The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) is an agency of the United States government, responsible for the nation's public space program. Established on July 29, 1958, by the National Aeronautics and Space Act. NASA often works with space agencies from foreign countries such as Japan and Russia for a number of missions.
In addition to the space program, it is also responsible for long-term civilian and military aerospace research. Since February 2006 NASA's self-described mission statement is to "pioneer the future in space exploration, scientific discovery, and aeronautics research."
Events[]
- Pigs in Space: Space Shuttle Columbia — sketches written and performed in 1981 exclusively for astronauts in space
- Big Bird's proposed flight on Space Shuttle Challenger — Caroll Spinney considered for space mission in mid-1980s
- Mars rovers success — the Henson Company sends a letter of congratulations to NASA's JPL in 2004
- NASA Tweetup — Elmo attends the final launch of Space Shuttle Atlantis in 2011
- Orion Flight Test — NASA sends mementos from Sesame Street into space in 2014
- Inter-American Development Bank — Lola attends an educational event with NASA engineers
Appearances[]
- Several NASA astronauts have appeared in Muppet/Sesame productions including Buzz Aldrin, Ricky Arnold (and the crew of ISS Expedition 56), Frank Caldeiro, Soichi Noguchi (on a joint NASA/JAXA mission), Sally Ride, Mario Runco, and Mae Jemison.
- Footage from the Saturn-Apollo 5 mission — the first launch of the Block II Saturn I rocket — on January 29, 1964 was featured in Jim Henson's documentary Youth 68 during a sequence about technology and innovation. The launch was heralded by President Kennedy for placing America's lift capability ahead of its competitors for the first time since the launch of Sputnik.
- Two "Wish You Were Here" segments from Sesame Street Season 29 feature Gabi and Miles touring Space Camp and the Kennedy Space Center. Along with a group of other kids, they learn about how rockets are launched into space. Miles works at Mission Control, while Gabi pretends to be an astronaut.
- Sesame Street used stock footage from NASA:
- Episode 1570 uses a mix of footage for Oscar and Othmar's launch into space, orbit of the Earth, approach to the moon, and descent to the moon's surface.
- Sally Ride talks to Bob, Maria, and the kids on the stoop of 123 Sesame Street in Episode 1965 about her mission in space. Footage of Ride and her crewmates on board Challenger from STS-7 is used to illustrate her extra-terrestrial activities.
- When "Everybody Sleeps" was re-edited in the 1980s (First: Episode 2508), the shot of a man falling out of a chair was replaced with astronauts in their sleeping bags during one of the Space Shuttle missions.
- A Miami Mice sketch finds Count von Count at mission control to count a rocket's countdown. Footage from NASA's mission control center as well as launchpad footage is used during the sequence.
- When Slimey traveled to the Moon in Season 29, NASA provided footage of past space missions for several episodes, including Episode 3697 in which Gordon describes NASA's first mission to the moon.
- Buzz Aldrin explains to Cookie Monster that the moon is not a cookie in Episode 4090 with the help of NASA's footage of missions to the moon.
- Muppet Babies used stock footage from NASA:
- "What Do You Want to Be When You Grow Up?" uses footage of a Saturn V launch for Baby Kermit transporting an astronaut to the moon.
- Footage of a Mercury rocket launch is used in "Muppetland" followed by footage of astronauts walking on the Moon, despite the fact that astronauts traveled to the moon in vehicles launched on a Saturn V rocket.
- Footage of a sunrise taken from Space Shuttle Challenger during STS-7 (Sally Ride's first flight) was used in "Nanny's Day Off", reversed and slightly zoomed in. Compare (YouTube) with (VIDEO).
- To illustrate Baby Gonzo's claim that a typewriter is space technology in "Romancing the Weirdo", footage of a Space Shuttle launch is used alongside shots of NASA's ground team at Mission Control.
- "Puss N' Boots N' Babies" used footage of a Space Shuttle landing to mirror Baby Kermit and Baby Gonzo's paper airplane.
- Baby Skeeter watches a Space Shuttle launch in "Remote Control Cornballs."
- Skeeter treats the Babies to a "launch party" in "Happy Birthday, Uncle Piggy" by way of a trip to space. Footage of Mission Control and a Space Shuttle launch is used for their ascent, and footage of a Solid Rocket Booster is used for their landing.
- The 2019 episode "Planet Gonzo" used a still image of Kennedy's Launch Complex 39 as the take-off point for Gonzo's rocketship headed to Planet G0N0.
- Extensive NASA footage is used in the 1996 direct-to-video release Things That Fly, including highlights from various Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, and Space Shuttle missions. Some astronauts include John Glenn and Jim Lovell in zero gravity as well as several Mission Control specialists.
- Footage of a Saturn V launch is used to illustrate Beaker's trip to the moon in Muppet Madness.
- Kermit the Frog visited NASA's Johnson Space Center in Texas as part of his 50th anniversary world tour in 2005. Kermit also appeared in NASA promotional material on the moon.
- On Earth Day in 2014, NASA asked everyone on the planet to participate in a Global Selfie.[5] Sesame Workshop submitted a photo of Elmo taken on the stoop of 123 Sesame Street. NASA composited all the #GlobalSelfie images posted to social media and used Elmo in the final product. Of the two images created, Elmo can be seen in the Earth on the right, on the upper-left hand side, just Northeast of the Mediterranean Sea.[6]
References[]
- Jim Henson featured still imagery of various NASA vehicles, including artwork of a docked Lunar and Command Module, in his 1967 short film Ripples.
- In Episode 0018 of Sesame Street, Gordon exclaims, "Holy NASA!" when Mr. Hooper shows him his rocket-launching device plans.
- Bert watches a shuttle launch at the Kennedy Space Center in The Sesame Street 1976 Calendar.
- Joe Mathieu depicts NASA's Saturn V rocket in The Sesame Street Dictionary to illustrate the definition of the word "rocket".
- Slimey attempts a rocket launch in Episode 1602 of Sesame Street in a miniature version of the Columbia Space Shuttle.
- Dr. Julius Strangepork writes Kermit a letter in the Summer 1983 issue of Muppet Magazine from the Johnson Space Center. He and Captain Link Hogthrob had intended to go to the island of Nassau for "de girls in de bikinis", but Link set a course instead for NASA. While they wait for The Swinetrek to be repaired, they take a tour and learn that Sally Ride will soon embark on her first mission to space. The letter arrives with bits of memorabilia including photos of the Space Shuttle, a NASA "meatball" patch, an Apollo Service Module toy, a Saturn V toy, pictures of astronauts Joseph Kerwin, Paul Weitz, and Jerry Carr (with an illustration of Link torn and pasted in), and a bill for $748,386,385.98 to repair the Swinetrek's coffee machine and water cooler.
- Sesame Street's WASA, the Worm Air and Space Agency, is a version of NASA staffed entirely by worms.
- When Penny becomes "The First Chicken in Space", she passes a garbage can marked with NASA's "worm" logo.
- Telly Monster's Uncle Tommy is an astronaut assisted by two NASA employees (one of whom is David Rudman making a cameo) in the Sesame Street video Telling the Truth. Dennis Quaid plays Uncle Tommy, who had portrayed NASA astronaut Gordon Cooper in The Right Stuff fourteen years earlier.
- Big Bird receives a toy Saturn V for that year's 124th Christmas in Elmo Saves Christmas. Later, when he calls Snuffy on the phone to sing "All I Want for Christmas Is You", he refers to the rocket: "don't buy me a rocket ship that goes into space".
- In one of the endings to the "Death-Defying Acts of Culture" games in The Muppet CD-ROM: Muppets Inside, the Newsman reads from a NASA report detailing strange falling satellites (actually a stunt-performing Gonzo).
- When an Anything Muppet takes his technologically enhanced letter T to get fixed at Telly and Rosita's Fix-It Shop in Sesame Street Episode 3801, Telly suggests he bring it to NASA.
- Rumpel's home-made rocket on Sesamstrasse in Folge 2372, the Rumpollo 1, is named after NASA's Apollo missions.
- Big Bird and a child were inserted into footage of Alan Shepard and Ed Mitchell planting the American flag on the moon during the Apollo 14 mission for a PBS Interstitial in the 2000s.
- In Farscape, John Crichton is a an astronaut for IASA, a fictional organization modeled after NASA. Crichton's father Jack is a retired NASA astronaut.
- In the Farscape episode "A Human Reaction," John Crichton mentions the Voyager program.
- The "Astronauta" entry in the 2008 Plaza Sésamo book series Los oficios de Elmo features a Space Shuttle on the cover with photos of NASA's Vehicle Assembly Building and Rocket Garden at Cape Kennedy in the interior.
- Grover prepares to pilot a Space Shuttle in an animated Road Safety Campaign.
- During a September 20, 2011 appearance on Good Morning America, Cookie Monster was watching the skies, looking out for satellites. This was a reference to the Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite making news for its expected re-entry in the following days and NASA's warning of a small potential risk of impact (the debris field was later identified in the Pacific Ocean).
- In The Muppets, Walter and Gary have a model of the Saturn V rocket, the only vehicle that has ever carried humans beyond low Earth orbit.
- After Gonzo decides to rejoin his friends in The Muppets, he reveals the daredevil outfit beneath his suit and — in a typical death-defying performance stunt — jumps off of the roof to Gonzo's Royal Flush. His feat turns to disaster when his descent is hindered, prompting him to shout "Apollo 13!" in reference to NASA's 1970 mission to the moon which also suffered from a serious mishap.
- Murray Monster visits Rocket Garden at the New York Hall of Science in Sesame Street Episode 4257 where he admires a Mercury Atlas rocket and a Gemini Titan rocket.
- Bunsen and Beaker were asked on Twitter in January 2016 if they'd ever wanted to work for NASA. Bunsen replied, "Yes, but unfortunately NASA doesn't feel the same way about us." [7]
Mentions[]
- A rubber chicken named Camilla Corona is the mascot of NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory. "Camilla", named after Camilla the Chicken from The Muppet Show, and "Corona" for the sun's plasma atmosphere.[1] Elmo had his picture taken with Camilla during his visit to NASA in July 2011.
- NASA's Goddard Remotely Operated Vehicle for Exploration and Research (GROVER) is a solar-powered robot built for research on Greenland's ice sheet. GROVER's mascot is a small plush doll of Sesame Street’s Grover, photos of which made the social media rounds in May of 2013.[2] Speaking with Wired, a Sesame Workshop representative responded to the story by emphasizing Grover's role in Sesame Street’s STEM curriculum[3] (Super Grover 2.0 was in its third season by this time).
Social media[]
Sesame Workshop and NASA have partnered in a number of social media campaigns by way of sharing content on their various social media outlets in the interest of educational exposure.
- In January 2010, Cookie Monster wrote on Sesame Street's official Twitter account, "Sometimes Moon look like giant cookie. Must look into joining space program." NASA responded a short time later from their official Twitter feed with information on how to join the space program.[4]
- To celebrate the 40th anniversary of NASA's first selection of female astronauts, Sesame Street’s Facebook page posted an image of Rosita wearing a space suit on January 16, 2018. The image is actually a manipulated photo of Neil Armstrong during the Gemini VIII mission in May of 1965. NASA's Johnson Space Center shared the post from their Facebook account. "Thank you to these incredible women for continuing to serve as great role models for girls and boys everywhere to dream BIG and reach for the stars! 💫" A similar dedication was posted by Sesame Street's Instagram account on the same day featuring Abby Cadabby photoshopped into a 1984 photo of Anna Lee Fisher ("First Mother in Space") from a story published in Life magazine.
- For the International Day of Women and Girls in Science on February 11, 2018, Sesame Street's Twitter account posted an image of Abby Cadabby meeting Ikri Mikri from Bangladesh in the Cupola observatory module on board the International Space Station, "If girls can dream it, they can do it! Happy International Day of Women and Girls in Science! #WomeninScience"
Sources[]
- ↑ personal communication via Scott Hanson
- ↑ @nasagoddard on Instagram (1), @nasagoddard on Instagram (2), @nasagoddard on Twitter
- ↑ Wired "Nasa's GROVER brings Sesame Street's Grover for Greenland debut" by Philippa Warr, May 21, 2013
- ↑ "Cookie Monster storms Twitter as @sesamestreet gains a following", LA Times blogs, April 9, 2010.