Stand up for the facts!

Our only agenda is to publish the truth so you can be an informed participant in democracy.
We need your help.

More Info

I would like to contribute

$
Instagram posts
Instagram posts
stated on May 8, 2023 an Instagram post:

Dropped globe in video shows NASA astronauts filming in TV studio.

False
By Jeff Cercone
May 8, 2023

NASA astronaut dropped the ball, but video shows only part of the story

If your time is short

  • A NASA astronaut on the International Space Station dropped a plastic globe during a 2021 livestream video, pushing it down and out of the camera frame with his arm motion.

  • The full video shows the globe floating back into the frame seconds later, as well as the globe and microphones floating at other times during the event.

See the sources for this fact-check

A video on social media claimed NASA astronauts fumbled a ball and proved to the world that the International Space Station is really just a television studio here on Earth. But the video doesn’t tell the full story. 

“Watch the ball,” reads text overlaid on a May 8 Instagram video, which shows five astronauts, one holding a globe. Text below the video read, “NASA Actornauts ‘drop the ball’ inside the ISS TV studio on Earth.”

The Instagram video was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

The astronauts in the video — four from NASA and one from the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency — were participating in a livestream Earth Day Q&A on April 21, 2021, hosted by singer Shawn Mendes. From the International Space Station, they fielded questions from children around the world.

Though the video itself is 2 years old, it’s still being used in false social media claims that it shows space exploration isn’t real.

@politifact Replying to @Mayajavaid Did NASA drop the ball? No, this video of an astronaut fumbling a plastic globe isn’t proof that the International Space Station is a TV studio or that the astronauts were acting. #nasa #space #conspiracy #gravity #iss #astronaut #factcheck #fyp #learnontiktok ♬ Astro Beat – Staysee

In the Instagram video clip, Michael Hopkins, the NASA astronaut on the far right, is holding a plastic globe as he answers a question about whether someone can see hurricanes from space.

He held a microphone in his left hand, while holding the globe with his left arm, pressing it against his body. He lost control of the globe, which fell down and out of the frame.

That’s where the clip ends; the Instagram video cuts to a laughing man saying, “Got eeem.” The narrator then returned and said the ball drop proves the astronauts are in a TV studio, not a weightless environment.

But the video is misleading. It shows Hopkins’ arm move downward as he fumbled the globe, pushing the globe in that direction.

Just a few seconds more of the full video — available on NASA’s YouTube page — shows what really happened. Shortly after the globe drops from view, it resurfaces, floating up on the frame’s right side at the 18:53 mark of the video below.

In the full video, the globe first appeared when Japanese astronaut Soichi Noguchi grabbed it from an area behind him. You can see the globe floating in the air while another astronaut answers a question. The globe moved down, up and in place, depending on the hand motions of the astronauts who touched it.

Several times in the video, you can see the microphone floating in space as the astronauts pass it to one another.

An Instagram video claimed that a plastic globe dropped by an astronaut shows that the video of the International Space Station was filmed in a TV studio. But the video showed only part of the story. The full video showed the globe floating up into the frame a few seconds later. It also showed the globe and microphones floating at separate points. 

The claim is False.

Our Sources

Instagram post, May 8, 2023

NASA YouTube video, "Earth Day Q&A with Astronauts in Space | Hosted by Shawn Mendes," April 22, 2021

Browse the Truth-O-Meter

More by Jeff Cercone
Social Media
stated on December 15, 2025 in social media posts:
Brown University student Mustapha Karbouch was a suspect in school shooting.
False
TikTok posts
stated on March 26, 2025 TikTok videos:
Videos show tornadoes hitting Seattle on March 26 and 27.
Pants on Fire!
Facebook posts
stated on March 21, 2025 a Facebook post:
“Elon Musk exposes hidden $20K roof grant. Congress approved it."
Pants on Fire!
Facebook posts
stated on March 10, 2025 a Facebook post:
Photo shows first lady Melania Trump crying.
Pants on Fire!
Social Media
stated on March 5, 2025 in social media posts:
"Apple quietly removed International Women’s Day from their calendar app.”
False
Facebook posts
stated on February 17, 2025 a Facebook post:
“Barack and Michelle Obama locked in bombshell divorce of the century.”
False

NASA astronaut dropped the ball, but video shows only part of the story





Donald Trump
stated on May 4, 2026 a White House event:








Donald Trump
stated on April 23, 2026 remarks at the White House:







Chris Wright
stated on April 19, 2026 an interview on CNN's "State of the Union":