11 minutes with a window view of Earth: What to know about Blue Origin spaceflights
Blue Origin's famed New Shepard launch vehicle is on the cusp of ferrying its next crew of celebrities and notable people to the edge of space, where its passengers will have a front-row seat of Earth from more than 60 miles high.
The commercial spaceflights are ones billionaire Jeff Bezos's space technology company has been offering since 2021, ever since the Amazon founder himself boarded the spacecraft for its maiden crewed voyage. The upcoming flight is also the first in nearly four years with veritable household names that this time includes pop artist Katy Perry and "CBS Mornings" co-host Gayle King.
The spacecraft that Perry, King and four other women are set to fly aboard as early as Monday morning is the same one that 48 others have rode to space on 10 previous human spaceflights. Joining them is civil rights activist Amanda Nguyen, former NASA rocket scientist Aisha Bowe, filmmaker Kerianne Flynn and Bezos' fiancée Lauren Sánchez.
The New Shepard, composed of both a rocket and crew capsule, will blast off at supersonic speeds after it lifts off from Blue Origin's private ranch facility in west Texas, taking the notable all-women crew high above Earth's atmosphere.
For nearly four years since its first crewed spaceflight, New Shepard has served as a poignant symbol of Blue Origin's commercial spaceflight ambitions amid a growing space tourism industry. Bezos company is increasingly becoming a major player in the commercial space industry, competing with the likes of Elon Musk's SpaceX for NASA's business, as well as the business of other private companies.
Here's everything to know about the New Shepard rocket that will be at the center of what is sure to be a headline-grabbing flight.
Blue Origin launch: Gayle King, Katy Perry among crew of all women launching to space
Named after astronaut Alan Shepard, the first American in space, the gum drop-shaped New Shepard launch vehicle is designed to be fully reusable, with a capsule that returns to Earth via three parachutes. The rocket itself is powered by one BE-3PM engine, which propels it to suborbit before restarting to slow the booster to just 6 mph for a controlled landing back on the launch pad.
The spacecraft operates autonomously – meaning no pilots are aboard – after taking off from the company's Launch Site One in rural west Texas, more than 140 miles east of El Paso.
But New Shepard doesn't just take celebrities on joy rides to the edge of space. In fact the majority of spaceflights Blue Origin has conducted to date with New Shepard haven't even had a crew.
Blue Origin has launched the New Shepard plenty of times with scientific payloads and other cargo on board from paying customers, including NASA.
For instance, in early February, New Shepard successfully simulated the moon's low gravity on board its capsule during a brief flight. On board was cargo belonging to NASA, which helped fund the mission as the U.S. space agency prepares to send humans back to the moon in the years ahead under its Artemis campaign.
The New Shepard's crew capsule can hold up to six people for a brief voyage above the Kármán Line – the 62-mile-high internationally recognized boundary of space.
Each spaceflight lasts about 11 minutes from liftoff to capsule touchdown, allowing passengers to experience a few minutes of weightlessness while in microgravity. The capsule also comes outfitted with large windows for them to enjoy the stunning view of Earth.
During each launch, the rocket reaches initial speeds exceeding 2,000 mph – much faster than the speed of sound – before the booster separates within a few minutes of takeoff. As the booster lands, firing its engines and using its fins to slow and control its descent, the capsule continues its journey for a few additional minutes.
Once the capsule makes a parachute-assisted landing in a remote area, a Blue Origin team is deployed to recover the spacecraft and pick up its passengers.
Bezos joined the spacecraft's first crewed flight in 2021 as part of the NS-16 mission, which came after New Shepard flew on 15 flights tests beginning in 2012.
With the vehicle's latest crewed flight Feb. 25, 10 of Blue Origin's 30 missions have now carried people to the edge of space. A total of 48 people have flown on the New Shepard, including four repeat passengers.
However, the launch vehicle's spaceflights were paused for nearly two years when the rocket was grounded in September 2022 following a failed mission without a crew on board.
Despite the mishap, Blue Origin officials have insisted that the capsule is designed to safely abort a spaceflight by ejecting from the rocket and deploying parachutes early if needed – as happened in 2022. The rocket itself crashed back to Earth during the flight with no reported injuries or damage.
Blue Origin spaceflights with human aboard then resumed in Man 2024 after the Federal Aviation Administration closed its investigation and ordered the company to make 21 corrective actions.
Passengers on Blue Origin's New Shepard have hailed from a variety of backgrounds, and have included tech executives, entrepreneurs, scientists and even a few well-known celebrities.
In 2021, both "Star Trek" actor William Shatner and NFL legend Michael Strahan boarded the New Shepard on separate flights.
Shatner, who was 90 at the time, embarked on his voyage Oct. 13 that year, becoming the oldest person to ever make a spaceflight. He was joined by former NASA engineer Chris Boshuizen, a Blue Origin vice president Audrey Powers and entrepreneur Glen de Vries.
When the crew safely landed back on Earth several minutes later, Shatner could be heard saying the experience was "unlike anything they described."
Strahan's spaceflight then came toward the end of 2021 on Dec. 11, when he flew with a crew that included Laura Shepard Churchley, Alan Shepard's daughter. Also on the flight were tech CEO Dylan Taylor, investor Evan Dick, venture capitalist Lane Bess and his child, Cameron Bess.
After the flight, Strahan took to Instagram to say "it was surreal."
Blue Origin also is developing its massive New Glenn rocket, which launched in January on its maiden flight.
The 320-foot-tall heavy-lift launch vehicle, which launched without a crew on Jan. 16 from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida, is meant to challenge SpaceX in regularly deploying satellites and other cargo into orbit.
Named after John Glenn, the first American to orbit Earth, New Glenn rivals SpaceX's 400-foot Starship in size. Its first stage, powered by seven Blue Origin engines known as BE-4, is designed to be reusable for 25 missions.
Eric Lagatta covers breaking and trending news for USA TODAY. Reach him at elagatta@gannett.com
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: What to know about Blue Origin spacecraft sending celebrities to space
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
44 minutes ago
- Yahoo
That's no ruby. It's an extremely rare red diamond.
While it may look like a blazing red ruby, the 2.33-carat Winston Red Diamond is just that—a diamond. One of the rarest diamonds in the world, the Winston Red Diamond is on display at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History in Washington DC–right near the more famous Hope Diamond. To learn more about this exceedingly rare Fancy Red diamond, Smithsonian gem and mineral curator Gabriela Farfan and colleagues spent two years researching its history and tracing its geological past. The team officially categorized the diamond and also narrowed down its potential country of origin as Venezuela or Brazil. The findings are detailed in a study published June 6 in the journal Gems & Gemology. Ronald Winston, son of famed American jeweler Harry Winston, donated the roughly 8 millimeter in diameter diamond to the Smithsonian in 2023. It is the fifth-largest confirmed red diamond in the world. Based on its old mine brilliant cut, gemologists believe that it was likely mined before the middle of the 20th century. This older style of cutting diamonds predates the more modern brilliant cuts seen today. Gemologists estimate that one in every 25 million diamonds is fancy red. According to the Smithsonian, this specific red diamond's documented history begins in 1938, when it belonged to the Cartier Family. The Cartiers then sold it to the Maharaja of Jamnagar India sometime before the 1980s. Winston purchased the stone from the Maharaja in the late 1980s and the diamond once adorned a ring worn by actress Brooke Shields in 1989. At 2.23 carats, it is smaller than the largest confirmed fancy red diamond. The Moussaieff Red clocks in at 5.11 carats and has been displayed in museums around the world. On April 1,the Winston Red Diamond officially went on display at the National Museum of Natural History in Washington DC. Scientifically describing and detailing the Winston Red's color and history was one of the major goals of this new study. Red diamonds are exceedingly rare, which makes studying them equally difficult. A diamond's color is largely determined by its chemical make-up. For example, a traditional white diamond is mostly composed of carbon. Small amounts of nitrogen will give a diamond a more yellow hue. If those nitrogen atoms have enough time–several millions of years–to aggregate in groups, the diamond will appear more brown. After even more years, if the nitrogen atoms form in groups of three surrounding a missing carbon atom, it will turn a yellow color. If the element boron replaces carbon, it produces a blue hue. Red and pink diamonds don't owe their color to chemistry. The extreme pressures and temperatures deep within the Earth can lead to plastic deformation within the rock. During plastic deformation, the atomic bonds in the diamond break and re-form along imperfections called dislocations. These deformations will change the diamond's atomic structure and affect how the light interacts with the stone. It's this deflection that gives it its rosy hue. Pink diamonds get their color in a similar way, since the color red is a more saturated pink. The Winston Red is also considered a Fancy Red diamond, meaning its color is pure red. It does not have any other modifying hues like purple, brown, or orange. Only 0.04 percent of fancy colored diamonds have this Fancy red color grade. The chances of finding a Fancy red diamond like the Winston Red is about one in 25 million diamonds. [ Related: The mystery behind pink diamonds just got some more clarity. ] To learn more, the team used several techniques including photoluminescence, spectroscopy, and cathodoluminescence to study the precious stone. These analyses confirmed the presence of plastic deformation bands and a pattern that officially classifies it as a type IaAB (A<B) Group 1 'pink' diamond. The diamond underwent significant pressure and temperature conditions when it was forming. They also found that the Winston Red gets its pure crimson color because it had a careful balance of the right pressure and temperature during its formation. Based on its mineralogical characteristics and mid-20th century cut, the team believes that it likely originated in Venezuela or Brazil. However, its precise place of origin is still unknown.


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Shop TikTok's viral stackable makeup, smart gyms and the kid-approved Nugget Couch
Shop TikTok's viral stackable makeup, smart gyms and the kid-approved Nugget Couch Consider this your weekly guide to the internet's trendiest products across beauty, wellness, travel and beyond. Craving a taste of TikTok's most viral products—sans the exhaustive doom scroll that often accompanies it? You've come to the right place. There are few apps that provide more shopping inspiration than TikTok, but navigating the platform's vast world of product recommendations can often be pretty daunting. That's why I created this weekly series, where together, we can break down the most popular TikTok items trending on any given day, and assess whether or not they deserve a spot in your digital shopping cart. Shop this week's most viral TikTok products In this week's installment, I rounded up the most viral essentials that are currently flooding my For You page, including the kiddo-friendly Nugget Couch, a best-selling beach hat that's perfect for summer wear and the stackable makeup kit that's taking the internet by storm. Check out our TikTok Shop Shop trending TikTok-viral products below: 1. A modular play couch for kiddos The Nugget Couch takes the concept of modular furniture to a whole new level. With four foam pieces as the base, the furniture is designed to be "infinitely configurable," giving kids the freedom to reimagine and redesign the sofa as they see fit. It's convertible, it's functional and it's wrapped in a washable fabric that can withstand even the messiest playrooms. My verdict? I look at this kiddo-friendly couch, and suddenly find myself yearning for the days of weekend sleepovers and endless afternoons spent in my playroom. My only question: How old is too old to buy one for myself? 2. The floppy beach hat with over 35,000 reviews No wardrobe is complete without a stylish beach hat incorporated into it, and according to Amazon shoppers, this Lanzom Straw Panama Beach Hat is pretty great. It boasts a 4.5 rating on Amazon's site, with over 1,000 shoppers buying the accessory last month alone. My verdict? Beach hats are synonymous with summer, and the nearly 36,000 people who have bought (and raved) about this Amazon best-seller tells me it's truly a worthwhile buy. Farewell bucket hats—I'm entering into my floppy hat girl era. Where to buy bathing suits: Summersalt, PacSun, Amazon, Target and more 👙 3. Look good, feel good with Tonal's smart fitness mirror Mirror mirror on the wall, who's the fittest of them all? At present, it's definitely not me—but that could change with the help of this Tonal 2 Smart Fitness System. This TikTok-famous home gym system is built to look like a standard wall mirror, but it's actually equipped with a Smart View camera, adaptive weight technology and access to expert-led workouts that'll help you up your fitness game from home—no bulky machinery required. My verdict? I have a love-hate relationship with the Tonal 2. On one hand, it's a genius fitness tool that's designed to help users create a more comprehensive workout experience. On the other hand, its compact design makes it a manageable option for those (like myself) in small apartments—meaning I can no longer blame my lack of space on my sloppy fitness regimen. Le sigh! 4. Stackable makeup for easy travel Multifunctional beauty lovers, this Subtl Starter Stak is just for you! The 5-in-1 cosmetic bundle includes a concealer, powder highlighter and bronzer (among other things), all of which are stacked together in a conveniently portable design that's perfect for cluttered office bags and long travel days. My verdict? Much like my linen closet, my makeup bag has become an amalgamation of products I regularly use, products I never use and products I (realistically) should have thrown out five years ago. This stackable makeup kit is designed to better organize your cosmetics—perhaps it can make a neat freak out of me? Throwback: Subtl Beauty was an editor-approved Black Friday 2024 deal 5. An influencer-approved vlog light The fairy godmother of Gen Z influencers—aka Alix Earle—gave this Newmowa 60 LED Conference Light her cosign, and the iPhone accessory has been trending on TikTok ever since. It delivers more even lighting for social videos or Zoom calls, and with its clipable design, is easy to take on the go. My verdict? Add this to my ever-growing list of products that Alix Earle has influenced me to buy. How do I determine the most viral TikTok products? There are a couple factors I take into consideration when narrowing down the best TikTok products on any given week, including: Which product categories are trending on TikTok? Is there an organic discourse surrounding individual items? Are there product reviews from shoppers that can support the hype surrounding a popular TikTok product? Understanding the functionality of an item—beyond just its virality—is critical in assessing its value, and I ensure that any products recommended here are also backed by USA Today Shopping editors, shoppers and boast no lower than a 4.0 average rating.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Dean Cain says men shouldn't compete in women's sports; releases heartwarming film on girls' soccer team
Friday marks the nationwide release of family-friendly sports film "Little Angels", a triumphant story of a team of athletes and an unyielding coach, written, directed and produced by actor Dean Cain. "Little Angels" unfolds the story of Jake Rogers, a Division I college football coach, played by Cain, with $5 million and a take-it-or-leave-it chance for redemption on the line. A male-centric statement hurdles the lead into a reflective arc and, when writing the script, the red-card comment "soccer is for girls," was definitive, according to Cain. "It's always a joke I make," Cain told Fox News Digital. Dean Cain Says He Turned Down Being One Of The Highest-paid Actors On Tv To Raise His Son Alone "Soccer is the world's game and I make fun of soccer because I played as an American football player and that's just what we do. We make fun of soccer. We make fun of rugby." In 1988, after his collegiate football career at Princeton, Cain was signed to the Buffalo Bills as a rookie. His professional NFL career came to a halt when he injured his knee. Read On The Fox News App While the on-air declaration that soccer is for girls kicks off Rogers' journey to softening in "Little Angels", the topic of men in women's sports is not a cornerstone of the film. However, Cain is firm in his position that, after a certain age, boys and girls should not compete together. "I'm a huge, huge supporter of women's athletics," Cain told Fox News Digital. "I don't think men or boys have any business once they're past the age of 7 or 10 competing together." "When you get to those higher levels, I don't think that men should be competing with women, period, end of story," Cain said. "Many of my ex-girlfriends have been professional athletes, and I really have tremendous respect for women's sports. I think it's hugely important to have women be able to compete against women and do that." Dean Cain's New Christmas Movie Celebrates Faith: A 'Trip Back In Time To Bethlehem' The benchmark theme of "Little Angels" is purpose and perspective and reserves the plot for a heartwarming tale of teamwork and family. "There's a lot of me in that character," Cain said of Rogers. Despite public perception, Rogers cannot be defended from his offside remark about female athletes. "College football coaches get looked at sometimes like they're a deity of something, like they're a God of some kind," Cain said. Rogers is met with an ultimatum: coach a team of 12-year-old girls or lose $5 million. Films like "A League of Their Own," "The Mighty Ducks" and even the true underdog story of "Dodgeball" echo a similar sentiment and evoke childhood memories across generations. Dean Cain Says He 'Had To Get Out Of California': 'Land Of Ridiculousness' The timeless tale in each of these movies follows a team of misfits bonded together by both their love of the game and a defeated coach who finds inspiration through group aspirations. This narrative conjures wistful affection in a way that other genres outside sports dramas cannot. "Take a guy who is flawed in a situation where he doesn't want to be," Cain said. "Through human experience and being with these young ladies and other people, he teaches them teamwork and the value of team and family." The movie, starring Lou Ferrigno, Bryan Callen and Swedish actress Helena Mattson, began casting during the COVID-19 pandemic. "You hope that you get them together and they have chemistry," he said of the athletes. "They are the heart of the story." "The young actresses were phenomenal," Cain said of a cast including Alex Jayne Go and "Role Models" actress Alexandra Stamler. Cain's niece and goddaughter also star in the film as athletes. "I've been called Superman forever and that's great. I love it," Cain said. "If people call me Coach Jake after this, 'Hey Coach Jake,' that's a warm fuzzy for me. It's a big-time warm and fuzzy." Cain is working on four films this year, including a golf-centered movie that he is co-directing with his son. The world premiere of "Little Angels" was featured at the International Christian Film Festival (ICFF) in May. There, Cain was awarded with the ICFF Lifetime Achievement Award. "I've been producing for a long time and directing," Cain said. "Man, I don't feel like I'm anywhere near getting a Lifetime Achievement Award, so, I think they were just being nice to me." "Little Angels" hits theaters nationwide on Friday, June 6, article source: Dean Cain says men shouldn't compete in women's sports; releases heartwarming film on girls' soccer team