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Moon Space Japan

Japanese Billionaire Unveils the 8 Artists He'll Fly To the Moon On SpaceX's Starship dearMoon Flight 76

A Japanese billionaire picked his crewmates for the first-ever artist-centered mission. Space.com reports: Yusaku Maezawa, who made his fortune as an online fashion retailer, announced the eight people who would be flying with him on the dearMoon mission, which aims to use a SpaceX Starship to fly around the moon as soon as next year. "I hope each and every one will recognize the responsibility that comes with leaving the Earth, travelling to the moon and back," Maezawa says in the video in Japanese, with a translation provided in-video.

Riding along with Maezawa will be:
- Steve Aoki, D.J., producer and electronic dance music artist with several Billboard-charting studio albums;
- Tim Dodd, YouTube creator of the "Everyday Astronaut" channel (Dodd has interviewed SpaceX founder Elon Musk multiple times on camera);
- Yemi A.D., artist and choreographer known for his work with JAD Dance Company and with Ye (formerly Kanye West);
- Karim Iliya, photographer whose publications include National Geographic Magazine;
- Rhiannon Adam, a photographer who has been supported by the BBC/Royal Geographical Society and won multiple awards, according to their website;
- Brendan Hall, filmmaker on projects such as the two-hour documentary "Blood Sugar Rising" about diabetes in the United States, according to the Internet Movie Database;
- Dev Joshi, an "Indian television actor known for portraying the role of Baal Veer in Sony Sab's Baal Veer and Baalveer Returns," according to the Internet Movie Database;
- T.O.P., a South Korean rapper known as the lead for the boy band Big Bang;
- Two backup members: dancer Miyu, and snowboarder Kaitlyn Farrington.

Each member of the dearMoon crew was briefly quoted in a video from the dearMoon YouTube channel, and the announcement was confirmed on Dodd's and Maezawa's Twitter feeds.
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Japanese Billionaire Unveils the 8 Artists He'll Fly To the Moon On SpaceX's Starship dearMoon Flight

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  • by Generic User Account ( 6782004 ) on Friday December 09, 2022 @04:08AM (#63115866)

    And back, right?

  • Tim Dodd isn't an artist - he's a space nerd and explains the technical complexities of his spacecraft obsession very well.

    HE has to come back.

    The "artists" ... meh.

    Oh, and if this launches before 2025, I will eat moondust.
    • One could argue the ability to effectively and evocatively explain complex scientific concepts to the masses is an art unto itself. There was certainly a poetry to the way Sagan communicated.

      As a musician, I will be keen to see what Steve Aoki takes away from it though.

  • by Eunomion ( 8640039 ) on Friday December 09, 2022 @04:39AM (#63115916)
    I'm really happy for him. Just imagining that guy getting such news is making me smile. Being invited to fly around the Moon is way beyond winning a lottery jackpot for a space fan.
  • Launch date (Score:5, Informative)

    by slack_justyb ( 862874 ) on Friday December 09, 2022 @04:52AM (#63115932)

    The previously-announced 2023 launch date may push back substantially, however, as Starship has not yet been approved for an orbital journey around Earth, let alone a flight to the moon.

    Yeah that 2023 launch date is absolutely not happening. For some insanely smart reason, the area the BFR is being built and tested in, in Texas has all kinds of environmental protections all around. None of the programmatic environmental assessments (PEAs) were done prior and so the FAA shut their shit down. Not only that, when it came up for eval by the FAA in 2021, there were over a 1,000 public comments that all had to be heard. Clearly none of the neighbors are fans of the place nearby. It wasn't until 2022 did the FAA finally wade through everything and gave them limited go ahead. But there's still way more paperwork that SpaceX hasn't completed with their facility and until that's done, the thing cannot even be tested for LEO approval.

    The rocket will eventually get green-lit as SpaceX's BFR is way too important to NASA's Lunar Gateway, a pretty fucking important component of NASA’s Artemis program as a whole. There's a really important reason SpaceX didn't get folded into the whole Twitter buying shit, NASA is basically letting them know that SpaceX is new Boeing and doing dumb shit with NASA's investment isn't going to fly.

    So yes, this rocket will get off the ground. That red tape will be gotten through. And this private moon trip will eventually happen because the FAA and NASA are not letting the BFR slip, full stop. But it's going to happen on the US Government's timeline and no one else's. Because that rocket blowing up a bunch of artist is only going to happen once the public puts trust in those rockets being at the Gateway. If those rockets kill everyone on board and suddenly Congress and the public wants to put hard brakes on them BEFORE NASA can get the Gateway stationed. Oh they'll tell SpaceX to pound sand. This whole Artemis thing has been slow enough and the Directors of the US Space program aren't going to humor some ego-tripping billionaire to YOLO some well known figures on a suicide mission and risk putting the entire thing on a delayed track for another ten years.

    • by BigZee ( 769371 )
      BFR was renamed to Starship in 2018/2019.
    • by necro81 ( 917438 )

      There's a really important reason SpaceX didn't get folded into the whole Twitter buying shit

      I think the real reason is that Elon's stake in SpaceX is small, relative to what he had to raise for Twitter, and he surely doesn't want to give up much of it. And because SpaceX is still privately held, his stake is much harder to liquidate.

      So I'm not surprised that he pulled from his shares of a publicly-traded company that has 10x the valuation of SpaceX. Even after Twitter, he still owns about 15% of T

  • Maybe he could also leave them on the moon?
  • It occurred to me that, in fact, money is actually a token that gives You the right of vote over, among other things, the usage of the limited amount of natural resources available to humans.
    Whence, whenever You pay for something, You need to be aware that You vote for two things:
    1) The use of those limited resources for the product You are acquiring
    2) You forego Your right to vote equivalent to the margin of the manufacturer and all of the intermediary

    Hence for those who are unhappy about the resources dep

    • Hence for those who are unhappy about the resources depletion by this space tourism, You need to be aware that those resources are the "votes" of people who allowed the tourists to accumulate wealth and decide on behalf of the humanity on how to use them.

      Shit ideas don't become good ideas because dumbfucks voted for them.

      • Shit ideas don't become good ideas because dumbfucks voted for them.

        True enough. So, what makes you think YOUR ideas are good ideas? As opposed, say, to MY good ideas?

        Alas, while democracy sucks as a form of government, it sucks LESS than all the other forms we've tried from time to time...

        In other words, till you can PROVE that your ideas are better than mine (or anyone else's), you'll just have to deal with the fact that not everyone (probably not even most people) agrees with you.

  • He should've hired 8 hookers, dressed them in sexy Startrek uniforms, and taken them up with him. I can see the poster now, a breathtaking image of the moon, taken from the capsule's porthole - and faintly reflected in the glass, is Maezawa doing his O face.

  • by gestalt_n_pepper ( 991155 ) on Friday December 09, 2022 @09:18AM (#63116268)

    He'll just bring them back.

  • If you were picked for this (and assuming the thing actually existed, had launch permission, etc), would you go?

    The risks are definitely higher than anything anyone does in normal every day life but the trip itself could be amazing.

    I'm not some random unknown artist so missed my shot but not certain I'd do it once my art is discovered. :-)

    • I absolutely would go. But then, I've jumped out of perfectly good airplanes, gone bungy jumping, paragliding, parasailing, snowboarding... My daughter would absolutely go to, but that's because she has a death wish.
  • If I was a billionaire, I would have chosen 8 hot chicks for the flight. Miyu was the best you could do? Sheesh!
  • The title is enough for me to shake my head and say "How stupid. Publicity stunt. What good is it to have art on the moon this decade? There's nobody to even look at it there."

  • So, there's actually nothing of real interest or value to see here at all. It's just yet another story about a privileged rich arsehole doing more than average to fuck up the planet that he shares with 8 billion others. This is an example of the worst of us doing the worst things. It's Big Brother in space and serves no purpose except self-aggrandizement.
  • It's really unfortunate that they missed their chance to send a blind person. They are ablelists.

  • These are the "artist" version of influencers. But such is the world...

Thus spake the master programmer: "After three days without programming, life becomes meaningless." -- Geoffrey James, "The Tao of Programming"

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