The Rest Is History - 438. The Moonwalkers, with Tom Hanks
Episode Date: April 7, 2024“We choose to go to the Moon. We choose to go to the Moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard…” In his speech at Rice University, Texas, ...in September 1962, President John F. Kennedy reaffirmed America's commitment to an extraordinary, startling project: landing a man on the Moon by the end of the decade. Facing fierce competition from the U.S.S.R., it would take 11 missions of unimaginable danger to reach this goal, with Neil Armstrong first setting foot on the Moon’s rocky surface on July 21st, 1969. "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind." 650 million people watched in awe that day, as Apollo 11 unfolded on live TV. In today’s episode, Tom and Dominic are joined by one of those people, very special guest TOM HANKS, actor, filmmaker and expert on all things Apollo-related, to discuss the epic saga of how humankind made it to the Moon and back. From the tragedy of Apollo 1 and the disaster of Apollo 13, to Buzz Aldrin's "religious moment" after the Eagle had landed, driving foldable cars on the Moon, and the arguments over who would get to take the first lunar steps, Tom Hanks, Dominic Sandbrook and Tom Holland look at the dangerous, daring, and incredible stories of the Apollo missions. The Moonwalkers: A Journey with Tom Hanks is on at Lightroom, in King’s Cross, London, until the 13th of October 2024. Find out more here: https://lightroom.uk/whats-on/the-moonwalkers/ *The Rest Is History LIVE in 2024* Tom and Dominic are back onstage this summer, at Hampton Court Palace in London! Buy your tickets here: therestishistory.com Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Producer: Theo Young-Smith Assistant Producer: Tabby Syrett Executive Producers: Jack Davenport + Tony Pastor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Thank you for listening to The Rest Is History. For weekly bonus episodes,
ad-free listening, early access to series, and membership of our much-loved chat community,
go to therestishistory.com and join the club. That is therestishistory.com. Fate has ordained, but the men who went to the moon to explore in peace
will stay on the moon to rest in peace.
These brave men, Neil Armstrong and Edwin Aldrin,
know that there is no hope for their recovery.
But they also know that there is hope for mankind in their sacrifice.
These two men are laying down their lives in mankind's most noble goal,
the search for truth and understanding.
They will be mourned by their families and friends.
They will be mourned by their nation.
They will be mourned by the people of the world.
They will be mourned by a Mother Earth that dared send two of her sons into the unknown.
In ancient days, men looked at stars and saw their heroes in the constellations.
In modern times, we do much the same, but our heroes are epic men of flesh and blood others will follow
and surely find their way home man's search will not be denied but these men were the first
and they will remain the foremost in our hearts for every human being who looks up at the moon in the nights to come
will know that there is some corner of another world that is forever mankind.
So that, Dominic, was your hero, President Richard Nixon. Or rather, it was Richard Nixon
as he would have been had the Apollo 11 mission gone wrong, had the Eagle not landed or had it been unable to take off, had Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin been left stranded on the moon landings. That is the one that haunts me more than anything, because it really brings home the jeopardy, the incredible sense of danger that accompanied a mission that is now so much
part of our imagination that we just take its success for granted, don't we?
We completely do, Tom. Well, first of all, I will say, tremendous effort there.
Thank you.
I felt it was slightly wavery at times, but as we will discover, we won't give it away right away, but you were under tremendous pressure there. Thank you. I felt it was slightly wavery at times, but as we will discover,
we won't give it away right away, but you were under tremendous pressure there. I was. I mean,
because there is a Californian listening to this who has maybe dabbled a little bit in
amateur dramatics himself. Bit of acting. In acting himself, exactly. So you did well under
tremendous pressure. To be honest, Dominic, it was Richard Nixon talking about the search for truth and understanding
that made me wobble.
Of course, right.
Yes.
Yes.
So it is an extraordinary thing, isn't it?
When you think about the 20th century, it will of course be remembered in the long run
for technology, for the world wars, for the terrible depths of man's inhumanity to man. But the one great shining light, I would say, is the sense
that mankind was pushing the frontiers of technological exploration. And that that moment
when man lands on the moon is the supreme symbol, I think, in the 20th century of the conquest of
frontiers that would once have seemed absolutely impossible.
And the sheer symbolism, don't you think, of that moment when Neil Armstrong steps onto the room.
And you're absolutely right, I think, to emphasize the jeopardy,
which is something we so often overlook.
Now, you and I are too young, aren't we?
I mean, I wasn't even born.
Well, I'm not actually.
You're too young to remember it, though.
Yeah, I am definitely too young to remember it.
But the good news is we have a guest today who does remember it. Now,
Tom, we are a patriotic podcast. So it pains me, given our history with the French,
this is our first guest who is a chevalier of the Légion d'honneur, would you believe?
That we have it on the show. Yeah. on the positive side he is a fan of aston
bella well it's not all bad two pretty deep black marks there tom but i'm prepared to overlook them
because it is our first guest to have won not one but two academy awards for best actor in
successive years it is of course top historian tom. Tom, welcome to the show. Thank you.
And by the way, Tom Holland, a dead ringer as Richard Hanks.
Thank you.
Without a doubt.
Thank you.
If you could say such things like, I am not a crook,
and you won't have Dick Nixon to kick around anymore.
Those were two of his other quotes.
I'll feel like I'm sitting in the same room.
Wow.
You are too kind.
That is charitable.
That is so kind.
That is so generous.
That is a beautiful, it's odd to say, but a missed opportunity for some magnificent
poeticizing in that speech that did not have to be given, in that it really does encapsulate the risk and the danger in the 50-50 one-shot only opportunity
that Apollo 11 had and Apollo 12 had in order to land on the moon. And it only took,
it took less than a year for the opposite to happen. On Apollo 13, that odd thing occurred, a bad valve, a misread test result, improperly interpreted reading,
what have you, had it happened at any other point in the voyage to the moon, would have taken the
lives of all three astronauts that were on board Apollo 11, Jim Lovell, Jack Swiker, and Fred Hayes.
And Tom, that is a mission that is associated with you. I played, I was in the movie.
I played Jim Lovell.
I talked to all of those guys and did a deep, deep, deep dive into that other aspect of
exploration was what happens when something goes wrong, terribly wrong.
And what does it take in order to avoid the disaster that really would have defined, I
think, the Apollo moon
message, the American space race, and perhaps going to the moon.
Just to ask, before we start looking at the history of how man ends up on the moon, what's
your kind of personal sense of it?
It goes back to childhood, doesn't it?
You were kind of playing games in swimming pools and things.
Yeah.
I'm 67 years old. I was born in 1956 and my school days dovetailed perfectly with the story of the decade. And as Dominic said,
really of the 20th century, we were going to go to the moon. Human beings were going to walk on the moon as early as 1962.
The question was when and who and how fast and which nation?
Would it be the Soviet Union, who seemed to be light years ahead of us in their secrecy
and in their accomplishments?
Or would it be the very open and public and very expensive American space program? So from John
Glenn or actually Alan Shepard in the early 1960s, I was in second, third, fourth, fifth,
sixth grade. So I was 13 in July of 1969. And the only thing I was paying attention to
outside of maybe some girls was the run-up to landing on the moon,
which began really in earnest in the, I think, in the zeitgeist of Vox Populi starting in 1968
when Apollo 8 went to the moon and broadcast live from lunar orbit on television. And we saw that
very particular vision of ourselves on the planet Earth in the distance in black and white.
But yet there we were.
But seeing it on television, I was sitting in my mom's house in Red Bluff, California, thinking that history just cracked wide open.
Something had happened that had never happened before.
And so now it was just we had to complete the task.
And when would that happen
there were two more missions that when tested equipment and one flew to the moon again apollo
10 they did not land and it wasn't until that july where it was going to happen and it was a
countdown it was it was a every day that ticked by every week, every headline was sort of like written.
All of the disciplines that I was studying, certainly it was current events,
you know, the news of the day.
But it was also science.
It was also physics.
Lift plus thrust is equal to load plus drag.
It was engineering.
It was mathematics of how do you build these rockets
and how do you put three guys into it and how do you, what does it take in order to build something that can land on the moon?
It was science and technology because they had amazing computers that would help divine, you know, how to get there.
Computers in the primitive sense.
Your average calculator that you get for free on one of your apps on your phone now has more memory than
everything that had on Apollo. And then there was also a degree of artistry to it, because I can't
tell you enough of how much the combined presence of 2001 of Space Odyssey, the motion picture,
as well as the poetry of Archibald MacLeish and the ongoing science fiction writing of anybody from Robert Heinlein to Arthur C.
Clarke, this was all enmeshed in this world of before we land on the moon.
I was very cognizant of that great, I overused the imagery of Rubicon that was crossed by
humankind on one side of the lunar river one day. And then
the next day we had crossed over to the other side. All of humankind now were spacefaring,
planetary visiting. And Tom, can I ask you, so you said you were born in 1956. Obviously,
the following year, I think it is, is the year that the Russians launched Sputnik, which was a
great shock for Eisenhower's America. How much were you growing is, is the year that the Russians launched Sputnik, which was a great shock for
Eisenhower's America. How much were you growing up conscious of the fact that the space race was
being driven by that kind of Cold War competition with an ideological adversary? Or was that not
really on ordinary people's radar, would you say? No, it was us versus them. Turns out the threat
of Sputnik was really just they'd been able to do it.
Everybody was like, oh, now they can drop rockets on us.
No, no, they couldn't.
Sputnik was essentially a grapefruit-sized ball that was going beat, beat, beat.
But the fact that they were able to do it in the first place was what kind of kicked America's ass for a while.
How come they can do it when we can't?
Then, of course, Yuri Gagarin goes up and it orbits the moon. And it seemed as though the Russians were building spaceships when Americas
were kind of like sending up versions of toasters to see if they could work in outer space instead.
But it was. It was a competition, pure and simple, us versus them. And it was always
in the perspective of they're beating us. We are losing. We're in
second place because it was so secretive. Yeah, of course. Because Khrushchev kind of
openly gloats, doesn't he, when he congratulates Gagarin and he kind of saying, let the capitalists
catch up with us. They'll never beat us. And then of course, John F. Kennedy picks up the gauntlet.
And since you were thrilled by my first impression of an American president,
let me- So you asked for this, Tom. You opened the door to this.
All right. Let's hear it. So this is September the 12th, 1962, and JFK gives a speech at Rice
University in Houston, where of course, you know, mission control is and all that kind of thing,
to 40,000 people. And he commits the United States to landing a man on the moon by the
end of the decade. So he is providing a kind of a deadline. But why some say the moon, why choose this as our goal? And they may well ask
why to climb the highest mountain? Why 35 years ago, fly the Atlantic? Why does Rice play Texas?
We choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things
not because they are
easy, but because
they are hard.
What do you think of that? So what people
who are listening to this can't see
is that actually Tom Hanks is in tears
and horror at the
destruction
of an American icon.
I mean, it's such a stirring speech.
And I hope that I haven't completely destroyed any sense of the drama of it with that.
But it is.
You can't screw up that text.
You know, the words live.
Right.
Even the worst actor, you're saying.
But it's an amazing commitment because failure in that mission will be so public. It's about as bold a statement as was ever to be made, I think, by any politician.
Yeah.
Now, later on in the famous speech to Congress, he says, I believe that we should dedicate
ourselves before this decade is out of sending a man onto the moon and returning him safely
to the earth. Between that and what he said in the
stadium at Rice University, and that, why does Rice play Texas? That was a great ad lib that
he put in there for the local crowd. It really does state something much more than a political
will, but sort of like the purpose and definition of humankind. Why would we try something like that? You can take that into
account by why go across those mountains in primitive man, when all you can do is walk?
Why go from here to there when it's on the other side of that body of water?
Why do anything that was going to risk your life, cost a lot of money, maybe have absolutely no value at the end of the day. Why go off and
explore or try anything new? Because it is the human condition, not because it is easy,
but because it is hard. He goes on and speaks about the test that is going to make of all of
ourselves, of the people that are involved in that. They're going to have to just figure things out with no
guarantee of success. In fact, a 50-50 chance of absolute public failure. And here's the thing that
I think comes down to what backed up his ability to say such a thing, is there's a ton of people
that want to do exactly that, that don't view
themselves as being fully alive without trying the impossible, without attempting to figure out
what has never been attempted. It is part of the human condition for some people to leave the
campfire and go outside the cave and see what's on the other side of the valley. And in this case, I mean, my God,
I mean, here we have been looking up at this thing that has been above us in different shapes and
forms more or less every single night of our existence. And depending on when we get up at
night, sometimes the moon is there shining down on us. Sometimes it's just barely showing up.
And it is this huge, big, circular, crescent, gibbous-faced source of light and perspective
that can really, with only a few minutes of pondering, produce nothing but questions.
What's up there?
Can I go there?
Why is it there?
How did it get there?
What does it mean?
I mean, what does the moon mean?
How does it affect us?
I mean, I think it's interesting that crazy people were often called lunatics.
Of course. Yeah.
You went to a lunatic asylum. I've spoken to people in the psychiatric industry. They said,
hey, what's the deal with the full moon? Does it really make people go crazy? And they said,
why do you think they called them lunatics?
Because even periodically that moon comes out and we all get a little bit
hairy.
We all turn into some version of,
of werewolves.
Yeah.
And it's as certain as the tides being pulled,
you know,
on bodies of water.
So there's this thing that exists up there for some kind of reason.
And as John F. Kennedy says, you know, we choose to go to the moon and do the other
things, not because they're easy, but because they are hard.
They're going to be a test of ourselves and why we're here on the planet Earth in the
first place.
Now, it's not far, I don't think, in order to take that and say, well, why try to figure
out what bacteria is? Why not try to
conquer viruses? Why not try to do any of the other things? Because they're not going to be easy.
They are going to be hard. But at the same time, it's a problem that we are a problem-solving
race. We like these mysteries and tasks. So you said something interesting there about
Kennedy's pledge, his vigor, his optimism, tapping something in the human spirit. But now that you look back, do you think that the 60s, I mean, Kennedy obviously talked about the new frontier and all that kind of thing. Do you think that the 60s, that that was a peculiar moment? The kind of technological optimism, the can-do spirit, obviously the economy is doing really well you know the united states
is really keen to flex its muscles i guess you know i'm not talking about militarily although
there is a military dimension to it but you know there's a real sense of dynamism there the new
whole new frontier thing conquering frontiers they're obviously now from the perspective of
the 2020s we kind of don't have that to the same degree, do we? We're much more pessimistic, we're much more introverted. But do you think there was something unique about
that spirit? So that climate in which you were growing up of kind of can-do, vigor, dynamism,
all of that kind of thing? Without a doubt, the 1960s were this time where the newness of so much
of our technological abilities as human beings was probably on display in a much
more vigorous kind of way. I'm going to say somewhere between the advent of television
through to the 1970s, maybe, when we could have the VHS machine and record everything.
Suddenly, all this stuff was possible that had been the stuff of science fiction for generation upon generation.
Even my dad, my parents could only get across the country really at the speed of a railroad.
And if they were going to make a telephone call, your voice had to get there along whatever
electrons could fit onto a copper wire.
And all of those barriers disappeared in the 1960s.
Just communications in general went nuts.
Yeah.
And also in our own individual lives,
it was an incredibly important invention,
and it came about widely in the 1960s,
was air conditioning.
Because suddenly you could live in parts of the world
that were inhospitable.
Well, like Houston, right? Yeah. I mean, that's why it can be done in Houston. Because suddenly you could live in parts of the world that were inhospitable.
Well, like Houston.
Yeah.
I mean, that's why it can be done in Houston.
Houston's a swamp, for goodness sake.
It's a murky, humid swamp with bugs and spiders the size of your head.
Yeah.
And air conditioning comes along.
And suddenly we are able to live our daily lives in this type of comfort and ease for the first time in all of human history.
So along with that, I think, stirred this catalyst of, well, what else is possible?
What else can we do?
What else is fun?
What else is going to be entertaining?
And what else can we do at nighttime when we're home done with our jobs?
But also then, what else is going to be able to move us from here and there? And what else is going to be technologically imaginatively possible?
It seemed there for a while that if you could imagine it, you could make it happen in the 1960s.
That has just sped so fast that now we don't even think twice about all the things that are
possible. And Tom, I should mention, I mean, this is a thought that was, it struck me very,
very powerfully when I went to a show that you narrate, Moonwalkers, in King's Cross here in
London, where we are, which is on at the moment, it's on, I think, till the 13th of October, 2024.
And in that, you narrate the story of all the various Apollo missions. And one of the things that leaps out from that is how short the distance of time is
between utter disaster and utter triumph.
So Apollo 1, I mean, three astronauts die horribly burnt to death in their tin can,
as David Bowie would put it.
And they weren't even meant to fly.
They were just doing tests on the ground.
And something went so hideously wrong that they were incinerated to death and they couldn't even open the door to
the space capsule. Because that seems a terror. I mean, Apollo 1, they die so horribly. The
technology seems dodgy. And yet the speed with which the missions are being sent up. So we
already talked about Apollo 8 with Moonrise and Jim Lovell up there and everything.
And then Apollo 10, dress rehearsal for the Apollo 11 lunar landing,
which is called Snoopy, isn't it?
The one that goes down.
Well, yeah, but okay.
Can we take a moment just to examine Apollo 10?
Sure.
Yeah.
Well, Charlie Brown and Snoopy was a command module in the lunar module.
Apollo 8 had
gone around the moon and at christmas with three guys in it it was just them just to see if the
math worked that paulo 8 was kind of like if we can throw this hammer far enough hard enough it
will go around the moon and come back right and they did and i'll tell you this little side story
charles lindbergh visited the crew of of Apollo 8 just before they were about to launch.
And they said to him, you know, are you going to come back in July for the Apollo 11?
Because that'll really be history because they're going to land on the moon.
And Charles Lindbergh said, no, you guys are making the most important flight in humankind.
You guys are leaving the gravitational pull of the planet earth.
That's never been done before.
If you guys can do that, all the rest of this stuff is nuts and bolts.
How about that?
Yeah.
So then let's take Apollo 10, Thomas Stafford, who is the commander and Gene
Cernan.
Gene Cernan is in Snoopy, the lunar module that cannot land on the moon, fly just a few dozen miles above its
surface and willingly give up on the idea of landing and coming back home? I mean, you are so
close and yet you're not allowed to park and go into Disneyland. You can only drive by and look
at it. Is that why they called it Charlie Brown?
They never got there. No, actually, the reason they called it Charlie Brown,
because it was the first time they were going to have two different spacecraft that they had to talk to individually. Oh, I see. So they needed names. So when they said,
hey, Charlie Brown, that meant the command module. They said, hey, Snoopy, that meant the lunar
module. Right. So as somebody who's talked to a lot of these astronauts
and obviously you've played astronauts
and you've narrated films about them
and so on and so forth.
Is there a sense of,
I mean, does the camaraderie trump everything?
Are they just so proud and privileged
to be doing the jobs that they are?
Or is there a sense of,
I don't know,
maybe jealousy is too strong,
but rivalry,
you know, because the guy
who gets to be the first guy on the moon,
I mean, that is a very privileged position. So in other words, do the people on Apollo 10 think,
yeah, this is all very well, but I wish I was on Apollo 11? Or does that not come into it?
They are perhaps the most competitive group of people I've ever come across.
Oh, really?
They are all convinced, rightly so, that they are the most accomplished of anybody is there.
They do give each other great respect for what they have accomplished, but they don't necessarily get along.
Right.
They don't necessarily have to like each other.
Yeah.
Without a doubt, it is a class.
And by class, I mean a group of people who are all studying and competing for the same honors.
Right.
Yeah. And inside that comes every one of the human feelings that was part of the human condition.
But what they also are, they are members of an extremely exclusive club that is a meritocracy.
You have to be smart.
You have to be accomplished.
And you have to withstand any number of intellectual and physical
rigors to be a part of it.
So I have found them all to be a source of, if you can get them away from, what's the
word I'm going, you know, anybody who accepts a check from the federal government runs the
risk of saying something so, you know, improper or whatever.
And so there's an awful lot of pressure on them to always say
and be and do the right thing. I'll take that into account because I understand that what goes along
with it. But just like, I don't know, it's kind of like when you get a chance to have a real
conversation with one of the Rolling Stones, you know, hey, Bill Wyman, I got some questions for
you about what it was like being a part of the Rolling Stones. Hey, Charlie, Charlie Watts,
you got to watch the back of those. do you think you know they all have a very
very very individual story to tell about what they saw and what they went through and it is singular
it is for them and them alone you know you you tom and dominic you talk about what would have
happened if neil and buzz and ap Apollo 11 had died going down to the
surface or not able to get off the surface. Let's imagine their corpses are in the sea of tranquility
for the rest of time. Okay. Do you know what Michael Collins had to do? Michael Collins was
the astronaut in the command module. He was there to take them home you know he had to drill and practice and come up with
the plan in order to fly home by himself yeah and that was not just a theoretical thing written on
paper yeah he had to run those simulations himself now you hear that that's like okay
i think it's great that neil and buzz got to. I have some questions for Michael Collins I'd like to ask about what he went through. So let's not discount the expertise of those men
simply because they didn't get to go down and get their boots dirty.
But also, I mean, imagine Aldrin and Armstrong know that Michael Collins has been preparing for
that. Michael Collins knows it. I mean, such courage. And just to go back to the
letter that we opened with, they're getting in a tin can. They don't know it's going to work.
So we should probably take a break. But before we do that, let's get man on the moon. So let's
follow Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin as they are coming down to the surface of the moon in the
Eagle. As preparation for this i re-watched the the
ryan gosling film first man and they do it brilliantly and i think it's kind of music
it's kind of incredible tension yeah and i was prompted then to go and read a book that you
wrote the introduction for andrew chaikin's a man on the moon the voyages of the apollo astronauts
because i hadn't realized until i saw that film that they almost land in a crater, don't they?
And Neil Armstrong has to kind of take over. He kind of goes... He says, pretty rocky area here, he said.
Understatements of the year.
Yeah. Pretty rocky area here. Well, yeah, yeah. On the moon.
And the NASA tracking guy is saying it was like watching a man, some kind of snake charmer,
put his hand on a cobra. Anything can happen any minute and probably will. I mean, I cannot imagine the tension there
must've been at that moment. There was also the fact that the visuals of landing there,
because there is no atmosphere, there is no sense of depth perception. It's very hard to determine
how big that rock actually is. Is it the size of a house? The size of a car?
Is it the size of a toaster?
How big is that rock?
Because the lack of an atmosphere means everything is crystal clear.
Everything is as sharp as focus as there is.
Outside of the analog radar, they had a very primitive version of radar,
not much better than had it existed since World War II. The best guide they
had was the fact they had the shadow of their lunar module. They had the shadow of the Eagle.
And the math that went into them landing meant that their lunar module had to be coming into
a landing with the sun directly behind them. So that this little shadow that finally shows up in the distance is them.
And they just match it up for where they are until the shadows.
I mean, just.
And it's not until about 20 feet above the surface that the dust of the moon starts kicking
up and Buzz Aldrin says, picking up a little dust.
That means they are that close. So a shadow and some
dust is the only thing that tells them how close they are to the surface. I can't get past those
kind of details. Yeah. Should we take a break now? And when we come back, we'll let the listeners
know whether the eagle manages to land or not. Yeah, let's find out because I'm anxious to know.
Okay. See you in a few minutes. Bye-bye.
I'm Marina Hyde.
And I'm Richard Osman.
And together we host
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therestisent is entertainment.com that's the rest is entertainment.com welcome back to the rest is history we are still here with tom hanks talking
about moonwalkers the men who walked on the moon so we're on july theth, 1969. A young Tom Hanks is watching in awe in California.
I think that's right, isn't it?
You're watching at home.
Yes.
You're watching a movie that flew to your TV like so many people.
And they've been gone for four days.
They have 30 seconds of fuel left in the reserves.
The tension is mounting.
I know.
The world is watching.
And Neil Armstrong brings the lunar module down and he cuts the engines and he says,
the Eagle has landed. And the show at the Lightroom that you narrate, so Tom mentioned
it earlier in the first half at King's Cross, you get a sense of this almost ecstatic joy and relief
in the control room when they realize they're down they've made it and
the next thing is actually getting a human being down the steps and onto the surface of the moon
and am i right in saying that before they do that um buzz aldrin has some bread and wine and he wants
to have a kind of a religious moment. Is that right?
Yeah, he was about Catholic. And the interesting personalities of all of these crews, I think,
comes out in Apollo 11, because I don't think you could have two individuals that are more different
than Neil Armstrong was from Buzz Aldrin. And you chuck Michael Collins in there and you have,
honestly, I'm not sure those guys would have volunteered to drive to the beach together had they not been
assigned to it. But he did do it. And I think it's actually very beautiful, particularly for a man
of any type of faith. And it does put that other sort of context into the endeavor. Now,
NASA, I don't think was ever wild about there being any religiosity
brought to anything in the program.
In fact, when Apollo 8 read from the book of Genesis
on their television broadcast,
there was all sorts of, you know, any number of public comments.
They were like, this is the last thing we need.
But I think what Buzz did there was he said,
this is a personal moment that I
am experiencing. So therefore, I am going to note it in a very, very personal way.
And one way or another, in an awful lot of the conversations I've had, I haven't spoken to every
one of the men who walked on the moon, but they all do some version of that. That is just a moment
for themselves. But of course, for people watching that. That is just a moment for themselves.
But of course, for people watching on television, the key moment is when Neil Armstrong
actually steps onto the moon. And he slightly fluffs his great line, doesn't he? Did you,
as an actor, ever talk to him about that? There's all sorts of fabulous, you know, old wives tales or, you know, legends about what it is.
And if he had said that's one small step for a man, one giant leap for all mankind, that might have been better.
But for my view, it's one small step for man, a giant leap for mankind.
There is a rule, I think, when it comes down to literature is to
get rid of any word that you do not need. I think that he just truncated it perfectly.
And maybe he was a little excited. Maybe his heart rate was a little large because I think
what he did not say, and I've heard fabulous jokes about this from various comedic outlets. What he did not say
is, holy cow, I'm stepping on the moon. Oh my God, I can't frigging believe this. I'm standing on
the goddamn moon. He didn't say that. So I think it ends up being as beautiful as anything that
Shakespeare or Sophocles or Confucius or late Zhao has ever said,
that you can't go much better than a giant leap for mankind.
Right.
And just to get back to the competitive thing that you talked about in the first half.
Yeah.
Buzz Aldrin wanted to be the first man on the moon, did he not?
Is it not right that when they said, listen, it's going to be Neil,
that he was like, you know what?
I think it actually should be me.
Well, every single man who was in the astronaut corps wanted to be the first man to set foot
on the moon.
Al Shepard wanted it to be.
Fred Hayes wanted it to be.
Pete Conrad wanted it to be.
And actually, he had a shot because if something had gone wrong with 11, he would have made
the first landing on 12.
Yeah.
But there had been this hierarchy when it came down to who gets out
of the spacecraft. On Gemini, for the first spacewalks of Ed White and Gene Cernan and
Michael Collins made a spacewalk on Gemini with two guys. The commander stayed inside the craft,
piloting it, and the pilot, the other guy, essentially popped the hatch and got out first.
That's the way it had always been in Gemini.
And they would have assumed, you would have assumed,
that that would be the case also when it came time to landing on the moon.
Now, is it an odd detail of spacecraft design
that the hinges of the door of the hatch of the lunar module
made it impossible for the guy standing on the right
hand side to get out first and instead be commander of the mission the guy who actually
made the landing right i don't know that we will ever know if it was that or it could have been and
i'm i have no i have no detail that says this was the case. I wouldn't be surprised if when it came down to that decision and the design of the hatch
itself that somebody, maybe it was Deke Slayton, maybe it was Chris Kraft.
I don't believe anybody is going to be the commander of the first landings on the moon
who's going to say, no, let the other guy get out.
I'm the commander.
I'm getting out.
I just landed. So leave it to that.
So is it because of the design of it or is it because of some greater discussion? The record,
I think, will probably go to show that, let's just call it a disappointment, that Buzz Aldrin
was not the first one. I mean, who doesn't want to be the first man to walk on the boat?
Yeah. And it was a piece that he had to make with himself and it took a long time probably for him to make that.
Neil Armstrong was the best pilot, was he? I think in the entire space program. I mean,
he had that reputation. Well, not if you ask all the other pilots.
Well, yeah, sure. But then they didn't walk on the moon, did they? The first.
Well, you know, Pete Conrad-
But I guess there's also the sense. There's a sense also that he's the kind of guy you would want to be the first man to walk on the moon.
He was a civilian.
How about that?
He was the only civilian.
Everybody else, maybe not Jack Smith, but everybody else had been commissioned officers in the Navy as an aviator or the Air Force.
Neil Armstrong was not.
But he was going to play the first guy who walks on the moon is obviously, if he makes
it back, he is going to be in the eye of the global media and he will be for the rest of
his life.
And so I guess you would want someone who could carry that off with dignity.
And Neil Armstrong obviously did that tremendously.
He certainly did.
And I will say this, that came about because everything went according to plan.
Plans that had shifted as early as December of 1968, when they decided to bypass the schedule of tests and missions. If, for example, anything had
gone wrong, even on Apollo 10, even if Apollo 10 had not lived up to its specifications, Apollo 11 would have been a different sort of mission and would have been bombed.
And Apollo 12 could have very easily have been the first mission to the moon.
Or somebody else could have done something else.
They would have slid it around.
It's an interesting question of what was the guarantee that Neil and Buzz and Mike Collins were going to be the mission that landed first
on the moon. Because even Al Shepard's Apollo 14, they were originally going to be Apollo 13,
but that got slipped for any number of reasons. So there's a period of time where
the schedule is in flux. But they make it back.
They do. And they lived up to that second important part. Land a man on the moon.
And get back.
And return them safely to the earth.
Yeah.
Let's look at them and just the physics of that. Okay. All right. They have landed on the moon.
They have to ascend back up into orbit around the moon. There's a lot of math involved in that,
a lot of technology, meaning that rocket has to work perfectly.
That rocket engine, all those valves and all the pressure and all the mixture and all the glycols and all that kind of stuff has to work perfectly.
The command module has to be in the right place and it's got to hook up.
They've got to be able to get back together, stow everything in, then they throw away that ascent station then they have to line up perfectly
and come home to earth and how many shots do they have at that they have one single shot they
essentially come back from the moon on a clothesline straight through going i don't even you guys might
be able to how fast is the uh as the spacecraft going as it comes backwards? Something like 55,000 miles an hour?
Dominic will know.
Dominic, you got those numbers for us?
I don't have them immediately to hand them.
Okay, all right.
Tom, that was very mean.
But it's going.
It's thousands and thousands of miles per hour, right?
Because the gravitational pull of the Earth
is pulling them even faster and faster and faster.
And then they have to survive that fiery thing, The gravitational pull of the Earth is pulling them even faster and faster and faster.
And then they have to survive that fiery thing.
And then the parachutes all have to work and they can't drown in the middle of the Pacific Ocean and all this stuff. So can I ask you, so Apollo 11 succeeds and then Apollo 12 and men land on the moon and come back and it's all brilliant.
But of course, Apollo 13 famously, things go wrong.
And everything that you've been talking about is essentially what the character that you
play in that film has to deal with.
I assume that having played Jim Lovell, it gave you a much sharper sense of everything
that was at stake, not just in Apollo 13, but in all the missions.
The question that I think everybody asks, and I might have asked it of Jim himself,
hey, how scared were you? And the truth is no more scared than any other time they'd gone up
in an airplane and figured out, oh, something could go wrong when I'm up here. On Apollo 13,
the crew knew exactly what they were going to have to do. They were going to have to treat
the lunar module Aquarius as a lifeboat. That was the engine that they had. And that was a contingency to a degree.
And after that, I said, well, did you ever have those type of moments where you were just sitting there thinking, we're screwed?
And he said, no, because there was always something to do.
He described it as a long, long game of solitaire.
You could always go three cards and see three cards and see nothing three oh no i
can do this here we need to do that here there was a thing with the uh taking the o2 out of the
out of the atmosphere there was always something they could do fred hayes uh played by bill paxton
the late bill paxton good friend he said you know sometimes the only thing to do was just to switch over to the forward
omni radio antenna because they were they were spinning around in space and so they always had
to have the the antenna turned on that was pointing at the earth sometimes he said that's all i had to
do but you know that gave me something to do every two and a half minutes so yeah that was something, that was something like that. So getting to that aspect where they
are always in play, and as long as they had a step that they had to take, they realized that
there was a chance that they were going to make it back. The bigger thing I think that I certainly
get from Jim Lovell, and he said this, he said, anytime you go up in an
airplane, you cheat death. Human beings aren't meant to fly, but we've just figured out how to
do this. Human beings aren't supposed to go up into outer space. And by the way, when he flew
on Apollo 13, he was the most traveled man in the history of humankind. He had been in space more
often. He had been in space longer. He had gone farther than anybody else up to that point because that was his second flight
to the moon because he'd been on Apollo 8.
I really got from him the tactile understanding that at the end of the day, it's flesh and
blood and brains that make all of this stuff possible.
Yeah.
And we always had our brains and our flesh and blood was still intact.
That's all they needed in order to have faith in themselves. Faith in themselves, I think, is the great divisive part between people that
achieve things and those who don't even try. It's the difference between us and rival
history podcasts, isn't it, Tom? Exactly right.
I like to think so. So when you talk about Jim Lovell and you talk about how well-traveled he
was, I mean, that's an extraordinary thought, isn't it? He's the most well-traveled man in human history to that point. And you get
a sense of the awesome scale of their achievements and the sense of possibility. I mean, they are
doing this year after year, multiple times a year sometimes. So Apollo 13 is what, 1970?
And then you have 14, 15, 16, 17, and they're playing golf on the moon.
Well, yeah. Apollo 15, they have playing golf on the moon. Well, yeah.
Apollo 15, they have a lunar rover.
They have effectively a car on the moon.
A fold-up electric car.
Now, how about that?
Yeah.
Someone said, hey, you know, it'd be great if we could see a little bit more on the moon and help these guys.
How can we get a car up there?
And someone says, I know.
Let's build one that folds up.
Right. we get a car up there and someone says i know let's build one that folds up right and so you'll just have to pull this little cord and it'll pop open up on the moon you have four wheels and
all the all the stuff and they can drive as far as they want to i uh the the guys they were called
the j missions right 14 excuse me 15 16 and. Not only did they have this electric car,
but they were going to spend three working days out on the moon.
Neil and Buzz were on the lunar surface for about two hours.
That's it.
And by the way, the Soviet Union,
had they been the first to land on the moon,
they wouldn't have even been able to walk more than a few yards
from their spacecraft
because they would have been connected by an umbilical cord.
Is that so?
They would have picked up some rocks.
Right.
They would have picked up some rocks and dust, planted a flag, the hammer and the sickle,
and they would have done a couple of other things.
And then they would have got back and they would have come home.
Their plan was not necessarily to explore the moon.
So Neil and Buzz are out for one spacewalk about two hours
pete conrad and al bean they did two spacewalks on apollo 12 spent the night uh and then and then
took off by the way also made a pinpoint landing because they landed right next to a the surveyor
probe yeah apollo 13 didn't make it apollo 14 did what Apollo 13 was going to do. And what they wanted to do was go to a different sort of geological formation on the moon to see the difference between the rocks.
They were in the Fraumura Islands.
Then along comes 15, 16, and 17.
It's like, go as far as you can, find as much as the stuff, and land in the most difficult places, and let's find out what is there every time they did that every one of those missions
tested some new aspect of what it takes for human beings to go into outer space and prove that
either worked or did not work and i think i think they all found you know a surprisingly uh great
amount of leeway i'll tell you this let. Let's just ponder their pressure suits, the lunar,
LEVA suits, lunar excursion suits that they had, the pressure suits.
They worked perfectly.
The worst thing that happened was on Apollo 14,
the water hose got crimped,
and the astronaut was not able to replenish himself with liquids while he was
out on the moon for seven hours.
Then here's a very interesting detail.
And let's not discount that.
I was in the lunar special and receiving laboratory where they still have the rocks from the moon,
geological samples from the moon that have not been touched.
They have not been examined.
I mean, most of them have been, but underneath gloves, inside a vacuum-packed seal in an airtight antiseptic atmosphere, I was
able to hold the packages that had moon rocks in them. And the geologist that was there said to me
something fascinating. He said, you know, 90% of what we know about lunar geology came from the rocks that Neil Armstrong picked up.
On Apollo 11, Neil picked up the lunar specimens. Buzz laid out the scientific packages. So 90%
of our understanding, our education of geological origins and makeup of stuff on the moon
came from the rocks that
Neil Armstrong picked up in his two hours. So you got to think then, what were all those missions
for? To find out what was possible, to find out the limits of how far one could go and to find
out the other specifications that is going to be the template for how anybody goes into outer space
yeah and you talk about them bringing stuff back like the lunar rocks but they also left things
there didn't they oh so there's a lovely story i remember it from the the light room show that you
did uh charlie duke he leaves a photo doesn't he um with an inscription with his family's
fingerprints and the and the inscription on the photo says this is the family of astronaut charlie duke from planet earth who landed on the moon on april the 20th 1972 i
actually found that the most because i'm sentimental i found that the most kind of poignant bit of the
whole exhibition this photo which now has been bleached by the sun so the sun yeah so like the
flags as well have been bleached yeah Yeah. On one side of that photograph
is probably just a white blotch. But on the other side that has been sitting in darkness since 1972
are the names and the thumbprints of his family. So let's imagine that we're long gone and somebody
else comes along to the moon. What do they notice?
There's plenty of flags.
There's a number of books.
There's a Bible was left on the lunar rover.
Plenty of scribbles of initials probably are here and there.
There's that sculpture of the fallen astronaut that Dave Scott left because by that time,
human lives had been lost in the space program.
And that was representative of them.
Everybody, you know, if you want to go on the internet, you'll be able to see that there's an entire market for lunar Apollo memorabilia,
everything from patches that had been flown, you know,
stowed away and flown to and from the moon,
autographs signed, flight plans, this and that.
That stuff is all scattered about
and i don't know that everybody is willing to talk about this stuff that they took up with them
and they brought back and i think there's a lot of very personal mementos that uh the 12 moonwalkers
took up with them and brought back and gave off as very, very special gifts and historic ones.
Because, I mean, imagine if you could come back with, you know, a fork from Columbus's original.
Oh, wow. Yeah, sure.
You might want to say this fork was, you know, was used on Magellan's, you know, trip around the world.
That would be a very unique fork.
So, Tom, you said 12 men walk on the moon,
and the Apollo missions end in 1972. So no human has set foot on the moon since then. Could we end, I mean, I know this is a history podcast, but just ask you to look into the future
and what your hopes would be for the future of human space travel and perhaps going to the moon and perhaps,
who knows, going to Mars? I found out recently that even just for the next 12-month period,
I think there's something like 24 different enterprises that are going to go back to the
moon. 24 different entities are going to land something there, plant something there, figure out how to
put a probe down a robot, whatever. And it just happened, what, like a week and a half ago.
Somebody landed on the moon and thing fell over. So it's now laying on its side. So I want to say
the desire to go back, but I also would say the need for us to return to the moon is as present now as it was to get there in
the first place. It is still there and it holds opportunity. Sure. Someone is, you know, I just,
I just read the other day that somebody is going to try to go up and put a robotic tractor up there
that is going to try to harvest the helium three isotope. You guys can have a whole podcast about
the potential for helium three isotope. Oh, we'd a whole podcast about the potential for Helium-3 isotope.
Oh, we'd love that. Dominic talks of little else, I have to say.
Wouldn't that be fun? By the way, book that show and then just get ready for record-setting
listeners coming in. Yeah, we will.
I don't want to miss that Helium-3 podcast on The Rest Is History. You got to get that.
So the opportunities go out there, it exists, but what you really are going to be
coming around to that same sense of humanity, the same human need to continue along the track
of what's up there. And so do you think it matters that it would be humans rather than say robots?
I mean, is it something about it being flesh and blood that matters for scientific reasons or perhaps imaginative reasons, making a statement?
Because that's what's so moving about the physical constraints on human beings.
Yeah.
Makes it more impressive.
I mean, it's the flesh and blood.
Yeah.
It will be both.
It's not either or, because human beings will not accept either or.
Tell human beings they not accept either or.
Tell human beings they can't do something and then see how big the line is for the people who said, don't tell me what I can't do.
Now, will human beings walk on the moon funded by governments and by popular will or by votes
of Congress or parliament or whatever?
Maybe not.
What we have learned from the Apollo missions is literally how to do it.
And how to do it does not necessarily have the need for huge, massive space consortiums in order to do it.
I mean, a husband and wife with the right amount of money and the right amount of smarts
and enough land could probably do it themselves right now if they set out in order to do it.
The technology is there. The technology is
there. The physics is understood. The composites, the building materials, the computers, all that
stuff is right there. The question will always still be to what purpose? It certainly isn't just
to go back and we did it. And here I am and now I'm going to come back and I'll have my own podcast
for the rest of the time because I'm the guy right back to the moon.
The Artemis mission, you know, that's that's going to probably go up and circumnavigate, fly around the moon sometime next year.
That's going to be literally the first footstep toward some brand of recovery if if all the funding and everything holds out like that.
But even without that, there are folks out there, maybe they're only eight years old,
or maybe there's somebody who's 67 like I am, that's going to say, I'm not going to miss out
on the opportunity to go back and restart or to take up again the mantle of what those first 12
human beings did. It's time for us to go back. We have never let a single piece of our planet Earth remain unexplored.
I mean, there's people who live in Antarctica, you know, because there's stuff to figure out there.
We've never done that.
And we're not going to do that with something as close as our nearest celestial neighbor either.
Because once we get up there, we say, well, why do it?
Because it's just going to be the next step towards whatever is beyond. And, you know, I love the scientific, the science fiction aspects of, and then we'll go to Mars and we'll figure out that. And then we'll go on here. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. We'll do all that. That's great. Somebody else is going to go off and do it for the reasons that human beings will want to go to the
moon in order to accomplish what needs to be accomplished. And I think that's fascinating.
And will it happen? Look, I hope it happens within the next 10 years. It's got a really
good shot. And if it happens within the next 10 years, it's just going to keep happening and keep
happening and keep happening until it becomes as routine as flying
from long Island in New York city into Paris, just like Charles Lindbergh did it, or, you know,
being able to get on a seven 47 and flying from Los Angeles to Sydney, it will become something
that is like, Oh yeah. Oh, Oh, some, Oh, someone's got flew back on the moon. Oh, who did it this
time?
And maybe they'll pay attention and maybe they won't.
But it will be being done by people who are phenomenally invested in the enterprise itself.
So more people will choose to go to the moon and they will do it not because it is easy.
They'll do it because it is hard.
That's a brilliantly optimistic.
We don't normally end the Restless History episodes
on an optimistic note.
Optimistically?
Okay, well.
But so, Tom, before we let you go,
and thank you so much again
for coming on the Restless History,
our beloved producer, Theo,
has banned us from saying goodbye to you
until we've asked you a few questions
about history.
Bring it on.
Don't worry, they're not quiz questions.
All right.
So I have my hand on the buzzer now.
Okay, very good.
Were you interested in history as a child?
And if so, what particular bits of history did it for you?
Is this my starter for 10, Dominic?
I just want to make sure.
Exactly so.
Get this wrong and you're out.
Yes, I've always been fascinated by history.
For some reason, I didn't have to take notes
in history classes. I just felt as though with a good teacher, I was hearing a story that was
kind of like unforgettable. Math was beyond myself. I was too lazy for English. But history,
it always used to be a version of a great story that I was hearing. And I think I was aware, I guess, as a young man, that I was
living in historic times. First of all, and I've gone back and I've revisited certainly World War
II, the war, because every adult in my life talked about the war in three very distinctive phases. That was before the war, that was during
the war, or that was right after the war. So I knew that I had come into the world after this
great conflagration that had really identified this entire generation. I was aware of that.
Then when I was seven, John F. Kennedy was assassinated. And to be seven years old and to witness something that was the equal to, I don't know, Pearl Harbor or Hiroshima or the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, any incredible moment of history, it's like, wow, I witnessed that.
And I don't think I'll ever forget where I was when I heard about it, nor the atmosphere of those three or four or five or six
days that went along with it. The world was sad, and I was sad too, because history had occurred
in front of our very eyes. Now, after that, I will tell you, and this is no joke, I was very much of the historical impact of four lads from Liverpool that came over not long after that.
Oh, very good.
Brilliant.
Because they removed from us that burden of sadness that the assassination of John F. Kennedy had placed upon us.
We literally were reintroduced to joy when we needed it very, very badly. Now that my generation,
but actually the generation of probably anybody from seven to 27 was aware of the, hey, a corner
has turned. So I've always thought that, well, is this a historic moment or not? I'll go back to
that crossing of a Rubicon image. It's like, hey, we have crossed the Rubicon. We used to be over
there, but now we're over here.
Dominic and I disagree about whether the Beatles are a historic moment. So I'm glad that you agree
with me that they are.
I never disagreed with you. That's a total lie.
Oh, no, Dominic. So you mentioned Lincoln there and you mentioned JFK. Can we just ask you,
if you had a choice, which US president would you most like to play?
Oh, none. I've read a very interesting book about Calvin Coolidge. You ready for this?
I didn't see that coming. Yeah.
Didn't see that coming. Yeah.
Calvin Coolidge, I think, forgive me, I may be wrong about it. I believe Calvin Coolidge,
nothing much more than, he was like the governor of Vermont and ended up serving as president of the United States for two terms, during which the country
was almost destroyed economically.
And in this collection of essays in a volume, I read that he lived out his life, Calvin
Coolidge, retired back in his Vermont small town.
And he apologized to people for what he had done as president,
because he had a very laissez-faire, hands-off kind of thing. He knew that he was a root cause
of the great debacle that turned into the Great Depression in 1929. And that sort of self-awareness
from a politician, I think somebody to be that humble at the end of his life saying,
I'm sorry, I blew it.
Sorry, I should have been on it better.
I hope that's true.
That is a tremendous choice.
So there you go.
I'm declaring right here.
The rest is history.
Okay.
If you have a movie about Calvin Coolidge, sign me up.
That's got Blockbuster written all over it.
So what about, because I know you do production as well.
If you went to
some you know big studio or whatever and they said listen tom we want a historical epic but the
subject of your choice and since you've done a lot to do with the second world war i'm going to ban
you masters of the air presumably is that what i was about to say i'm going to ban you from a second
world war or world war theme choice so you have to go back a bit further in history all right i'm good what are you gonna choose all right are you ready for this yeah
maybe maybe like yourselves i know a number of people men and women of all of all ages some of
them are peers and some of them are not whose lives were completely changed for the better
over a long difficult struggle by are you ready for this?
Yeah.
Alcoholics Anonymous.
Oh, wow.
These guys came up with this thing called a 12-step program that just keep each other
from drinking themselves into an alcoholic stupor.
And that was in the 1930s, 1940s, and it really came about in the 1950s.
Now, no one makes money off of my understanding
of Alcoholics Anonymous, but if you were going to say, has there been a life-altering movement
that has really changed, in some ways, the world for the better by way of defining and enlightening
people in the realm of human behavior? I'd say Alcoholics Anonymous has, and I think it's a
fascinating story that has... I haven't read a lot about it, but there's a number of things like the history
of that organization. It's about as vibrant and as vivid as any that you're going to come across.
And the funny thing is that there are how many millions of members of Alcoholics Anonymous are
there out there? And the most you can get out of any of this, well, how does it work? And they'll all say, well, quite nicely.
Thank you.
That's all you're going to get.
That would be something that if someone wanted to throw down and say, let's examine that.
Right.
You heard it here first.
Well, let's say they're listening.
Yeah, of course they're listening.
So I would be remiss.
I would be letting myself down and my family down if i didn't ask you one last question
and it is this is there any chance that you might put on the hat once more and bring woody back to
the screens in another toy story film now everybody loves toy story except one person would you
believe who that person is with us right now tom john holland he is tom holland can you believe
it's so shocking anyway let's put that we were very much as i think i've mentioned very much a
forest gump family rather than a toy story family unbelievable i just wanted to put that on record
i just wanted to shame tom but also would you play woody again Please say yes. This is in the hands of the great overlords of commerce. Absolutely. Matter of fact, I will tell you this. Tim Allen and I still get together about once a month because we knew that we were part of something quite profound that started 20, more than 25 years ago. That's when we did the first Toy Story.
And there has been some jungle drums that,
why not do it?
Why not try to do it a fifth time?
But I will say, I think the gatekeepers of all things,
Woody and Buzz and Bo Peep and Slinky Dog and whatnot,
do not take their tasks lightly.
No one is going to just rush something out.
Quite right.
If they do it,
if it happens, boy, it's going to
have to go through a hothouse atmosphere
and pass all sorts of very, very
rigorous sort of tests
before we would do that. But
I'm game. I'd love to.
Great news. I hope my voice is
still high-pitched enough in order to get there.
Buzz Aldrin,
was he thrilled? Oh, God, yes. Oh, I'm to get there. Buzz Aldrin. Was he thrilled?
Oh God.
Yes.
Oh,
I'm sure he was.
Buzz came to,
I think every premiere there was for any of the toy story.
I love it.
Brilliant.
Brilliant.
Well,
Todd,
thank you so much for,
for,
for doing that.
It's been absolutely wonderful.
And,
um,
it would be remiss of me at this point,
not to mention the brilliant show,
which you narrate moonwalkers, which is on at the Lightroom in London, King's Cross, until the 13th of October, 2024.
Exactly right.
And you tell the whole astonishing story, actually not just of people walking on the moon, but of humanity's obsession with the moon.
It's wonderfully done.
So thank you so much for joining us.
Yeah, thank you very much, Tom. You're quite
welcome. I will tell you this,
this is just a warning to perhaps to some
of your audience members. I was just
in London and I jumped in a cab
to get out to King's Cross.
It was fabulous seeing a London black cabbie.
I hopped in. I said, I'm going to a
place called Lightroom. Do you know it?
It's out in King's Cross. Well, I know
King's Cross is. That's what he said. So we we're on our way and he said where are you from and i said i'm from
los angeles oh they're on australia but i can't quite understand but he says so why are you going
to king's cross i said well i'm uh i'm going to this place called uh why is that i said well it's
kind of like an exhibit kind of thing there's a there's a show there that we put on it and it's called the,
the moonwalkers.
Well,
moonwalkers.
Well,
is that Michael Jackson thing?
I said,
no,
actually it's,
it's not.
It's about the,
it's about the Apollo program that,
Oh,
it's Spaceman.
Yeah.
That was it.
So,
and in the words of that London cabin,
it's not a Michael Jackson
thing
no it's not
the Michael
no it's not
brilliant
so on that
bombshell
thank you so
much to Tom
Hanks for
joining us
thank you to
everybody for
listening
and I think
Tom this
experiment with
Hollywood stars
talking about
historical subjects
has been an
absolute triumph
yeah it's worked
hasn't it
let's keep it up
you know what's
sad about this this is what this is what we talk about down at the office all the time anyway,
guys. This is just a Friday for me. I'm glad you were a part of it.
Thank you. Well, listen, next time we will be back with the Franco-Prussian War,
and we'll be doing that with Zendaya. So we'll see you next week. Bye-bye.
Sign me up. Take care, guys. Bye-bye.
Bye-bye. Sign me up. Take care, guys. Bye-bye. Bye-bye. Bye.
I'm Marina Hyde.
And I'm Richard Osman.
And together we host The Rest Is Entertainment.
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