HomeDisney NewsArtemis II Launch on Disney+ and Hulu Today as NASA Returns to...

Artemis II Launch on Disney+ and Hulu Today as NASA Returns to Deep Space

Disney viewers have a front-row seat to one of the biggest live events of the year.  Launch Updates here  Special Coverage on Disney Plus starts at 5pm east., Official NASA Artemis II site.

PHOTO: CSA astronaut Jeremy Hansen with NASA astronauts Victor Glover, Reid Wiseman and Christina Koch walk out before traveling to the launch pad to board the Artemis II crewed lunar mission at Kennedy Space Center in Florida, April 1, 2026.
CSA astronaut Jeremy Hansen with NASA astronauts Victor Glover, Reid Wiseman and Christina Koch walk out before traveling to the launch pad to board the Artemis II crewed lunar mission at Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, April 1, 2026.

ABC News and National Geographic are teaming up for major Artemis II coverage, and the launch is set to stream across Disney+, Hulu, ABC, National Geographic, and ABC News Live. For Disney audiences, that makes this more than a space story. It turns Artemis II into a true cross-platform event.

Why Artemis II Matters

Artemis II is NASA’s first crewed mission beyond low Earth orbit in more than 50 years. The flight will send four astronauts around the moon and back, making it a major step toward future lunar missions.

OFFICIAL LIVE COVERAGE

The crew includes Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen. Their mission is expected to last about 10 days and will test the Orion spacecraft and Space Launch System in a real deep-space mission with astronauts on board.

Why This Is a Big Disney Streaming Moment

What makes this especially notable is where people can watch it.

PHOTO: Artemis flight path graphic

Disney+ and Hulu are part of the live launch coverage, alongside ABC and National Geographic. That gives Disney a place in a real-time historic event, not through fiction or a documentary after the fact, but as it happens.

That matters because live events still cut through in a way few other streaming offerings can. Artemis II gives Disney platforms a chance to be part of a genuinely historic moment with broad appeal.

National Geographic’s Access Could Be the Best Part

This story goes beyond the launch itself.

National Geographic has worked with NASA to give audiences a closer look inside Orion, including training the Artemis II crew to document parts of the mission themselves. That adds a more personal angle to the coverage and helps separate this from a standard launch simulcast.

Image shows the orange core stage of the NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS) rocket with the white spacecraft on top making up of the Orion spacecraft at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
NASA’s Artemis II SLS (Space Launch System) rocket and Orion spacecraft are seen at Launch Complex 39B, at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The Artemis II test flight will take NASA astronauts Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, and Mission Specialist Christina Koch, and CSA (Canadian Space Agency) astronaut Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen, on an approximately 10-day mission around the Moon and back to Earth. NASA/Bill Ingalls

Nat Geo also published a closer look at the spacecraft and how astronauts will live inside Orion during the mission. That includes details about the tight quarters, the mission setup, and how the crew is preparing for a journey that will carry them far beyond Earth orbit.

What to Expect From the Coverage

ABC News is set to provide live reporting from Kennedy Space Center and around the mission, while National Geographic adds the immersive storytelling side. Together, they are building coverage that mixes breaking news with behind-the-scenes access.

That combination feels like the real hook here. You get the live event through ABC News, but you also get the human side of the mission through National Geographic.

Sam’s Disney Diary Take

This is not a traditional Disney parks story, but it is absolutely a Disney media story.  Disney has the right brands for this moment. ABC News brings the live coverage. National Geographic brings the access and storytelling. Disney+ and Hulu expand the audience.

The Artemis program patch in the space station's cupola. The patch is framed by the center circular window in the space. Earth can be seen behind the patch. The Artemis patch has five sides. It has a white background with a black border. There's a black "A," for Artemis. The crossbar of the A is made by a curving red trajectory line that crosses from left to right. That line continues beyond the "A" and beyond a small gray circle representing the Moon. Below the "A" is a blue crescent representing Earth. At the very bottom is the word "Artemis."

That makes Artemis II a smart fit across Disney’s platforms, especially on a day when the world is watching something bigger than entertainment.  For Disney viewers, the headline is simple: if you want to watch history unfold live, Disney’s platforms are part of the place to do it.

 

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

13,789FansLike
5,480FollowersFollow
57,042SubscribersSubscribe

Free Disney Coloring Pages

Most Popular

All
LEGO Brand Retail