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Miami Heat star Tyler Herro shares astonishing conspiracy theory on livestream, leaving fans stunned
Miami Heat star Tyler Herro shares astonishing conspiracy theory on livestream, leaving fans stunned

Daily Mail​

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Miami Heat star Tyler Herro shares astonishing conspiracy theory on livestream, leaving fans stunned

Retired Red Sox slugger Carl Everett denied the existence of dinosaurs and NBA star Kyrie Irving briefly considered the flat-earth debate in 2017, but Miami Heat guard Tyler Herro may them both beat: He doesn't believe in history. Specifically, the 25-year-old University of Kentucky product questions anything before 1950 as well as select events over the ensuing years, such as the 1969 moon landing and Wilt Chamberlain's 100-point performance in 1962. 'I don't even know what Wilt looked like, played like,' Herro told Twitch streamers Adin Ross and N3on about the Philadelphia Warriors legend's single-game scoring record. Herro isn't the first to question the legitimacy of Chamberlain's century-mark effort against the New York Knicks in Hershey, Pennsylvania. Officially, only 4,124 fans were in attendance that night and there is no film of the 169-147 Warriors win. The only keepsakes from the historic performance are the scorebook, a few articles and the famed photo of a 25-year-old Chamberlain holding up some paper with '100' scribbled across in dark pencil. Similarly, Herro isn't the only person to question Neil Armstrong's first steps on the moon – a conspiracy theory that is currently enjoying renewed popularity. Where Herro really differs from other supposed truthers is the scope of his disbelief. Asked if he believes anything that happened two centuries earlier, Herro left the social media influencers stunned. Tyler Herro says he doesn't believe in history before 1950 😕 — Underdog (@Underdog) June 13, 2025 'Hell no,' he said. 'What about the moon landing?' N3on asked. 'Nah, I don't believe in that,' Herro continued. 'I don't believe in anything that happened before 1950.' Herro also took issue with Columbus' famed voyage to the Americas. But rather than arguing that countless other groups discovered the 'new world' prior to Columbus setting sail in 1492, Herro instead questioned the date. 'For real, like, how do we know? When did he come to the land or whatever?' Herro asked. 'They said 1492?' N30n, a 20-year-old influencer and not a history expert, immediately agreed, saying there is 'no way of really knowing.' In addition to Columbus' own journal and letters, other contemporaneous records of his journeys exist, such as the Book of Privileges detailing his specific agreements with the Spanish court. In the end, Herro did not seem interested in hearing about the existence of history, primary sources, or even books. When one person in the online chat tried to explain that historians can document facts and those records are then passed down to later generations, the Heat star shut down the conversation.

Private Moon City Dreams Stumble After Another Failed Landing
Private Moon City Dreams Stumble After Another Failed Landing

Yahoo

time07-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Private Moon City Dreams Stumble After Another Failed Landing

Before humanity can vacation or settle on the moon, we need to land there safely—and that's proving harder than it sounds. A private Japanese space firm's second attempt to place a probe on the lunar surface has failed, bringing its ambitious dream of a 1,000-person moon colony another step back. The company, ispace, lost communication with its Resilience lander Thursday, ABC News reported. The loss happened mere moments before its scheduled touchdown in a region of the moon known as the Sea of Cold. After months in space and years of preparation, the mission is officially over with no objectives met. The lander, which launched on Jan. 15 aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, had spent nearly five months in transit before the high-stakes descent. It marks the company's second failure. In 2023, ispace lost its first lander in the final moments of its descent. Engineers are now combing through telemetry data to identify what went wrong this time. 'Given that there is currently no prospect of a successful lunar landing, our top priority is to swiftly analyze the telemetry data we have obtained,' said founder and CEO Takeshi Hakamada. Resilience was carrying commercial and scientific payloads, including a water electrolyzer to extract hydrogen and oxygen from lunar ice, a deep-space radiation probe, and an algae module to explore potential food sources. If it had landed, it would've also deployed a rover called Tenacious, which was equipped with a miniature sculpture titled 'Moonhouse.' The ultimate goal is to mine water on the moon and convert it into fuel, enabling frequent lunar transport and, eventually, habitation. It's a bold vision, but until ispace proves it can land on the moon, the dream remains out of reach. 'We strongly believe this endeavor and its long-term success will contribute to making life on Earth sustainable for all humanity,' said Moon City Dreams Stumble After Another Failed Landing first appeared on Men's Journal on Jun 6, 2025

Japanese spacecraft crashes during moon-landing
Japanese spacecraft crashes during moon-landing

ABC News

time06-06-2025

  • Science
  • ABC News

Japanese spacecraft crashes during moon-landing

Samantha Donovan: Over the years, many attempts to land a spacecraft on the moon have failed. Japanese company, iSpace, tried to land an uncrewed vessel on the moon two years ago, but it crashed during the landing. Now it appears the company's second attempt has ended the same way. Elizabeth Cramsie has more. Elizabeth Cramsie: If at first you don't succeed, try and try again. It's a useful motto, but for the second time now, Japanese company, iSpace, has failed to land on the moon. Takeshi Hakamada: In conclusion, we have not achieved the landing. So in that regards, you can say we failed. Elizabeth Cramsie: That's Takeshi Hakamada, the CEO and founder of iSpace. Two years ago, iSpace's first attempt ended in failure when its spacecraft crashed into the surface of the moon. This second uncrewed lander was aptly named Resilience. But in a media conference today, Mr Hakamada once again had to apologise to everyone who contributed to the mission. Takeshi Hakamada: This is the second time that we were not able to land. So we really have to take it very seriously. Elizabeth Cramsie: The suspense had been building as the lander approached the moon and prepared to land. Up until that point, the mission had gone well, but communications were lost less than two minutes before the scheduled landing. Ryo Ujiie is the Chief Technology Officer. Ryo Ujiie: Based on the fact that the speed of the lander was not reduced enough, I think it's appropriate to think it is crashed. Elizabeth Cramsie: Associate Professor Alice Gorman is from Flinders University in Adelaide. Alice Gorman: I'm very sorry that they weren't successful. It would have been an amazing mission. But what we have to keep in mind, I think, is that in some ways failure is more common than success on the moon. Elizabeth Cramsie: She says while moon landings have been achieved before, they haven't gotten any less difficult. Alice Gorman: People remember the successes like the Apollo missions. They don't remember the failures. And with the Apollo missions, I think we were extremely fortunate. So the President of the United States had speeches prepared if the astronauts all died. That was the real possibility. And they didn't, and that's extremely fortunate. But then there was a period after Apollo of about 50 years where people just weren't sending missions to the moon. So a lot of that continuity of knowledge was lost. Elizabeth Cramsie: She says there's multiple challenges in a moon landing and it's more difficult than other planets. Alice Gorman: There's no atmosphere. But what that means is that a spacecraft can't use parachutes to slow its speed down when it's coming out of orbit. It has to rely on engines. In the case of the iSpace lander, the information it was getting about its distance from the surface wasn't happening fast enough. So it's kind of out of sync with the little rocket thrusters. So it just went, poof, down it went. There's no air to slow it down. Elizabeth Cramsie: Professor Gorman says every crash is a learning opportunity. Alice Gorman: You learn something about your systems, your engineering. You learn something about the lunar surface, the lunar atmosphere. So it's not entirely useless. It's just not what people were hoping for. Samantha Donovan: That's Associate Professor Alice Gorman from Flinders University, Elizabeth Cramsie, reporting.

Japan's moon lander ‘crashes AGAIN' in second botched mission as spaceship goes silent just moments before touchdown
Japan's moon lander ‘crashes AGAIN' in second botched mission as spaceship goes silent just moments before touchdown

The Sun

time06-06-2025

  • Business
  • The Sun

Japan's moon lander ‘crashes AGAIN' in second botched mission as spaceship goes silent just moments before touchdown

A JAPANESE spacecraft attempting a touchdown on the moon has crashed into the surface, the space company said. The unmanned Resilience Moon Lander, from private Japanese astro company ispace, has been declared a failure for a second time. 2 2 Friday's flop follows the failure of the company's first attempt at a moon landing in 2023. Resilience had difficulty measuring the distance between itself and the moon, its makers said, so it careered into the surface going too fast. Following the disappointment, CFO Jumpei Nozaki said: "We're not facing any immediate financial deterioration or distress because of the event." Ispace will now have to wait years before taking another shot at a lunar landing. However, the country remains committed to the mission - and a number of private companies there are looking at moon exploration as a business opportunity. Tokyo-based ispace had hoped to join US firms Intuitive Machines and Firefly Aerospace in making successful commercial moon landings. It comes amid a global race that includes state-run lunar missions from China and India. .

Moon lander 'likely to have crashed', says Japan's ispace
Moon lander 'likely to have crashed', says Japan's ispace

Sky News

time06-06-2025

  • Business
  • Sky News

Moon lander 'likely to have crashed', says Japan's ispace

Japan's private space company ispace has said its latest uncrewed moon lander has probably crashed onto the surface, two years after another unsuccessful touchdown attempt. The Tokyo-based company declared the mission a failure on Saturday, several hours after communication was lost with the lander, named Resilience. It follows its failed inaugural mission in 2023. CEO and founder Takeshi Hakamada issued an apology at a news conference. "This is the second time that we were not able to land. So we really have to take it very seriously," he told reporters. But he stressed that the company would press ahead with more lunar missions. On Wednesday, ispace released footage from the Resilience lander circling the moon, ahead of Friday's planned landing. Initial analysis of the mission failure suggests the laser system for measuring the altitude did not work as planned, and the lander descended too fast, officials said. "Based on these circumstances, it is currently assumed that the lander likely performed a hard landing on the lunar surface," the company said in a written statement. The Tokyo-based firm had hoped to follow in the steps of US companies Intuitive Machines and Firefly Aerospace - which have already conducted successful, or partially successful, commercial landings. Resilience was launched in January from Florida on a long, roundabout journey, and entered lunar orbit last month. It shared a SpaceX ride with Firefly Aerospace's Blue Ghost, which reached the moon faster and became the first private entity to successfully land there in March. Another US company, Intuitive Machines, arrived at the moon a few days later, although that lander skidded into a crater near the south pole and was declared dead within hours. 0:44 Resilience was targeting a flat area at the top of the moon, in a long, narrow region full of craters and ancient lava flows that stretches across the near side's northern tier. On board was ispace's European-built rover - named Tenacious - with a high-definition camera and a shovel to scoop up some lunar dirt for NASA. tiny, Swedish-style red cottage with white trim and a green door. It was called the Moonhouse by creator Mikael Genberg and was supposed to be placed on the lunar surface.

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