T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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366.1 | 'bout time | WAYWRD::ALLEGREZZA | George Allegrezza @ TWO | Thu Oct 29 1987 09:57 | 8 |
| I've seen several of these commercials. I don't remember all of the
combinations, but they feature Whoopi Goldberg, Lucille Ball, Sinatra,
Vereen, Willie Nelson, Ara Parseghian (sp), and a number of others, all
talking about some of the direct benefits of space research and
technology. I think they serve as an excellent "image" campaign for
the space effort. By the way, I think they are shown as PSAs (public
service announcements), so the NSF probably doesn't have to pay diddily
for the airtime.
|
366.2 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Fri Oct 30 1987 09:15 | 10 |
| I saw one the other day with Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter on a split
screen, allegedly talking by satellite between California and Georgia.
(There was no 1/4 second lag in their conversations, however.)
A cynic could say "where were these people when they were in office?"
but I'm not that cynical.
Also, I think spots are by the "US Space Foundation."
- tom]
|
366.3 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Mon Nov 02 1987 10:22 | 1 |
| US Space Foundation, 800-255-1000
|
366.4 | McDonnell-Douglas space commercial | DICKNS::KLAES | Nobody hipped me to that, dude! | Sun Nov 08 1987 18:12 | 35 |
| From: [email protected] (MacLeod)
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: Commercial plea for space station - effective!
Date: 3 Nov 87 02:55:45 GMT
Organization: Digital Research, Monterey, CA
Has anyone else seen the (in my opinion) well-done commercial plea
for renewed space activity from McDonnel-Douglas? It goes like this -
(View from Earth orbit; Earth to left.)
Voice begins to ask if it would be good to have ongoing space research,
a manned space station, and so on.
(From below camera angle, a long Skylab-like station begins to move past
the camera, and you can hear muffled SSB-type voice transmissions in the
background. Obviously, this is a space station.)
Voice asks several questions as the station passes by your POV, then
says, "There is such a program, but it is not American" or words to that
effect.
(The end of the station comes into view with a huge red star and a
CCCP on it. The muffled SSB transmissions are louder and now clearly
in Russian. The station drifts onward.)
The McDonnel-Douglas logo comes up and there is a request for
support for a renewed US space effort. I may have some of this
confused; I only saw it once and I wasn't paying attention at the
beginning. It was quite moving, though, and I wish that they would
run it every night during Nightline or somewhere where it would do
some good. Has anybody else seen this?
Mike MacLeod
|
366.5 | Short-term sell | SARAH::BUEHLER | Doin' lots of that pilot sh*t | Wed Nov 11 1987 12:59 | 7 |
| > Has anyone else seen the (in my opinion) well-done commercial plea
>for renewed space activity from McDonnel-Douglas?
I've seen it. Unfortunately, it plays on paranoia - hardly a usefull,
long-term approach to exploring space's potential.
John
|
366.6 | RE 366.5 | DICKNS::KLAES | Nobody hipped me to that, dude! | Wed Nov 11 1987 13:21 | 5 |
| Perhaps, but it might be the only way the US will get back into
space again, just as we needed SPUTNIK in 1957 and VOSTOK 1 in 1961.
Larry
|
366.7 | disgusting | PARITY::KARDELL | | Wed Nov 11 1987 16:29 | 10 |
| I agree that paranoia might be the only way to motivate the American
public at this time, but what a sad sad state of affairs ! That
old paranoia/competition with the Russians business is what has
caused our short sighted policy problems . We will never get out
of that stupid political rat race unless we set a visionary goal
oriented program in place, rather than the quagmire that we have
now . Get people to think of the future for themselves rather than
looking over their shoulders at some imaginary enemy for petes sake!
Jon
|
366.8 | RE 366.7 | DICKNS::KLAES | Nobody hipped me to that, dude! | Wed Nov 11 1987 17:18 | 16 |
| Like it or not, the US has usually needed a swift kick in its
collective pants to get out of its conservative, self-interested
mode when it comes to new situations, be it war, space exploration,
whathaveyou.
Goddard was laughed at for having the "radical" idea of sending
a simple rocket to the Moon; Von Braun's Earth satellite program
was shrugged at by the US government and military in the 1950s as
"not worth their time", until the Soviets suddenly showed they were
far from disinterested in the challenge.
Someday Americans will really look to the future for the benefit
of the world, but not yet...
Larry
|
366.9 | Radio Moscow Should take out US TV space | IMBACQ::BIRO | | Thu Nov 12 1987 10:16 | 9 |
| Radio Moscow has been pumping there own plan, maybe we should
add it to the TV commercial over American TV. The Soviets plan
to use their new booster to make a industrial complex in space,
a moon base (that was new to me), and then a man trip to Mars.
If RM is talking about it I would assume the money has allready
been funded... an this is for the trun of the Soviet century
john
|
366.10 | Some good reasons for space "propaganda" | DICKNS::KLAES | Nobody hipped me to that, dude! | Thu Nov 12 1987 14:47 | 49 |
| From: leif@swatsun (Leif Kirschenbaum)
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: Re: Commercial plea for space station - effective!
Date: 12 Nov 87 03:34:04 GMT
Organization: Swarthmore College, Swarthmore PA
In article <[email protected]>
[email protected] (Stephen P. Masticola) writes:
>In article <[email protected]> [email protected] (MacLeod) writes:
>
>> Has anyone else seen the (in my opinion) well-done commercial plea for
>> renewed space activity from McDonnel-Douglas?
>
>MdD's argument does not, however, make any objective
>sense at all, in explaining why a space station will benefit the U.S.
>more than spending the money elsewhere (including other space
>projects such as BDB, solar energy, planetary exploration, astronomy,
>etc.). Beating the Soviets in a propoganda race is not an acceptable
>reason to spend 20-40 billion dollars.
Right now we spend much more than that on defense, much of which
is unecessarily spent. Isn't this propaganda for the American people?
The Space Station will (this may be somewhat innaccurate, or
repetitive for many readers):
1) Force us to invent new technology
2) Give easier access to a space environment for vacuum, microgravity,
cold temperatures, etc.
3) Permit on-the-site supervision and *repair* (how many experiments
have failed in orbit that could be repaired by an astronaut) of
various experiments including the space telescope and other scientific
packages
4) Allow us to put many of the satellites we currently use in one spot
thus consolidating power supply, and allowing us to more easily
maintain them. In addition micrometeorite protection would be easier
with all the instrument in one place. Another factor is limited room
in orbit: If every satellite needs 100 miles leeway (due to launch
innacuracy and other factors) and the U.S. wants many satellites, and
they have to be above the equator, smaller countries like Brazil or
India may be pushed aside in their quest for satellite space.
5) Be a launching platform for manned and unmanned missions
6) Be an assembly site for manned and unmanned missions. I would think
cleanliness would be easier in the vacuum or near-vacuum of space than
on Earth.
Leif Kirschenbaum '91 Swarthmore College
Swat Motto: "Harsh but fair"- I'm working on a *real* signature.
|
366.11 | United Technologies space advertisement | DICKNS::KLAES | I'm with Digital. We don't lie. | Tue Nov 17 1987 12:33 | 31 |
| From: [email protected] (Jonathan Leech)
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: AW&ST advertisement in poster form
Date: 16 Nov 87 18:37:41 GMT
Organization: University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
The 2-page ad from United Technologies which appeared on the
inside cover of the 9/21 issue of Aviation Week (picture of astronaut
on the lunar surface, caption ``It's time we raised our sights
again'') is a powerful image. It's also available in poster form; a
polite letter to:
United Technologies
Director of Public Relations
United Technologies Building
Hartford, CT 06101
Resulted in my getting a free poster of the ad (along with some
other UT ads and a corporate info brochure) in 10 days. My copy is
going on my office door, the best to expose it to my coworkers;
perhaps other people will want to do the same, thus this posting.
A tip of the hat to UT for the free poster!
Jon Leech ([email protected]) __@/
"The idea of ``picking up where Apollo left off'' in lunar
exploration is a chimera. There is nothing to pick up; when we dropped
it, it broke."
John & Ruth Lewis in 'Space Resources: Breaking the Bonds of Earth'
|
366.12 | Available Right Now ! | IMGAWN::BIRO | | Tue Feb 23 1988 08:25 | 27 |
| from the other side, here is their ad
Commercial Launch Vehicle
92 %
Sucess Rate
in Over 110
Flights
Lift Capacity:
4,800 lbs to GEO
44,000 lbs to LEO and if that is not enought guess what
11,000 lbs to the MOON, MARS or VENUS
For mor information contac:
SPACE COMMERCE CORPORATION
69th Floor
Houston, Texas 770022 USA
Telephone (713) 227-9008
Fax (713) 227-9006
Telex 910-240-9191
and if you have not guessed the first line of this add
PROTON COMMERCIAL LAUNCH VEHICLE
from Aviation Week 15 Feb 88 page 72
|