The singer Katy Perry kissed the ground and kept a flower in the air when she returned to space from her blue origin trip and revealed that she would write a song about experience.
The 40-year-old sang Louis Armstrongs what a wonderful world, as she and the Six-Woman crew, also from CBS-Morning moderator Gayle King, the former rocket scientist Aisha Bowe, the astronaut Amanda Nguyen and the film producer Kerianne Flynn and Bezos, Lauren Sanchez.
When she came from Jeff Bezo’s new Shepard NS-31, Perry kept a daisy in the air to honor her daughter Daisy before kissing the floor, and bezos congratulated her, where to answer: “Thank you”.
After her return to the earth, the Roar singer said: “I feel super connected to love, so connected with love.
“I think this experience showed me that they never know how much love is in them, how much love they have to give and how loved them until the day they start.”
When Perry spoke about the tribute to her daughter: “Daisies are common flowers, but they grow through every condition, they go through cement, they walk through cracks, they walk through walls, they are resilient.
“They are powerful, they are strong, they are everywhere.
“Flowers are for me, God’s smile, but it is also a memory of our beautiful earth and the flowers here and God’s smile and the beautiful magic, which is everywhere, everywhere around us and even in a simple daisy.
“So, to really appreciate it and to remember it and take care of it, to protect it.”
She was heard as she screamed “Oh my god” when she was painted into space after the singer had been seen in the rocket when she retired from the Gantry at the starting facilities in West texas.
Her co -tronaut king, who praised Perry’s decision what a wonderful world to sing in space, said she wanted to talk about the world, even though her crew asked her to sing roar or fireworks.
Perry explained her decision to sing the song and said: “I treated this song in the past, and obviously my higher myself always steers the ship because I had no idea that one day I would decide to sing a little bit of it in space.
“But I think it’s not about me, it’s not about singing my songs, it’s about a collective energy, it’s about us.
“It is about creating space for future women and claiming space and belonging, and it’s about this wonderful world that we see right out there and appreciate them.
“This is all for the benefit of the earth.”
After a countdown by Mission Control, Flames shot out of the vehicle when it successfully started the air and floor team and “looks good” with the inscription.