you're going towards Mars.
You're gonna die.
Meteorites, radiation, landing on Mars.
This is why we have engineers. You may die. What? You're not definitely gonna die, landing on Mars. This is why we have engineers.
You may die.
What?
You're not definitely gonna die, you may die.
It's why we have engineers, to figure this out.
You're going to die, the chances of you surviving
a meteorite hit, or lasting six months on Mars
with all that radiation, and then getting back in
and saying, oh, more flames, we gotta get liftoff,
get out of orbit of, I mean, and land on Earth,
you're gonna die.
Okay, none of us wanna hear you say that
who uttered the words to boldly go in on it.
You're gonna die.
Boldly go, boldly go to your death,
and if you don't die, we'll congratulate you
and we'll tell you
your telomeres are lengthening.
Take us back to Antarctica.
They're on the open seas.
They could be monsters in the ocean.
They could be weather patterns
they've never thought of or predicted.
They don't know how much food they'll actually need.
They don't even know if there will be food there.
Gavin coined the word catabatic or adabatic. What does that mean?
100 mile an hour winds coming down wind or 100 mile an hour is going up. 100 mile an
hour winds. You gotta hear in a robo for crying out loud. You got a sail. A sail?
A sail is good for 15 knots. 20 knots you're gonna blow your sails out. 30 knots you're gonna blow your sails out, 30 knots, you're master crashing. You're gonna die.
So what I have come to learn,
being a member of the species that we call homo sapiens,
not all of us fear the risk of death at the same level.
Wait a minute.
Hang on.
No, very simple.
There are people who ascend Mount Everest
knowing there's a real chance they're gonna die.
They got oxygen, they've got parkas,
they're gonna slide down on their ass down the glacier
to get back to camp.
They've got Sherpas who go up without oxygen
and run up and run back.
If you need some help, sir, I'll help you, says a Sherpa.
They probably give the, you know, all those National Geographic specials where they show
someone ascending the mountain for the first time, but there's a camera already there when
they get up to the top.
So who got the camera?
The camera got there first.
Exactly, the Sherpa.
The Sherpa and the camera got there first.
Exactly.
But what I'm saying is, there are people who jump out of airplanes willingly.
People who rock climb. But they have a parachute. They're not going.
This thing's going to open. How about that guy that jumped out of the, what is he?
Baumgartner? Yeah, Baumgartner.
Felix Baumgartner. Who by the way? He was scared.
He was a guest. He was dead.
He was scared. Scared.
He was gonna die the moment he started twisting.
I'm gonna dive centrifugal force.
How would you like to dive centrifugal force?
Your blood comes out of your ears.
I had Felix Bumgarner on Star Talk.
Yes, he checked our archives.
And he's a pretty good guy.
I thought he'd be a little weird or crazy
What was he exploring? He liked look he liked exploring the limits of his own
Bodies tall okay, so it's like a rock climber. How many rock climbers lived to 40?
Nobody you know why they're after that thrill after a while to climb a rock. I got to go further
I got here's where I want to take this listen to me
some of us do that and
Some of them die those who don't die
Figured out how to do it without dying. They'll write about it. There'll be someone documenting
No, and it opens up horizons for the rest of us who aren't that brave.
Wait a minute.
And that's how we got out of the cave.
You don't understand.
They're a junkie.
Because risk is our business.
I've heard that.
They're adrenaline junkies.
They need the adrenaline.
And the adrenaline doesn't flow after three times.
Dude, if we didn't have them in our species, we'd still be in the cave. Exactly,
they're the explorers. And as they're falling, they say, I'm dying! And that's it. But the next
person that does it makes sure that they don't make whatever mistake that the previous person did.
That's exactly right. Until they make their own mistake. And that's what these guys are.
That's who these, that's who the original group of astronauts were.
I agree with you on the one-way mission is not something I would be interested in. Having
lived in an enclosed, sealed environment for a year when you cannot walk outside, you know,
Earth has like everything practically for humans. It has everything to offer.
Wait, Scott, Scott, we went 150 years
with people coming from Europe
on one way trips to the new world.
Oh, I know, it's for some people, it's not for me.
Oh, it's not for you.
I would not want to live on Mars for the rest of my life.
However, I would watch that reality show.
Because I think at some point it's gonna turn into like Lord of the Flies situation.
Oh, the darker side of what it is to be human.
So, but that's what you're on.
We're on to an interesting part of this thesis of what is exploration.
Those who do explore those not, you know, the ranger with the deer
and the penguin who asked a question, that's one kind of exploration. But the jeopardy
of exploration is something to be discussed. Who goes on what could be a one-way trip?
These guys didn't know they were. They had to know when that guy,
when that brave astronaut was seeing flames coming up from the entry point and screaming
I'm going to die, that's just his humanity. But he was willing to go. Somebody must have
said you know son, the tiles are going to heat up and you'll probably
feel some heat and it's going to look, oh, it's okay, I can take that.
But when you see it flaming and it's going to burn your parachute and you're screaming,
you're succumbing to humanity.
So you don't always know where your limits are.
Exactly.
Even if you have bravado leading up to that. Exactly, your bravado, but that's what this adrenaline is.
One more rock I can climb, I'll put my fingers in there,
I got a grip, I got a grip, do I let go with the legs?
I don't know whether I can.
Because I can tell you, the only people,
friends I've ever had, who died prematurely,
were rock climbers, dying in just such an accident.
I'm telling you that's why they do it.
Free climbing.
See, I grew up in a city.
The city was dangerous enough.
I don't need to add other dangers to that.
Exactly.
Okay?
I already was feeling it wasn't the exploration gene, it was a survival gene, enough so that
I don't need to do something else to put my life at risk. So
What is your your collective opinion on people who?
Are looking at like the people are going to go to Mars the once the instruments go
People are going to go for at least a year and a half
So so bill I think the people who want to go to Mars have already noticed that NASA has plunked an
Suv sized Rover on Mars
Following a half dozen other Rovers that got there before and this current Rover brought a helicopter
We so Mars is not some unbreached place
In the humanity humanity, so I think that they're not thinking they're gonna die
No, but but they know that the risk,
like Scott was saying,
1% out of 99, 99, 1%, that's pretty good odds.
I'm not gonna die.
But would you put the odds at 50-50 to go to Mars?
I would say 50-50 is very generous.
I agree. For the first ones to Mars, I would say 50-50 is very generous.
I agree, for the first ones to Mars, I'd agree.
And I think that's what they were considering
maybe even for Apollo 11, right Charlie?
Maybe a 50% chance of success?
Really, so now you're looking at guys
in the magnificence, and they were all men at that time,
in the magnificence of their manhood.
They were running on the
beach, they're the best physical shape, they've learned everything. Nine, six
years of geology, Jose was saying, wasted on him because he was... Jose, another
astronaut on board here. They're trained to the warrior degree. They are wielding their swords of intellect
like the ancient Spartans.
Yes.
Okay?
Yes.
They're gonna die nobly, 1% chance.
That's what these guys were.
That's the original 16, 19, what was it?
Original seven.
Original seven.
Well, the Mercury seven, the original seven.
Yeah, Mercury seven. So, the Mercury seven. The original seven.
Yeah, the Mercury seven.
So, and by the way, in the spirit of your exchange letters of who might die, it, within
a few years ago, I forgot exactly when, it went public.
The letter that Nixon was going to read had Apollo 11 not successfully left the moon.
And if it couldn't launch,
they'd still be alive until they died.
And so you'd be watching them die.
Which is another aspect,
you couldn't test that LEM's takeoff, right?
The LEM's takeoff could not have been tested on Earth.
Well, I'm sure they fired the engine many times in a vacuum.
One-sixth the gravity,
and suffering that journey
and landing. But we do have the laws of physics which work very well for us. Yeah, it's not just
a random when we ignite it. Where will it go? I don't know. No, not where will it go, but will it
work was random. Will it work in those kind of, with that kind of G's kind of starting off and landing and circling?
Every mission before Apollo 11 was incrementally leading up to that landing. Right up to Apollo
10, right up to Apollo 10, we all forgot Apollo 10, but that one was important. It got to
the moon, deployed. But if you're in an airplane in the density of this air, and you can pull a switch and eject,
it's far different from circling the moon
and wondering with this little collapsible,
the little hut that they were gonna live in the moon,
live on the moon, and get the fire to get back into orbit
and then climb from that back into there and then climb from that back into there
and then get from there back to there.
I mean, the chances were incredible.
That's why they're heroes.
That's why they're heroes.
That's why they're heroes.
Thank you, sir.
Exactly. So we're running short on time here.
One feature of Star Trek in the original series, and it trickled into other incarnations of
it, was that there was a morality tale.
So each episode was a lesson in how we treat one another here on Earth, but under the guise of, oh, it's just
science fiction and it's aliens and it's that.
So that would get you to comment on a lot of prevailing geopolitics, social cultural
issues, racial issues.
And my favorite episode was the one where a guy was black and white and the other guy
was white and white.
With Frank Gorshin was the lead actor.
In that episode, the aliens were exactly half black, half white.
And one group of them were persecuting the other group.
Why?
Because they were black on the other half of their bodies.
And so again, it's just the space,
but really, they're mirrors back to civilization,
especially there in the 1960s,
civil rights movement was still in full swing.
So I just want to say, to be able to explore
and still do something socially conscious,
I think was with Gene Roddenberry
as the creative genius behind it all.
Yeah, you should get a lot of credit,
but there were other guys that really worked on the show.
People as a, and I was a huge Star Trek fan as a kid,
my early memories were watching,
sneaking behind the couch, watching Star Trek episodes when I was like five years old
when my mother didn't know my brother and I were there.
What were you doing behind the couch?
We were just hiding so she wouldn't see us.
We were supposed to be in bed and we would watch.
And same with me.
We weren't allowed to watch TV during the week.
And it was scary.
So I had to catch most of it in reruns.
For goodness sake.
And Apollo 11 memories.
But as an astronaut, people would sometimes ask me
a simple question, you know the yes no question
or the binary question, Star Trek or Star Wars?
What was your answer, Scott?
I used to say when I was a young fighter pilot,
oh, absolutely Star Wars.
X-wing fighter.
Jesus, Scott, Scott, that's really loud.
Scott, Scott, security, could you get him off of this stage?
As I got older.
Wait a minute, you have test files,
you gotta be in your 20s.
You know, once I got into my 40s, my 50s,
you know the harsh edges have gotten rubbed off
on me a little bit.
Clearly Star Trek now,
because of the very reason you mentioned
and how that show was just so far ahead of its time,
decades ahead of its time, decades ahead of this
time.
It cared about the laws of physics, unlike Star Wars, just to be clear.
Just to be, I don't want this to go unrecognized.
You flew for the Navy, correct?
Correct.
I just want to make sure that's on the table here.
Why?
Why?
Why is it important that he flew for the Navy?
Well, it was a fighter pilot versus the Air Force.
Because the Navy, being a Navy pilot,
much more challenging than being an Air Force pilot.
That's why it's important.
Sorry Charlie.
Landing on those carriers.
Landing on the carrier.
Landing on the carrier at night apparently is the worst.
That's the worst.
Because I once went on a centrifuge at a,
in Brandeis University, we were doing a show there and went on a centrifuge at a in Brandeis University
we were doing a show there and they had a centrifuge and they didn't put it at
its fastest or anything and I got off and my lunch came out of me and it was
so I realized I was not unlike this ship. I realized I was the inadequate stuff
rather than the right stuff and but I can handle that because I
Other talents I think I know this is the second time I've talked to you in the last couple of days
Where you're up chucking has been a subject
Is it are you guys a fetish with you I mean
Are you trying to release something from inside you?
What is it?
I'm exposing my vulnerable side to your audience.
That's all.
You're letting us see your insides.
So, let's say we can land this plane here, if I may use a metaphor, or land this starship.
When I look at the challenges of Shackleton and other
polar explorers, it is many dimensional. It is the temperature, it is the time, it is a place
they've never been before. Well, do they have enough food? There's all manner of things that
have never been breached before and it's all rolled up into one expedition.
And that's gotta be the scariest thing ever.
So can you just comment on that?
Reflect on how, it's one thing to say
Mars is at risk because there's radiation,
or maybe I'll get a radiation suit or something.
That's one thing.
But if you got 20 things that could kill you,
you know what it reminds me of?
I don't remember which film is one of these sci-fi films
where their hand, oh I remember, excuse me,
I remember what it was.
It was a movie Contact based on the Carl Sagan novel
where Jodie Foster's character is going to visit
the aliens.
Because they sent us a recipe of how to do that.
Before she gets on board this newfangled alien spacecraft,
they hand her this thing to bite on
where she can kill herself, commit suicide.
It's some kind of, it might have been cyanide,
I don't remember what it was, but it's,
and she says,
you think I'm gonna travel all the way just to kill myself?
And they leveled with her.
They said, we can list a hundred reasons
why you might want to do this.
What scares us are the hundred reasons we can't think of
why you might want to do this.
I wanna ask one question about that very element of torture.
Yes.
Okay?
You're dressed in a suit, head to toe.
I mean, it's airtight.
Water is flowing through it to cool it. The 200 degrees on that thing.
And your armpit itches.
What do you do?
Well, you can't do anything.
The worst though is something on your face.
Oh, it's the face, yeah.
You can kind of scratch your cheek
and you can't scratch your cheek.
What do you do?
You deal with it.
What do you mean deal with it?
Dude, they're the right stuff. They're not going to freak out because their face itches.
No, I don't mind dying, but I got to scratch this itch.
Not something we really ever talk about much.
But it's so practical.
As I understand, there was a variant on the spacesuit where they had like a thing where
you can maneuver it from the outside, it can scratch.
I read about this.
Is that true?
I don't know.
I've never heard of it.
I just heard about it.
You may have heard about it.
But I'm not going to do it.
I'm just going to do it.
I'm just going to do it.
I'm just going to do it.
I'm just going to do it.
I'm just going to do it.
I'm just going to do it.
I'm just going to do it.
I'm just going to do it. I'm just going to do it. I'm just going to do it. I the outside and you can scratch. I read about this.
Is that true?
I don't know, I've never heard.
I just heard about this.
You may have heard about it.
But I tested this.
He was in one, okay?
Whose word are you gonna take?
So I've tested this.
So I tested it.
I said to myself, if I'm in a space suit
and my face itches, I can't scratch it.
So I said, how long can I go
without scratching a face itch?
And I would stand there and initially it's a little twitchy. Yeah. But after a while
the itch goes away. So I pictured myself as an FBI agent and I'm hiding in a closet and
the bad guy is in the room and I itch. I got to scratch this thing and he's going to hear
me scratch. You wouldn't be a good FBI agent. No, you have to deal with that itch. Yeah, they'd shoot through the closet
and then you'd be removed from the jeep.
Absolutely. Here, you got an itch. Where is the thing?
So I found you can resist itches.
If you wait long enough, the itch goes away.
Is that right?
I have found. I did the experiment, at least on myself.
So now...
We've covered that.
All of my shows, when they have fun folks on,
I want to give you a chance to ask me a question
about astrophysics. Only because there aren't many astrophysicists in the world. In fact,
if you do the numbers, it's one in a million people in the world is an astrophysicist.
So if you're ever in the same space as one of them, you better ask your question.
My ambition is to sit down and talk with you about astrophysics. All the stuff I have no
comprehension about that you do.
There's so much to learn.
Ask me one question now.
I can't think of one.
No, no.
Scott, come to Scott.
Scott first.
Scott, go.
Yeah, I wanted to clear something up with you, Neil.
Uh-oh, clear something up.
From Twitter.
October 9th in 2022, after the Top Gun movie came out,
you said late to the party here,
but in this year's Top Gun movie,
Tom Cruise character Maverick
ejects from a hypersonic plane at Mach 10.5
before it crashed.
Holy mackerel.
He survived with no injuries.
At that airspeed, his body would splatter
like a chainmail glove swatting a worm, just saying.
And then I responded to it.
Not true.
And I said-
Thus began the Twitter dust-up.
Yeah, so I said, depends on his altitude.
I was going Mach 25 when I left the ISS on a spacewalk,
and that was just fine.
Oh, that's true.
Which is a lot faster.
So, and it was interesting to see this whole thing unfold because people chose sides.
Yeah, so did.
There was like, Tyson, you've never been in space, so I'm siding with the guy who's been
in space.
And other people said, you can't duck the laws of physics.
So it divided right down the middle, I think.
Yeah, and they thought it was just like beef like we hated each other
Because the internet thrives on just that kind of let me let me ask you
Astrophysicist question you would leave this dangling here. Okay, that's why I'll come back
I'm going 18,000 miles an hour with this no air
Yeah, and it's not suffering or because, I think, because there's no air.
Because there's no air!
Right.
You're talking about a winged airplane using air as a lift,
ejecting at 10,000, whatever it is.
Mach 10 would be 70,000 miles an hour.
But there's almost no air where a Mach 10 airplane would fly.
They fly very high
You can't do that at low altitude, but that's kind of the whole point where there's less air
You can go faster so that you're still intersecting the requisite air molecules to measure the fact that you're going Mach 10
Next time you're driving down the street. Yes, 60 miles an hour roll down the window. Yes, or sorry. How do you open? Windows, but lower the window. Yes. Oh, sorry, how do you open windows?
Oh, lower the window.
Lower the window with the button.
Stick your hand out, just like that.
You can barely hold your hand straight
against 60 mile an hour air.
That is a hard thing to accomplish.
Now, increase the speed of that air by a factor of 100.
You stick your hand out there,
your hand will just blow away.
Separated from your arm.
And you're gonna, we've missed 100 mile an hour winds here,
but they happen all the time.
Now pick up, where are you going with your question?
Okay, the universe is expanding.
All measurements tell us that. Okay. Now, pick up, where are you going with your question? Okay, the universe is expanding.
All measurements tell us that.
Okay, where, so the star system that we saw, we think is the original one, is the farthest
away, 13.8 billion years away, where's it gone?
Where's it going?
That star system, we see it not as it is today, but as it once was 13.8 billion years ago,
because that light is only now just reaching it.
Jesus, yesterday you said that it's instantaneous.
I mean, you've got to have the rules, follow the rules here.
So wait a minute.
So that still is my question.
It's only more compounded. So I'm looking at light from that galaxy 13.8 billion years away and it's
Another 30. It's 26
It's 29.6
You light years away now
Billion so what so what's going on is?
There's the light you see from objects formed at the beginning of the universe only now just reaching us.
Today, that object is way farther away from us than that.
So the universe is far larger.
You just can't see that. Yes.
The measurements of the universe is far larger than they do.
It's like 90, nearly 100 billion light years across.
So it's like immeasurably big.
So what is space?
Gotcha.
It's the final frontier.
Thank you.
Oh, mic drop on that.
Let me say, Scott, it was fun doing a little dust up
with you on Twitter, just to see how people chose sides. Right, they thought we were just enemies and they wanted to watch it happen,, it was fun doing a little dust-up with you on Twitter. Just to see how people chose sides.
Right, they thought we were just enemies and they wanted to watch it happen.
But it was fun.
It was a highly educational moment for people.
They'd see what's going on there.
Bill!
Yes?
You're my man.
You are my man.
You are treasure, not only to me, but to everyone assembled here on this ship, to the country and to the world,
your enthusiasm, your boyish curiosity,
childlike curiosity is infectious.
It is contagious.
I don't want to use these biologically bad words.
It is, it's, yeah, it's contagious.
Great.
It's contagious to us all.
That's what it's contagious. This past It's contagious to us all. That's what it's contagious.
This past year you had your 93rd birthday.
My birthday is March 22nd, so it's not that far away.
You're gonna be 94.
I'll be 94.
And we have, there's a documentary called You Can Call Me Bill that's out and around
and making its rounds right now.
It's really good.
And I was with you for the New York premiere of that,
which I delighted in just to,
and just if I can steal another minute here,
could you tell us all, recount for us all,
as you did in the film,
what were you thinking after they had canceled Star Trek,
after its third season?
We haven't yet landed on the moon,
and you're living out of a trailer trying to...
Did I tell that story in the film?
Or maybe you told me, I don't...
But you had a trailer in regional theater
trying to make a buck.
I have three children, they're going to school,
I was getting divorced as the show was being canceled.
I was broke. I couldn't write a $15 check at the end of Star Trek. I
had it I acquired I think I bought it an old truck with a cab on the back and a
dog a Doberman and I drove and I put together a summer theater show, and I drove across the country
to the Cape, Boston.
And did summer theater for 13 weeks,
turned around, headed back home to go back to my family.
Made a point of calling my agent every day
from a gas station, put the quarters in.
And he said, oh, Rose Kennedy wants you to
come to a party.
Can you come to?
I said, well, I'm on the road.
I can't come to a party.
I got to go see my kid.
All right, call me tomorrow.
I called him tomorrow.
He says, I'm telling you, Rose Kennedy wants you to come to the Kennedy party and the thing
over there.
I can't come.
I get to Phoenix.
I call him.
He says, they'll send an airplane for you.
Had I not been so blinded by coming home in this,
pilots know about the danger of coming,
of home, homeitis is it?
Where you sacrifice the rules to get home,
you're so anxious.
I sacrificed the rules.
I could have asked her, send the plane to Arizona,
fly me to Los Angeles pick up my kids fly back to New York
meet the the canadies and fly me back I didn't think of it and
That was my my journey my initiation
after
Star Trek so it went to a low and that it has been ascending ever since. I've had good luck ever since.
And of course you have the book To Boldly Go?
Boldly Go.
But it's more than one book out there.
Okay.
Yeah.
All right, we'll look for those.
And Scott, what projects you have going right now?
I do a bunch of public speaking.
I'm on some advisory boards.
Yeah, okay.
You know, I write a little.
I have some other book ideas I need to start working on.
He's a wonderful public speaker.
He's perfect in front of an audience.
Guys, thanks for coming back onto Star Talk.
Yeah, it's great.
So this has been Star Talk Live
in a voyage sponsored by the Future of Space,
an organization that's trying to connect us to exploration.
Absolutely.
And this is the inaugural voyage of a space to sea
trip to Antarctica, which brought the three of us together.
Fortuitously.
Fortuitously.
Yes, I am Neil deGrasse Tyson,
your personal astrophysicist,
and as always, I bid you to keep looking up. Thank you.