Hot News 21/04/2025 03:38

Blue Origin Slammed by Online Conspiracy Theorists Claiming Mission Was a Hollywood FAKE


Katy Perry Went to Space with the Girls—And the Internet Thinks It's CGI?

In case you missed it: A group of high-profile women—including pop star Katy Perry—just went on an 11-minute space trip aboard Jeff Bezos’ rather suggestively-shaped rocket.

Joining Katy were Lauren Sánchez (Bezos’ fiancée), rocket scientist Aisha Bowe, activist Amanda Nguyen, film producer Kerianne Flynn, and CBS journalist Gayle King. All six suited up in what looked like Marvel-designed space gear, and naturally, global media couldn’t look away.


A Short Trip, But a Major Media Moment

The whole ride—from launch to touchdown—lasted just 11 minutes in West Texas, but the internet lit up like a launchpad. Oprah Winfrey, Kris Jenner, and Khloe Kardashian were among the star-studded crowd cheering them on.

But for the rest of us watching from afar, one question loomed large: “Wait… that’s it?”


Butterfly Cards and a Conspiracy Storm

After footage from inside the capsule was released, the public got a glimpse of the crew floating around in zero gravity. Yet, instead of admiring Earth from orbit, Katy Perry held up a hard-to-read butterfly card teasing her upcoming tour setlist.

Cue the chaos.

Within a day, conspiracy theories exploded across X (formerly Twitter).

Some users questioned the legitimacy of the launch altogether:

“Anyone else think that the Blue Origin flight today was a Hollywood fake?”

Others pointed fingers at CGI, AI, and even Satanic symbolism.

One user claimed, “That video was clearly made in a studio,” while another went so far as to call it “a massive Satanic ritual.”

Because let’s be honest—no celebrity conspiracy theory is complete without throwing in Satan or the Illuminati.


Why Are So Many People Calling It Fake?

According to Dr. Daniel Jolley, a conspiracy psychology expert at the University of Nottingham:

“This mission blends two of the most conspiracy-prone areas—space exploration and celebrity culture.”

Basically, the moment a celebrity boards a rocket, the internet straps in for a wild ride of its own. Every frame, every floating grin, every spin in zero gravity becomes “proof” of a cover-up.


Staged or Spectacular PR?

Whether you believe in rockets or in rendering software, one thing’s clear: Blue Origin and this girl-powered space crew launched more than a capsule—they launched a cultural moment.

Real or not, they got everyone to look up.

Even if you don’t care about NASA or space travel, maybe you’re just wondering what Katy’s opening song will be. Either way, this mission was 100% 2024 energy: short, surreal, and absolutely viral.

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