When a Russian spaceship docked as a lifeboat for three stranded men at the International Space Station in February,gay video chat sex one may have wondered if Sergei Krikalev, heading the rescue mission, felt any deja vu.
If that name doesn't ring a bell, he's also sometimes known as "the last Soviet" for his more than 311 days spent in space as the Soviet Union collapsed 250 miles beneath him in 1991. He was only meant to be at the Mir station for five months. Instead, he remained for close to a year, never abandoning the outpost.
Today, Krikalev, the former cosmonaut, is the executive director of human spaceflight for the Russian space agency. That means it's on his watch to make sure NASA astronaut Frank Rubio and cosmonauts Sergey Prokopyev and Dmitry Petelin get back home safely after their ship sprang a leak at the station in December 2022. The three marooned crew members were supposed to return this month. But their mission will now stretch for a year, until a new crew arrives to relieve them on a separate spacecraft in six months.
Krikalev's story of being stranded in space is now getting a perhaps overdue spotlight with a new podcast series called "The Last Soviet." And it's being told by another cosmonaut, Lance Bass.
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If that name doesn't ring a bell, he's also sometimes known as the other blond heartthrob in NSYNC. That's right: theLance Bass, who sang "Tearin' up my heart" with JT, who had a cameo in Zoolander, a satire on the very serious ambitions of beautiful people.
Bass, now 43, might seem an unlikely bard for a podcast about the fall of the Iron Curtain and a space mission gone awry that left Krikalev without a country. Few may remember that boy-band member Bass almost made it to space on a Soyuz spacecraft himself. In 2002, he spent about six months, off and on, training in Star City, Russia, and was certified by Russia and NASA to fly a mission to the space station. At the last moment, Bass lost his seat aboard the ship when his Hollywood financiers failed to pony up $20 million to pay for the trip.
In a recent interview with Mashable, Bass said he learned about Krikalev's story while training on a Russian military base for his own mission. From then on, he considered the cosmonaut a personal hero.
"I heard it from other people, my professors, after class," Bass said. "We would always kind of bond, and that's where you would sometimes go into the sauna and drink vodka and beat each other with branches, and they would very brilliantly tell their stories of their history."
"The funny thing is," he continued, "I have no idea if I've met him or not."
The podcast, an iHeartPodcasts production with Kaleidoscope and Samizdat Audio, comes at a poignant time, with the past serving as prologue. The Russia-Ukraine War resurfaces tensions from the Cold War, and, yet again, a crew will spend an unplanned year in space, although this time not for geopolitical reasons. Despite the conflict and strained relations with the United States, the two nations' space agencies have continued to work collaboratively at the space station.
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"You would sometimes go into the sauna and drink vodka and beat each other with branches, and they would very brilliantly tell their stories of their history."
Still, that global hostility has made bringing Krikalev's story to listeners challenging, Bass said.
"Unfortunately, because of the war, Russia is not allowing him to speak, especially to American podcasters," he said. "But we did get his friends and family and colleagues, and we really get the story of him through their eyes."
It's not clear if Krikalev was prevented from participating. He recently joined a NASA news conference and obliged questions from U.S. reporters on the status of the leaky Soyuz spacecraft. He spoke of working "together with our NASA colleagues" to minimize safety risks. Roscosmos, however, did not return a request for comment from Mashable regarding the podcast.
The series, which debuted Feb. 15, weaves in Bass' own experiences with the Russian space program, an unusual story in its own right. The former pop star was just 23 when he pursued an offer to fly aboard a Soyuz spacecraft on a 10-day mission. Space tourism is all abuzz today, but two decades ago when Bass geared up for the trip, only two billionaires had traveled before him in privately paid seats. Had it gone to plan, he might have become the youngest spacefarer, onboard the space station just three months before the deadly Space Shuttle Columbia disaster.
At the time, NSYNC was on the last leg of its final tour, Justin Timberlake wanted to pursue a solo album, and Bass was figuring out his next career moves. Aside from the singer's childhood love of space, the idea of becoming a cosmonaut seemed so random to Bass.
"I thought it was a joke at first because it just sounds silly to even say," he said. "I really did think Ashton Kutcher was 'punking' me because that was such a huge show."
Soon he found himself in a U.S. hospital undergoing a surgical procedure to correct an irregular heartbeat that could have otherwise prevented him from space flight. Then, he was on a plane to a Russian military base, immersed in a new language, and cramming astrophysics lessons.
There were parabolic flights and rides on a centrifuge, like the Gravitron at an amusement park, to simulate the effects of weightlessness in space. Even camping trips to test his wilderness survival instincts.
The preparations ended unceremoniously, two weeks before his rocket launch. Without the payment, Roscosmos gave his seat to another cosmonaut.
Now, with so many opportunities for private citizens to fly to space with Virgin Galactic, Blue Origin, and SpaceX, Bass is interested in finishing what he started. It was the podcast that rekindled his fire, he told Mashable. He hopes it will have the same effect on his listeners, claiming a new audience excited about space.
Meanwhile, as others ponder Krikalev's space legacy, he's not done composing it. The recently damaged Soyuz spacecraft will return empty to Earth later this month so Roscosmos can perform a post-flight investigation.
Both the Russian space program and NASA determined in January it was unsafe to bring the crew back. They will oversee the men's return home later this year on the spacecraft sent to replace it.
"We know that situation is not very good," Krikalev said then, "but it's not a situation with deadend where we don't have any solution."
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