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Spaceship Endeavour Is In Orbit

By Keith Cowing
NASA Watch
NASAWatch
March 3, 2024
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Spaceship Endeavour Is In Orbit
More talking head stuff on BBC World News TV
BBC

Keith’s note: Crew 8 lifted off on time tonight and is now in orbit. They’ll be arriving at the International Space Station on Tuesday. I was on Bloomberg radio twice today and then on BBC World News TV [AUDIO] to provide some pre- and post-launch commentary. One thing that I noticed – and made mention of – are the names of the spacecraft involved. NASA TV’s hosts talked about the Crew Dragon “Endeavour” – which was named after Space Shuttle “Endeavour”. The Apollo 15 command module also named “Endeavour”. But NASA PAO seems to be uninterested in mentioning that these spaceships of exploration had a historic namesake i.e. Capt. James Cook’s H.M.S. Endeavour. Note that NASA kept the English spelling of Cook’s ship in all of the spacecraft named after it. Also, the Crew Dragon already in space and docked to ISS that will bring some of the current occupants home is named “Endurance” after Sir Ernest Shackleton’s famous antarctic exploration ship “Endurance” – which was recently re-discovered on the Antarctic seabed. NASA refers to these crew stays on ISS as “expeditions”. It would be nice if someone in NASA PAO synched up their commentary so as to remind the public about actual historic resonances with ships of exploration – especially as we prepare to return to the Moon – to explore. Just sayin’.

NASA Watch founder, Explorers Club Fellow, ex-NASA, Away Teams, Journalist, Space & Astrobiology, Lapsed climber.

One response to “Spaceship Endeavour Is In Orbit”

  1. Richard Brezinski says:
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    Apparently the NASA public affairs people are learning. They’ve somewhat separated their coverage from Space X. Space X gives tje technical details of the vehicle and correlation with the trajectory. NASA focus is on the astronauts and what they’re doing and saying. NASA.used to focus equally on the vehicle, which frankly should not be NASA’s concern since NASA neither owns or operates it.

    I wonder when the first crew launches on Starliner in a couple months, is it still called ‘Crew 9’, or does that moniker only apply to Space X Dragons? If so, what designation do the Starliner astronauts get? (maybe we should call them “Stars”? Or does ‘Crew 9’ refer to something else, like ‘commercial crew’, which is a misnomer since these are all either NASA or international partner astronauts, which confuses the ‘official real astronauts’, with the ‘tourist astronauts’ (who we all know aren’t ‘real’). Of course they all get to space the same way; somebdy buys a ticket. Whoever came up with the current NASA designation screwed the pooch and just added confusion.

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