Mamdani considering ticker-tape parade for Artemis II crew



A ticker-tape parade down Broadway honoring the Artemis II crew may not be light years away after all — provided NASA picks up the tab.

Mayor Zohran Mamdani said this week his administration is reviewing the feasibility of celebrating the heroic astronauts’ feat of traveling further in space than any other humans.

“When it comes to the Artemis II ticker-tape parade, that is something we have brought back to [my City Hall] team and are looking into the logistics of what that will require,” Mamdani told 1010 WINS, when asked about City Council leaders’ demand that NYC celebrate the crew’s achievements.

NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani said this week his administration is reviewing the feasibility of celebrating the Artemis II crew’s historic feat of traveling further in space than any other humans. Best Image / BACKGRID

But Mamdani strongly hinted he wants NASA to foot the bill.

“I think typically ticker-tape parades have been funded by the organization or entity that’s being celebrated, and that’s part of what we’re looking into right now,” he said.

The city last held a ticker-tape parade in 2024 when it celebrated the New York Liberty’s WNBA championship down the Canyon of Heroes, with the team picking up most of the cost.

It’s unclear how much the Liberty parade cost, but a similar parade honoring the US women’s national soccer team’s World Cup championship cost $2 million — with NYC taxpayers reportedly paying $1.5 million.

Speaker Julie Menin (D-Manhattan), Minority Leader David Carr (R-Staten Island), Deputy Speaker Nantasha Williams (D-Queens) and Councilman Frank Morano (R-Staten Island) sent Mamdani an April 17 letter — first reported by The Post — requesting he celebrate the space crew along downtown’s Canyon of Heroes.

Mamdani strongly hinted he wants NASA to foot some — or all — of the bill. ZUMAPRESS.com

The last astronauts honored that way was the famed Apollo 11 moonshot crew in 1969.

The socialist mayor — who has already coldly banned the public from attending the Times Square ball drop celebrating America’s 250th birthday on July 4 — admitted to WNYC that it was “quite incredible” watching the Artemis crew’s journey from Earth.

“I think it was a real invitation for people across the world to remember that we are part of something larger,” said Mamdani.  

More than four million people attended the August 13, 1969 parade in NYC honoring Apollo 11’s crew, The New York Post then reported. NY Post
Apollo 11 astronauts wave from open car after City Hall ceremony in 1969. Left to right: Michael Collins, Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong. In front of them in car are then-New York City’s Mayor John Lindsay and then-United Nations Secretary General U Thant. HUM Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

The NASA-led Artemis II mission earlier this month marked humankind’s first crewed visit to the moon since 1972, and set a new distance record for manned space travel of 252,760 miles from Earth. 

NASA did not return messages.



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