A single, flickering frame has thrown gasoline on an old fire. As Artemis II hurtles farther from Earth than any crewed mission
in history, a strange “green screen” glitch during a live CNN interview has conspiracy theorists screaming fraud.
A floating plush toy, a few ghostly letters—“OW” and “TAN”—and suddenly, millions doubt what they’re se… Continues…
For some, the Artemis II clip is proof that nothing in space can be trusted.
The toy named “Rise” drifts weightless through the capsule, and behind it, letters seem to flash in and out of existence, like a bad special effect. To those already
suspicious, it feels like catching the magician’s hand in the act, a moment that confirms every fear about faked missions and manufactured heroes.
But the truth here is painfully ordinary. The “glitch” is a quirk of Chroma Key technology, the same layering method used in weather forecasts and movie sets.
CNN’s on-screen text refreshed out of sync with the rest of the video
, momentarily revealing letters that were never meant to be seen. No grand cover-up. No studio soundstage.
Just a fragile, human attempt to share something wondrous with the world—through imperfect tools that, for a heartbeat, made reality look like a lie