USC (and nearby UCLA) are well-respected schools for filmmaking, so they probably had no trouble finding top-tier student filmmakers to volunteer for the project.
There were too many people in this project, see 07:50 for example. Way too many people, way too many problems! Edit, I just have watched the entire video 😂 Note, on the pre-launch meeting the room was full, everyone was hyped, but there were only a handful of lads in the post-mortem session, typical, barely anyone interested except the key members I guess. With the average few days long attention span of many of these kiddos, they can't be bothered. The second launch was far better, more organized, far less crowded, fewer people touching the equipment, quiet on the launchpad, etc.
@@pavel9652 you are kidding correct? They aren't starting a Camry they built a rocket. It's LITERALLY rocket engineering. That team looked perfectly sized for the goal. NASA has hundreds of thousands of employees there are 10s of thousands of people involved with rocket launch program deployment. 1000s with assembly and stacking, finally hundreds of people are actively consulted in the hour leading up to launch and if I recall 60 people say go before you get to the 20 odd command consoles that you hear say go before anything is launched from kennedy. How is 5 teams with scrub authority to many people?
im pretty sure that happened on one of the gemini missions where the US shot a polaris missile at the space craft to see if the human eye could track it from low earth orbit
Honestly teared up when he called out, "we appear to be out of the atmosphere". It brought chills to think that this was done with only that team, no third party, just these wonderful people's ideas and dreams!
@@MixiestA I would have been mortified but that's me. You on the hand seem impressed and pleased with yourself. You done good. Now go change boy , you starting to foul the air also. Someone has died inside.
Sitting in the parking lot of a gas station in the mountains, this pops up in my feed. So I sat here, parked, and watched. Freakin crying at the success with happy tears for these students. The first all student group to make it to space…what a fitting day to watch this too. Congratulations to everyone who was involved throughout the years. You’re all incredible, absolutely incredible humans. Cheers to the future, you will all do amazing things for humanity, surely.
in 11 years I've never posted a comment on UA-cam, after watching this i have to say that i was compelled to share my opinion. This is an incredible job on the shooting + editing. I was in awe. stay true to your passion.
@@keithwhisman maybe they wont. But most of them will go on to be very successful people in the world of rocketry. I'd trade getting laid for that ANY day.
As a Veteran Air Force Rocket Fuel Handler I found this video really fun to watch. I used to work with UMDH hydrazine and N2O4 nitrogen tetroxide. These were extremely dangerous and poisonous chemicals that we worked with in amounts in the tens of thousands of gallons. Great job on your rocket!
hi sir, seeing your expertise in this sector would you mind helping mee or giving me some suggestions regarding rocket fuel and engines as i am also working on a project similar to this :)
This is my fourth time watching this. It's my favorite documentary I've ever watched. The shooting and editing are fantastic, the way you've told this story is fantastic, the subject is fantastic, and the music is fantastic. As they get close to launch I literally cannot wipe off the grin I get from the excitement everyone exudes. Seriously I hope you're able to work on some really groundbreaking documentaries in the future, because I totally see that happening for you. Update: 1 year later youtube recommended me the video again and I'm falling in love with it again
That’s because some people work for pay, they worked for passion. Big difference in the motivator. You do one reluctantly, the other without hesitation.
They learned to do a "go" "no go" check with each section before starting a countdown to avoid someone thinking they heard avionics say "let's go" accidentally over scratchy radios that were acting up at the time. Sometimes in life, you can get so caught up in complexities that you miss something simpler when you are under stress and exhausted. It's easy for us to say things later when we get to see everything clearly and later after it happened.
Running Windows for years hear. Never a single failure. Its hardware that fails. Windows doesnt like failing or ailing hardware.....Hence 95% of BSOD errors are RAM issues!
@@nissan300ztt Not even close poorly written kernel mode drivers are a more common failure point than ram, although ram is still a failure point, but there's a reason why ~96% of the top million domains are linux powered as well as the majority of cloud compute (92% of EC2 and ~60% on azuire for example) and a small part of that is a record of stability.
As a UA-cam addict I can honestly say that this is the most inspiring example of not only the triumph of human ingenuity and passion over adversity but also a brilliant portrayal of the abilities of our youth, reminding of the faith we should all have in them in guiding humanity to it's future. Well done.
%1,000 agree! Best example of genuine teamwork. They endured failure so elegantly; then continued to prosper until a hard earned success! The best feeling a human can feel…. Hard work will always pay off!
This is truly inspiring. Seeing they’re Joy at the end made me cry. It’s amazing to witness what humans can accomplish when they unite they’re strengths instead of using it to destroy each other. Huge congratulations for these students, bravo ! Now time for my kids and I to build a baking soda rocket in our backyard !
What I love more about this than the achievement itself, is that this illustrates the curve in technological progression. 60 years ago it was only governments along with contracted specialists with years of experience in their respected fields that had to come together to make space a reality, 15 years ago the first private company took on the challenge and 10 years later revolutionised the design, now...meant in the most respectful way possible and certainly not to patronise, teenagers with almost no life experience, no established careers, fresh into adulthood have absorbed those years of collaborative knowledge and experience and...well, the video says it all. These guys are the future of space tech and travel. This gives me so much hope for the future. Congratulations 😁🙌🙌
60 years ago a group of students from a university in lebanon launched an 8 meter rocket bigger and heavier than this one to an altitude of 150 km, 50km higher than this one... nearly fucking got the rocket into orbit lol. that was in 1962, a bunch of students with their professor
They could have made a similar small rocket 70 years ago reach space. Its basically a passive rocket tube with a solid fuel motor. But back then the telemetry elements would have been way too heavy - for such a small rocket - to have any meaningful results, and reaching space is still a far cry from reaching an orbit.
"15 years ago the first private company took on the challenge" The first private company to reach space was Space Services Inc, nearly 40 years ago in 1982
I actually punched the air, I felt apart of something I'm clearly not! it was fantastic to watch young people who give up on "oh what's popular" and applied their brains and abilities and worked together to achieve more than 99.9% of us could ever do!
All accomplished before one of the worst years to pass. Congrats to all the students on their success with a very tough job and loads of anxiety. You all are amazing!
I saw this video 4 years ago when I was in 9th class, and watching this and barely understanding anything I was like, this is soo cool !! Fast forward to 2024 now that I am a fresher in college and a member of the embedded flight software team of our college's space tech club. Watching this video again understanding everything feels like a dream come true. It's just the beginning for me, our club has partnership with the isro and we'll launch a cansat on pslv in december. Then we freshers have an upcoming weather balloon project. Someday I hope we build our own propulsion systems and model rockets that can reach space too !!
This is some really amazing work done by the students. 1. The cinematography, production design, music composition, lighting and direction of this documentary film are so immersive that I didnt even wink my eye for a second while the movie was playing. The movie only increased my adrenaline rush every second the rocket was being built. 2. The atudents of USC have done a brilliant and award winning job of putting what they have learnt in the clasroom on the table. There was failure because they got carried away in the heat of the moment and excitement the first time. There should be checklists before any major operation. That didnt deter them even an inch. They were back with increased enthusiasm, resilience and passion - improving on their past performance and they succeeded. Kudos to them for the wonderful work. So can we see them joining NASA and working on a mission to nearby planets.
This could easily win awards at a film festival. The videography, filming, editing, and soundtrack of this video is by far the best I have ever seen on this platform, and I’ve been watching UA-cam for 7 or so years. Absolutely incredible work. And congrats on reaching space!
This was insane... I hope everyone on the team that made this launch possible and all before that made this possible know how important they are to breaking such an amazing achievement. I can't even imagine the joy that must have been felt by everyone from the start of USCRPL to the moment of launch.
@@shravani9106 Oh! There are a few reasons: 1. Space tech requires a lot of expertise, capital and development time to begin with. You can't start it from your dorm room with only your laptop like Facebook/google. 2. Space isn't a regular market. It's not like Uber where you are sure of thousands of customers each seconds. Very few space launch take place each year and most launch govt. assets. Which means the market is small and you also need strong diplomatic lobbies to get them. 3. All these demand for capital, expertise, lobbies etc also demands superior management skills. Young entrepreneurs almost always lack this, for things like app they have time to pick up the skill along the way. But for space company, you need a lot of it just to take the first step. 4. Big boys like Jeff Bezos or Richard Branson are already in the game. These people have the money and decades of experience on management and leadership and also all the lobbies. Bright-eyed entrepreneurs stand very little chance before them. All these are just my opinion. I'm a techie not a business analyst. Anyway take a look on Copenhagen suborbital. They are advancing slowly with a modest goal. So they are slowly building their managerial and technical expertise also building reputation along the way. Still It will probably take them the better part of the next decade to achieve this goal, given they don't shut down due to some horrible accident.
This is a story of human triumph that demands to be looked at. Hats off to the dev team and sponsors for being able to make this a reality, and the amazing production work behind this documentary. 11/10
Very impressive production. This is how documentaries ought to be done. The rocket was awesome as were all the students. Guess outfits like SpaceX know where the talent is. Hope y'all do well ...
As a rocketeer and a creative professional, this hits all of my senses at once. The design, engineering, problem solving, videography, storytelling, and editing....wow! Not only did you succeed in your mission to reach space, but the elegance of your presentation told your story in a way that is sure as hell to inspire more people and more endeavors like this. Rock on!
The educational value of this experiment is 10% about rocketry, 30% about learning team work, 50% about how massively important are failures when correctly feedback into the process . And that makes up for 90%... the last 10% for sure about how to make an amazing and inspiring video for the generations to come. Well done kids, your diapers are coming off!
Kudos to Joseph DeRose. I edited television professionally for 30years. This is first-rate. Also, congratulations to the entire student team. Outstanding!
This is amazing. I was in a rocket club throughout my senior years of college too, and we were aiming to reach an altitude of 100k ft with a two stage rocket. Sadly second stage didnt ignite and the rocket came in ballistic. I didn't have the chance to try it a second time either. Seeing you guys try time after time is very inspiring though, I'm happy for y'all. Space or nothing
The amount of effort, time, quality, knowledge, professional work, ilusion, emotions and euforia put in this project and on the making of this video make it one of the best in YT right now. Well done kiddos! That was epic, thanks for sharing it with the world!
I am a baby boomer and remember watching on black and white TVs- manned launches going back to Shepard to Armstrong--Yes I was a real space geek since age 12. This is so wonderful to see a bunch of young people working on such a project--with such an intense goal to touch the sky--I see some hope for our next generation and wish an old geezer like me could have been there
The genius behind the editing of the first launch. WHOOSH, there it goes, and I was thinking, “WHERE WAS THE COUNTDOWN, WTF!?” That was the point. Half the team wasn’t ready for launch. Neither was the audience. Well done, film school kid.
For those of you thinking this is awesome, man have I got some news for you. 'Student Designs Teams" are a whole world of collegiate engineering competitions. Rocketry, small scale formula one, small scale Baja off-roading, autonomous sailing, competitive blacksmithing, robotics and more. These teams are incredible and as someone who also gave every spare moment to one of these teams through my five years in university, they are all incredibly worth it. I still remember the elation at seeing/piloting a project come to fruition before my eyes.
I was part of a team of undergraduate engineers at NM State U, an hour south of where the final launch shown here is, that attempted the same thing in 2008: to be the first student-led team to break the Karmen line. Unfortunately it was not a success. Congrats to these kids for achieving history!
This looks, sounds and feels like a Netflix Documentary. I would not be surprised to see the logo at the beginning. Everyone on the project did a truly amazing job
I will probably never be a part of such a project, but this video SO WELL MADE, that for 30 mins, I was a part of the team, the journey, feeling each and every step towards the grand goal of reaching space, and when they made it, I felt a wave of happiness from head to toe like I MADE IT! Excellent job guys, you are beyond phenomenal.
I'm at the University at Buffalo's SEDS group and I watch this on a regular basis so that I make sure that our avionics computer is on track. Very inspirational.
Thanks for that masterpice of a MOVIE….. i am a produkt designer myself and to see the joy, the grind and teamwork of young people to accomplish that kind of technology is just unbelivable … for real i shed in tears after the crossing of the athmosphere. thanks you all for this masterpice and the hope i got in our generation ❤
Why is this only just appearing in my recommended? This is amazing. Don’t let the negative comments let you down btw, be proud of this achievement and the work you’ve done. There will always be a few haters but eventually they’ll come to understand just how significant this was.
Excellently directed and shot! Fantastic professional level work. And a huge congratulations to those indomitable students who fought themselves right into rocket history books. :D
lol they accomplished nothing, the mission failed for a stupid reason, all their hard work was all for nothing, a big waste, that's why they didnt benefit in anyway after this.
@@thefunshackwars5418 tf you mean? Their 4th rocket went to space and landed mostly intact, and they learned how NOT to launch a rocket, In no way a failure.
@@thefunshackwars5418 they are first student group successfully launched a rocket into space. Their name will be written in rocket history book, and will be remember for thousands of years after. And you, just an average person, no one will remember you after you die, there will be nothing to prove you had been existed
@@bacphan7582 Why are you personally attacking him? Wtf is wrong with you? He didn't even insult them??!!!! Also, their name will definitely not be written in any history book taught in any school across any place on earth.
This video inspires me so much. I am trying to get fellow space nerds and engineers at my school to go for a space shot. This team is truly the future of Aerospace and I greatly admire the maturity and professionalism displayed in the film. GREAT WORK!!!
Amazing short film. Great storytelling, camera work and editing. I was so invested that I was screaming with the rest of the group during successful confirmation of hitting space. I feel the emotion of every character. How does this not have more views and you have more subscribers?
it must have been truly heartbreaking to lose so much hard work to a simple communication error. honestly massive kudos to the entire team for managing to move on and try again. that would've broken me
Traveler III launch was the embodiment of the adage, "too many cooks in the kitchen", but watching them learn from that and succeed with Traveler IV was inspiring. Good job on the filming and editing on this, your film making enhanced this achievement
You know they put their hearts into it, when they got a full professional video documentation of the project. Beautifully done, loved to see the that passion.
@Ronald Vincent The USC team's rocket can also be classified as a sounding rocket. That term refers to any sub orbital rocket taking measurements for research purposes. That said, I can't find anything about this New Zealand student launch
What an absolutely amazing film! It's rare to be so engrossed and so captivated all the way through. My heart was racing with them as the countdown started. Well made and well done all!
This was great, I searched for Lauren on linkedIn to see where she ended up 4 years after this was made, it was the highlight of my day to see she is working at SpaceX!
This is an incredible film on top of the topic being an incredible achievement. I am so happy that I found this. Huge congratulations to everyone involved!
This is the most beautiful and inspiring video I have ever seen in my life. The documentary itself is beautifully put together, not to mention the USCRPL team's incredible journey. Thank you for making a gem like this available to us
It's crazy the amount of hours that goes into unseen subsystems like avionics and recovery, but when they fail, those are all that's on people's minds. Excellent job and truly inspiring.
When I was 12, I stole potassium nitrate from the school's chemistry lab, it was lefted to rot in the cupboard. I made a simple rocket with it and launched it. It didn't fly that high, but it felt great. When no one was home that morning, my work with the gas mask I prepared from clothes and dealing with dosens of pots made me feel like a genius scientist. The best day of my life ended when I was beaten by my father in the evening because I turned my house into the canteen with potassium nitrate, I was reported to the police by my neighbors who heard the explosion and I was expelled from school for theft. I am currently working in a canned food factory, this video impressed me very much. It's nice to see some people trying good things for humanity with their dreams. Well done guys!
Hey you guys, you definitely are inspiring. I'll share this with my former students. All of these guys are what US students bring as the most valuable to whole humanity. I wish them everlasting successes.
Who says that college kids cant do anything. This is proof showing if you have people with the same drive as you can achieve anything. Just keep on working for it and you will get there. Best quote for this is " Never give up never surrender".
Unbelievable, this is brilliantly cut together, not to mention how inspiring the actual event is.
wow man nice to see you here in the comment section ;) i find this video so underrated only 7000 views hope they get some attention soon
We are Species of Explorers #Goforlaunch
Hey bps
Hi BPS! Huge fan
stop slacking and get to work !!!!!!!!!
This video had a better narrative structure than 90% of Hollywood movies.
Yes.
yes
Correction, 99.99%
@@pepperidgefarmremembers6350 what about the 1%
@@mers800 ._. Didn’t think about this question
No one will talk about HOW GOOD THIS GUY FILMED AND EDITED?????
USC (and nearby UCLA) are well-respected schools for filmmaking, so they probably had no trouble finding top-tier student filmmakers to volunteer for the project.
@@WilliamDye-willdye oh thats cool, i am from Brazil soo i didnt notice that
It's just DAMN good When you should do a 100% this Team did 150%!!!!
Pretty much every 3rd comment is about it. Maybe try another cliche comment like saying it’s lit. Maybe it slaps?
@Nectar Krsn 😂😂😂
“Don’t launch until I give the go ahead”
“He said launch, go ahead” LOL
@@nohopepope
Please tell me he didn’t blow something up when he wasn’t supposed to!!!
@@alit7313 hopefully was inert since they were only training
There were too many people in this project, see 07:50 for example. Way too many people, way too many problems! Edit, I just have watched the entire video 😂 Note, on the pre-launch meeting the room was full, everyone was hyped, but there were only a handful of lads in the post-mortem session, typical, barely anyone interested except the key members I guess. With the average few days long attention span of many of these kiddos, they can't be bothered. The second launch was far better, more organized, far less crowded, fewer people touching the equipment, quiet on the launchpad, etc.
@@nohopepope they said the number 5 didn't they?
@@pavel9652 you are kidding correct? They aren't starting a Camry they built a rocket. It's LITERALLY rocket engineering. That team looked perfectly sized for the goal. NASA has hundreds of thousands of employees there are 10s of thousands of people involved with rocket launch program deployment. 1000s with assembly and stacking, finally hundreds of people are actively consulted in the hour leading up to launch and if I recall 60 people say go before you get to the 20 odd command consoles that you hear say go before anything is launched from kennedy. How is 5 teams with scrub authority to many people?
Imagine astronauts on the ISS are just chilling and then look out the window to see a missile looking rocket heading right at them
‘Those damn kids again...”
@@bennybooboobear3940 LMAOO
im pretty sure that happened on one of the gemini missions where the US shot a polaris missile at the space craft to see if the human eye could track it from low earth orbit
@@bennybooboobear3940 😂😂😂
@@bennybooboobear3940 This. Lmao.
“Don't tell me the sky's the limit when there are footprints on the moon.”
― Paul Brandt
Is there tho
@@buzby303 there is. There are also retro reflectors you can shine a light onto on the surface to do certain experiments.
Not if you're an idiotic flerfer or denier.
Yeah, to be honest "the sky's the limit" is stupid.
Hey, I never said which sky...
Honestly teared up when he called out, "we appear to be out of the atmosphere". It brought chills to think that this was done with only that team, no third party, just these wonderful people's ideas and dreams!
I shed a tear myself at that point.
@@acecombatmerc I farted and shit my pants. It was truly emotional moment.
@@MixiestA I would have been mortified but that's me. You on the hand seem impressed and pleased with yourself. You done good. Now go change boy , you starting to foul the air also. Someone has died inside.
@@MixiestA fardded and shiddid
I came back to watch this again, probably for the fifth time, and teared up again.
This video is about to blow up... it has taken too long to reach the algorithm
Its on its way now
Guarantee
Prepare for launch
Oh yeah it’s blowing up
Where’s the “KABOOM? There was supposed to be an earth shattering, KABOOM!”
Sitting in the parking lot of a gas station in the mountains, this pops up in my feed. So I sat here, parked, and watched.
Freakin crying at the success with happy tears for these students. The first all student group to make it to space…what a fitting day to watch this too.
Congratulations to everyone who was involved throughout the years. You’re all incredible, absolutely incredible humans. Cheers to the future, you will all do amazing things for humanity, surely.
Yeah... It's a trucker thing... No shame, do it toi
in 11 years I've never posted a comment on UA-cam, after watching this i have to say that i was compelled to share my opinion.
This is an incredible job on the shooting + editing. I was in awe. stay true to your passion.
ur account is 17 years old nice
These college kids are gonna make a rocket to get to orbit before blue Origin
This is the best roast I have ever heard
It could happen they beat them
Give them the same money and resources as BO, and they will definitely make something better.
Blue Origin and Boeing are head to head on the worst space company in terms of greediness
I laughed at first and then realized that this might actually be true
That dude been waiting to hug that girl for years
And she quickly ran away.
None of these guys will ever get laid. Haha I don’t know how I got married.
@@keithwhisman maybe they wont.
But most of them will go on to be very successful people in the world of rocketry.
I'd trade getting laid for that ANY day.
@@davecrupel2817 you do realize I was joking right? You realize the original poster was joking right?
@@keithwhisman You do realize I was joking, right?
This was so enjoyable to watch! Honestly felt like a Netflix show.
@@cap5856 This ^
@@cap5856 Yep, Netflix promotes pedophilia.
Nah, this is too good for netflix
As a Veteran Air Force Rocket Fuel Handler I found this video really fun to watch. I used to work with UMDH hydrazine and N2O4 nitrogen tetroxide. These were extremely dangerous and poisonous chemicals that we worked with in amounts in the tens of thousands of gallons. Great job on your rocket!
hi sir, seeing your expertise in this sector would you mind helping mee or giving me some suggestions regarding rocket fuel and engines as i am also working on a project similar to this :)
This is my fourth time watching this. It's my favorite documentary I've ever watched. The shooting and editing are fantastic, the way you've told this story is fantastic, the subject is fantastic, and the music is fantastic. As they get close to launch I literally cannot wipe off the grin I get from the excitement everyone exudes. Seriously I hope you're able to work on some really groundbreaking documentaries in the future, because I totally see that happening for you.
Update: 1 year later youtube recommended me the video again and I'm falling in love with it again
u should watch airsoftfatty documentary by idubz. very inspirational
bro this is my 4th time
Found the usc grad
@@aeichelberger15 You think I'm smart enough to graduate from USC? 🥺
Oh god that’s why we have checklists.
Yeah. Even professionals with decades of experience adhere to checklists.
The 'ol Tenerife clearance routine
Every one of those people is now and forever going to be VERY strict about checklists. :)
@@DonVigaDeFierro a checklist cant forget something.
@@DonVigaDeFierro Mhm kinda crazy to think they didn’t lol.
I love everything about this. Those kids were more invested than the employees at any place I've worked.
That’s because some people work for pay, they worked for passion. Big difference in the motivator. You do one reluctantly, the other without hesitation.
Excuse me did you just call us kids?
why should employees be invested they get paid 8 bucks they did plenty of work now you want investment sound like want a free present
students*
"I can't believe we are back again, ready to launch..."
"Did you say, "Ready to launch? 5!...4!...3!..."
lol just push the button
get back in the kiln
120... 24... 6... 2...1...
Yeah, that moment around 15 min felt like that...
@@OninDynamics i guess you beat me to it
This film alone is the reason i decided to continue taking a video production class-the videography here is incredible
Man was that a good decision
Good choice indeed.
The happiness, when a project that seems close to impossible gets completed and performs, is something out of this world ❤️
"Launched without avionics go-ahead"
oh my god they have to be so mad
hope they took some lessons from air traffic
Avionics means electronics on board.
@@anthonyjames4319 There was a team addressed as avionics. The people controlling the electronics. They didn't turn them on before yeeting the thing.
I feel like you didn't actually watch the video...
@@Enderplays12 from the comment I thought they were under the impression that avionics meant air traffic control
They learned to do a "go" "no go" check with each section before starting a countdown to avoid someone thinking they heard avionics say "let's go" accidentally over scratchy radios that were acting up at the time. Sometimes in life, you can get so caught up in complexities that you miss something simpler when you are under stress and exhausted. It's easy for us to say things later when we get to see everything clearly and later after it happened.
“Windows is a little more susceptible to failure” as said by engineers
linux masterrace, written on my Thinkpad T60
@@deathbornium
To stability and beyond!
@@deathbornium A true man of culture.
Running Windows for years hear. Never a single failure. Its hardware that fails. Windows doesnt like failing or ailing hardware.....Hence 95% of BSOD errors are RAM issues!
@@nissan300ztt Not even close poorly written kernel mode drivers are a more common failure point than ram, although ram is still a failure point, but there's a reason why ~96% of the top million domains are linux powered as well as the majority of cloud compute (92% of EC2 and ~60% on azuire for example) and a small part of that is a record of stability.
As a UA-cam addict I can honestly say that this is the most inspiring example of not only the triumph of human ingenuity and passion over adversity but also a brilliant portrayal of the abilities of our youth, reminding of the faith we should all have in them in guiding humanity to it's future. Well done.
Join them with all that UA-cam knowledge you probably know enough to make your own rocket
%1,000 agree! Best example of genuine teamwork. They endured failure so elegantly; then continued to prosper until a hard earned success! The best feeling a human can feel…. Hard work will always pay off!
@@colinbaker9998 Just don't have them watching over the nuclear arsenal. might accidentally launch one.
Just like the guys in the 30's and 50's.
This is truly inspiring. Seeing they’re Joy at the end made me cry. It’s amazing to witness what humans can accomplish when they unite they’re strengths instead of using it to destroy each other. Huge congratulations for these students, bravo ! Now time for my kids and I to build a baking soda rocket in our backyard !
One of the best videos on youtube, PERIOD.
Those were the worst looking pancakes ever and that dude knew they were gonna be bad but he was obviously starving
you made my day hahaha X)
Just another day in the life of a college student, haha!
More like welshcakes
lol same I was watching that poor mans face the entire time. Politely smiling for the cameras but behind that smile pancake man cry :/
Yup. Pan heat too high (you could see the smoke in the background), and batter poured too thick. You make me sad.gif
What I love more about this than the achievement itself, is that this illustrates the curve in technological progression. 60 years ago it was only governments along with contracted specialists with years of experience in their respected fields that had to come together to make space a reality, 15 years ago the first private company took on the challenge and 10 years later revolutionised the design, now...meant in the most respectful way possible and certainly not to patronise, teenagers with almost no life experience, no established careers, fresh into adulthood have absorbed those years of collaborative knowledge and experience and...well, the video says it all. These guys are the future of space tech and travel. This gives me so much hope for the future. Congratulations 😁🙌🙌
60 years ago a group of students from a university in lebanon launched an 8 meter rocket bigger and heavier than this one to an altitude of 150 km, 50km higher than this one... nearly fucking got the rocket into orbit lol. that was in 1962, a bunch of students with their professor
They could have made a similar small rocket 70 years ago reach space. Its basically a passive rocket tube with a solid fuel motor. But back then the telemetry elements would have been way too heavy - for such a small rocket - to have any meaningful results, and reaching space is still a far cry from reaching an orbit.
"15 years ago the first private company took on the challenge" The first private company to reach space was Space Services Inc, nearly 40 years ago in 1982
They remind me of the teenagers of The 100
going to orbit is a very different achievement from going to space
This was absolutely brilliant. You guys had me jumping out of my seat when the call came through of T IV leaving the atmosphere.
No joke. Such an authentic and earned moment
This is a story of human triumph that demands to be looked at
I actually punched the air, I felt apart of something I'm clearly not! it was fantastic to watch young people who give up on "oh what's popular" and applied their brains and abilities and worked together to achieve more than 99.9% of us could ever do!
All accomplished before one of the worst years to pass. Congrats to all the students on their success with a very tough job and loads of anxiety. You all are amazing!
I saw this video 4 years ago when I was in 9th class, and watching this and barely understanding anything I was like, this is soo cool !! Fast forward to 2024 now that I am a fresher in college and a member of the embedded flight software team of our college's space tech club. Watching this video again understanding everything feels like a dream come true. It's just the beginning for me, our club has partnership with the isro and we'll launch a cansat on pslv in december. Then we freshers have an upcoming weather balloon project. Someday I hope we build our own propulsion systems and model rockets that can reach space too !!
I’m in a similar position to you, except in Scotland. Good luck man!
This is some really amazing work done by the students. 1. The cinematography, production design, music composition, lighting and direction of this documentary film are so immersive that I didnt even wink my eye for a second while the movie was playing. The movie only increased my adrenaline rush every second the rocket was being built.
2. The atudents of USC have done a brilliant and award winning job of putting what they have learnt in the clasroom on the table. There was failure because they got carried away in the heat of the moment and excitement the first time. There should be checklists before any major operation. That didnt deter them even an inch. They were back with increased enthusiasm, resilience and passion - improving on their past performance and they succeeded. Kudos to them for the wonderful work. So can we see them joining NASA and working on a mission to nearby planets.
This was very professionally made and was exciting and inspirational to watch. Keep up the good work!
i disagree
Gluing in engine in the wrong direction, launching when not ready...
Cooordination is a nightmare when you have so many excited kids.
@@bigsmall246 Well none of that has anything to do with a professionally made video.
I wonder if the film budget is greater than the rocket build/ launch budget?
almost 18 months later, I wonder where they're working now...
Mostly probably shut down for many of those months due to Covid.
Most likely aerospatial industry
Boca
Mcdonald's
Check the attached webpage! its called the "Dome Piercer" basically a further more well designed upgrade to the one in the video
This could easily win awards at a film festival. The videography, filming, editing, and soundtrack of this video is by far the best I have ever seen on this platform, and I’ve been watching UA-cam for 7 or so years. Absolutely incredible work. And congrats on reaching space!
This was insane... I hope everyone on the team that made this launch possible and all before that made this possible know how important they are to breaking such an amazing achievement. I can't even imagine the joy that must have been felt by everyone from the start of USCRPL to the moment of launch.
I hope every single one of those kids get hired by SpaceX or NASA.
I hope some of these kids actually build a SpaceX like company. But I doubt that such is no longer possible.
@@aniksamiurrahman6365 why?
@@shravani9106 Why what?
@@aniksamiurrahman6365 nah wanted to know why can't they build a Pvt space company? U said it's no longer possible
@@shravani9106 Oh! There are a few reasons:
1. Space tech requires a lot of expertise, capital and development time to begin with. You can't start it from your dorm room with only your laptop like Facebook/google.
2. Space isn't a regular market. It's not like Uber where you are sure of thousands of customers each seconds. Very few space launch take place each year and most launch govt. assets. Which means the market is small and you also need strong diplomatic lobbies to get them.
3. All these demand for capital, expertise, lobbies etc also demands superior management skills. Young entrepreneurs almost always lack this, for things like app they have time to pick up the skill along the way. But for space company, you need a lot of it just to take the first step.
4. Big boys like Jeff Bezos or Richard Branson are already in the game. These people have the money and decades of experience on management and leadership and also all the lobbies. Bright-eyed entrepreneurs stand very little chance before them.
All these are just my opinion. I'm a techie not a business analyst. Anyway take a look on Copenhagen suborbital. They are advancing slowly with a modest goal. So they are slowly building their managerial and technical expertise also building reputation along the way. Still It will probably take them the better part of the next decade to achieve this goal, given they don't shut down due to some horrible accident.
This is a story of human triumph that demands to be looked at. Hats off to the dev team and sponsors for being able to make this a reality, and the amazing production work behind this documentary. 11/10
"hey, don't launch it yet"
"Oh alright I'll just press this little red button here"
HAHAHAHAAHAHHAAHAHHAHA!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Very impressive production. This is how documentaries ought to be done. The rocket was awesome as were all the students. Guess outfits like SpaceX know where the talent is. Hope y'all do well ...
As a rocketeer and a creative professional, this hits all of my senses at once. The design, engineering, problem solving, videography, storytelling, and editing....wow! Not only did you succeed in your mission to reach space, but the elegance of your presentation told your story in a way that is sure as hell to inspire more people and more endeavors like this. Rock on!
13:40 ready for launch with his lens-cap still on ;-)
The educational value of this experiment is 10% about rocketry, 30% about learning team work, 50% about how massively important are failures when correctly feedback into the process . And that makes up for 90%... the last 10% for sure about how to make an amazing and inspiring video for the generations to come.
Well done kids, your diapers are coming off!
3:56 That speech sounded straight out of a movie and it must have felt so cool to say.
Kudos to Joseph DeRose. I edited television professionally for 30years. This is first-rate. Also, congratulations to the entire student team. Outstanding!
This was amazingly well shoot, edited, and produced. I felt the full range of emotions from failure to success!
This is amazing. I was in a rocket club throughout my senior years of college too, and we were aiming to reach an altitude of 100k ft with a two stage rocket. Sadly second stage didnt ignite and the rocket came in ballistic. I didn't have the chance to try it a second time either. Seeing you guys try time after time is very inspiring though, I'm happy for y'all. Space or nothing
What was your propellent fuel?
The amount of effort, time, quality, knowledge, professional work, ilusion, emotions and euforia put in this project and on the making of this video make it one of the best in YT right now.
Well done kiddos! That was epic, thanks for sharing it with the world!
I am a baby boomer and remember watching on black and white TVs- manned launches going back to Shepard to Armstrong--Yes I was a real space geek since age 12. This is so wonderful to see a bunch of young people working on such a project--with such an intense goal to touch the sky--I see some hope for our next generation and wish an old geezer like me could have been there
The genius behind the editing of the first launch. WHOOSH, there it goes, and I was thinking, “WHERE WAS THE COUNTDOWN, WTF!?”
That was the point. Half the team wasn’t ready for launch. Neither was the audience. Well done, film school kid.
For those of you thinking this is awesome, man have I got some news for you. 'Student Designs Teams" are a whole world of collegiate engineering competitions. Rocketry, small scale formula one, small scale Baja off-roading, autonomous sailing, competitive blacksmithing, robotics and more.
These teams are incredible and as someone who also gave every spare moment to one of these teams through my five years in university, they are all incredibly worth it. I still remember the elation at seeing/piloting a project come to fruition before my eyes.
@@artemdown6609 cut my teeth on the UBC Baja team and then helped start UBC Volcan (competative sword/blacksmithing)!
One can really feel the intensity, struggle and nervousness of those exceptional people, what a great documentary - thanks for making this!
Watching that pancake flip, you know that shit was gonna end in disaster.
Foreshadowing ;)
Breathtaking. This video restarted a fire that i've lost many years ago.
I was part of a team of undergraduate engineers at NM State U, an hour south of where the final launch shown here is, that attempted the same thing in 2008: to be the first student-led team to break the Karmen line. Unfortunately it was not a success. Congrats to these kids for achieving history!
The production of the video is my favorite part, nice job to the one who edited and showed their story in the best way.
Now I *really* want to get out of my room, talk with friends and do something similar to this! Veeery inspiring!
READ A LOT. I just recently built my first scratch built 20,000ft Rocket. Lots of calculating weight and thrust and flutter and material science.
@@nissan300ztt Yeah, for now at least I have some experience on KSP and Arduino, just gotta apply it to the real world
@@rafaelgutierrez7845Lmao. Experience on KSP 😂
This looks, sounds and feels like a Netflix Documentary. I would not be surprised to see the logo at the beginning. Everyone on the project did a truly amazing job
Nah, this was actually well researched and had value.
One of the best documentaries i have watched hands down.
I will probably never be a part of such a project, but this video SO WELL MADE, that for 30 mins, I was a part of the team, the journey, feeling each and every step towards the grand goal of reaching space, and when they made it, I felt a wave of happiness from head to toe like I MADE IT! Excellent job guys, you are beyond phenomenal.
I think I have seen this documentary close to 5 times because of how amazing it is!
That ending made me tear up.
I hope all of these people get to be engineers at spacex or nasa.
Space is the next frontier & we need to explore it!
Its a shame this has not been put on trending or gained more views because this is an absolute beauty of a video. I wish I had seen this earlier!
I agree with you
Literally gave me goosebumps. I can't tell you how happy it makes me to see people so passionate about space .
I'm at the University at Buffalo's SEDS group and I watch this on a regular basis so that I make sure that our avionics computer is on track. Very inspirational.
Thanks for that masterpice of a MOVIE….. i am a produkt designer myself and to see the joy, the grind and teamwork of young people to accomplish that kind of technology is just unbelivable … for real i shed in tears after the crossing of the athmosphere. thanks you all for this masterpice and the hope i got in our generation ❤
Amazing! The story itself is truly inspiring, and this video really does it justice!
“Goose” will be making pancakes on Mars. It’s a delight to see all that brain power in such young frames. You can’t teach that level of motivation.
Oh the drama, the suspense, the emotion. Such a good film.
The audacity of this little group of humans. BRAVO!
Why is this only just appearing in my recommended? This is amazing.
Don’t let the negative comments let you down btw, be proud of this achievement and the work you’ve done. There will always be a few haters but eventually they’ll come to understand just how significant this was.
This is so inspiring!!! You guys deserve way more attention.
Props to the edit team. Made it compelling as Hell
Excellently directed and shot! Fantastic professional level work. And a huge congratulations to those indomitable students who fought themselves right into rocket history books. :D
lol they accomplished nothing, the mission failed for a stupid reason, all their hard work was all for nothing, a big waste, that's why they didnt benefit in anyway after this.
@@thefunshackwars5418 tf you mean? Their 4th rocket went to space and landed mostly intact, and they learned how NOT to launch a rocket, In no way a failure.
@@thefunshackwars5418 they are first student group successfully launched a rocket into space. Their name will be written in rocket history book, and will be remember for thousands of years after.
And you, just an average person, no one will remember you after you die, there will be nothing to prove you had been existed
@@bacphan7582 Why are you personally attacking him? Wtf is wrong with you? He didn't even insult them??!!!!
Also, their name will definitely not be written in any history book taught in any school across any place on earth.
The real talent the we perceive here on UA-cam is the art of story telling. Great work. Absolutely.
This video inspires me so much. I am trying to get fellow space nerds and engineers at my school to go for a space shot. This team is truly the future of Aerospace and I greatly admire the maturity and professionalism displayed in the film. GREAT WORK!!!
Amazing short film. Great storytelling, camera work and editing. I was so invested that I was screaming with the rest of the group during successful confirmation of hitting space. I feel the emotion of every character. How does this not have more views and you have more subscribers?
Beautifully filmed, edited, and scored … and it’s about rockets 🚀 Well done. 👏🏼
it must have been truly heartbreaking to lose so much hard work to a simple communication error. honestly massive kudos to the entire team for managing to move on and try again. that would've broken me
Traveler III launch was the embodiment of the adage, "too many cooks in the kitchen", but watching them learn from that and succeed with Traveler IV was inspiring. Good job on the filming and editing on this, your film making enhanced this achievement
You know they put their hearts into it, when they got a full professional video documentation of the project. Beautifully done, loved to see the that passion.
My guess is that, since this is USC, this documentary was some film student's project.
@@sciencecompliance235 That may be, but that really doesn't take any of the skill and passion put into this away. (not that you implied that)
"When it is obvious that the goals cannot be reached, don't adjust the goals, adjust the action steps."
This deserves more recognition
The first student rocket to space happened in 1997 with a sounding rocket in New Zealand IIRC.
Was that the guy from Rocketlab?
This is the U.S. no other students.. humans.. records.. exist outside it...
@@rescyou yeah , like all those "world championships and champions" they have over there..."World champion of Alabama Pumpkin seed spitting" lol
@Ronald Vincent The USC team's rocket can also be classified as a sounding rocket. That term refers to any sub orbital rocket taking measurements for research purposes. That said, I can't find anything about this New Zealand student launch
@@Hugh.Manatee he specifically was referring to mass produced commercial sounding rockets
What an absolutely amazing film! It's rare to be so engrossed and so captivated all the way through. My heart was racing with them as the countdown started. Well made and well done all!
This was great, I searched for Lauren on linkedIn to see where she ended up 4 years after this was made, it was the highlight of my day to see she is working at SpaceX!
Halfway through the video and hoping the launch goes better than the pancakes.
Beautifully produced Joseph. Congratulations.
This is awesome!!! how has this not hit like millions of views?!
now and then YT recommends something good and this was better than good, so inspiring to see these students work so hard with such passion.
This is an incredible film on top of the topic being an incredible achievement. I am so happy that I found this. Huge congratulations to everyone involved!
This is the most beautiful and inspiring video I have ever seen in my life. The documentary itself is beautifully put together, not to mention the USCRPL team's incredible journey. Thank you for making a gem like this available to us
Best thing I watch today on Internet 😊.
@Joseph DeRose.... WOW. Their achievement was amazing, but you brought it to us all.
It's crazy the amount of hours that goes into unseen subsystems like avionics and recovery, but when they fail, those are all that's on people's minds.
Excellent job and truly inspiring.
When I was 12, I stole potassium nitrate from the school's chemistry lab, it was lefted to rot in the cupboard. I made a simple rocket with it and launched it.
It didn't fly that high, but it felt great. When no one was home that morning, my work with the gas mask I prepared from clothes and dealing with dosens of pots made me feel like a genius scientist.
The best day of my life ended when I was beaten by my father in the evening because I turned my house into the canteen with potassium nitrate, I was reported to the police by my neighbors who heard the explosion and I was expelled from school for theft.
I am currently working in a canned food factory, this video impressed me very much. It's nice to see some people trying good things for humanity with their dreams. Well done guys!
It’s never too late to live your dream!!
Hey you guys, you definitely are inspiring. I'll share this with my former students. All of these guys are what US students bring as the most valuable to whole humanity. I wish them everlasting successes.
Great story! really impressed, made me feel like I had a real connection to the launch at 25:25, real chills, my heart was fluttering.
This is the reason I loved Mechanical engineering far more than Computer science Engineering. It can be felt after watching this masterpiece
The editing and the sort of dramatic music and clips are so like mesmerizing it just makes you want to be a part of something like this.
Who says that college kids cant do anything. This is proof showing if you have people with the same drive as you can achieve anything. Just keep on working for it and you will get there. Best quote for this is " Never give up never surrender".