Blue Origin forced to delete female astronaut's footage of first time in space after controversy - What should have been a wonderous moment was ruined by people online

By Gerrard Kaonga for UNILAD, 26 Nov 2024 - Link, Archive

d3e177ecfbdc39cdc05f888b199a8677a5c9fd7b.webp

A female astronaut has said she won’t back down to ‘small men’ after a video of her in space had to be taken down.


Jeff Bezos’ company Blue Origin were happy to make history when they sent American engineer Emily Calandrelli into space, marking her as the 100th woman to do so.

Calandrelli was among the six 'space tourists' who set out on the ninth human test flight for Blue Origin's New Shepherd spacecraft.

However, the company was forced to delete a social media post showing a video of the MIT engineer from its page due to comments.

While there were plenty comments congratulating Calandrelli, it didn’t take long for the trolls to come out and for there to be very ‘sexualized’ replies making jokes and jabs at women in space.

ba418edc73170bc401cf608672304c2355448ccf.webp
Emily was part of a group of 6 'space tourists' to become the 100th woman in space (Blue Origin/Instagram)

In the video, Calandrelli compared the experience to motherhood, explaining: "I didn’t expect to see so much space, and I kept saying that’s our planet! That’s our planet! It was the same feeling I got when my kids were born, and I was like, 'That’s my baby!'"

Calandrelli even admitted that the comments began to get to her and she said that she spent her flight home texting her ‘space sisters’ and crying in her seat. A stewardess who recognized her offered her a kind word however and said ‘don’t let them dull your shine’.

Ultimately, Calandrelli had a defiant message to the trolls and haters.

She said: "I refuse to give much time to the small men on the internet. I feel experiences in my soul. It’s a trait I got from my father. We feel every emotion deeply and what a beautiful way that is to experience life. This joy is tattooed on my heart."

On the other Instagram posts celebrating the trip into space, the engineer received a barrage of support.

7e0ea398b236a41290ff43fc47f95c31d6d0cfd9.webp
Emily had a defiant message to the people making ridiculous comments (Blue Origin/Instagram)

One person said: “So incredible. I love the perspective of a mom up there looking with such pride and love at our planet. Beautiful.

Another said: “Her talking about this moment had me in tears. Now seeing it with this photo, I'm sobbing.”

A third wrote: “Emily, I am so sorry to see your post regarding your video of your reaction having to be taken down because of the stupid men commenting. I shared it earlier today saying I would have had the exact reaction! I guarantee you inspired more people, especially women out there, then you can imagine.”

Another simply said: “What an inspiration.”
 

Female astronaut hits back at online trolls who mocked video of her first space flight

The MIT engineer was the 100th woman to go to space

By Kaleigh Werner for The Independent, 25 Nov 2024
(Link, Archive)


MixCollage-25-Nov-2024-10-41-AM-1477.jpg
Emily Calandrelli clapped back at the ‘hoards of men’ who belittled her as a female astronaut (Instagram/@thespacegal)

Emily Calandrelli has issued a response to the “small men on the internet” who belittled and sexualized her after she became the 100th woman to go to space.

The female astronaut and MIT engineer joined Jeff Bezos’s aerospace company Blue Origin on their ninth human rocket mission to fly past the Kármán line — a boundary that separates Earth’s atmosphere from outer space — and back down in minutes. Calandrelli was one of six other tourists to take flight including Austin Litteral, Henry Wolfond, James (J.D.) Russell, Sharon Hagle, and Marc Hagle.

In footage shared by Blue Origin, Calandrelli can be seen looking out the rocket window as she says, “Oh my god, this is space.” She then compared seeing Earth from above to becoming a mother.

“I didn’t expect to see so much space, and I kept saying that’s our planet! That’s our planet! It was the same feeling I got when my kids were born,” Calandrelli said. “And I was like, ‘That’s my baby! That’s my baby!’ I had that same feeling where I’m seeing it for the first time, and it was beautiful.”

Blue Origin posted Calandrelli’s raw reaction to their Instagram account, prompting many congratulatory comments and numerous negative remarks from trolls.

MixCollage-25-Nov-2024-10-41-AM-1477.jpg
Emily Calandrelli claps back at trolls who belittled her for being the 100th woman to go to space (Instagram/@thespacegal)

“She has been dreaming of this all her life. Made me cry happy tears for her. Congratulations @thespacegirl for achieving your dream,” a kind follower remarked.

It was the same feeling I got when my kids were born, and I was like, ‘That's my baby! That’s ...jpg
47,070 likes | blueorigin
"We got to weightlessness, I immediately turned upside down and looked at the planet and then there was so much blackness. There was so much space. I didn’t expect to see so much space, and I kept saying that’s our planet! That’s our planet! It was the same feeling I got when my kids were born, and I was like, ‘That's my baby! That’s my baby!’ I had that same feeling where I’m seeing it for the first time, and it was beautiful."— Emily Calandrelli, NS-28 Astronaut

Meanwhile, one X/Twitter user commented on her announcement: “It’s not an achievement being a woman.”

“Would you consider yourself the hottest woman to ever go to space? Any other contenders?” one man asked, while another said: “It was just a glorified roller coaster. You ain’t no astronaut.”

Screenshot-2024-11-25-at-10.38.04 AM.png
(X/@duttyman45)

The company has since deleted the original video due to the volume of crude remarks and reposted an edited version.

Calandrelli later took to her own Instagram account, @thespacegal, to clap back at the “hoards of men” who came after her.

This all happened as I was flying home after experiencing the most perfect, wonderful dream-ac...jpg
91,441 likes | thespacegal
This all happened as I was flying home after experiencing the most perfect, wonderful dream-achieving experience of my life. And instead of being on cloud nine, I’m crying in my seat staring out the window. Because of course this happened. Of course I should have expected this.
I spent the flight texting my space sisters for advice. To share anger and sadness and to receive validation that I have nothing to be embarrassed of. I had to take a moment to feminism myself if I’m being quite honest.
But I refuse to give much time to the small men on the internet. I feel experiences in my soul. It’s a trait I got from my father. We feel every emotion deeply and what a beautiful way that is to experience life. This joy is tattooed on my heart.
I will not apologize or feel weird about my reaction. It’s wholly mine and I love it.
When I can, I’ll reshare it myself with all of you. 💗
As I left the flight, the Southwest stewardess who recognized me, and I suspect could see that I had been crying, whispered as I walked off the plane “don’t let them dull your shine.” And I felt an immediate sense of camaraderie with her, with all women.
I love you all. 💗🫂


Next to a picture of her after the rocket landing, she wrote: “This all happened as I was flying home after experiencing the most perfect, wonderful dream-achieving experience of my life.

“And instead of being on cloud nine, I’m crying in my seat staring out the window. Because of course this happened. Of course I should have expected this,” she continued. “I spent the flight texting my space sisters for advice.

“To share anger and sadness and to receive validation that I have nothing to be embarrassed of. I had to take a moment to feminism myself if I’m being quite honest.

“But I refuse to give much time to the small men on the internet. I feel experiences in my soul. It’s a trait I got from my father. We feel every emotion deeply and what a beautiful way that is to experience life. This joy is tattooed on my heart.

“I will not apologize or feel weird about my reaction. It’s wholly mine and I love it. When I can, I’ll reshare it myself with all of you,” Calandrelli went on to say.

She finished: “As I left the flight, the Southwest stewardess who recognized me, and I suspect could see that I had been crying, whispered as I walked off the plane ‘don’t let them dull your shine.’ And I felt an immediate sense of camaraderie with her, with all women. I love you all.”



More coverage of this 'story':

The Guardian: Female astronaut goes to space but can’t escape online sexism by ‘small men’ (Link, Archive)

CNN: Emily Calandrelli, 100th woman in space, refuses to bow to ‘small men on the internet’ (Link, Archive)

The Telegraph: Blue Origin removes video of 100th woman in space after being flooded with sexist comments (Link, Archive)
 
Last edited:
I don't get it. It sounds like there was no real controversy, nothing she did that's weird or anything, there were just some people in the comments of the video (on YouTube? somewhere?) who posted weird thirstposts like "damn make that ass clap in zero G"? And she was checking the comments on the video in real time, while up in space, and seeing Indian-tier comments were enough to make her break down crying?

And they wrote MULTIPLE news articles about this?
 
Whenever you have a weakness that's easily exploited, you should confirm it's effectiveness to your opponent - Sun Tzu

Nice to know an astronaut is so mentally weak that some random trolls talking shit on twitter is enough to send her into an actual hysterical tear-filled spiral.

The men that went to the moon had to worry about getting burned to death in their capsules, drowning in them, getting slingshoted into the infinite black with no hope of return, getting stranded on the moon with no hope of return. This girl falls apart over twitter. Definitely a strong woman and not a dei/casting couch hire.
 
I don't get it. It sounds like there was no real controversy, nothing she did that's weird or anything, there were just some people in the comments of the video (on YouTube? somewhere?) who posted weird thirstposts like "damn make that ass clap in zero G"? And she was checking the comments on the video in real time, while up in space, and seeing Indian-tier comments were enough to make her break down crying?

And they wrote MULTIPLE news articles about this?
The internet is a rough place worse than space
 
What a weak person. You went into space, an activity 99% of earthlings have never experienced, and you're buttblasted by people saying mean things on the Internet.
There's a limit. This woman does nothing wrong, and is suddenly sent nasty shit from a whole bunch of randoms, of course it can get to you. If she was a man, she'd likely do something equally weak like get angry and retort back. Being confronted with pure mean-spiritedness can catch many people off guard. As it's described, this is subhuman behaviour that Nick Fuentes and the Groypers would do.

However, to your point, because they don't quote any of the offensive comments, I'm going to guess most of these comments weren't actually that offensive or were taken out of context. We had something like this earlier this month when that Wicked star lost her shit because somebody made a fan poster of her.
 
Back