Conspiracy theorists claim Katy Perry’s Blue Origin mission was FAKE
April 15, 2025
Katy Perry, Lauren Sanchez and four other high-profile women were blasted into space aboard a Blue Origin rocket yesterday afternoon.
During their 11-minute journey, they reached an altitude of 66.5 miles (107 km), crossing the Karman Line and officially entering space.
But not everyone is convinced that the all-female crew actually left Earth, as wild conspiracy theories ignited online.
Sceptics have panned the launch as a ‘Hollywood fake’, claiming it had ‘the worst CGI any of these fake space agencies has produced’.
Wild theories claim that Jeff Bezos‘ New Shepard mission took place entirely inside a film studio, with the crew ‘floating’ in tanks of water.
Some online theorists went even further, claiming that the entire mission was a ‘satanic’ ritual led by Katy Perry and Jeff Bezos.
While none of these claims have any basis in reality, psychologists say that this mission was a ‘perfect storm for conspiratorial thinking’.
Dr Daniel Jolley, an expert on the psychology of conspiracies from the University of Nottingham, told MailOnline: ‘This mission brings together two domains that have long been fertile ground for conspiracy theories: space exploration and celebrity culture.’
While the event was streamed live and covered by the world’s media organisations, online theorists think they have seen through the lies.
On X, formerly Twitter, a sceptical user asked: ‘Anyone else think that the Blue Origin flight today was a Hollywood fake?’
Another said it was ‘one of the biggest lies in the history of mankind’, adding ‘Hollywood studios have enough technology to produce impressive special effects.’
‘Look another Hollywood production of fake space,’ one commenter added.
While another chimed in: ‘When you realise that Katy Perry & those other celebrities are actually in an Hollywood Movie Studio inside a pool, instead of fake space.’
Just like the conspiracy surrounding the moon landings, many users claimed that travelling to space was impossible, and therefore the flight must be fake.
Meanwhile, adherents to the ‘flat Earth’ theory suggested that space itself was fake so the rocket couldn’t possibly have flown anywhere.
As one commenter put it: ‘The whole key of the space is fake movement is to show what they’re selling us as ‘space’ is a lie. A literal Hollywood creation.’
However, the involvement of big-name celebrities like Katy Perry and the billionaire Jeff Bezos also attracted a more intensely paranoid strain of conspiracy.
Many commenters on X believed that the mission was part of an elaborate satanic or occult ritual led by Katy Perry.
On X, one commenter wrote: ‘Katy Perry one of the biggest industries occult promoter is one of the signs this is fake.
Another added: ‘Satanic rituals in the middle of Passover to show they mock God what else would Katy Perry and co be doing at the week of Passover?’
While one commenter wrote: ‘Katy Perry has been part of the Satan scandal bs for a while now. Ask why… why these women? Why all female? Why space?’
Conspiracy theorists centred on the NS-31 mission patch worn by each of the passengers, claiming that this was actually a satanic symbol.
‘Katy Perry is a known Satan worshiper. They are all wearing Satan worshiping labels on their space outfits,’ one commenter proclaimed.
While another asked: ‘Did you notice the logo on Katy Perry and her fellow Blue Origin Space travellers’ patch is the satanic goat with an upside down cross if you flip it over?’
However, Dr Jolley explains that this is not an entirely new conspiratorial claim.
He says: ‘The idea that celebrities are part of satanic cults or secret rituals is surprisingly common in online conspiracy spaces – It ties into longstanding fears about hidden evil among the powerful, which go back centuries.
‘In the internet age, these old tropes have taken new forms, often blending religious imagery with more modern anxieties about control, manipulation, and media influence. Katy Perry has been a frequent target of these narratives, like many other celebrities, who are seen as powerful.’
Likewise, the sense that this privately funded space flight was an ‘elite’ project added another layer of perceived secrecy for conspiracy theorists to hold on to.
In reality, at 14:30 BST (08:30 local time), the NS-31 mission launched from Blue Origin’s Launch Site One, about 30 miles north of Van Horn, Texas.
On board were Jeff Bezos’ fiancé Lauren Sánchez, pop star Katy Perry, CBS Mornings co-host Gayle King, film producer Kerianne Flynn, activist Amanda Nguyen, and former NASA rocket scientist Aisha Bowe.
After liftoff, the New Shepard rocket carried the crew capsule just over the Karman Line, a boundary used to define the edge of space.
After enjoying a few minutes of weightlessness, the capsule fell back to Earth and landed safely just 11 minutes after liftoff.
However, the conditions surrounding the mission were almost perfect for creating conspiracies.
Psychologists believe that people are likely to adopt a conspiracy theory when some of their basic needs aren’t being met – including the ‘epistemic’ need to have the truth.
Professor Karen Douglas, a psychologist from the University of Kent, told MailOnline: ‘People are looking for ways to understand what is going on and they don’t like the uncertainty that often surrounds unfolding events.
‘Also, a simple explanation is often not very appealing. People assume that there must somehow be a bigger explanation, or more going on than people know about.’
The natural mystery of space travel, combined with the involvement of celebrities and the billionaire Jeff Bezos, created uncertainty which allowed the conspiracies to flourish.
Combining these factors with social media means that lots of people who might have been feeling uncertain suddenly have access to a more satisfying conspiratorial explanation.
Professor Douglas says: ‘It is easy to find and share conspiracy theories on social media. People who are interested in conspiracy theories can find them almost immediately and they can spread rapidly.
‘Once conspiracy theories are out there, they are difficult to quell, especially when some of the facts are still unknown.’
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