Neil Armstrong’s barber sold Armstrong’s hair for $3k without his consent. Armstrong threatened to sue the barber unless he either returned the hair or or donated the proceeds to charity. Unable to retrieve the hair, the barber donated the $3k to a charity of Armstrong’s choosing.
It is unknown what Neil Armstrong took with him to the moon personally and the record of his personal property kit was never found. Armstrong made an unscripted visit to a crater and it is speculated he left his late daughter’s bracelet there.
To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the historic Apollo 11 moon landing, the three astronauts on that mission are being honored with life-sized sculptures made out of butter at the Ohio State Fair.
How do Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins and Buzz Aldrin like to eat their ice cream? In floats! Your time is waning to come to the @OhioStateFair to enjoy Velvet Ice Cream and see the three astronauts commemorated in butter. #Apollo50th#OSF19pic.twitter.com/cx7dgAEraL
On July 20, 1969, Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins landed on the moon and changed the course of history. The state of Ohio has a strong kinship with space travel: Neil Armstrong was an Ohio native and so was John Glenn, the first American to orbit the Earth. Ohio also has a long history of dairy production. Combine all those factors together and you get the magnificent butter display at this year’s Ohio State Fair.
If you are lucky enough to be able to go to the Ohio State Fair in Columbus, don’t miss the traditional “cow made out of…
Dairy farmers donated over 2,000 pounds of butter to help create the sculptures. An artist from Cincinnati named Paul Brooke and a team of sculptors spent 400-500 hours creating the buttery tributes in a cooler set at 46 degrees to prevent the pieces from melting.
Here’s a cool time-lapse video of the butter being sculpted:
Legen-DAIRY: This year's Ohio State Fair butter sculpture honors the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon mission, and we're over the MOO-n about it! MORE: https://t.co/8xQiZavTrxpic.twitter.com/NkrJ7eDGDd
Alexander Balz, one of the artists, said, “The space suits were a real challenge, to be honest. It’s easy to sculpt things that you know. When you sculpt a human being you memorize it, so this was a challenge.”
This Ohio State Fair butter sculpture shows the three Apollo 11 astronauts — Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins and Buzz Aldrin — standing next to the lunar module Eagle.
Roughly 500,000 people are expected to have attended the State Fair in late July and early August. Here’s a video with some great footage of the display.
What a unique and cool way to honor a pivotal event in American, and human, history!
And, by the way, I’m really hoping that this butter sculpting catches on more widely because it is fabulous.
Moments after Neil Armstrong took his first steps on the moon, he dropped a bag of trash on the surface of the moon and kicked it underneath the lunar module.
In 2012, Neil Armstrong’s widow Carol Armstrong found a hidden stash of moon landing artifacts inside his closet – and the hoard included the famed 16 mm camera that captured Apollo 11 crew’s planting of the US flag on moon’s surface.