Blocked, of course, will have to try to watch from home. I knew from yesterday they couldn't confirm either the harpoons or the screws in the feet had deployed to secure it to the surface yet.pumpkinpi wrote:If you haven't already, watch this fantastic short film from ESA to promote the mission.
http://www.ambitionfilm.com/
Thumper wrote:Blocked, of course
Rommie wrote:
I put on Twitter my initial reaction during the whole thing- namely, while I'm flabbergasted anyone would know they are on TV that day and consciously choose to wear it, I have no idea why no one at the ESA saw this shirt and didn't tell him to wear another one. (Beyond obvious "where the hell do you work?" guidelines, at NASA in comparison you have press officers who require scientists to go through "dry runs" of major press conferences in order to make them look better, and will critique what you plan to say/ tell you to change a shirt if it won't look good on camera, in order to make the science look better.)
Rommie wrote:Dude apologized, so in my book it all goes down as a teachable moment for the field.
pumpkinpi wrote:Rommie wrote:
I put on Twitter my initial reaction during the whole thing- namely, while I'm flabbergasted anyone would know they are on TV that day and consciously choose to wear it, I have no idea why no one at the ESA saw this shirt and didn't tell him to wear another one. (Beyond obvious "where the hell do you work?" guidelines, at NASA in comparison you have press officers who require scientists to go through "dry runs" of major press conferences in order to make them look better, and will critique what you plan to say/ tell you to change a shirt if it won't look good on camera, in order to make the science look better.)
I tend to look for the good in people, so my theory is this. He had it on over a black polo, which some other members of flight crew were wearing. Perhaps he wasn't wearing the offensive shirt the whole time, but rather he threw it on right before he was interviewed. Thus, no one at ESA had time to tell him to take it off for the live interview.
That's me looking for the good in his coworkers. That makes him out to look even worse, though. Instead of ignorantly wearing a shirt he didn't consider might be offensive, he intentionally put it on to cause a ruckus.
I'm probably wrong. I'd just rather there be just one asshole on the Rosetta/Philae team than one asshole with a bunch of ignorant/complacent coworkers.
squ1d wrote:I am surprised you can wear shirts with naked people on them in a professional science/engineering environment and not get disciplined/sacked/sent home.
Rommie wrote:... Apparently though, this got under the crosshairs of the not-so-lovely GamerGate people GJ has been documenting here, ...
geonuc wrote:Once again, I get no respect.
Sigma_Orionis wrote:geonuc wrote:Once again, I get no respect.
Of course you don't, you're a Nuclear-Geological-Legal-Pinko-Commie-Liberal
Rommie wrote:Apparently though, this got under the crosshairs of the not-so-lovely GamerGate people GJ has been documenting here, and they've been now targeting the accounts of women astronomers. My colleagues have been getting threats, at times even doxxed (ie home address published online), and a lot of people on the outside have been telling us women "you seem so weak, why are you so upset about a shirt?"
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