Blue Origin launches 6 tourists to edge of space, including couple making their second flight
CBSN
Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin launched six space tourists on a high-speed dash to the edge of space and back Friday, giving the passengers — including a husband and wife making their second flight — about three minutes of weightlessness and an out-of-this world view before the capsule made a parachute descent to touchdown at the company's west Texas flight facility.
Science popularizer and TV host Emily Calandrelli shed tears of elation after landing, telling an interviewer "oh my gosh, when we got to weightlessness, I immediately turned upside down and looked at the planet, and then there was so much blackness, there was so much space! I didn't expect to see so much space!"
"And I kept saying, like, that's our planet," she added, wiping away tears. "That's our planet. It was the same feeling I got when my kids were born, and I was like, that's my baby, that's my baby. I had that same feeling like where I'm seeing it for the first time. It was just beautiful. Oh my God."
Americans say they continue to feel the aftereffects of the highest inflation in four decades, especially at the grocery store, where prices remain 26% higher than before the pandemic. President-elect Donald Trump's proposed tariffs could cause even more financial strain in the nation's food aisles by reigniting price hikes, according to a recent study.
One of the first tasks faced by an incoming president is staffing the Cabinet, the people who collectively are a president's top advisers and the nation's highest officials. Most of the members of this group need to be confirmed by the Senate in order to serve in the roles chosen for them by the president.