Up Next
Latest
- 50 Years After Moon Landing, Hoax Theories Still Flourish Despite Weak EvidenceThe Issue3:46
- Doctor Allegedly Tried to Kill His Wife on Hawaii TrailCrime1:59
- Amanda Knox Shares How She Survived in PrisonCrime2:49
- More Messages Released From White House Signal Group ChatPolitics3:10
- Accused Stepmom Arrives at Court in 20-Year Captivity CaseCrime2:31
- Dog in Tornado's Path of Destruction Saved by FamilyNews1:16
- Josh Blackledge of TikTok Fame Dies at 16News1:01
- Plane Skids Out of Control on Runway After Landing Gear BreaksNews1:03
- Car Gets Stuck on Beach Access Stairway in CaliforniaOffbeat1:00
- Monstrous Texas Hail Storm Crashes Through Woman's SunroofNews1:01
- Grieving Parents Sue Six Flags Magic Mountain After Son’s DeathNews2:36
- Fallout After Journalist Mistakenly Added to Yemen Bombing Group ChatNews2:57
- What Food is Safe to Eat While Traveling Overseas?Health2:11
- 5 Lions Rescued From Ukraine Now Living Happily at Sanctuary in EnglandAnimals1:02
- Police Helicopter Helps Nab Kids Who Stole Golf Cart and Went for a Ride: CopsCrime1:00
- Police Release Bodycam Footage From Gene Hackman HomeNews2:04
- Couple Caught on Camera Putting Hair in Food at RestaurantOffbeat1:36
- Teen Son of Yankees Star Brett Gardner Dies During Family VacationSports1:58
- Sorority Sophomore Takes Arresting MugshotCrime1:19
- Megachurch Pastor Caught on Camera Breaking Into Woman's HomeCrime2:10
- Korean Tourists Vanish in Northern ArizonaNews1:19
50 Years After Moon Landing, Hoax Theories Still Flourish Despite Weak Evidence
More than 50 years ago, men walked on the moon and it’s been almost that long since other men have been claiming it was all faked. In 2002, moon landing denier Bart Sibrel gave astronaut Buzz Aldrin a mouthful of his theories and got a mouth full of fist in return. The moon hoax movement started when a man named Bill Kaysing published a book in 1976 detailing his theories on how the Apollo 11 mission was faked. Inside Edition Digital’s Mara Montalbano has more.