From the AP:
By the yardstick of history, Neil Armstrong was among the most accomplished men
ever to walk on the planet that he looked upon from afar one magical week in
July 1969.
Television news didn’t seem to fully recognize the importance of the first
human to walk on the moon on the weekend he died.
In the hours after Armstrong’s death was announced, news networks were airing
canned programming — jailhouse documentaries, a rerun interview with Rielle
Hunter, Mike Huckabee’s weekend show. Menacing satellite pictures of Tropical
Storm Isaac had much more air time than Armstrong’s dusty hops on the lunar
surface. Talk of the upcoming GOP national convention sucked up the air.
A trio of factors played in to the lack of attention.
First, Armstrong died in Cincinnati on a Saturday. Not just any Saturday,
when news organizations have a skeletal staff, but a late August weekend. Half
the country is at the beach. It’s not a stretch to think inexperience on duty
might have played a role in NBC News’ embarrassing gaffe: a website headline
that read: “Astronaut Neil Young, first man to walk on the moon, dies at age
82.” (NBC called it a staffer error and said the mistake was taken down after
seven minutes.)
His death came as somewhat of a surprise, too. Everyone dies, of course, and
most news organizations have prepared material on hand to mark the passing of
famous people. In many cases, though, there is advance word that someone is very
ill, giving the media a chance to prepare and plan.
Armstrong’s determined effort to live a quiet, private life after his
astronaut days also left TV at a disadvantage. There was relatively little tape
on hand to roll from interviews reminiscing about his experiences, reunions with
old astronauts or public appearances. No Armstrong chats with David Letterman.
No appearances in music videos. There was the moon walk, and not much else.
Notable deaths often give viewers the chance to reflect, to put into
perspective lives of great accomplishment or great notoriety.
Not so with Neil Armstrong. His death was like his life: strangely muted
given the magnitude of his achievements.
1 comment:
During the summer of 1969 our nation turned the attention away from the Viet Nam War to gaze skyward as 3 men attempted an insane feat.
Against all odds and knowing that if one tiny part of their spacecraft failed it would mean certian death they stepped onto the surface of the moon.
A dozen years later when asked why he took such a chance, knowing that the odds were he would not return, Neil Armstrong said "Because that is what my country needed me to do."
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