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Mae Jemison corrects CBS anchor Vladimir Duthiers after he says ‘mankind’ ahead of Blue Origin flight

The first black woman to challenge the space chined CBS anchor after a journalist used the term “humanity” in an interview with her leading up to Blue Origin’s historic All-Women’s flight on Monday morning.

Pioneering astronaut Mae Jemison scots anchor Vladimir’s Dachie as he insisted on the importance of a star-studded flight crew, including singer Katy Perry, Gail King and Jeff Bezos’ fiancee ‘Fiancé Sale Loren Sanchez from ‘CBS Morning’.

“Why would we explain to our audience, even on trips like this, to space, or even to humanity?” duthiers asked Jemison. “CBS Mornings”


May Jemison spoke with CBS Monday morning. CBS

Jemison, who became the first black woman to enter space in 1992 with the Space Shuttle effort, quickly revised her CBS anchor.

“So it benefits humanity and I’m going to continue making corrections,” she said as duthiers issued Mea culpa.

“And because humanity and artificial missions and artificial missions are expanding our perspective on who will be the space because this is exactly the purpose of this mission.”

“I’m sorry, humanity,” Darcheese quickly intercepted.


Jemison smiles as suit engineer Sharon McDoll performs a defenseless, pressurized leak check in her space suit before the STS-47 Spacelab-J mission at the Kennedy Space Center, Florida on September 12, 1992.
Suit technician Sharon McDoughle smiles as suit technician Sharon McDoughle makes an unprotected, pressurized leak in her space suit before the STS-47 Spacelab-J mission at Shuttle Endeavor at Kennedy Space Center, Florida on September 12, 1992. Getty Images

Jemison then shared her answer.

“Why is the universe so important? Just looking at it gives you a perspective on this world that you can’t get from looking down on the ground,” she said.

Civil rights activist Amanda Nuguen, rocket scientist Aisha Bow and film producer Kellianne Flynn were also part of the historic takeoff where a woman flew 62 miles above the Earth.

The Blue Origin Mission was the 11th human flight for the Bezos-owned Rocket Company and the first all-female space trip since the 1963 solo adventure of Soviet astronaut Valentina Teleshkova.

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