WILD conspiracy theories have emerged over the historic all-female Blue Origin flight into space after an apparent gaffe was spotted in the landing video.
The six women –and – travelled just beyond the aboard Blue Origin’s reusable New Shepard rocket, before parachuting back to Earth.





As well as, on board the capsule were morning show icon, ex-NASA rocket scientist Aisha Bowe, civil rights activist Amanda Nguyen andproducer Kerianne Flynn.
The group flew in Bezos' own ship and soared past the Kármán line – the internationally recognised boundary of space.
They spent three minutes in pure weightlessness before the craft safely parachuted back down and landed in .
Footage after the historic mission.
However, viewers spotted a bizarre gaffe in the clip that sparked a slew of conspiracy theories that slammed the mission as “fake”.
In the video, Jeff Bezos is seen wrenching open the hatch from outside to let the all-women crew out of the craft.
However, footage from just minutes earlier clearly shows the capsule door being opened from the inside before being hastily shut.
Dozens of sceptics seized on the moment to claim the entire operation was staged.
One commenter wrote: “It was fake. The girls opened the door to begin with from the inside with no tools.
“They then waited a few minutes, and Jeff Bezos stepped up with some sort of tool and acted like he unlocked the latch.”
Another commenter chimed in: “Can't post this fake s*** enough. Door opens from the inside, they're told to close it because the door can ONLY be opened by an outside person.”
While one commenter wrote: “This s*** is so fake. Watch the door be opened from the inside; then they need a tool to open it from the outside.”
What fuelled these suspicions even more is the fact that the doors were seen opening inwards, unlike most spacecraft with pressurised cabins.
Typical spacecraft have doors that open outwards and require a team of technicians working from the outside to unlock them, especially after a trip to space.
One person said: “Doesn't look like a pressurised hatch to me, more like a flimsy door.”
While another commenter slammed: “Pretty sure pressurised doors don't open inwards, the capsule looks like it's an inflatable tent and the only footage they showed was the ‘weightlessness' part, which you can achieve in a plane.”
And for some viewers, the capsule looked too clean for a space mission.
Meanwhile, the all-women crew was seen doing somersaults while floating in space.
Perry was seen holding up the daisy she brought with her in honour of her four-year-old daughter.
The singer said the space mission was “the highest high”; â and promised to create a song inspired by the trip.
It was later revealed that Perry sang the “What a Wonderful World” in space.
The iconic song, first recorded by American trumpet player and singer Louis Armstrong, was belted out by the Teenage Dream star during the journey.
And Bowe was captured grinning as she showed off a patch representing the Bahamas, with the Earth glowing in the background.
Meanwhile Flynn looked to be marvelling at the unbelievable view of , while Nguyne smiled as she floated around in the capsule.
It marked the 11th human mission for the New Shepard program, which has now flown 52 people, including repeat flyers, to space.
Screams were heard on board the spacecraft as they blasted off.
Jeff Bezos next to the Blue Origin space capsule carrying his fiancée, Sanchez, when the crew landed.
The billionaire, who first fell head over heels for his soon-to-be wife in 2018, was ready to congratulate his partner on the mission soon after she touched down.


