16 July 2009, by Webmaster
As a lad, glued to the TV coverage of the Moon landing with 600 million others around the world, actor James Marsters was a little put out by how fuzzy the picture was.
"I was allowed to stay up late, and I was never allowed to stay up late," he remembers.
"I’d been told that this was very important. It seemed very cool at the time, but I couldn’t understand why the picture was so bad. In my mind I thought it was going to look spectacular but it was all grainy. And then I got sleepy and got (...)