Evan Hadfield explains why astronaut father's tweets went viral - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 05:45 AM | Calgary | -11.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Saskatchewan

Evan Hadfield explains why astronaut father's tweets went viral

The son of Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield was in Regina Tuesday, talking about why his father's social media posts from space were so massively popular with with the public.

Social media expert in Regina Tuesday to speak at conference

Chris Hadfield got millions of YouTube views after he sang David Bowie's Space Oddity from space. (CBC)

The son of Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield was in Regina Tuesday, talking about why his father's social media posts from space were so massively popular with with the public.

Evan Hadfieldwas a keynote speaker at the Saskatchewan Professional Marketing Association annual conference in Regina.

The elder Hadfield received wide acclaim for his social media presence while aboard the International Space Station in 2013. But it was Hadfieldthe younger who worked on the strategy and did much of the legwork.

He was less than keen at the start, particularly since in the song [Space Oddity], the astronaut dies.=- Evan Hadfieldexplainshow his father Chris'sfamousvideofromspace came to be.

After numerous Twitter and Facebook posts, the capper was a video of Chrisperforming David Bowie's Space Oddity in near-zero gravity.

Speaking with Morning Edition host Sheila Coles,Evan said when he brought the idea to his father, Chriswas a little skeptical at first.

What made his astronaut father's tweets and videos so compelling is that they looked at space from the average person's perspective, Evan Hadfield says. (CBC News)

"He was less than keen at the start, particularly since in the song, the astronaut dies," he said. "So, we rewrote the words."

The song turned out be a viral hit, garnering millions of views on YouTube.

Looking back at the impact of all the social media posts from space, what made it successful was to look at things from the public's perspective, rather than from an astronaut's.

Astronaut Chris Hadfield changed the way people in space communicated with the public in a series of viral tweets, Facebook posts and videos when he was aboard the International Space Station in 2013. (CBC Arts)

"So those videos of brushing your teeth, going to sleep, cutting your hair.... these are things that everyone can understand, across the world, not just in Canada."

Evan Hadfield said he's looking forward to further collaborations with his father, who retired from the Canadian Space Agency shortly after returning from space.