Firefly
All posts tagged Firefly
by Jeff Cunningham
This morning, shortly before 5am, SpaceX finally launched a Falcon 9 rocket (after a few scrubbed attempts) carrying an unmanned Dragon on its fifth official resupply mission to the International Space Station (CRS-5). The Falcon 9 lit up the early morning sky, and was visible to a large part of the East Coast before it separated from the rest of the craft and began its controlled descent back to Earth, making an historic, albeit “interesting,” landing on a drone-piloted barge in the Atlantic Ocean.
Viewers around the world (including this East Coast writer, who set his alarm to wake him in time for spacex.com‘s 4:30am live web coverage and watched the 4:47am launch still clad in his pajamas) watched online as the Falcon 9 broke atmo and the Dragon capsule achieved Low Earth Orbit and deployed her solar arrays. Dragon will now rendezvous with the ISS at 6:12am on Monday, January 12.
by Chris Tobias
“Well… here I am.” — Jubal Early, Firefly “Objects in Space”
Yes, here we are. Another year is behind us, and a new year lies ahead.
If you haven’t already, it’s a pretty safe bet that over the next several days you’ll be bombarded with all manner of retrospective pieces about the year that was 2014. That’s appropriate, of course. It was quite a year, with more than its fair share of highs and lows. Those who have been following developments in the space industry are probably familiar with more than a few of them: ISS missions and their commercial resupply flights, ESA’s Rosetta, the disastrous Antares launch and the tragic Virgin Galactic crash, the unveiling of SpaceX’s DragonV2, the awarding of NASA’s Commercial Crew contracts, etc. While it’s always good to take a moment or two to look back on where you’ve been and see how far you’ve come, we’d like to keep the focus of this first post of the New Year on what lies ahead for Take Back the Sky in 2015.
OUR TIME IS NOW
This year marks the tenth anniversary of the motion picture Serenity, the movie that was the realization of a dream for Joss Whedon and the fulfillment of Browncoats’ wishes the world over in that it provided a measure of closure to the story that was begun in the television series Firefly while laying the groundwork for future adventures of Serenity and her crew. That fact alone should be reason enough to believe that 2015 is the perfect time for those of us who want to convince SpaceX that their first manned Dragon capsule should bear the name Serenity to step up our efforts, both to recruit still more Browncoats to our cause and to convince Elon Musk and SpaceX of its worthiness. But nostalgia for the film’s tenth anniversary is hardly the only thing that will be motivating us this year.
by Jeff Cunningham
Those words of Malcolm Reynolds in the Firefly episode “Safe” came to mind earlier today as we regrettably had to announce that, due to a personal emergency, the correspondent who was to cover this weekend’s Dragon launch in person won’t be able to attend. (Well, that and the words of Jayne Cobb in the movie Serenity when he said, “Well, what you plan and what takes place ain’t ever exactly been similar.”)
Needless to say, we are as disappointed by this development as we were excited when we first learned we had been awarded press credentials to cover the launch by NASA.
Since we’ll no longer be live-tweeting the events leading up to the launch, the hashtag #BrowncoatsAskNASA is also unfortunately no longer going to be in play prior to or during the launch broadcast.
You can still watch the live stream of the launch, however, starting before liftoff this Friday, December 19 at 1:22 PM EST at nasa.gov or spacex.com. It’ll still be one heck of a show watching a rocket liftoff, and then land on that platform like a leaf on the wind!
by Chris Tobias
By now Comic-Con International is already in full swing in San Diego, and while Take Back the Sky wasn’t lucky enough to make it out to the world’s biggest, most famous festival celebrating all that is great about geekdom this year, we are happy to say that we won’t be staying on the bench for the entire convention season!
It has been confirmed that Take Back the Sky will be in attendance at the Pittsburgh Comicon again this year. The 2014 Pittsburgh Comicon will be held September 26-28 at the Monroeville Convention Center, and Take Back the Sky will have a table at the con where Browncoats, space enthusiasts and anyone else who’d like to support the cause can stop by, sign our petition and learn about other ways they can convince Elon Musk and SpaceX to name their first Dragon V2 capsule Serenity.
We won’t be reprising our Browncoats in Space panel this year, but we will be on hand all three days to meet and greet anyone who’d like to drop by and chat with us about Firefly and Serenity, the future of space exploration and the efforts of companies like SpaceX, the latest in science and science-fiction in general or anything else that people like us love to geek out about. So if you plan to be at the con, please stop by and say hello, because making new friends is shiny.
For more information about this year’s Pittsburgh Comicon, visit their website at www.pittsburghcomicon.com.
Hope to see you there!

SpaceX staffers assigned to the coveted “Comic Con” duty. Unconfirmed reports say they sought out photo opportunities with Iron Man cosplayers in honor of their boss.
by Chris Tobias
We here at Take Back the Sky are all manner of excited to announce that we will be a part of Can’t Stop the Serenity Pittsburgh again this year.
CSTS Pittsburgh has graciously allowed Take Back the Sky to have a table in the lobby of the Hollywood Theater during their event, at which those in attendance will be able to sign our petition to SpaceX and Elon Musk asking them to name their first manned Dragon V2 spacecraft Serenity.
by Jeff Cunningham
In the cult favorite sci-fi-western series Firefly, the crew seek freedom and fortune among the stars aboard a craft that, we’re told, is classified as a Class III Firefly medium transport. Now, details have been announced by Space Exploration Technologies that will tell us at long last just what kind of ship her real-life counterpart will be. Continue Reading
by Chris Tobias
Over the years, Browncoats the world over have found a variety of creative ways to express their love of Firefly and Serenity. One of the most unique has been through song, and Firefly-friendly artists like the Bedlam Bards and Marian Call are quite well known in the Browncoat community.
Another musician with whom more and more Browncoats are becoming well acquainted is Sean Faust. Faust, who lives in Bergen County, New Jersey, has become a regular fixture at CSTS events in the New York/New Jersey/Philadelphia area in recent years. His new song “Signal,” which was inspired by the movie Serenity, was released on May 20, and Faust will be donating a portion of the proceeds from its sales to Equality Now through Can’t Stop the Serenity.
Take Back the Sky recently interviewed Sean Faust about the new single, as well as his love of music and the Firefly ‘verse.

Steven “Swanny” Swanson
by Jeff Cunningham
Years ago, a young man found himself about to finish grad school, and began to contemplate his career path in life for the first time. He knew that he wanted to be in a field in science and technology–which was fitting, given that his bachelor’s was in Engineering Physics and that the advanced degree he was about to earn was in Computer Systems.
Finding one’s passion is one of the easier–and more enjoyable–pursuits in life, but finding a way to make a productive career out of it is something that precious few among us are fortunate enough to achieve (and even fewer now with the loss of so many of the jobs that people go to college for). The more the young man thought about it, the more sure he became aware that he was not content to spend the rest of his life “sitting in an office all day long every day.” Long before he would be eventually be introduced to the ‘Verse, this much he knew: he aimed to misbehave. From there, deciding to become an astronaut almost seemed like the logical course. He had no idea if such a thing would really prove possible in the end–but doing the impossible makes us mighty. Continue Reading









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