
All-female Blue Origin crew with Bezos' fiancee, Katy Perry, Gayle King launch to space
Jeff Bezos' fiancee Lauren Sánchez led an all-female crew including pop singer Katy Perry and CBS Mornings co-host Gayle King for a short trip to space this morning.
Riding on Bezos' Blue Origin's suborbital New Shepard rocket, the six women, which also included Aisha Bowe, Amanda Nguyen and Kerianne Flynn, lifted off from the company's West Texas launch site at 9:30 a.m. EDT.
This was the 11th human spaceflight for New Shepard, and 31st mission overall. The flights have sent the capsule on short 10- to 12-minute trips that lets passengers experience a few minutes of weightlessness and see the curvature of the Earth before their capsule returns for a parachute-assisted landing.
They traveled above the Karman line, about 62 miles high, the internationally recognized altitude of having reached space.
Screams of excitement and raucous laughter could be heard over the live stream of the launch on both the way up and on the way down. While experiencing weightlessness, though, it became quieter.
'Look at the moon,' said one of the six after reaching space.
Another replied, 'Oh my goddess. That's our pink moon.'
'Oh my god,' said another. 'It's so peaceful.'
Blue Origin said the capsule reached an apogee of 346,802 feet, which is more than 65 miles altitude. The entire trip too 10 minutes, 21 seconds.
It was the first all-female crew to head to space since Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova's solo mission when she became the first woman in space on June 16, 1963 on the Vostok 6 mission.
King said she was nervous but was told by her friends to take advantage of it.
'As excited as I am, I'll be glad when we come back down,' she said ahead of the launch.
Oprah Winfrey said she told her she would regret it if she didn't and didn't want to hear about it for the next 15 years.
Sánchez is a former entertainment TV journalist. She organized the crew. Bowe is a former NASA rocket scientist, Nguyen a bioastronautics research scientist and Flynn built a career in fashion and then produced films including 'This Changes Everything.'
This mission increased to 58 the number of humans since 2021 Blue Origin has taken to the edge of space, including four who have flown twice.
Bezos was on the first one back in 2021 while other flights have taken up the likes of Star Trek's William Shatner, NFL Hall of Famer and 'Good Morning America' co-host Michael Strahan and Laura Shepard Churchley, daughter of Alan Shepard, the first American in space for whom the rocket is named.
He told the crew ahead of launch that the trip would be the 'most amazing, most profound experience.'
'I'm so excited for you. I don't want to get off. I want to go with you,' he said. 'When you get back I can't wait to hear how it's changed you. I love all of you. See you soon. Godspeed. Gradatim Ferociter.'
Gradatim Ferociter is Blue Origin's Latin motto, that translates to 'step by step ferociously.'
Bezos was at the landing site to welcome the six, first hugging Sanchez and giving her a kiss on the cheek as she asked, 'Where are my babies?' and going over to hug her children.
Perry held a Daisy to the sky after exiting the capsule in honor of her daughter Daisy. She then kissed the ground once she stepped off the capsule.
'I just want to take a moment with the ground,' King said also getting on her hands and knees and kissing the dirt of the Texas dessert and scooping it up with her hands. 'Just appreciate the ground for just a second. Thank you Jesus.'
Sanchez was emotional in an interview soon after.
'I don't really have words for it. I'm so proud of this crew,' she said. 'I mean Gayle, we were just talking in the capsule, doesn't even have ear piercings, she's so afraid to do anything, and she got in that capsule and I think it profoundly changed her.'
'I don't think you can describe it,' she continued. 'It was quiet, but then also really alive. You look at it, and you're like, 'We're all in this together.''
Central Florida couple Marc and Sharon Hagle were among the four who have been two-time riders, having taken the trip in both 2022 and this past November. Another Central Floridian to take the trip was Brevard County millionaire Steve Young.
Blue Origin has been a fan of knocking out superlatives with its New Shepard rocket having flown the tallest (Strahan at 6 feet 5 inches tall), the oldest (90-year-old Ed Dwight Jr.) and youngest (18-year-old Oliver Daemen) people to space.
The space tourism flights are just part of Bezos' company's business. It flew the much larger heavy-left New Glenn rocket from Cape Canaveral for the first time this past January, and has said its second will launch this spring. Also on Blue Origin's plate are plans for a commercial space station and the Blue Moon lunar lander.
--------------
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Long-Dead NASA Satellite Suddenly Lets Out Epic Blast of Energy
NASA's experimental Relay 2 satellite had been dead in the sky since 1967 — until last summer, when it emitted a super-short and very powerful burst of energy out of nowhere. In an interview with New Scientist, one of the researchers from Australia's Curtin University who discovered the strange pulse coming off the dead communications satellite described his shock at finding the nearby source of that nanosecond-long energy blast. Curtin astronomer Clancy James and his team had been using the Australian Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) radio telescope array when they detected something so "loud" that it briefly outshone everything else in the night sky. Even stranger, it turned out, the signal was coming from so close to Earth that ASKAP's radio telescopes couldn't all focus on it at once. "We got all excited, thinking maybe we'd discovered a new pulsar or some other object," James told New Scientist. "This was an incredibly powerful radio pulse that vastly outshone everything else in the sky for a very short amount of time." As explained in a new paper that's now awaiting peer review, the Curtin researchers eventually traced the source of the pulse to NASA's derelict Relay 2 — but that discovery raised more questions than answers. Because Relay 2 had been dead for nearly 60 years, the Curtin team thinks that something either collided with the defunct communications craft that made it produce such a wild racket, or that electricity had been building up within it for so long that it resulted in a huge type of energy burst known as an "electrostatic discharge." As astrophysicist Karen Aplin of the UK's University of Bristol told New Scientist, all the space junk crowding Earth's orbit makes it nearly impossible to determine if either of those explanations, or any other, is correct. (That problematic crowding of Earth's orbit, it's worth pointing out, was not a pressing issue during Relay 2's short life in the mid-1960s.) "In a world where there is a lot of space debris and there are more small, low-cost satellites with limited protection from electrostatic discharges, this radio detection may ultimately offer a new technique to evaluate electrostatic discharges in space" explained Aplin, who was not involved in the research. More on strange energy: Scientists Spot Mysterious Object in Our Galaxy Pulsing Every 44 Minutes
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
NASA's New Data Has Scientists Sounding the Alarm on Climate Extremes
The latest satellite data from NASA is painting a troubling picture of Earth's climate, and it's coming into focus faster than expected. According to new research from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, extreme weather events like floods and droughts are not only becoming more common, but also more intense, longer-lasting, and more destructive. The Guardian reported that data from the past five years show these events doubling in intensity compared to averages between 2003 and 2020. Even researchers behind the study admit they didn't anticipate such a dramatic spike. "We were surprised to find the actual population living in rural areas is much higher than the global data indicates," said lead researcher Dr. Bailing Li, who helped compile the figures using NASA's Grace satellite and dam relocation data across 35 countries. The result: a grim confirmation that climate change is fueling a shift in the planet's water systems, and the consequences are just data, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, reveals that global extremes now show a stronger correlation with rising temperatures than with other climate drivers like El Niño. Events are lasting longer, affecting wider areas, and shifting with less predictability—creating what scientists call "hydroclimatic whiplash," sudden transitions from drought to flood or vice versa. What's most worrying isn't just the scale of the change, but how unprepared most of the world remains. Experts say the current infrastructure, especially in water management, was built for a different era—one with a more stable climate. Christopher Gasson of Global Water Intelligence warned that most water systems are facing extremes from both ends—too much water or too little—and that investment must scale quickly to keep up. Meteorologists and climate experts across the globe echoed the concern. Richard Betts of the UK's Met Office called the data "a stark reminder" that what was once theoretical is now reality. He stressed that most societies have built their systems around past weather patterns, leaving them vulnerable to extremes that now fall outside the historical norm. With the World Meteorological Organization predicting an 80% chance that one of the next five years will be Earth's hottest ever, the window for adapting is narrowing. NASA's findings serve as a warning: the planet is heating up, and the consequences are already surging across every New Data Has Scientists Sounding the Alarm on Climate Extremes first appeared on Men's Journal on Jun 22, 2025
Yahoo
12 hours ago
- Yahoo
Unsung women behind moon landing celebrated in art
More than a thousand unsung women whose circuits helped man land on the moon have inspired two Kent artists to celebrate the historic moment of 1969. The work is based on the female Navajo weavers who were employed for their perceived dexterity to make microchips in New Mexico in the sixties, which were used by NASA in the Apollo Guidance Computer. Moon Landing is by weaver Margo Selby and composer Helen Caddick is a 16m (52ft) handwoven textile suspended from The Trinity Chapel of Canterbury Cathedral, accompanied by an original score for six strings. The tapestry is described as a celebration of the crossover of mathematical patterns, tone and rhythm found in weaving and music and will remain in the chapel until 31 August. Ms Caddick said she was inspired by a weaving tool to compose music about space exploration. She said: "I had gone to see Margo weave and I noticed that she used a shuttle to move the thread along and that made me start to think about space." She added that when she had saw documentaries or films about the space shuttle, she noticed there was an "indicator light flashing in the cabin". "So so I took the rhythm of that to mirror in the harp part," she said. In turn, Ms Selby translated the musician's work into textile art. The textile artist said: "With these incredible carvings and shapes, to see my contemporary work hanging alongside them is truly thrilling." Some 1,200 indigenous people - mostly women - were employed to work at a Fairchild Semiconductor factory in Shiprock, New Mexico, from 1965, during the United States' race to the moon. The manufacturer was tasked with building complicated microchips for NASA's Apollo Guidance Computer, which was integral to space missions. A contemporary brochure from Fairchild compared the intricate work creating elaborate microchips to weaving the Navajo population's traditional tapestries. However, these women who contributed to the space race were largely overlooked in their time. The Dean of Canterbury Cathedral David Monteith said the chapel was excited to celebrate the work of art. "In life sometimes things can become a bit grey scale but this is such an assault of colour that it gladdens the heart and that's such a gift," he said. Follow BBC Kent on Facebook, on X, and on Instagram. Send your story ideas to southeasttoday@ or WhatsApp us on 08081 002250. Mars art installation on display at cathedral Girl, 8, uses dad's ham radio to chat to astronaut Canterbury Cathedral