
EXCLUSIVE: Y’all, the drama is OVER! After weeks of speculation and nail-biting tension, the Artemis II crew finally made their splashdown. We’re talking history-makers—the first crew to fly past the moon in half a century!
Get this: Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen—a crew stacked with firsts—are officially back on Earth. Glover made history as the first person of color, Koch the first woman… talk about a POWERFUL lineup, chile!
They launched on April 1st, and sources say this wasn’t just a joyride; it was a **SHOCKING** test run for future lunar landings. They even smashed the Apollo 13 distance record! Can you BELIEVE the GUTS it takes?
But WAIT—it gets WORSE. The return journey? That was the *real* reality show moment.
Listen, forgetting the glamour of space travel, the splashdown is where the real tea is spilled. This was the final, **DANGEROUS** hurdle, honey.
We’re told the Orion spacecraft hit Earth’s atmosphere at a blistering 25,000 MPH! That kind of speed generates HEAT that would melt your favorite designer handbag.
For six agonizing minutes, the crew went radio silent. A communications blackout! Did they lose signal? Was this the moment NASA’s multi-billion dollar gamble went completely sideways? We were on the edge of our seats!
According to reports, the heat shield did its job, protecting our space VIPs. Thank GOODNESS for that tech, because we couldn’t handle the loss of these trailblazers!
When exactly did this near-disaster conclude? The target time for the Pacific Ocean splashdown was set for 8:07 p.m. ET/5:07 p.m. PT on Friday, April 10th (Source 1).
And yes, they HIT IT! The splashdown was confirmed, folks! FOX 5 NY reported the successful landing right on schedule (Source 3).
The separation of the crew module from the rocket happened just before that—around 7:33 p.m. ET. It’s all about precision when you’re dropping from space, y’all!
Where did this **EPIC** finale take place? Right near San Diego, California, in the big blue Pacific Ocean. Talk about a high-profile landing spot!
So, they hit the water. Now what? Did they just paddle to shore? ABSOLUTELY NOT!
Sources confirm that the next step was a high-speed extraction mission. The Navy was on standby, ready to snatch up the crew.
The recovery vehicle? The USS John P. Murtha, a U.S. Navy transport dock ship. That’s the kind of VIP treatment we expect for people who just flew around the moon!
Once aboard, the crew immediately underwent medical checks. Because even space heroes need a check-up after enduring that G-force and heat!
Think about it: Koch, the first woman, Glover, the first person of color… this mission was a **CULTURAL** watershed moment, and their safe return is a victory for everyone!
The parachute deployment was another nail-biter, happening around 8:03 p.m., slowing that capsule down just enough before the final kiss with the ocean (Source 3).
This whole mission proves that NASA is serious about getting boots back on the moon. But honestly, the real headline is the sheer **BRAVERY** of these four individuals.
We’re waiting for the first post-flight interviews, but trust us, when they start spilling the REAL tea about those blackout minutes… we’ll have it first. Stay tuned!






