The latest edition of “This Week In Space” is available for your viewing pleasure. Please take a look! Hello, and welcome. Our theme this week is detente – as in the easing of hostilities between rivals. It is what we … Continue reading
Tagged Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, Apollo–Soyuz Test Project, Deke Slayton, International Space Station, Kennedy Space Center, Low Earth orbit, NASA, Space, Technology, Vance D. BrandThe latest edition of “This Week In Space” is now available – give us a watch. Hello and Welcome. we begin this week with shuttle manifest destiny…and the movable feast that the last days of STS launching has become. It … Continue reading
Tagged Earth, Hubble Space Telescope, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, John Glenn, NASA, Space, Space exploration, TechnologyDavid Waters is your host for the latest edition of “This Week In Space.” Check us out! It was a nail biter – sample return missions always are – but in the end JAXA pulled it out and the troubled … Continue reading
Tagged Earth, Hayabusa, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, Kennedy Space Center, Lockheed Martin, NASA, Space, TechnologyThe lastest edition of “This Week In Space” is now out! Give us a watch… Hello, and welcome… We have a scoop for you this week – an exclusive interview with SpaceX founder Elon Musk – we’ll ask him how … Continue reading
Tagged 2001 Mars Odyssey, Chris Hadfield, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Mars, Mars rover, NASA, Phoenix, Phoenix Mars Lander, Space, TechnologyHello and Welcome from the Kennedy Space Center. The Space Shuttle Atlantis is on the pad – pointed in the right direction – marching toward what will likely be her last mission. The crew of 6 – led by commander … Continue reading
Tagged Apollo 13, Jim Lovell, Kennedy Space Center, NASA, Space, Space Shuttle, Space Shuttle Atlantis, TechnologyThe latest edition of “This Week In Space” is available! Check us out [youtubevid id="wHjCsmKl7Yw"] Hello and welcome - I am taking the week off – doing some diving with my 17 year old son in the Cayman Islands…would love … Continue reading
Tagged Baikonur Cosmodrome, Constellation program, International Space Station, Kennedy Space Center, NASA, Space, Technology, Tracy Caldwell DysonThe latest edition of “This Week in Space” is now available! Check us out!! And many thanks to our sponsors, Binary Space and Space Careers! [youtubevid id="yR7Gcio4r3g"] Two million parts – all of them form the low bidder – as … Continue reading
Tagged Charles Foster Kane, European Space Agency, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, NASA, Space, Technology, Wally Schirra, Wide-field Infrared Survey ExplorerThe latest edition of “This Week In Space” – hosted by Yours Truly, is out! Watch here! [youtubevid id="S5icnMDAGsI"] I gotta admit, I am getting a little tired of launching the program with the latest skirmish in the war over … Continue reading
Tagged Buzz Aldrin, International Space Station, Kay Bailey Hutchison, NASA, Space, Stanley Cup, Technology, United StatesThe Space Shuttle Endeavour was fresh off its night time landing at the Kennedy Space Center. The 6 person crew – led by Marine Colonel George Zamka – the guy they call Zambo – logged a successful mission to the … Continue reading
Tagged International Space Station, Kennedy Space Center, NASA, Soichi Noguchi, Space, Space Shuttle, Space Shuttle Endeavour, Technology[youtubevid id="-5UFIQGCzGc"] Mr. Bolden goes to Capitol Hill this week… The NASA boss Charlie Bolden is a former Marine fighter and test pilot and astronaut and he is used to taking flak – after all he flew a hundred combat … Continue reading
Tagged Constellation program, David Vitter, International Space Station, Low Earth orbit, NASA, Space, SpaceX, Technology, Vietnam war ← Older postsHINKLEY, Calif. – We all love a neat, tidy Hollywood ending to a David and Goliath story. Sadly, in the real world, they are hard to come by. More often than not, the little guy might win a battle, but Goliath prevails over the long haul — winning the war.
Before I went to Hinkley, I did, of course, watch the movie once again. As it turns out Erin Brockovich is accurate in many respects.
You might remember the woman who gets a big check at the end of the movie after the down-on-her-luck, crusading legal assistant has brought a giant utility to its knees for polluting the groundwater beneath the tiny desert town half way between L.A. and Las Vegas.
In the movie, she was known as Donna Jensen (and played by Marg Helgenberger). There is no real-life Donna Jensen — the details of her story are a composite of several real-life travails.
But Roberta Walker was the main inspiration. Naturally, it was not long after I met her that I asked her what she thought of the movie.
Read the rest of the post and see the video story here.
Miles O’Brien is a veteran freelance broadcast and web journalist who focuses on science, technology & aerospace.
He is the Science Correspondent for PBS NewsHour, and a regular correspondent for the PBS documentary series FRONTLINE and the National Science Foundation Science Nation series.
For nearly seventeen of his thirty years in the news business, he worked for CNN as the Science and Space Correspondent and the anchor of various programs, including American Morning.
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