Hey, we to the other world, boys
Jul. 20th, 2019 08:27 pmI did not sit up to watch the moon landing when it happened. I could have; I think that another member of the flat share did. Nor did
durham_rambler. We probably had ro work the morning after, he at his real job and I at my summer-before-university holiday job.
It's not that we weren't interested in space travel. I'm old enough to remember how excited I was when my father told me about the sputnik; and Yuri Gagarin's flight not so long after. But what I remember of the moon landing is feeling overloaded by the advance publicity, as if nothing could live up to that amount of fuss. Which is ridiculous, of course: a man walking on the moon, how could you overstate the importance of that?
I've thought about this from time to time in the interim, and felt I'd got it wrong. And yet here I am at my desk, listening to the distant sounds of the Brass Festival, happy for
durham_rambler to watch the anniversary showing of the 'live' coverage, not at all tempted to join him.
Nonetheless, I raise a glass to the man in the moon (he drinks claret, you know):
ETA: UK television coverage was intensive.
It's not that we weren't interested in space travel. I'm old enough to remember how excited I was when my father told me about the sputnik; and Yuri Gagarin's flight not so long after. But what I remember of the moon landing is feeling overloaded by the advance publicity, as if nothing could live up to that amount of fuss. Which is ridiculous, of course: a man walking on the moon, how could you overstate the importance of that?
I've thought about this from time to time in the interim, and felt I'd got it wrong. And yet here I am at my desk, listening to the distant sounds of the Brass Festival, happy for
Nonetheless, I raise a glass to the man in the moon (he drinks claret, you know):
ETA: UK television coverage was intensive.