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Forum:Publications & Multimedia
Topic:Challenger Disaster: Lost Tapes (Nat Geo Channel)
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MOLI was able to watch this National Geographic special thanks to an advance DVD copy distributed at the Television Critics Association meeting in Pasadena.

Overall it was very well done. There is no voice narration at all — it is 100% archival footage with narrative titles interspersed. It is done chronologically starting with footage of when Christa McAuliffe was announced as the chosen teacher by Vice President Bush and rare footage of her rehearsing her on-orbit lessons.

For me, this special brought back very vivid memories, because unlike most specials on the Challenger disaster it doesn't only show television footage but uses audio from radio coverage.

I was a freshman aerospace engineering student at USC here in Los Angeles on the morning of Jan. 28, 1986. My roommate was still asleep at 8:35 that morning, so I was listening to launch coverage on headphones through my radio. I was listening to "AP radio" and a reporter named Dick Guliano describing the launch and the sudden "plumes of smoke" that he saw. This audio that I haven't heard in 30 years is replayed in the special.

The only "lost video" in this special that I personally have never seen before is a clip of Vice President Bush and Senator John Glenn addressing the launch control center team at KSC the afternoon of launch day. President Reagan had dispatched them there to meet with the families of the crew. John Glenn's words to the launch team were very emotional — espousing the fact that for 25 years the U.S. enjoyed many successes in human space flight but we always knew this day would arrive.

In all I think this special does justice to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the tragedy.

domVery tasteful and really brought back the sense of shock this event had on me as a 13 year old space enthusiast.

The clever use of different film footage and radio audio really worked for me - especially the use of the newly discovered 8mm amateur film footage of the launch taken by an onlooker.

SpaceCadet1983I thought the program was well done. Brought back a lot of emotions even 30 years later.
Go4LaunchJust for the record, the AP Radio correspondent was my good friend Dick Uliano, who now is a reporter with WTOP in Washington, DC.
moonguyronAs an aside; I was a flight engineer on a 727 for United that day 30 odd years ago. We were airborne out of Miami for Chicago that morning. ATC re-routed us a bit to the west over the center of the state because of the launch.

I worked the P.A. so it was my job to inform the passengers the reason for the deviation. I decided to tune the ADF to pick up a local radio station carrying the launch. Upon learning the news it was my distasteful job, since I had brought it up, to tell the folks the rest of the story.

Upon landing we were the last out. I asked the flight attendants about the passengers reaction to that mornings news. They told me it was completely quiet the entire flight. It was the most solemn flight they had ever experienced.

ea757grrlIt was powerful viewing. I found myself wishing it had been a little longer, but that didn't diminish the power of the program at all, or the power of the memories it brought back.
issman1Very good compared to most other documentaries that I've seen over the past two decades.

I noticed that shuttle commanders Brewster Shaw, Michael Coats and Steven Nagel were visible in still photos in the LCC where then U.S. vice president Bush addressed the personnel.

Obviously John Young was already there that day along with Challenger's next scheduled crew, STS-61F, and Sonny Carter, the ASP who helped strap in the STS-51L astronauts.

Interesting seeing new things like that all these years later.

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