Updated
Updated · NASA · May 22
NASA Wins 4 Telly Awards for Artemis II Coverage After 290 Million Views
Updated
Updated · NASA · May 22

NASA Wins 4 Telly Awards for Artemis II Coverage After 290 Million Views

6 articles · Updated · NASA · May 22
  • Four 2026 Telly Awards went to NASA for Artemis II coverage and related productions, including a Gold for “Artemis II: Humanity’s Return to the Moon.”
  • NASA said the honors recognized its 24/7 Artemis II livestream, which blended live visuals, real-time mission data and expert analysis to make the crewed lunar flight accessible worldwide.
  • Nearly 290 million combined views across NASA platforms made Artemis II the agency’s biggest streaming event, with commercial partners extending potential reach to hundreds of millions more viewers.
  • Two other wins went to a geology-training video for future Moon missions and a telescope documentary script, broadening the awards beyond the flagship Artemis broadcast.
  • Artemis II carried the first humans around the Moon in more than 50 years, giving the awards added weight as NASA pushes its broader lunar exploration campaign.
With the moon landing delayed to 2028, can NASA's media acclaim justify the Artemis program's soaring $93 billion cost?
How will the new Roman telescope, 1,000 times faster than Hubble, change our understanding of dark matter and exoplanets?
As the U.S. and China race for the Moon, what rules will prevent conflict over lunar resources and territory?

NASA’s Artemis II Coverage Reaches 290 Million Viewers, Wins 4 Telly Awards for Groundbreaking Space Storytelling

Overview

NASA's Artemis II mission coverage earned four Telly Awards in 2026, highlighting the agency's exceptional storytelling and digital innovation. The Telly Awards, judged by a council of top industry professionals, recognize only the most compelling and well-produced content. NASA stood out for its creative approach to communicating the excitement of space exploration, using expansive digital platforms and livestreams to reach its largest audience ever. This achievement demonstrates NASA's ability to make complex space missions accessible and engaging for a global audience, setting a new standard for excellence in science communication.

...