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NASA IT

Inside the Pluto Public Relations Machine 58

An anonymous reader writes: They knew it was going to be huge, but even the communications team — which had spent months planning for the event — was surprised by the magical atmosphere and worldwide excitement surrounding NASA's New Horizons Pluto flyby. The communication needs were monumental and required good planning, a ton of teamwork and attention to detail. This is how they made it happen.
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Inside the Pluto Public Relations Machine

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  • by Kunedog ( 1033226 ) on Friday September 18, 2015 @05:11AM (#50547709)

    the magical atmosphere and worldwide excitement surrounding NASA's New Horizons Pluto flyby

    It sad to know that a large section of the press would have been happy to ruin the moments the pictures came back (and shit on the public's excitement) by trashing one of the scientists, just because a women he was friends with made a shirt that pissed off a few ideologues. I'd love to hear what the Horizons PR team thought about that, when it happened to the ESA mission.

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      Really, you want to derail this article over an incident that has nothing to do with New Horizons? How many articles do you want to derail?

      • Unlike most of the space probe news articles which were derailed by the shirt, this one actually is about PR to begin with. I really would be interested in their opinions as well as any steps they took, even if it was just a dress code.
    • The adults are trying to have a conversation here.
    • Can yuo please provide more information or a link, as I have no idea what you're talking about. What woman and what shirt?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 18, 2015 @07:22AM (#50548091)

    If you want to hold a massive press conference about space exploration, of course you have to planet.

  • Why all the excitement? It isn't any more interesting than you typical asteroid flyby.
  • "First, the reporters later told us that they had never had such good access to scientists, and it made their jobs easier and their reports better. Second, this set up gave our communications team more time to solve problems, plan and react to news, and maintain stability at the center – instead of racing to fill reporter requests."
  • Was it written by a precocious ten year old? It osunds like something from a school essay about One Direction.

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