Take Back the Sky

Because America STILL needs a private crewed US spaceship named SERENITY!

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What Shepherd Book Taught Me About Conviction

Posted by Chris Tobias on November 29, 2016
Posted in: Articles, Tributes. Tagged: Big Damn Heroes, Captain Malcolm Reynolds, Firefly, Joss Whedon, Malcolm Reynolds, Ron Glass, Serenity. 2 Comments

shepherd-book

by Jeff Cunningham

Over the holiday, actor Ron Glass passed away at the age of 71. He’s well-known among Browncoats and geeks as Shepherd Derrial Book from Firefly and Serenity, and a long career in television stretching from Barney Miller to Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

Those who were fortunate enough to work with him and to know him, however, knew him for his contagious laugh and uncommon kindness. I was fortunate enough to meet the man at a small Orlando comic and fandom convention about ten years ago. It was my first time at a con of any kind, much less approaching anyone for an autograph. Mr. Glass immediately made my companions and I feel right at home, and treated everyone like they were his own grandkids. As best as I or anyone can recall, no one has ever heard or known him to have said a cross, unkind or critical word to anyone, deserving or no.

It’s these kinds of people, it seems, that we miss the most when they pass on, gentle souls who soften the tone in any room, and remind us of times in our lives when we were all a little better-behaved, and make us wonder if maybe we shouldn’t follow their example. Indeed, one of his most famous roles was that of a sort of pseudo-Christian minister, providing spiritual guidance– and, at times, gentle reproof– to fellow travelers aboard Serenity, and serving as the voice of compassion and faith in the show’s narrative.

Now, let’s not lose sight of the fact that Ron Glass and Derrial Book were two separate, different individuals. At the same time, however, the character of Book was heavily influenced by Glass’ own Buddhist faith and outlook on spirituality. As a practicing Christian, in fact, I feel no hesitation in saying that he taught me a deep, profound truth about belief– one that everyone, believer or not, stands to benefit greatly from. At Mr. Glass’ passing, I felt it would be appropriate to say a few words about that lesson, because I feel that following someone’s example and remembering the lessons they taught us is the best way we can honor them after they leave us. Continue Reading

One ACHIEVEMENT UNLOCKED for Mankind

Posted by Chris Tobias on November 14, 2016
Posted in: Articles. Tagged: Call of Duty, Crew Dragon, Elon Musk, Enterprise, Falcon, Firefly, Flash Gordon, Gwynne Shotwell, Heart of Gold, Infinite Warfare, Isaac Asimov, Jayne Cobb, Joss Whedon, Mass Effect, NASA, Oculus Rift, Robert Heinlein, Serenity, SpaceX, Star Trek, Star Wars, Wernher von Braun. Leave a comment

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by Jeff Cunningham

Ni hao, travelers! Jeff here, back from a lengthy, profession-induced hiatus, on the air once more. We’ve discussed at length here and in person at cons how real-life voyages out into the black have been inspired by the art of science-fiction. Recent events, however, have opened my eyes to a subtle phenomenon in sci-fi that’s been going on in plain sight, yet has gone unnoticed. Continue Reading

Take Back the Sky to Appear at Wizard World Pittsburgh Nov. 4

Posted by Chris Tobias on October 28, 2016
Posted in: Con Presence. Tagged: Browncoats, Commercial Crew Program, Dragon, Firefly, NASA, Serenity, SpaceX, Wizard World Pittsburgh. Leave a comment

by Chris Tobias

For the second consecutive year, Take Back the Sky will be presenting a panel at Wizard World Pittsburgh Comic Con.  This year’s panel, Still Flyin’:  Browncoats in Space, will examine the historical relationship between science-fiction and the space industry as well as recent developments and achievements in commercial spaceflight, with a special emphasis on SpaceX and its involvement with NASA’s Commercial Crew Program.

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Take Back the Sky co-founder and Pittsburgh native Chris Tobias will present the panel, which will take place on Friday, November 4 from 6:30-7:15pm in Room 401 of the David L. Lawrence Convention Center in downtown Pittsburgh, PA.

If you’re going to be at the con on Friday and have an interest in Firefly, SpaceX or just commercial spaceflight in general, stop by and hear what we have to say.  We’ll have updates on our latest activities for those who want to see SpaceX name its first manned Dragon Serenity, as well as some ideas and resources that will make it easier for Browncoats to join our cause.

We hope to see you one week from today at Wizard World Pittsburgh!

Some Thoughts on Star Trek at 50 and Our Failure to Boldly Go

Posted by Chris Tobias on October 28, 2016
Posted in: Articles. Tagged: Alien, Browncoats, Can't Stop the Serenity, Commercial Crew Program, Crew Dragon, Douglas Adams, Elon Musk, Firefly, For the Love of Spock, Gene Roddenberry, Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galazy, International Space Station, Interplanetary Transport System, James T. Kirk, Joss Whedon, Matrix, Mr. Spock, NASA, Neil Armstrong, Serenity, SpaceX, Star Trek, Star Wars, Starfleet, The Player of Games, USS Enterprise. Leave a comment
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With my friend Liz (who is a science teacher in real life) in the lobby of the Hollywood Theater at “a Steel City Celebration of Star Trek.”

by Chris Tobias

(Note:  This blog post was originally supposed to appear last month, but due to technical difficulties that were beyond our control, it couldn’t be salvaged until now.  We hope you accept our apologies, and that you still find this updated version of the article relevant. — Chris)

Fifty years ago, Star Trek debuted on television screens across the United States.  On September 9, I attended a special screening of Star Trek II:  The Wrath of Khan and For the Love of Spock at Pittsburgh’s historic Hollywood Theater (the very same theater that is featured prominently in the Rocky Horror scenes in the movie The Perks of Being a Wallflower) in honor of that anniversary.  The event was an opportunity for me to return to my sci-fi roots, because while there are few Browncoats whose coats are more of a brownish color than mine, I was a Trekkie long before Joss Whedon read a book about the Battle of Gettysburg and was inspired to create a space-western TV series called Firefly.  So, when it was announced that geekpittsburgh.com was sponsoring “a Steel City Celebration of Star Trek” for the benefit of the Hollywood Theater and Pittsburgh’s ToonSeum (two organizations that have hosted Pittsburgh’s “Can’t Stop the Serenity” screenings in recent years), I was content to leave my browncoat in the closet for one evening in favor of the command gold of a Starfleet uniform (once a cap’n, always a cap’n) and boldly go where I had always so enthusiastically gone before.

Continue Reading

SpaceX Launch of JCSAT-16 Scheduled for Early Sunday

Posted by Chris Tobias on August 12, 2016
Posted in: Launches. Tagged: Battlestar Galactica, Cape Canaveral, CRS-9, Dragon, Falcon 9, Firefly, ISS, JCSAT-16, Pokemon Go, Serenity, SpaceX, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Leave a comment

JCSAT mission patch

by Chris Tobias

When you’re an innovator in your industry, there’s no time for a summer vacation.  Fresh off the success of its recent CRS-9 resupply mission to the International Space Station, and before Dragon even returns from that mission, SpaceX plans to launch again.

This Sunday, August 14, SpaceX will launch a Falcon9 rocket to deliver the JCSAT-16 satellite into Geostationary Transfer Orbit.  The client for this launch is Japanese satellite operator SKY Perfect JSAT.  Once in orbit, the JCSAT-16 will act as a backup transmitter for the rest of the company’s satellite fleet.  The launch, which will take place at SLC-40 in Cape Canaveral, is scheduled for the early morning hours, with a launch window set to open at 1:26AM, EST.

Continue Reading

CRS-9: Making the ISS Truly “International”

Posted by Chris Tobias on July 17, 2016
Posted in: Articles, Launches. Leave a comment

by Jeff Cunningham

A little after midnight on Sunday night/Monday morning, SpaceX will launch a Dragon spacecraft on its ninth Crew Resupply Mission (CRS-9) to the International Space Station (ISS) under contract to NASA.  This mission will be another one for the history books, for a couple of reasons.

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Courtesy: NASA

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SpaceX and Comic-Con: Planting the Seeds of Serenity

Posted by Chris Tobias on July 12, 2016
Posted in: Updates. Tagged: Browncoats, Can't Stop the Serenity, Dragon, Elon Musk, Firefly, Gwynne Shotwell, Joss Whedon, San Diego Comic-Con, Serenity, SpaceX. Leave a comment

by Chris Tobias

In approximately 24 hours, we will close our second (and likely final) online petition to SpaceX asking them to name their first manned Dragon capsule after Joss Whedon’s fictional spaceship Serenity.  Unlike our first online petition, this one was time-sensitive, since it asked SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk or president Gwynne Shotwell to announce the name of the ship at this year’s San Diego Comic-Con, which is now less than two weeks away.

spacex at comic-con

We tied this second petition to an announcement at Comic-Con for two simple reasons.  The first is that SpaceX has had a presence at SDCC for the past several years, so it made sense that since they were already in attendance, they could take advantage of the massive media attention the con attracts these days without even having to go out of their way to call a press conference.  The second is that it’s no secret that Elon Musk has a penchant for spectacle, and when it comes to pop culture, there are few spectacles in the ‘verse bigger than Comic-Con.  It was our hope that those two factors would combine to make San Diego Comic-Con the perfect place for SpaceX to name the spaceship that represents the future of American spaceflight after a fictional spaceship that represents the best of American sci-fi television and film– and, if they saw fit to bring the cockpit mockup that they’ve been setting up at astronomy and engineering conferences, it’d also make for some awesome Instagram photos in the pilot’s seat for some lucky Firefly cosplayers!

As a rule we always have high hopes, but we also have to be honest with ourselves.  It doesn’t look like it’s going to work out that way.  Whereas our first petition accumulated a couple thousand signatures, this latest one has struggled to reach five hundred.  I’m sure there are multiple reasons for that, but speculating about them here won’t do anyone any good.  Instead, I’d like to focus on the fact that this petition still has the potential to be a success even though it never really “broke atmo” or went viral.  Although any logical person would assume that there is next to no chance that SpaceX will actually name their Crew Dragon after Serenity with a surprise announcement at this year’s San Diego Comic-Con, I don’t think that means this petition can’t still play a role in convincing Elon Musk that his company’s first manned Dragon should bear that name.  Here’s why…

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SpaceX Aims to Launch/Land Again June 15

Posted by Chris Tobias on June 13, 2016
Posted in: Launches. Tagged: ABS, Boeing, Cape Canaveral, Commercial Crew Project, Dragon, Elon Musk, Eutelsat, Falcon 9, Gwynne Shotwell, NASA, Of Course I Still Love You, Serenity, SpaceX. 2 Comments

ABS Eutelsat

by Chris Tobias

SpaceX has announced a June 15 launch date for its next Falcon 9 launch from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral, Florida.  The mission is to launch the Eutelsat 117 West B and ABS 2A communications satellites to a geosynchronous transfer orbit.  SpaceX will also once again attempt to land the first stage of the Falcon 9 downrange of the Cape on its drone-piloted barge Of Course I Still Love You.  The launch is scheduled for 10:29am EDT, and there is a 45-minute launch window.  SpaceX will broadcast the launch live on its website.  Coverage should begin approximately 20 minutes before liftoff.

The French-made Eutelsat 117 West B satellite will provide Latin America with video, data, government, and mobile services, while ABS 2A, made by Bermuda and Hong Kong-based Asia Broadcast Satellite, will distribute direct-to-home television, mobile and maritime communications services across Russia, India, the Middle East, Africa, Southeast Asia and the Indian Ocean region.

The satellites, which will launch in a conjoined configuration and use all-electric propulsion for orbit-raising, were built by Boeing, which has been chosen along with SpaceX to return US astronauts to space in American-built spacecraft as part of NASA’s Commercial Crew Project.  Boeing, which was to conduct the first Commercial Crew launch, recently announced its flight would have to be delayed until 2018.  SpaceX is currently on track to launch its first crewed Dragon spacecraft sometime next year.

Of course, it’s that very Dragon that we want to bear the name Serenity.  If you agree that Serenity would be a shiny name for America’s next manned spaceship, then now is the time to let SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk and president Gwynne Shotwell know how you feel.  You can start by signing our online petition, which will remain open for approximately one more month.  And don’t forget:  there’s always time to write either or both of them a letter to tell them why you believe SpaceX’s first Dragon should be called Serenity.

Peace, love and rockets…

 

Thaicom 8 Launches Tomorrow

Posted by Chris Tobias on May 25, 2016
Posted in: Launches. Tagged: Elon Musk, Falcon 9, Gwynne Shotwell, space, SpaceX. Leave a comment

by Jeff Cunningham

On Friday, May 25, at 5:40 pm ET, 9:40 pm UTC, SpaceX will launch a Falcon 9 rocket carrying a communications satellite for one of Asia’s leading providers into space. Following stage separation, the first stage will attempt another landing (the fourth, if successful) aboard the drone barge platform Of Course I Still Love You.

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The satellite, Thaicomm 8, will provide broadcast and data services to south and southeast regions of Asia. Much like other high-performance satellites serving other parts of the world, this necessitates placing it in a geosynchronous orbit– essentially, it moves at the same speed as the Earth’s rotation, so to an observer on the ground, it appears to be a stationary star in the sky. This makes communications way easier, because all you do is point your dish or antenna at a fixed spot in the sky and you’ll pretty much always have contact, as opposed to other satellites that whizz by without stopping to say “Ni hao.”

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A post shared by SpaceX (@spacex)

The tradeoff is that to achieve this orbit (called “GEO” for short), you have to get your spacecraft really high up– like, higher than the space shuttle, International Space Station, or Soyuz can reach. That in turn means that any rocket heading there will have to shoot off of its launch pad at a much faster speed and thus use more fuel, leaving less available in the tank to do something like land. It’s easy to understand why SpaceX prefers to be “cautiously optimistic” when it comes to “experimental landings” for this particular type of mission.

If successful, in addition to broadening coverage over Asia, the landed first stage will add to the body of data that SpaceX has collected about reusable rockets– it’s easy to forget that no one’s ever done this before, so they’re blazing some serious trails at hypersonic speeds.

If for some reason the launch attempt must be delayed, or “scrubbed,” they will re-attempt the next day at around the same time. You can watch a live feed of the launch with commentary and translation of all the rocket talk at SpaceX’s YouTube channel.

SpaceX Falcon 9 to Break Atmo Again May 5

Posted by Chris Tobias on May 3, 2016
Posted in: Launches. Tagged: Cape Canaveral, Falcon 9, JCSAT-14, Of Course I Still Love You, SpaceX. Leave a comment

by Chris Tobias

SpaceX will be back in action again in the early morning hours of May 5 with the launch of another Falcon 9 from Cape Canaveral.  This latest mission will carry the JCSAT-14 communications satellite into orbit.  The satellite, which will replace its predecessor the JCSAT-2A, is designed to operate for at least 15 years and is intended to help meet the growing demand for telecommunications infrastructure in the Asia Pacific region.  Liftoff is scheduled for 1:21am EST, and the mission has a two-hour launch window.  JCSAT-14

As has quickly become the norm with SpaceX launches, the company will also attempt to land the first stage of the Falcon 9 on the drone-piloted barge Of Course I Still Love You, which will be awaiting the rocket’s controlled descent in the Atlantic Ocean.  If SpaceX is able to repeat the success of their April 8 vertical landing at sea, it will mark the third successful vertical landing and recovery of the Falcon 9’s first stage, and the second on an “Autonomous Spaceport Drone Ship.”  (SpaceX is warning everyone not to be overly optimistic in their pre-launch press release, saying, “Given this mission’s GTO destination, the first-stage will be subject to extreme velocities and re-entry heating, making a successful landing unlikely.”)

Those on the East Coast who are willing to stay up late enough to watch are likely to be rewarded with a pretty spectacular night launch and recovery.  Live online coverage of the launch is scheduled to begin approximately twenty minutes before liftoff at spacex.com.

So, put on a pot of coffee late this Wednesday night and prepare to stay up with us and the rest of the night owls to watch another Falcon take flight and then come home to roost, as SpaceX continues to do the impossible and make it look routine.

Peace, love and rockets…

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