Brewer
Jedi Council Member
Hello!
The hair of the female astronauts appears heavily lacquered. Notice how it just bounces around a little but retains it's form, right down to individual strands that are shaped into curls. It should flow around similar to how hair does underwater but no matter what angle or velocity she assumes their hair retains the same form, even when the brushes it back. Does NASA and the ESA ship cans of hairspray up to the ISS at $15000 a kilo? Perhaps it's a the regulation NASA hair do, love to see their hair product budget, do corporations sponsor them?
This video compares the bouffant ISS hairstyles to their terrestrial versions.
Cady Coleman's bad hair day, watch at 1:25 as she starts to rise up and assume a horizontal position, hair stays the same. Looks like shes in the 'vomit comet' and it's banking during it's zero G phase.
Even fashion conscious space ladies with trendy bobs feel the need to gel, wax and spray their short tresses into submission. Look at the way her hair moves, quite earth-like to me. Watch the video through and see if you notice anything else out of order as she explains her LEO beauty regime.
Something not quite right here!
Cheers, Brewer
The hair of the female astronauts appears heavily lacquered. Notice how it just bounces around a little but retains it's form, right down to individual strands that are shaped into curls. It should flow around similar to how hair does underwater but no matter what angle or velocity she assumes their hair retains the same form, even when the brushes it back. Does NASA and the ESA ship cans of hairspray up to the ISS at $15000 a kilo? Perhaps it's a the regulation NASA hair do, love to see their hair product budget, do corporations sponsor them?
This video compares the bouffant ISS hairstyles to their terrestrial versions.
Something not quite right here!
Cheers, Brewer

. Summing up, wrong protective gear, no BA, no helmets or gloves. GD should have been assembled, calibrated and prepped before hatch opening. Hatch should have been cracked and atmosphere sampled, not swung wide open. Hatch should be designed so an external GD probe could be inserted without the module's air mixing. Improper use of GD, should be taken to every nook and cranny of the new vessel for sampling and with hatch closed behind them to prevent mixing. Non essential personnel nearby. Every ISS astronaut should know how to use safety gear but it seems crude at best. Seems like NASA's safety protocols and build quality haven't progressed since Apollo 1 when Gus Grissom hung a lemon on the command module! This video is fake. The ISS is there but I doubt whether it's fully and continuously staffed. Cheers