I used to be in the same camp. But when you couple these direct bits of fakery evidence with some of the more snaky indirect bits (like Buzz Aldrin using threatening language about sicking the CIA on a documentary producer, etc., and then you look at the comparison of Kubrick's front projection technique to the moon footage, it's tough to maintain any doubt that the whole thing was fake. What about the fact that they had tested the lunar lander on Earth and it flipped upside-down and burned? But then they were able to launch it out of a spacecraft orbiting the moon and land exactly where they wanted to and then take back off and rendezvous with that same spacecraft… The odds of that all happening are ludicrous lmfao.
Even the phone call by Nixon is so ridiculous. We're gonna have a two way comm to the moon in 1969 with 5-10 sec of latency and no issues? I'm guessing this call took place during the day when the moon wasn't even visible in the sky, also. So that means Houston had some kind of network relay around the world to a location that did have line of sight with the moon, and where there was a large comms array there? They just didn't even bother with the details. And clearly it never mattered, most people were dumbfounded by their television sets and that was enough.
I used to be in the same camp. But when you couple these direct bits of fakery evidence with some of the more snaky indirect bits (like Buzz Aldrin using threatening language about sicking the CIA on a documentary producer, etc., and then you look at the comparison of Kubrick's front projection technique to the moon footage, it's tough to maintain any doubt that the whole thing was fake. What about the fact that they had tested the lunar lander on Earth and it flipped upside-down and burned? But then they were able to launch it out of a spacecraft orbiting the moon and land exactly where they wanted to and then take back off and rendezvous with that same spacecraft… The odds of that all happening are ludicrous lmfao.
Even the phone call by Nixon is so ridiculous. We're gonna have a two way comm to the moon in 1969 with 5-10 sec of latency and no issues? I'm guessing this call took place during the day when the moon wasn't even visible in the sky, also. So that means Houston had some kind of network relay around the world to a location that did have line of sight with the moon, and where there was a large comms array there? They just didn't even bother with the details. And clearly it never mattered, most people were dumbfounded by their television sets and that was enough.