Interest in a story like a fake moon landing (in the movie’s case, the first manned mission to Mars) had appeal. Watergate broke and America was thrown into a government scandal at its highest levels. Hyams shopped the script around but got no takers. That was in 1972, four years before Kaysing’s book was released. So he wrote a story based on the concept. “I wondered what would happen if someone faked a whole story.” For him, he admits, it was the same with television. “I grew up in the generation where my parents basically believed if it was in the newspaper it was true,” Hyams said in an interview with a film trade magazine. A former TV news anchor, Hyams was more interested in how such a thing could actually be pulled off? Peter Hyams Whether you believed Kaysing or not was a moot point for American screenwriter and director Peter Hyams. Kaysing’s theories were technical and persuasive and soon a movement of nonbelievers, inspired by the book, was born. Kaysing believes NASA couldn’t safely put a man on the moon by the end of the 1960’s (a promise made by President Kennedy) so they staged it instead. We Never Went to the Moon: America’s Thirty Million Dollar Swindle was written by Bill Kaysing, a Navy midshipman and rocket specialist, who claimed to have inside knowledge of a government conspiracy to fake the moon landing. In 1976, a controversial new book was released that contended the Apollo 11 moon mission never happened. ‘Capricorn One’ – The Movie That Helped Shape a Conspiracy
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