• Coffee House
  • Announcement of NASA's most challenging mission ever?
2017/06/25 22:02:09
SteveStrummerUK
 
NASA has outlined plans for what most experts consider to be their most ambitious and challenging mission ever.
 
However, the astronomical cost of the expedition coupled with the extremely low probability of success has left some commentators scratching their heads in disbelief.
 
Astronaut Buzz Aldrin added his voice to those of the proposed mission’s many critics saying, “I don’t understand their decision. When JFK famously declared in 1961 that the United States would put a man on the moon and return him safely to earth before the end of the decade, most people thought the idea fanciful, if not a downright impossibility.” Shaking his head and smiling ruefully, he added, “But compared to NASA’s next expedition, our chances of success were a stone cold certainty!”
 
One NASA spokesman retorted angrily to Aldrin’s criticism by saying, “Yes, the mission is going to cost billions, and the chances of accomplishing our goal are almost infinitesimally slim, but we believe that the potential rewards outweigh all the undoubted difficulties and expense."
 
Lift-off for this new voyage of discovery is due to be sometime before 2020, although NASA insisted that such was the importance of the mission, every effort would be made to get the project off the ground as soon as possible.
 
“There are fundamental questions that we believe mankind demands answers to” added the NASA boffin and quipped, “To paraphrase John F Kennedy, we are doing this not because it is easy, but because it is nigh on impossible!”
 
A whole new level of technology has been conceived for the mission, including instruments designed with previously unheard of levels of complexity, sophistication and sensitivity.
 
Details of the mission have, until now, been guarded by unprecedented levels of security, leading to rumours and theories abounding – a manned mission to Mars being by far and away the most prevalent.
 
The full reveal was a complete surprise to most observers, and went as follows:
 
“NASA are proud to announce our exciting new goal of sending a probe to land on the surface of James Corden in a mission to try and discover any trace of talent whatsoever. The craft will be launched from Cape Canaveral and once en route, will be attracted by the immense natural gravity of Corden. The probe itself will consist of two parts – an orbiter which will remain circling the main wobbling mass and a lander which will descend to the surface. The descent through the hundreds of miles of Corden’s massively dense ego will prove a real challenge, but we believe a soft landing on the upper slopes of his mountainous flab will happen at the conclusion of this perilous journey.”
 
After the official announcement, the mission leader went into other details and the history of the project. “Due to the vast surface area scheduled to be surveyed, the exploratory phase is expected to last for many years” he explained, “The lander’s solar powered batteries should keep it operational for decades, although the amount of sunlight that can penetrate the ego and arrive at the surface could be a limiting factor. We’ll be trying to keep the lander in direct sunshine as often as possible, although when navigating the area beneath the many chins, this might prove a little difficult.”
 
Although some may perceive the purpose of the mission to be a complete waste of time, effort and money, the search for talent in James Corden has been attempted many times before. The NASA spokesman stressed that “It is completely obvious that no talent whatsoever can be observed using the naked eye, so some form of instrumentation has always been employed in an attempt to view this elusive attribute. We finally decided to launch a probe after extensive use of the Hubble Space Telescope failed to reveal even the slightest trace of quantifiable talent, even during Corden’s recent eclipse of the sun.”
 
If this voyage proves successful, the NASA spokesman hinted that further missions of talent discovery may be launched further down the line. “We could see a day when such missions are commonplace” he suggested, “And the thought of finding any talent whatsoever in the likes of Russell Brand, Noel Edmonds or Adrian Chiles keeps us motivated and prepared to carry on working at what most consider to be a fruitless task.”
 
James Corden is fat.
 
 
 
 
 
 
2017/06/25 22:12:23
Beepster
2017/06/25 22:25:56
craigb
Did that OP start with "Hi," or did I just miss it? 
 
(Er, and who is James Corden?)
2017/06/25 22:32:09
paulo
craigb
 
(Er, and who is James Corden?)




You really don't want to know.
2017/06/26 07:02:45
jamesg1213
I can forgive him for being a bit of a pillock, because he co-wrote (and was very good in) Gavin & Stacey, one of my favourite comedies.
2017/06/26 16:06:09
chuckebaby
jamesg1213
I can forgive him for being a bit of a pillock


I cant believe I have never heard this word before.
Excellent vocabulary there James. I learned a new word today
2017/06/26 16:43:48
craigb
Lots to learn in the Coffee House.  The rare bit can even be used.  
2017/06/26 16:47:25
Beepster
Since nobody's asked about my GIF...
 
That's one of those "Fake" moon landing conspiracy wackaloons essentially calling Buzz Aldrin a liar... and Buzz not putting up with that shiznock for a lunar second.
2017/06/26 17:04:40
jamesg1213

2017/06/26 17:05:32
craigb
Beepster
Since nobody's asked about my GIF...
 
That's one of those "Fake" moon landing conspiracy wackaloons essentially calling Buzz Aldrin a liar... and Buzz not putting up with that shiznock for a lunar second.




Cool!  I was wondering about that.
 
(To the moon Alice!)
 
--------------------------------------------------------
 
Here's a cute Neil Armstrong story:
 
On July 20, 1969, as commander of the Apollo 11 lunar module, Neil Armstrong was the first person to set foot on the moon.
 
His first words after stepping on the moon, "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind", were televised to earth and heard by millions. But, just before he re-entered the lander, he made the enigmatic remark "Good luck, Mr. Gorsky."
 
Many people at NASA thought it was a casual remark concerning some rival soviet cosmonaut. However, upon checking, there was no Gorsky in either the Russian or American space programs.
 
Over the years, many people questioned Armstrong as to what the 'Good luck, Mr. Gorsky' statement meant, but Armstrong always just smiled.
 
On July 5, 1995, in Tampa Bay, Florida, while answering questions following a speech, a reporter brought up the 26-year-old question about Mr. Gorsky and this time he finally responded because his Mr. Gorsky had just died, so Neil Armstrong felt he could now answer the question.
 
Here is the answer to "Who was Mr. Gorsky?":
 
In 1938, when he was a kid in a small mid-western town, he was playing baseball with a friend in the backyard. His friend hit the ball, which landed in his neighbor's yard by their bedroom window. His neighbors were Mr. and Mrs. Gorsky. As he leaned down to pick up the ball, young Armstrong heard Mrs. Gorsky shouting at Mr. Gorsky, "Sex! You want sex?! You'll get sex when the kid next door walks on the moon!"
 
It broke the place up.
 
Neil Armstrong's family confirmed that this is a true story.
© 2026 APG vNext Commercial Version 5.1

Use My Existing Forum Account

Use My Social Media Account