In my blog post on Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, and Jeff Bezos from this past January, I wrote that Bezos has capitulated to Trump to prevent Trump from getting postal rates on packages raised, which would be a detriment to Amazon. I had completely forgotten that, while Musk has own own outer-space pursuits and has contracts with the government in relation to that endeavor, so does Jeff Bezos. I forgot about Bezos' own space-exploration company, Blue Origin.
Of course, Bezos wants to keep his government contracts for his space-exploration endeavors as well, in this time where even the exploration of space and the expansion of human knowledge of space have been privatized, so of course that ties in with capitulating to Trump. Bezos wants to be a player in this lucrative and relatively new business as much as Musk does. And in order to promote his own interests, Bezos has to pull an egregiously dumb publicity stunt involving an all-female "space" crew to promote the role of women in space exploration even as Trump is purging references to female astronauts and going after programs in the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) designed to foster female astronauts in an attack on diversity, equity and inclusion policies.
Here's what went down - or, should I say, up. Bezos selected a six-woman crew to fly into the outer atmosphere of the earth for roughly ten minutes in a capsule and then come back down. The "flight" was yesterday. The women on board included only one real astronaut - Aisha Bowe, a former aerospace engineer for NASA. The other crew members included, among others, TV newswoman Gayle King and former TV entertainment reporter Lauren Sánchez, who is better known these days as Jeff Bezos' fiancée.
Oh, and pop singer Katy Perry.
WHAT?????????????????????
"It's about making space for future women and taking up space and belonging," said Perry, who somehow failed to bring up Trump's attack on women in NASA. "And it's about this wonderful world that we see right out there and appreciating it . . .. This is all for the benefit of Earth."
And just how is this more significant than Sally Ride becoming in 1983 the first American woman in space, who has been followed by dozens of American female astronauts?
"Space is going to finally be glam," added Perry, who, along with her traveling companions, discussed having their hair and makeup done for the "flight" with that noted science and aviation magazine, Elle. "If I could take glam up with me," Perry added, "I would do that. We are going to put the 'ass' in astronaut."
She's already done that on her own.
And to think Hillary Clinton made her a leading surrogate for her 2016 presidential campaign. No wonder she lost.
This wasn't a scientific mission to see how women could fare in space or anything like that. This was a publicity stunt for Bezos, for Sánchez, and for Gayle King, whose participation in the stunt was covered by her employer, CBS. King violated the cardinal rule of journalism. She went beyond covering the story to being the story.
But then, given that she moonlighted for CNN by hosting a talk show with Charles Barkley that was meant to be "centered around the news stories and cultural moments that Gayle and Charles are most interested in," that was likely to be expected.
Bezos remains the main villain in this sorry escapade of ego and superficiality in what was clearly a "news" story meant to be entertainment. But Perry, Sánchez and King shouldn't get off scot-free for allowing the trivialization of women in space. As Maggie Harrison Dupré wrote in Futurism, there was "an insidious hollowness to the sweeping characterization of the flight as a great achievement for women that's somehow paving roads for aspiring future space travelers . . . that's deeply, and cynically, at odds with the way that new federal mandates about diversity policies are actively working to erase women's legacy in American space exploration."
I once foolishly included Katy Perry on my soon-to-be-terminated blog "Pictures of Beautiful Women" (POBW), back when I wasn't aware of what a joke she was, but I took her down a couple of weeks ago, as I no longer wanted her included on my blog in its final weeks of operation (I'm shutting it down on May 31). But I also added Gayle King to my blog. I now have to remove her as well.
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