Bryson DeChambeau Floats the Theory of Lunar Navigation

Bryson DeChambeau may need to drop his nickname “The Scientist” if NASA hears what he thinks about the moon landing.
No, the pro golfer doesn’t doubt that Neil Armstrong again Buzz Aldrin it actually touched down on the lunar surface in 1969. But the grainy video we’ve all seen? He is not sure about that.
“I don’t think these pictures are real,” DeChambeau, 32, said on the Tuesday, May 19 episode of the “Katie Miller Podcast.” ”But I think we went to the moon.
The two-time US Open champion said he trusts him Elon MuskAsserting that arrival itself has occurred.
“He’s a man who knows a little bit about all that,” DeChambeau said. “Artemis just orbited the moon. So I believe if we use as much of our resources as they say, I think we did.”
And even though he doesn’t believe in the video showing the tiny human step, he’s willing to jump into space in one.
“I think there are different creatures out there, for sure. I believe in UAPs,” DeChambeau said. “UAPs [unidentified aerial phenomenon]UFOs, I think are just aliens. Maybe aliens from another country. But I think there is more. There is much more to this story.”
DeChambeau isn’t the only professional athlete who has expressed doubts about what’s going on up there. The star of the Boston Celtics Derrick White asked about the moon landing on the March 2026 episode of his podcast “White Noise” when he recalled a conversation he had with his head coach, Joe Mazulla.
“He’s on the treadmill and I’m lifting, and he just turned around and said, ‘Can you believe we got to the moon?'” said White, 31. “I don’t think we did. I’m a non-moon person.”
White quickly retracted his comment but left room for doubt.
“Maybe we did, but I don’t think we did,” he continued. “I don’t know. I really don’t know. But I don’t think we did.”
“I wouldn’t call myself a conspiracy. I don’t think I’m that extreme,” said White, who seemed to know how the public would react to his comments. “But I think they’re very interesting. And you know I like to argue, so it makes sense that I get into things like this.”
In 2025, a former NASCAR driver Danica Patrick He revealed that he likes to ask people about the arrival of the moon.
“This contradicts one of the conspiracies [sic] I believe,” he wrote on Instagram, “I don’t care if you think I’m crazy. I already know that I am.”





