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Letter From The Editor Opinion

Letter from an Editor: Space Waste?

This space — the Letter From the Editor column — has for decades been the home of opinions and stories from (you guessed it) the editor of the Memphis Flyer. We’re in between editors at the moment and Flyer staffers have divvied up the responsibilities of that task, including the writing of this column.

My work has appeared in almost every section of this fine paper over the years, but never here. I don’t have an opinion when I’m on the clock. No reporter should. This works out because sometimes I have dumb opinions. Sometimes things don’t make sense to me and when I say what I think out loud (usually only to my wife), it sounds Jurassic.

I listen better than I speak. I try to empathize better than I criticize. But I know for sure that I learn better than I opine. Learning is usually the cure for whatever dumb opinion I have. So, when this space is mine, I’m going to learn, seeking counsel from some of Memphis’ brightest minds. I hope you’ll learn along with me.

My first dumb opinion here: The $10-billion James Webb Space Telescope is a waste of money. (Can’t you just hear how dumb that sounds?) The price tag only bothers me when I think about how else that money could have been spent. This attitude to space stuff was most certainly inspired by this verse from Bob Marley’s “So Much Trouble in the World.”

“You see men sailing on their ego trip,

Blast off on their spaceship,

Million miles from reality

No care for you, no care for me.”

I bet teachers across America could think of way better ways to spend $10 billion than pointing a camera into space for a look back billions of years. When you’re driving on some of Memphis’ potholed streets, do you ever think, “Man, I wish we had a closer look at the galactic cluster SMACS 0723?”

Again, this is (probably) a dumb opinion. So, I turned to Jeremy Veldman, president of the Memphis Astronomical Society.

Memphis Flyer: What is the Webb Space Telescope going to do for us, as a planet, I guess?

Jeremy Veldman: [It will answer questions] not only about the origins and evolutions of the first galaxies and stars in our universe, as well as the composition of atmospheres around distant exoplanets to see if they could possibly be habitable, but I think what’s more exciting is it could possibly answer questions that we haven’t even thought of yet.

I’ll give you one example. Thirty years ago, when [the Hubble Space Telescope] was launched, we knew that the universe was expanding, going all the way back to the late 1920s and Edwin Hubble. But we didn’t know if the universe was going to expand forever or maybe slow down and contract back on itself.

What came out of the Hubble Space Telescope is that we discovered that the universe is not only expanding but it’s accelerating in its rate of expansion. Completely counterintuitive. We live in an expanding, accelerating universe. That was something that scientists did not even expect and it came out of research from Hubble.

So, what I think is exciting to me is that in the next 25 to 30 years, [the Webb telescope] could possibly answer questions that we haven’t even thought of yet.

What would you say to people who say that $10 billion is a lot of money to spend on something like this, something that might not have everyday, applicable uses?

It’s a legitimate question. I would say that what’s going come out of that $10 billion is years and possibly decades of research that will not only help answer questions about the cosmos and our place within the universe and our significance in it, but also stimulate a lot of curiosity and, ultimately, wonder. As the great Greek philosopher Socrates said in antiquity, “Wonder is the beginning of wisdom.”

So, when you have young people seeing this and getting exposed to it, that could be something similar to the way I was when I was a young person, seeing these discoveries, wondering, having curiosity come out of it and then putting them on a linear path to do work, to do research, to pursue a career path, and to avoid anything toxic.

They can work hard, get educated, become a functional member of society, and possibly pursue a career in the sciences and maybe be instrumental in working on the next generation of technology, whether it’s another James Webb that comes up later down the road or some other field of science.

Toby Sells

The Memphis Flyer is now seeking candidates for its editor position. Send your resume to hr@contemporary-media.com.

Categories
News The Fly-By

Protect Our Aquifer Teams Up With NASA For Aquifer Study

Satellites from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) will soon point their cameras at West Tennessee to better understand and protect the area’s drinking water.

Protect Our Aquifer (POA) teamed up with NASA for a research project starting this month to monitor the recharge zones of the Memphis Sand Aquifer. The project is part of NASA’s DEVELOP program at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory to address environmental and public policy issues through Earth observations around the world.

NASA will employ its Global Precipitation Measurement satellite, another tool from the International Space Station, and more to study the recharge zone, which spans 12 West Tennessee counties. The study hopes to find “hot spots,” where more water enters the recharge zone, and, then, to protect those hot spots.

These areas are important to a water system that supports more than 1 million people and industries, companies, and farms. These zones are where rainfall directly replenishes the aquifer.

“We have a valuable collection of remote sensing acquisitions, and we are excited to use this data over the Memphis Sand Aquifer to guide stakeholders,” said project adviser Kerry Cawse-Nicholson of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

The study will last five months, and findings are due this summer.

We caught up with POA executive director Sarah Houston to talk about the project. How do they hope to use the information and how could it inform development in the region, especially around Ford Motor Co.’s Blue Oval City to built be close to these recharge zones?

Memphis Flyer: How did this collaboration with NASA come about?

Sarah Houston: It was actually through a Rhodes College graduate Erica Carcelen [project manager for the NASA DEVELOP program]. She had heard of Protect Our Aquifer and our work and is now working at NASA full-time. She reached out to us to apply for a program that pairs new hires with NASA with seasoned scientists to do really applied science research projects to take a lot of this information and available tools and apply it to a community need.

What do you hope to learn?

We are hoping that we can get a sense of these new technologies that can be applied to understand the aquifer system, not only for this study but future studies. This is the first time these satellite tools have been used for a study like this here.

We are hoping to get a sense of where our recharge zone hot spots are. Where the sands come to the surface, that’s where our water supply is being sustainably replenished.

We don’t want to pave over the recharge zone. So, we’re hoping to find specific areas that are our hot spots where more rainfall is directly re-entering the system compared to others. Those areas, we know, are very important for our water sustainability portfolio.

How do you hope to use the information?

This is going to be helpful, not only as Ford actually develops their property, but it will also be informative for the broader region as we start to see more development, like suburbs coming up. If there are areas that are really important to recharge, could those be conserved? So, how do we still grow the region sustainably and use best management practices as we’re building out these communities?

Categories
News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Memphis from Space, Elvis Looks Different, and Better than Chicken

Feeling Seen?

If you felt like someone was watching you last month, maybe they were. On September 6th, an astronaut took this image of Downtown Memphis from the International Space Station as it orbited 261 miles above the U.S.

Posted to Flickr by NASA.

It’s a sign

Posted to Reddit by u/VengefulGH.

King of Sloth?

Reddit users felt all kinds of ways about a new Elvis mural last week. But many saw someone else in it entirely.

hgd1995: Happy to see Sloth from The Goonies got a wig. Good for him.

B1gR1g: HEY Y’ALL GUYS!

Posted to Reddit by B1gR1g.

Categories
Art Art Feature

Blast Off: NASA Photo Exhibit at Edge Alley

Ryan Adams loves to hear what people say when they view his NASA photographs, which range from images of the moon’s surface to a rare color photo of Mars.

“It’s just hearing the stories they have if they were living during that time,” says Adams, 34. “Someone came in the other day, his father had taken him to go see the launch for Apollo 15. He said, ‘We were four miles away, and I could feel the concussion of the rocket in my chest.’

“It’s hard to imagine seeing a rocket that large,” says Adams. “It’s crazy — that it would burn 20 tons of fuel a second.”

Photos from Adams’ collection are on view in “Edge of Space: Apollo 11, Orbiter, and Viking I,” the debut show at the new Shift + Gallery inside Edge Alley at 600 Monroe.

All the images are vintage photographs. “Vintage photography just means that it was printed at the time it was taken,” Adams says. The photographs “aren’t photos that have been reprinted. These are actual photos from NASA that are stamped ‘NASA’ on the back.”

NASA photo of Mars

They were “truly just reference materials for the scientists at NASA. The primary purpose was never to be art.”

Adams’ love of space dates to conversations he had as a child with his grandfather, who had friends who worked for NASA. “Exploration has always been a massive interest of mine,” he says.

He began collecting NASA photographs 20 years ago after he found some at an estate sale at the home of a former NASA employee. He became more knowledgeable about NASA photography when he was director of special collections for Historic Images, which digitizes photographs in newspaper archives.

He also dealt with space photographs when he became director at Daniel Blau gallery in Munich. The gallery’s vintage photography collection included photos of major space missions. “There would be [photos] of the Apollo missions, Gemini, Skylab … different missions to Mars … Voyager.”

A majority of his collection came about a few years ago when he began contacting former NASA employees. “I started using genealogy searches trying to find relatives of photographers who took photos I had in my possession.”

Adams was specific about what photographs he wanted, which included photos taken during the Orbiter missions between August 1966 and August 1967. “The Orbiter photographs are just such a monumental feat of engineering, both in rocket science and photography,” he says. “The satellites orbited the moon with film, took photographs, developed the film on board the satellite, scanned the film, and then transmitted the image back to Earth, where they would print the strips out. And then collage the strips together.”

The Orbiter image in the show is actually about 30 strips that make one large image.

Adams put this exhibit together after Edge Alley chef/owner Tim Barker suggested he do a photo show to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Apollo 11 (July 20th).

The Mars photo, which sells for $7,500, is Adams’ favorite. “It’s the first color photograph of another planet,” he says. “It’s also the third known example outside the Smithsonian and NASA’s museums in Houston and Huntsville.”

The image, taken on a Viking I mission, is “the first photo that was sent back of another planet’s surface … July 20th, 1976.

“Out of the thousands of years people have been studying the stars and planets and looking to the heavens in the sky for meaning in life or mathematics, this is the first time we have a photograph of another planet’s surface.”

And, Adams says, “It’s beautiful.”

Edge Alley, 600 Monroe, 425-2605.

Categories
From My Seat Sports

Perspective From Pluto

News is delivered with the frequency (and often fury) of a hailstorm these days. I confess to a growing addiction to my Twitter feed. What has happened to change my world since I last checked … 20 minutes ago? As a sportswriter, the addiction can numb the brain. Innings are played, trades made (or discussed!), free agents signed, and all this during what amounts to the sports world’s slow season of summer. Two weeks ago, I chose to tune things out long enough to visit with family members who’d driven across the country and would spend one full day with my family in Memphis. My penalty for disengaging a few hours: the Twitter-driven explosion of reaction to Austin Nichols leaving the University of Memphis basketball program. #WTH?

But then the photos of Pluto began to arrive. Early last week, images shot 3.7 billion miles from Earth by the New Horizons spacecraft began to fill the Internet. The tiny “dwarf planet” named for the Greek god of the underworld (the Disney character came later, people) became the latest topic of awe for astronomy nerds, students of natural science, and even a few sportswriters. Honestly, I found the standard snark and viral memes out of place this time. Human beings managed to send a device to the very edge of our galaxy, a device that can be controlled — from more than three billion miles away — and take pictures to send us, like that friend who finally checked off the Great Wall of China on his bucket list. “Check out Pluto’s heart! Wish you were here!”

The images stopped me in my news-gathering tracks. You had to relish the coincidence of the photos reaching human eyes during the week of baseball’s All-Star Game, the quietest sports week of the year in the United States. With images of mountain ranges — what?! — on Pluto, I found myself reconsidering the label “all-star.” Pluto may have recently been demoted from planet status by the likes of Neil deGrasse Tyson, but if it’s not a Milky Way “all-star,” then Pete Rose can’t draw a crowd in Cincinnati.

Then last Thursday, of course, news returned to what we consider normal in 2015 when we learned of the latest rampage by a gun-toting madman, this time across our own state in Chattanooga. My heart heavy for the latest victims, I couldn’t help but wonder about the perspective from Pluto on this kind of behavior. Imagine how tiny our planet is relative to those 3.7 billion miles separating us from NASA’s photo-gathering craft. Yet random slaughter continues to dance across news cycles, however brief we now define them. It would seem there are other rocks in our solar system that could use a large heart shape.

At least we have sports, daily distractions with a dose, now and then, of the inspirational. Dodger pitcher Zack Greinke has apparently decided not to allow a run the rest of the season. Barely able to take a legal drink, Jordan Spieth is making the bitterly cruel game of golf look easy. Unless she takes the wrong cab to Arthur Ashe Stadium in September, Serena Williams should complete the first calendar Grand Slam tennis has seen in 27 years. And to think we have a Triple Crown winner grazing somewhere in Kentucky today. They’re all jaw-dropping achievers. And much needed in a world where hate and bullets steal too many headlines. You’ll have to forgive me, though, if some time passes before I describe another athlete, however brilliant, as “other-worldly.” They may be hard to see, Pluto, but we have big hearts here on Earth, too.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

American Made

The Bush years have given American swagger a bad name, but there was a time when this quality was rooted not in cowboy-style bluster but in competence and confidence. You can see this in In the Shadow of the Moon, a terrific new documentary about NASA’s Apollo space program, which put men on the moon in 1969 and returned for several subsequent voyages over the next few years.

Directed by British filmmaker David Sington and produced, in part, by Hollywood director Ron Howard, who celebrated the most difficult, tense Apollo voyage with his film Apollo 13, In the Shadow of the Moon might be as captivating a stew of imagery and words as has been seen on the big screen this year.

Sington posits this history of the Apollo program as something almost mystical, pointing out that the Apollo astronauts are “the only human beings to have visited another world.”

“I want to promise you I’m human,” says Apollo 17 commander Gene Cernan early on. “I pinched myself to find out whether it was really happening. I called the moon my home for three days of my life, and I’m here to tell you about it. That’s the stuff of science fiction.”

All of the men interviewed — 10 of the 15 surviving Apollo astronauts who traveled to the moon — seem humbled by their experience. Charlie Duke, an Apollo 16 pilot who describes his father being in awe of his accomplishment and his 5-year-old son not the least bit impressed, recounts looking out the window of his ship at the shrinking planet he’d left and thinking how fragile Earth seemed, “hanging in the darkness like a jewel.”

Mike Collins, now in his 70s and still gifted with the guileless twinkle of the young boy who grew up flying model planes, was the Command Module pilot of Apollo 11, the first flight to actually land on the moon, and he was the man who stayed aboard the main ship, orbiting the moon, while the rest of his crew — Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin — were making history on the surface. Collins is the most engaging of the subjects here, but it’s stiff competition.

Sington makes an astute decision to make his film basically an oral history. All narration and commentary, save a few written intertitles, come from the astronauts themselves, in tightly framed close-ups that often linger on the faces of these men for moments after they’re done speaking. These 10 men (Aldrin among them; the somewhat reclusive Armstrong did not participate) make for riveting, engaging subjects. Here is a bunch of old American white men, many of them with Southern accents, macho yet intelligent and gentle. They have accomplished great things via, in part, what Apollo 14 pilot Edgar Mitchell describes as an espirit de corps, a willingness to risk danger, and a pioneering spirit rooted in their generally shared history as test pilots. They are old-school American men, and they give that generally discredited class a fairly thorough redemption through In the Shadow of the Moon‘s two hours.

Sington pairs this terrific interview material with NASA archival footage, newly remastered and much of it unseen, synched up with original sound for the first time. This gripping footage is awesome in the most literal sense. Kubrick couldn’t touch it.

In revisiting the shiniest, happiest byproduct of the Cold War (the film acknowledges Soviet competition as a primary impetus to exploration), In the Shadow of the Moon restores the luster of the space program at a time when it seemingly lies dormant and barely dents the public consciousness. But, more than that, it speaks to a part of the American character itself.

“It was a bold move, and it had some risks,” says Jim Lovell of the Apollo 8 mission, which rushed to beat the Russians into moon orbit. “But it was a time when we made bold moves.”

We still make bold moves, of course. But the conception, follow-through, and outcome are not the stuff of the Apollo program. In the Shadow of the Moon acknowledges the dark side of this era in American history — a bad war in Vietnam, assassinations and unrest at home — but it also recaptures a moment when the world was united in admiration of American achievement. “I think it’s wonderful,” one European woman says in response to the moon landing. “I always trust an American. I knew they couldn’t fail.” Even the French loved us.

The image of American heroism captured here is built on role-playing, as always. But the laid-back machismo and professional swagger of these men is the stuff of Humphrey Bogart and John F. Kennedy, the president who set the mission in motion, not the more arrogant, less competent version that’s evolved in recent decades. It’s a movie that taps into feelings of patriotism and pride made latent by recent events. As such, it’s a moving, inspiring experience. But a bittersweet one.

Buzz Aldrin in a scene from In the Shadow of the Moon

The Kingdom, the latest film from actor-turned-director Peter Berg, also opens this week and is also somewhat of a testament to the American can-do spirit. The fictional story is about a terrorist attack at an American compound in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and the four-person team of FBI agents who are sent to investigate.

The cast here — Jamie Foxx plays the primary investigator, leading a team played by Chris Cooper, Jennifer Garner, and Jason Bateman — is likable and relatively believable (in characterization, if not action). They create an engaging sense of competence and confidence, their quippy asides and gallows humor underscoring the ease of their professional camaraderie as they begin to piece together the clues in Riyadh. This feels like the inspiration of producer Michael Mann, who, himself, seems to get his feel for this dynamic from classic-age Hollywood films, primarily those of Howard Hawks. These outlaw-hero qualities — once pleasing embodiments of the American spirit — were corrupted in the age of Die Hard and Ronald Reagan and haven’t seemed like noble qualities for a while. But, in its quieter moments, The Kingdom hearkens back to an earlier notion of the American character embodied in In the Shadow of the Moon.

Unfortunately, The Kingdom doesn’t have the modesty or control to hold this tone. It wants to be a serious treatise on global politics, à la Syriana, and it also wants to be a noisy, exciting action movie. Berg isn’t content to make a mere quality film in the Hawks or Mann mold. He wants to win an Oscar and make a blockbuster. Can someone make a serious movie about the impact of violence and still craft combat/action scenes in a way that apes the would-be excitement of ’80s-era Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicles? Maybe, but apparently Peter Berg can’t. And, in trying to make both kinds of movies, he accomplishes neither.

As Gladiator‘s Oscar win proved, a morally reckless disconnect between what a movie wants to be and what it actually is doesn’t have to be a hurdle to significance in this film culture. Gladiator was a movie that encouraged viewers to condemn the film’s bloodthirsty coliseum masses. Yet the film’s brutal fight scenes were presented in a way that encouraged filmgoers to become the modern equivalent of those ancient spectators.

The Kingdom has the same should-be fatal flaw. The film ends with speechifying against violence in favor of cultural understanding. But the film’s opening terrorist attack is presented in a way that encourages a demand for vengeance, something the film is all too happy to deliver with a noisy, unlikely shoot-out climax. The film audience, for example, is encouraged to cheer the sight of a knife plunged into a man’s groin. At a recent local preview screening, the audience eagerly and loudly complied.

In the Shadow of the Moon

Opens Friday, September 28th

Ridgeway Four

The Kingdom

Opens Friday, September 28th

Multiple locations