The Daily - Your Kids Asked the Artemis Astronauts Questions. They Answered.

Episode Date: May 6, 2026

Last month, the astronauts of NASA’s Artemis II mission splashed down in the Pacific Ocean, bringing their journey around the moon to a close. “The Daily” asked children to send in questions for... the crew. The astronauts — three Americans and one Canadian — sat down with Rachel Abrams to answer them. Guest: The Artemis II astronauts: Victor Glover, Jeremy Hansen, Christina Koch and Reid Wiseman. Background reading:  The mission took the astronauts farther than any human has ever traveled in history and reminded us how small we are. The Artemis II splashdown gave NASA momentum in a renewed moon race. Photo: The New York Times For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.  Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Zoom, zoom, zoom. You want to take a trip. Climb aboard my rocket shift. Zoom, zoom. From the New York Times, I'm Rachel Abrams, and this is the Daily. Two weeks ago, we asked if you, or more specifically, your kids, had questions for the Artemis II astronauts. Hello, my name is Matthew. Hi, I'm Ila Renovar.
Starting point is 00:00:39 Hi, my name is Benjamin Souser. My name is Owen. I'm three years old. Kids definitely had questions. How yummy what's the food? I think they ate stars. The moon made out of cheese. How did you get to the moon without using Google Maps?
Starting point is 00:01:02 Kids wanted to know about life on board the spaceship, about the wonder and the vastness of space. Were you scared? Because I would be scared. Why did they go on the mission thing? when it was super duper, duper, duper whiskey. My question for the Artem's crew is, how do you think people will look back at this mission in 50 years?
Starting point is 00:01:27 And today, we posed these questions to the astronauts themselves. Reed Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Cook, and Jeremy Hansen, to learn what their mission to the moon was like, how it changed their perspective about life here on Earth and whether it is possible to drink soda in space. It's Wednesday, May 6th. Crew of the Artemis 2, welcome to the Daily.
Starting point is 00:02:00 Thank you. Thank you. Read, Jeremy, Victor, Christina. You have been answering about a thousand trillion questions since you got back from your mission to the moon. And that makes sense because space captivates us in a way that very few things do. And perhaps no group of people embraces the wonder
Starting point is 00:02:17 and curiosity of space better than children. And so for that reason, we asked kids to see. submit questions to the daily. Can I go to space with you? And we got so many responses, so many more than in my entire time of the daily. That's amazing. A lot of kids, as I'm sure you've heard, they want to go to space too. I'm going to be a grown-up.
Starting point is 00:02:42 I'm going to be an astronaut. I'm saving up to go to space can next summer. What does it take to be an astronaut? When you were a kid, did you guys ever imagine that you would go to the dark side of the moon. I want to be an astronaut when I grow up. What is one piece of advice you can give me? What would you tell a child about the qualities that allow you to do what you do,
Starting point is 00:03:14 to be astronauts, and how a child might cultivate those? Reid, would you like to start? I think curiosity and the wonder of nature. You cannot leave out the wonder of nature. Walk outside, look at a tree, watch a bird fly, watch water go around rocks, is it's coming down a waterfall or a stream, just any way you can look at nature. Jeremy?
Starting point is 00:03:35 Persistence is another one we talk about a lot because the one thing that we can all guarantee kids today, there are going to be challenges between you and your goal, and there are going to be times where you do not believe you're going to make it. And you're just going to have to have persistence to keep trying and let other people know where you're trying to go so they can help you. Victor? The number one thing I would say to a young person is being a good teammate.
Starting point is 00:03:57 And the reason I would start with that, one is because at the end of the day, you don't get to say if you're a good teammate. It's your teammates who say that. And so focusing on that, they can start practicing that today. Christina? Rounding out, there's so many left to choose from. I'm thinking about humility. I'm thinking about hard work. And I'm thinking about supporting the people around you. Well, those are all very beautiful answers. And now I want to actually talk about the mission that you went on. So this was a historic trip, of course. You were gone for 10 days. You were farther than any human has ever been
Starting point is 00:04:33 from Earth. You orbited the moon. You went to the far side of the moon. You lost contact with people back on Earth briefly. And we got a lot of questions about what that felt like. So here is a question from Colin in California. My question for the astronauts of early on this two is how did it feel like to be on the dark side of the moon? Was it scary or was it adventurous? Christina, scary or adventurous? Wow. I would say in some ways, I would almost call it solemn. We had so much work to do, so we were also very busy, but we did know it needed to be commemorated amongst us when we were the four people out there by ourselves.
Starting point is 00:05:14 And we did that. We took a moment, and then we kind of got back to work. But I can't imagine, Reed, that you're not up there looking at what you're looking at and being at least momentarily distracted from the very important work that you're doing. Keel asked. It's funny that you asked me that question. It turned out that Victor's, he didn't know his job before launch would be to always pull me away from the window back into the vehicle, but that did end up being his job. But when we're on the far side of the moon, first, for us, you know, the far side of the moon is often lit by the sun.
Starting point is 00:05:46 Whenever we have a new moon here on Earth, that means that the far side is fully illuminated. And it was, as we're looking at the far side, it was the right side of the moon that was lit up. which was really special for us because human eyes, even though we went to the moon in the 1960s and 70s in the magnificent Apollo program, human eyes had never looked at what we were looking down on. There are a few craters, a basin called Oriental, which is kind of the marquee basin of the solar system
Starting point is 00:06:14 that we were able to look down on. Craters like Vavlov and Ome and Oms ejector rays streak from the far side around to the front side. That was really special for us to get to see. The thing that I just can't stress enough is we did take a moment, but then we had so much science that we were trying to conduct. We were trying to record everything that the human eye saw on the far side because we never see it here on Earth.
Starting point is 00:06:38 We are gravitationally locked to only see the nearest side of the moon here. So we did take a moment, and then it was right back into the work. I haven't found good words to describe it, but how it felt was overwhelming. There was a time when Reed mentioned that our brains have not evolved to see what we're seeing. And so we were actually, you know, transitioning from the far side to coming back toward the near side when the sun went behind the moon. It got really bright and then really dark. And looking out at this really large ore, it was all of the things. I mean, there were so many different emotions at the same time. I can't tell you how many times
Starting point is 00:07:17 I heard something like, oh my God. And I think that was not in vain. That was an appropriate response for what was happening at that moment. It was so unreal. And you have described yourself as a religious person. And so I wonder, did you have a singularly spiritual experience in those moments? The whole thing. The entire mission to me was about God's glory. I think at any point in the mission, you could go, look at that. That's kind of amazing.
Starting point is 00:07:44 And we did not build that. The amazing spacecraft we were in that we built that allowed us to go do it. But it was like we're next to the moon, which dwarfs us. And like, we didn't do that, right? That's just happened over billions of years. It's quite an amazing perspective to have. have. All of that is very beautiful, but we did get one question that I think embodies a little bit of the skepticism that some people have about the cost-benefit analysis of space travel. So here is
Starting point is 00:08:10 Isaac from Arlington, Virginia. Hello, I'm 13. I'm a normal listener of the daily, and I just want know why is it important to know we're spending billions and billions of dollars on something rather than going to do. We're just looking at it. I believe he said, why are we spending the money when we're not even landing on the moon. We are just looking at it. Jeremy, do you have a thought? Yeah, sure. First of all, Isaac, I think it's really important question to ask
Starting point is 00:08:36 because we have a lot of problems here on the planet that we need to tackle. And we are investing a lot of money in space exploration, but I do see it from a different perspective. I see the genius that we bring together under the focus of a common goal. And the solutions that people create that allow us to go out into deep space do benefit us here. on the planet. And I think if we didn't have that push of exploration, we would miss out on these extraordinary innovations that only come together when it's not one mind, but when it's a thousand minds trying to solve a problem together. Well, we got questions that were about
Starting point is 00:09:16 things that were much less serious and much more tangible than that. The kids were actually obsessed with every single part of your trip. I wandled if the astronauts played any games on the spaceship, like tag or something, because it's still floating. And I was wondering if your ears pop. How do you shower and clean yourself? Because at first, I would smell really bad for four people in space. They wanted to know what space smelled like.
Starting point is 00:09:46 What happens if the astronauts went out of fire? Was it colder than you thought it was. They wanted to know whether it was cold, whether it was hot. Astronauts have to eat clock. And they had a lot of questions about what you guys ate. My question for the astronauts is, was the food in space as good as the food at your home and earth? Quick question for the astronauts. Do they have pizza parties up there?
Starting point is 00:10:13 How do you guys get food if there's no restaurants? What do you eat in space for dessert? Can you drink soda in space? I'll take first stab at this. First, yes, we have broccoli. And it's actually delicious. Broccoli all grotten, one of my favorite things to eat. It's just saying that.
Starting point is 00:10:36 You're just saying that because you're talking to parents of the chicken. Absolutely not. It's got cheese in it, but you just had a little bit of water and heat it up. It was very good. The food is magnificent. We have tortillas. You can put brisket on a tortilla. We have chicken and beans, broccoli, spicy green beans is another favorite.
Starting point is 00:10:51 What were some of your favorites? Beats. Yeah. Cale salad. Cale salad. And I wanted to bring in tortillas because Jeremy, on the first. I don't know if you invented it, but you may have seen we had Nutella. And taking Nutella and spreading it on a tortilla and then folding that in half,
Starting point is 00:11:06 it almost made like a chocolate crepe. And Jeremy was just distributing those around the cabin. And they were a great dessert. Did any of that stuff spill? Did you have a moment where the tortilla happened in it? Constantly. But you know what? It's funny.
Starting point is 00:11:19 I like to say that, you know, we shared a lot of meals. Sometimes it was on purpose. So, you know, pieces of things would fly by and you make sure it's food, but then you just enjoy what your crewmates. Make sure it's food. One of the coolest moments on that. First day up there, I had some oatmeal, and I didn't put quite enough water in it to rehydrate it. So when I opened it, there was crumbs of oatmeal that just started floating out.
Starting point is 00:11:39 And I don't mean like two crumbs. I mean like 10,000 crumbs of oatmeal. And I was very embarrassed. You know, I've flown in space before. I shouldn't be making these mistakes. And instead of being annoyed, Victor just floats over and goes, oh, this is my favorite game. It just starts eating them all out of the floating area around me. It was really great.
Starting point is 00:11:56 That's amazing. I think there's actually a Simpsons episode with that exactly. with the potato chest. Oh, my God. Wait, so, okay, we did get a question about soda in space. How do you do that? Soda, I haven't seen it happen successfully. I think there have been attempts, but for many astronauts, that's something that they crave when they get back.
Starting point is 00:12:13 Something bubbly. What's the problem with carbonated beverages? We tried, when I was on Space Station, we did try to drink carbonated beverages. Some of my Russian crewmates had a soda bottle, and we couldn't even open the cap because the bubbles do not go to the top. They're just distributed throughout the entire thing. And any time we would twist the cap a little bit, it would start to spray out, like, if you shook up a can. And so we would twist the cap and just try to suck it off that cap. And we eventually gave up.
Starting point is 00:12:38 That sounds like the worst way to drink a sprite. So our next question is from Leonardo in New York City. It is about another aspect of daily life. My big question for the Artemis 2 crew is, what does it feel like to sleep upside down in space when there is no gravity? Also, is there gravity in your dreams? Thanks. I want to be an astrophysicist when I grow up. Love that.
Starting point is 00:13:05 Great question. I think one of the great things about being in weightlessness is there is no upside down. There is no upside down. There is no upside down. Meaning that any side could be right side up. It all feels the same. It's all convention. What do you call the floor and what do you call the ceiling?
Starting point is 00:13:21 It could be anything. Wow, you just blew my mind. Everyone listening. Their mind just got alone in that moment thinking about that. Did you have to strap yourself in some way? Did anybody ever bump into anybody else in their sleep? I'm sorry, Jeremy. Yes.
Starting point is 00:13:33 It was you? He just tested yes. No, it was me. Well, we kind of slept almost as if we were in bunk beds. So like two this way, to this way, but in opposite directions. And I ended up sort of in this middle space with Reed and Victor underneath me. At one point, I made the mistake of saying, I kind of like how I float around and I move around. And so once I said that, then really would just kick me and I would watch and float,
Starting point is 00:13:58 bounce around for a bit, and then I would just be drifting off, and then I'd get another kick and I'd go for another ride. The second part of Leonardo's question was, is there gravity in your dreams? I think we all dreamed that we were floating at different times. And one really neat thing that happened, I think, to all of us was when we got back and woke up in our beds at home, we all felt like we were floating for a little while. Wow. So you obviously traveled more than a quarter million miles away from people that you love and your home. And we got a lot of questions from kids about what that distance might have felt like. This one is from Aden.
Starting point is 00:14:35 He's eight years old, and he lives in Santa Cruz Mountains, California. My question is from Reed, think of Christina and Journey. How did you feel when you were that far away from North? Was it lonely? Was it lonely, Reed? You are flying with great friends. And so I never really felt lonely. I would say the one thing that I definitely felt, and I think it's all individual, but I definitely felt some fear.
Starting point is 00:14:59 You are so far away and you're trusting this vehicle and ours handled marvelously well. But if something went wrong out there, it could be a very tough day. So that to me is always, it was always in the back of my mind. I didn't feel lonely at all. But what I did get this new sense of is how everything is sort of distributed in our galaxy. When you look up in the night sky, every star you see in our night sky is in our galaxy. This is one galaxy in the entire universe. And we were looking out from our spacecraft and we were just seeing these other stars in our galaxy.
Starting point is 00:15:32 But I was seeing them in a three-dimensional space. Like some of them look closer than others. And the Earth and the moon and seeing them and just seeing how they're juxtaposed have such a hard time explaining it to people. But it was very different than I expected. And when I see the pictures now, I'm like, well, those are really, beautiful pictures. But that's not what I experienced when I saw it. I didn't feel lonely, but I felt longing for Earth. It's all of the people I love, and Shakespeare was down there. It's everything, right? And so, but then you get out there and
Starting point is 00:16:04 you go, there's a lot of nothing out there. Space is emptiness. There is no air. There's a lot of nothing. And you go, wow, if all of the things we know of, even this spacecraft that we're hanging out in was built there, it is an infinitesimely small piece of the universe, but Mary, Jesus, Gandhi, you know, it's all there. And these folks and their families, it's special, even though it's small. I don't know that this will relate, but if you look at the crescent moon, it's rounded and it stops where the sun goes to shadow. But when you look at a crescent earth, the same thing happens, but the edge of the earth just extends a little bit longer And if you look at it, you realize the extension right there, this tiny, it's like two little tiny
Starting point is 00:16:57 whiskers coming off the edge of Earth. It's the whole atmosphere. It's everything that keeps us alive. You really sense fragility. You just sense such a special little tiny thing right there, that atmosphere. You can just tell the moon cannot sustain life, but Earth can. And when you put those two things next to each other, the thing that enables us to live here is so tiny. It's impossible to even
Starting point is 00:17:22 rationalize in your mind. We're going to take a very quick break, and when we come back, I'm going to present questions to you about the number one topic that we got questions about. It probably does not come as a surprise that the number one topic
Starting point is 00:17:49 we got questions about was the bathroom. Of course. And so we want to play you a very small number of questions that we got about this topic. My name's Atticus. I'm pouring three quarters, and how do they poop or pee in space? How did they go to the bathroom and space?
Starting point is 00:18:11 How do you go to the bathroom and space? What is it like to go to the bathroom in space? And you guys have any privacy? How do you? Oh, poop. Who farts the most in space? Let the poop go up or bath. And where does it go? in space and did it float? I was wondering what you did while your toilet was broke on the spaceship.
Starting point is 00:18:39 Where do you go, poo-po? Okay, Artemis crew, the children have spoken. They demand answers. How do you have a bowel movement in space? What part of the toilet broke? And what did you do when it did? Well, there was a lot of, does it go up? Does it go down?
Starting point is 00:19:02 Where does it go? if it's going up, you have a problem and you did something wrong. Because you're right, we don't have gravity to naturally bring all the things where they need to go. But what we do instead is we create an entrainment with kind of like a suction slash fan. It's not very, very strong like a vacuum cleaner or anything. I was about to say it's like sitting on a vacuum. Is that what this is? It's enough to make everything go where it should go if you do everything right.
Starting point is 00:19:28 So for us, we have the primary toilet, which handles the, the bowel movements and the urine anomaly. And then once you urinating into this hose, it gets stored in a tank and then that gets vented to space. Okay. The capability to vent it to space clogged and that failed. And so we needed to go to a backup method, which is these just very simple tubes that you can connect to a port on the side of the spacecraft and vent them to space. I just assumed you did what we all do, which is use an empty water bottle. It's a sense of what you do it. Space water bottle. Okay.
Starting point is 00:20:01 It wasn't too far. Well marked. It was definitely a challenge for us. And we lived that way the whole entire time. And what's the privacy situation here with all of this? For a capsule, pretty good. There is a separate toilet area with a door. It's in the floor.
Starting point is 00:20:15 So you get to float in there and you can close it off. It's actually pretty good. It's one private space we had other than putting on headphones, which was a signal that you might want a little privacy. We could not talk about questions from kids without a question about aliens. So we have one. Hello, my name is Celine. I'm eight years old, and I live in California, but I want to live in New Jersey.
Starting point is 00:20:39 So I have a question for you guys, the Artemis, too. Is there other life out there, aka alien? And did your experience on the dark side of the moon change your answer? Yeah, that's it. Bye! Aliens, guys? Who wants to answer? I mean, I've been to New Jersey.
Starting point is 00:21:00 Jeremy? Oh, well, when I think about the universe, and I was talking to you before, every star you see is in our galaxy, the Milky Way. But then we think there's maybe a couple trillion other galaxies out there. So it's pretty hard to fathom that there's not alien life out there. If you look at the closest neighboring galaxy, which is Andromeda, let's say there's this amazing civilization there.
Starting point is 00:21:26 They have the most extraordinary telescopes, and they're looking at Earth right now while we're chatting. What do they see? They see us a couple hundred thousand years ago. And so we're not here. That's our closest neighboring galaxy. So it gives you an idea of how hard it is to look for life in the universe. It's just really far away, even at the speed of light.
Starting point is 00:22:00 As the details about the toilet show, you guys prepared for every single eventuality. So I have to ask, did any of your training, Victor, include, what to do just in case you encountered an alien? No. But the other part of that question, did our experience on the far side of the moon change that? No. We've looked.
Starting point is 00:22:23 I mean, we have a lot of resources pointed at this dark sky looking for answers, and it's a great question, and I hope it continues to drive us to explore further. I just want to point out that no is the answer that somebody who saw an alien but wasn't allowed to talk about it would say. You realize if we found alien life out there and we came back and reported on it, NASA would never have a budget issue for the rest of eternity.
Starting point is 00:22:45 So trust me. That is one good argument. I'm not going to argue with that. Also, we tell Reid not to say things all the time, and he does. True. We have one more question about your experience while you were actually in space. This is Clara Jones, age nine of Dallas, Texas. What was the most beautiful thing you saw?
Starting point is 00:23:08 What was the most beautiful thing you saw? Victory, would you like to start? Oh, I'm sorry to be boring on this, but it's the Earth. Wow. It just stood out. It was so different. The colors, the shapes, our planet looks alive. Even though we can't see human structures and boats and roads, it looks alive because the swirls change.
Starting point is 00:23:30 And it just, it demands your attention. When you see it out the window, you have to stare at. I think one of the most beautiful moments from this, at least for people watching back home, was the video read where you dedicated the crater to your late wife, Carol. Would you mind describing that moment and what you were thinking and feeling? Well, thank you for that. I mean, that was a special moment for this crew, and it was clearly a special moment for everyone watching.
Starting point is 00:23:58 Thank you, Houston. We have a couple more things we'd like to take this moment for. Christina had the idea, and Jeremy approached me before we launched and said, hey, the crew would like to do this. And I said, Jeremy, that would be amazing honor for my family. And I would love it if you all did that. But I cannot do the talking. And so Jeremy did.
Starting point is 00:24:20 A number of you had an astronaut family, and we lost a loved one. And it was very emotional for all of us. I mean, I just, Jeremy, I still can't believe you made it through that. There's a feature in a really neat place on the moon. And it is on the near side, far side boundary. I can't believe that thought that you all put into that was very special. for me. You can, we will be able to see this from Earth.
Starting point is 00:24:49 And so we lost a loved one. Her name was Carol. And as we were approaching the moon, even days away from the moon, we can look out and see that crater. The spose of Reed, the mother of. And it turned out that both of my daughters were in mission control. They were in the viewing room. It's a bright spot.
Starting point is 00:25:08 In that moment, even though it was an honor of my late wife and primarily to my two daughters, But that was the moment that our crew coalesced, and I think we were bonded there forever. How did your daughters react when they first learned that you'd be able to do this for their mom? We still haven't talked through that. But I know it was, they did not know it was coming, and I know it was, I think, for them, I can't think of a more special moment in their lives to get to hear those words come down. That sounds very beautiful. It was.
Starting point is 00:25:59 You guys have done so many interviews since you've gotten back. You're obviously doing one right now, and you will probably get asked about this trip. for the rest of your life. And I wonder how you plan to hold on to something this singular and special, Jeremy? We talk a lot about gratitude and just remembering what a privilege this was. And we're not doing it that well right now on the planet, but we can at least have the stated goal of trying to get to where we collaborate to lift one another up here.
Starting point is 00:26:31 Victor, I think I heard in an interview that you tried to kind of seal yourself off from the world for a week, just a process. Can you talk a little about that? Two weeks, actually. Two weeks. You managed two weeks. It ended when we started this trip to, you know, get out and share the news. And I think that for me, that two weeks was nice. It was medical checks and reconditioning, working out. And it's also giving me time to just get ready for this, to just think about it and be very intentional as we transition to being more in the public. And to connect it to the previous question you asked,
Starting point is 00:27:00 I've actually decided it's not as a person who gets to kind of be an ambassador of the cosmos, right? Like, that's a crazy job title to be an astronaut. I don't want to hold on to it. I was there, and I can't, I will never be able to put words to what we actually saw felt there. I'll try. But really, I want to give it away. I want to give it away technically to the next crew, and I want to give it away socially and culturally to people who, who made it possible. So thank you, again, gratitude for doing this, but it's not mine to hold on to.
Starting point is 00:27:27 I think one of the astounding things about your trip was just how much it brought people together. You're talking about your crew back home, but also you guys have said you wanted to do something that was really unifying for people watching. And now that you've had a chance to come back and reflect, we want to ask one more question from a kid that kind of gets at what your takeaway might have been. Hi, my name is Amali. I'm 11 and a half years old and I'm calling from Lawson. My question is, when you saw the whole or from far away, did it make you think differently about what really matters in life, like what people should care about? about or how we should treat each other. Thank you. It's such a deep question. There's so many, there's so many things that I want to say. I guess the thing that I would relate to that is you see the purity of Earth and you can sit there and wonder why we can't get along and why we have differences. I would also say that, that maybe those differences are what makes us great sometimes. It lets us explore different
Starting point is 00:28:28 avenues. If we were all the same, I don't think we would do what we do. Well, we've talked about joy. Yeah, I think it really said in our hearts that, you know, our purpose here on this planet is joy and lifting one another up. And I don't think that's new, but I think it certainly reinforced that for us. I have one last question for you guys, which is, I think most people believe you when you say that nobody could understand this experience. You had something wonderful happen and you're going to carry it with you for the rest of your lives and we're just not going to get it. But I also wonder whether being up there with no life gave you a renewed appreciation or wonder for what I think is sort of the unlikely scenario of life down on Earth and just all the things that had to come together for us to even be here right now. 1,000%.
Starting point is 00:29:21 Absolutely. That was one of the biggest takeaways. Because when you look out and you see the Earth, tiny Earth, and you mostly see blackness around it, you recognize. You recognize what an completely unlikely scenario this is and how precious it is. There is some such thing as a global scale, and we have a choice as to what we do with that. I think what I sort of wanted to end with is just a gratitude to people who paid attention to the mission. We look a lot and pay attention at the negative right now and the things that are different and how they're wrong. but you can also look at the things that are different between us and how that's right and how that's an asset.
Starting point is 00:30:09 And so what I have a renewed sense for is that people are willing to spend energy and pay attention to the positive things. And therefore, we have a choice of where we put our energy and our attention. Our world, our choice. Thank you all so much for spending this much time with us. I get my last word. Oh, sorry. I was looking. I thought you were nodding like you were.
Starting point is 00:30:36 This is the last thing. This is the most profound comments you could ever hear. So if there's kids listening, I want to give homework. You absolutely can. My homework would be the next time you see something in bloom or something growing out of the ground, just stop for a second and look at it and just be impressed by it. Because sometimes you have to leave and look back and then come back to realize the simplest little thing can be the most impressive thing you have seen all week.
Starting point is 00:31:08 Crew of Artemis II, it has been such a pleasure, and congratulations. Thank you. Thank you. Here's what else you need to know today. Officials at the Food and Drug Administration have blocked publication of several studies supporting the safety of widely used vaccines against COVID-19 and shingles, the latest step by an administration that has tried to limit access to vaccines and promoted information that casts doubt on their safety.
Starting point is 00:31:54 The studies were conducted by scientists at the FDA and cost us. millions of dollars in public funds. Researchers found serious side effects to the COVID-19 and shingles vaccines to be very rare. And Senate Republicans have inserted a billion dollars for security enhancements for President Trump's new ballroom into the immigration enforcement funding bill they hope to rush through Congress this month. Democrats pounced on the proposal, signaling that they intended to make the ballroom a centerpiece of their opposition to the measure and their election year message that the president and his party were not meeting voters' needs. The president had previously insisted that the renovation would be funded through private donations,
Starting point is 00:32:35 and the proposed new ballroom is currently being challenged in court. The crew for today's episode includes producers Lexi Dio and Anna Foley, with help from Rochelle Bonja. Our episode was edited by Mark George with help from Paige Cowett, and contains music by Diane Wong, Pat McCusker, Sophia Landman, and Chelsea Daniel. Original music by Marion Lazzano and Dan Powell. Our theme music is by Wonderly. This episode was engineered by Alyssa Moxley,
Starting point is 00:33:08 and a special thanks to our entire video team, including Peter Colpart, Christina Avalos, Mustafa Mirza, and Devin Greenleaf. And to our studio engineers, Kyle Grandillo, and Sam Winter. If you want to see the Artemis astronauts react to these questions from kids, check out the video version of our interview at our website. And finally, thank you to everybody who called in, the kids, the parents, the teachers who got their whole classrooms to ask questions. We really loved listening to all of you.
Starting point is 00:33:51 That's it for the Daily. I'm Rachel Abrams. See you tomorrow.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.