:03:01
	'- You know, my cousin called.
'- Uh'-huh.
:03:03
	Asked who we bribed
to get on Jim Lovell's crew.
:03:05
	Yeah.
:03:07
	I told him they wanted
to make sure he got the best.
:03:10
	Well, they got that right.
:03:12
	'- What network do we want?
'- Come on! Walt! Hey! Put on Walter!
:03:16
	'- Walter!
'- Jules Bergman!
:03:18
	John, turn it up!
:03:20
	...has completed putting on
the spacesuits and the boots.
:03:23
	I, uh'-'- I really appreciate you all
coming to this dress rehearsal party...
:03:28
	for my Apollo 12 landing.
:03:31
	Sit down, Conrad.
:03:33
	I think we should all take
a moment to recognize...
:03:35
	the exemplary'-'-
hell, damn near heroic'-'-
:03:39
	effort displayed by Neil Armstrong's
backup for this historic moon walk...
:03:44
	and, of course, his crew.
:03:46
	Let's hear it for Jim Lovell,
Ken Mattingly and Fred Haise.
:03:53
	There he is! There he is!
Everybody quiet down!
:03:57
	Hey! Kids!
:03:59
	We had a good touchdown.
:04:02
	We can verify the position of the
opening I ought to have on the camera.
:04:07
	What?
:04:10
	'- Think it's too late for him to abort?
'- He still has time to get out.
:04:14
	He just needs somebody to wave him off.
Pull up, Neil!
:04:17
	Pull up! Pull up!
:04:20
	Okay, Neil, we can see you
coming down the ladder now.
:04:24
	Look at those pictures. Wow.
:04:26
	I'm, uh, at the foot of the ladder.
:04:29
	The LEM footpads are only depressed
in the surface about, uh...
:04:34
	one or two inches.
:04:36
	'- It's almost like a powder.
'- Armstrong is on the moon.
:04:39
	Neil Armstrong,
38'-year'-old American...
:04:42
	standing on the surface
of the moon...
:04:46
	on this July 20, 1969.
:04:50
	That's one small step for man...
:04:54
	one giant leap for mankind.
:04:58
	His quote was...