Ben Franklin would do it, so here I go - showing you this mock-up LEM that Grumman made for ground training the Apollo Astronauts - even though I have been told by the Smithsonian that I'm not allowed to. But it's out in the open, so I guess if they really wanted to keep it out of public view it wouldn't be outside in a park behind the Franklin Institute here in Philadelphia! I might be in trouble, but you go ahead an enjoy this anyway!
Even though the Smithsonian receives a majority of it's publicly disclosed financing from Congress it made this Viacom deal in private without seeking Congressional approval and without any Congressional oversight. The terms of the deal still remain private, and it is not known to anyone outside of the Smithsonian just how much money has been exchanged in this deal, or how much directors at the Smithsonian may have benefited personally from it.
In 2014 when I visited the Garber facility to examine genuine Apollo DSKY's first hand there was a lot of drama. A memo was sent to NASM managers on the morning of my arrival there from one director who disparaged me harshly, stating that I did not meet the moral standards required to represent the collection and sending observers to Garber to spy on me. People at the facility showed me the memo and it really rattled me. It is true too that they also told me that there was a threat of my being arrested if the observers witnessed me violating the Viacom contract. This was also the reason I waited over 6 months to publish my work at Garber, waiting for all that drama to die down. All of that because I'm Fran, and I do this stuff.
https://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/31/washington/smithsonianshowtime-tv-deal-raises-concerns.html
veritanuda
2019-07-15 13:03:53 +0000 UTCHarry Lakhaney
2019-07-13 21:20:23 +0000 UTCRocco Rizzo
2019-07-13 17:42:45 +0000 UTCJessica McIntosh
2019-07-13 15:03:37 +0000 UTCBobC
2019-07-13 15:02:16 +0000 UTCFred Patton
2019-07-13 14:51:04 +0000 UTC