
NASA Seeks Creatives to Tell Moon and Mars Mission Stories
NASA is inviting filmmakers, poets, songwriters, and storytellers to help share the incredible stories behind upcoming Moon landings and Mars missions. The agency wants up to 10 creative partners to bring space exploration to life for everyone.
NASA is opening its doors to artists and storytellers who want to help the world fall in love with space exploration all over again.
The space agency announced this week that it's looking for creative partners to tell the stories behind some of humanity's most ambitious upcoming missions. Filmmakers, documentarians, poets, songwriters, and other storytellers have until June 30 to submit proposals for unfunded partnerships with NASA.
What makes this opportunity special is the access. Selected creators will get behind-the-scenes insights into missions that sound like science fiction but are very real and happening soon.
The Artemis program tops the list. NASA plans to land humans on the Moon again in 2027 with Artemis III, followed by Artemis IV in 2028. The agency is even working toward establishing a permanent Moon base, turning our celestial neighbor into a launching point for deeper space exploration.
Creators can also dive into NASA's nuclear propulsion advances, including the Space Reactor-1 Freedom mission to Mars scheduled for 2028. They're pushing boundaries in aviation too, with cutting-edge flight tests that could reshape how we travel.

NASA isn't funding these partnerships directly, but they're offering something potentially more valuable: access. Selected storytellers can request entry to facilities, interviews with personnel, and the kind of insider perspective that turns technical achievements into human stories.
The agency is primarily seeking U.S. creators but will consider proposals that include some international participants. Submissions should explain which missions interest them most, how they plan to fund and distribute their work, and what specific support they need from NASA.
Why This Inspires
This initiative recognizes something important: space exploration belongs to everyone, not just scientists and engineers. By inviting poets alongside physicists and filmmakers alongside flight directors, NASA is acknowledging that inspiration comes in many forms.
The missions themselves represent genuine human achievement, but their power multiplies when told through diverse creative voices. A documentary might captivate one audience while a song reaches another. Each storyteller brings their unique lens to help people see themselves in humanity's journey beyond Earth.
These aren't just Moon rocks and rocket equations. They're stories about what we can accomplish when we dream together and work toward something bigger than ourselves.
NASA is betting that the right storytellers can help the world feel connected to these missions, turning distant achievements into shared victories that inspire the next generation of explorers, scientists, and dreamers.
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Based on reporting by NASA
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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