Day 6 in the Race for Space!

Day 6 in the Race for Space

Hey Orbiters,

It’s now Day 6 in the Race for Space! Yesterday I was setup with my booth at SFU. Got to talk to some folk who are also space geeks. Printed flyers with QR codes on them so that everybody could scan on their smart phones straight from the booth. 

Matt at the Race for Space Booth

The Link to vote went down for a few hours last night. I believe there was a confusion on end of voting dates. It was supposed to close last night in the US but remain open until April 5th in Canada. I e-mailed the competition and they have since e-mailed me back apologizing for the confusion and have re-opened the voting link. The awesome thing is that now, if you go to the gallery page and sort by top entries 

http://metroinspace.com/ca/galleries/top_entries

You can now find my entry on the first page! Huzzah. Thank you all! 

To continue to vote, just click the link here http://metroinspace.com/ca/view/ct94/  Only 1800 more votes and I move up 3 more places! Already 16th, that would put me in number 13 edging in closer on the top ten! Remember, you can easily vote 30 times a day. 10 per device you’re on. 10 at work, home and on your phone. 

To SPAAAAACE!

-Matthew

Day 5 In the Race for Space

Day 5 In the Race for Space

It’s been 5 days competing in Metro’s Race for Space, a competition to win a trip on one of the first space tourism flights with aerospace company SXC.

As of right now, I just hit 8500 votes. Amazing! I thought I’d be struggling to hit 1000, and here we are. I want to make the top ten voted individuals. They are not specific as to which of the highest ranked will be considered, but I think that is a fair challenge. 

I am currently prepping a booth to put out at Simon Fraser University’s Convocation Mall for tomorrow where, during the day, I will be campaigning to leverage the support of the student population. I’ve got some nifty decor picked out for the booth including some star and planet models, a lego shuttle, and my 80mm Skywatcher telescope. I figure that should draw some attention. 

Thank you all again for your continued support, and remember you can vote up to 10 times per day on any connected device that you are on from now until April 5th. So, for example, that’s ten votes at work, ten at home and ten on your phone each day! I know we can crack the top ten! Here’s the Link!

http://metroinspace.com/ca/view/ct94

Cheers,
Matthew

Day 2 in the Race for Space

Hey Chasers,

Only a day and a half in and I’ve already grabbed 3400 votes for my entry in Metro Newspaper’s Race for Space Competition. Thanks to everybody who’s been voting for the support. Here’s the current strategy.

The top voter is still a ways off from where we’re at. However, we have moved to 30th place out of approx 2000 entries. Not too shabby. The goal is to get into the top ten meaning we’ll have to hit about 15 000 ish votes. It can be done! Still averaging about 50-100 votes per hour presently. And there are surges here and there as well. Once we get to the top ten, we end up closer to the front page meaning it is easier for people on the interwebs to see the post!

So keep those votes coming by going to the link: http://metroinspace.com/ca/view/ct94 and remember that you can vote up to ten times a day every day from now until the contest closes on April 5th!

Thanks, Team!

Blessings,

Matthew 

 

Help Put Matthew Into SPACE…Literally

Hey Chasers,

Metro newspaper is running a competition to put one of their readers on a sub-orbital flight that literally crests the edge of the atmosphere. As you might know from our project, I really dig space, and always wanted to get up there somehow. This is an opportunity to do just that. 

The competition is based on entry and by vote. My entry is below. You can vote multiple times a day. Any support would be greatly appreciated!!

http://metroinspace.com/ca/view/ct94

Blessings,

Matthew

Scale of the Universe 2: Help Get some Perspective Today

I found this post on George Stroumboulopoulos’ blog on CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.) George is one of our favorite evening show hosts and focuses his interactions with the most amazing and interesting artists, scientists and social activists. On today’s post, George highlighted an interactive program that helps one navigate the scales of our Universe from the quantum tiny to the Astronomically Huge. There is now a more interactive version of the first Scale of the Universe program that went viral. 

Strombo’s post is below along with the direct link to the interactive scale program

http://www.cbc.ca/strombo/technology-1/awesome-thing-of-the-day-a-taste-of-complete-perspective.html

http://inciswf.com/589217_scale_of_universe_enhanced.swf

-Matthew

Catching Atlantis

I’m back from Florida. Each step in this journey has been so remarkable. When we set out from Toronto at the outset of “Chasing Atlantis” I never imagined that we would have such a rich story to tell or have met so many amazing individuals. This most recent return journey to Florida is yet another example.

I arrived in Florida the evening of March 7th. Our supporter and friend, Ryan Horan, who works at the Kennedy Space Center, informed me that Atlantis was being moved from the Vehicle Assembly Building to one of the KSC’s Orbital Processing Facilities. Once inside, access to the orbiter is even more limited. If we were going to get a shot at seeing her up close, we needed to be on a flight that night. So, stuffing suitcases and packing cameras, I was off to Vancouver airport.

The next morning, I was back at the Vehicle Assembly Building. The structure is massive even on the outside and yet still even more so once you walk through the massive exterior doors. Inside, by volume, the VAB could house 4 of New York’s Empire State Building.

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Any vehicle seems dwarfed. This is where the mighty Saturn V rocket that took humans to the moon could stand completely upright pointing toward its heavenly destination. But I was here to see the shuttle that inspired our entire journey, and, finally, there she was, Atlantis, not more than 30 feet in front of me, dwarfed by the VAB yet seemingly larger than life.

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Because Atlantis was being rolled out to the Orbiter Processing Facility, it meant that I was in store for a shuttle double header. The following morning Atlantis was swapped with Discovery in the Vehicle Assembly Building.

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Following NASA, Ryan and his wife, Rachel, took me out on the town for an evening concert featuring Big Head Todd and the Monsters in Orlando’s House of Blues in Downtown Disney. Big Head Todd is a favorite around NASA.  Each morning during Atlantis’ last journey in orbit, music was played to the astronauts to get their day started as a sort of reveille. This has been tradition for many shuttle missions. Big Head Todd played live in Houston Mission Control to facilitate the morning wakeup call. It was the first time live music was played to any shuttle crew while in orbit.

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Saturday was my day “off”. I decided that it would be great to reconnect with some familiar faces in and around Titusville and catch up with those who helped to support our documentary when we were in town in July and October. I managed to reconnect with Space Walk of Fame Director Karan Conklin, however she was not at the Space Walk. I found Karan at this amazing project started by local Titusville entrepreneur Maxine Trainer. Maxine, who we also first met back in July during the Atlantis launch, had mobilized the Titusville community to completely renovate an old Firestone garage into an art studio. The studio featured the work of local artists and also raised funds to support charitable causes such as the non-profit Just for the Cause founded by Chasing interviewee Liz Parker, which raises awareness of the challenges faced by young children with autism. The name for the Firestone garage-turned-art-studio? Stone Fire! Interviewing some of the Stone Fire team, I asked Maxine “would this have happened if the Shuttle Program was still in operation?” I wanted to know if there was a connection. In the absence of the Program, Titusville’s economy has taken a hit. House values have been impacted and the city is struggling to find its footing. Maxine’s answer was a clear “No.” “This city had become dependent on that…” she said gesturing toward the Vehicle Assembly Building. In her view, Titusville was in a state of transition and this art studio represented a community that was helping the city find a new identity in the post-space shuttle era.

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Maxine wanted to show me more of the new growth in Titusville and invited me to another concert with local artists at the brand new Rabbitfoot Records – a new store which exclusively features vinyl LPs. The March 10th concert marked the grand opening of the store and headlined local band The Dull Blades.  I was able to sit down with store owners Robert Wallace and Kendra Heckart. Kendra described Titusville’s post shuttle program experiences as a “renaissance”, one where the city itself was “waking up” to a new era. When I asked Rob why it seemed economically sound to start a business in Titusville, he said the rationale was obvious: Their store could find a niche market much more easily than in a larger city like Orlando or Miami. There were many local artists who can now find a community hub within the store, and rent rates in Titusville are very competitive right now.

Rabbitfoot’s vinyl collection was amazing. My brother has a record player. Being that he is a jazz musician, I went hunting for some records and found stuff I hadn’t even seen in Toronto stores. Needless to say, the bottom layers of my suitcase were a vinyl Satchmo sandwich.

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This second return journey to Florida was a vivid reminder of the themes that have woven themselves through our documentary from the very beginning: We came for the technology, but were truly inspired by the people. Whether it was the astronaut flying the shuttle, the fire safety crewman who protected Apollo crews, the woman who started an art studio, or a couple who founded a record store, we have been so amazed at the people who have been a part of our story and I am really looking forward to when we get to share that story with all of you. Keep an eye out for news about our Summer release! And speaking of some of those amazing folks, here are some links below where you can learn more about them and their cool projects.

Big Head Todd and the Monsters

Just for the Cause On the Web

Stone Fire Studios On Facebook  On The Web

The Dull Blades On Facebook

Rabbitfoot Records On Facebook

Blessings!

Matthew

PS, another huge thanks to Ryan (@Whitethunder75 on Twitter) and Rachel Horan for hosting me while I was in town, and for keeping us updated on all things space!

Back at the Kennedy Space Center

It’s been a crazy past 24 hours.

Basically we received word that Atlantis, which is currently being housed in the Vehicle Assembly Building, is being moved Friday morning back to the Orbiter Processing Facility. I have been in touch with with a NASA PR representative in an attempt to gain media level access to Atlantis which would allow us to get a proper film shoot of the vehicle. So far that hasn’t panned out. However, if we are going to get any coverage at all of the orbiter, it seems that it will have to be while it is still in the Vehicle Assembly Building. I needed to make a call. Assuming things don’t work out on the media accreditation side, this will be our only shot to see Atlantis within 10 meters rather than within 3 miles. I was on a plane and here I am in a hotel in Titusville giving this update. The plan is such…

Atlantis is in the VAB today. Tomorrow, it will be swapped out with Discovery and return to the Orbiter Processing Facility. Discovery will be not fully parked in the VAB but rather out in the loading isle meaning that tours for it tomorrow will actually go under the wing. I’m pretty stoked about that. So the plan is to catch both orbiters over the next two days.

Due to the last minute nature of the trip, Paul couldn’t make it down this time. I’m flying solo. Missing the team members 🙁 so we won’t be shooting this one with the Panasonic HVX under Paul’s gifted hands. It will be me with the Rebel DSLR. I’m hoping for the footage to turn out decently or, at the very least, get some great photos.

Keep an eye out for the results over the next few days. I also have one other awesome announcement regarding our first screening that I will be posting about soon!

Blessings

Matthew

Lost in Space

On February 19th, I made a post regarding cuts to NASA’s budget that puts future human space flight missions in jeopardy

I had a few direct responses to the post, some for and some against, but I also came across this critique to the general sentiment of my post that made me second guess my original argument.

“NASA, we have a problem, why America is Lost in Space”  by Brett Biddington, Adjunct Professor, School of Computer and Security Science at Edith Cowan University states in his article:

“Some commentators have already been fast to criticize the cuts, suggesting they are minimal relative to the buckets of money lavished on the US defence establishment (which include classified and unclassified space programs).”

He continues by arguing that NASA has lost focus on space exploration, lost touch with the public, and is in danger of becoming a cold war relic. This final point struck me. It rang true with many of the interviews we conducted with both active and retired personnel at NASA during the shooting of Chasing Atlantis. Many who started early into the program were ashamed that NASA astronauts were not being lifted from the globe by Chinese technology insinuating that America had lost some of its pride. From a country that has a space program which has always hitchhiked its astronauts into space, I cannot fully relate. Canada has always been proud to have any of our citizens or technology (Canadarm/Canadarm II) in orbit at all. I also just finished watching Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson on the Daily Show with Jon Stewart. In his latest book, Space Chronicles, Tyson says that when the moon landing happened in 69, predictions were made suggesting that we would be on Mars by 1980. We’re still not there, and it doesn’t look like we are going any time soon. Why? Tyson says that with the pressure of the cold war over, the impetus on extra terrestrial travel was lost.

It would seem both authors are correct then. In the absence of a war, we have made no further progress to put humans elsewhere in our solar system and NASA, according to Biddington continues to exude habits formed during the cold war in terms of its reluctance to participate in international programs.

So what is the solution? More funding? Smarter allocation? Public engagement to create a new-found sense of relevancy? I am uncertain. However, I do echo Tyson’s concerns he shared on the Daily show, currently our civilization seems to be regressing. Reduced funding for education, technology development, a labored economic system. Perhaps a new frontier is exactly what we need right now.

Blessings,

Matthew

Riptide Studios On Twitter

Hey Chasers,

Our parent label, Riptide Studios, which was founded by Chasing Director Paul Muzzin, is now on Twitter. Let’s help get those initial follower numbers boosted! You can find Paul’s project here:

@riptidestudios

https://twitter.com/#!/riptidestudios

Blessings, 

Matthew

Connecting

Don’t forget, you can also find Chasing Atlantis on Twitter where we tweet about doc stuff, reviewing footage, the latest in space news and all around geekdom. Follow us @chasingatlantis

Or, you can also find us on Facebook!

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