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Make Me Smart: Lunar Edition

Apr 3, 2026
Eric Berger, senior space editor at Ars Technica and author on SpaceX and reusable rockets, reflects on the Artemis II launch and how modern spaceflight differs from Apollo. He talks about commercial providers reshaping NASA, the politics and budgets behind lunar plans, and how future missions like Dragonfly and lunar hoppers could change exploration.
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ANECDOTE

Firsthand Reaction To Artemis II Launch

  • Eric Berger watched the Artemis II launch in person from about three and a half miles away at Kennedy Space Center and found it uniquely thrilling.
  • He emphasized seeing a daytime lunar-directed launch and called it inspirational compared with other rocket launches he's seen.
INSIGHT

Why Artemis II Won't Mirror Apollo's Cultural Moment

  • The cultural impact of Artemis II is muted compared with Apollo because media and geopolitics changed; 1968 had three networks and Cold War urgency.
  • Today’s fragmented media, more entertainment options, and less novelty about lunar travel reduce mass-viewing and global cultural focus.
INSIGHT

Isaacman's Business Lens Reshapes NASA Priorities

  • Jared Isaacman as NASA administrator is an outsider with a business perspective pushing NASA to focus on core lunar exploration goals and cut peripheral programs.
  • Berger notes Isaacman has successfully worked with Congress to terminate or reshape programs he deems nonessential to lunar priorities.
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