Kim Kardashian is known for her bold opinions — but her latest one might be her most out-of-this-world yet. In the October 30th episode of The Kardashians, the 45-year-old reality mogul revealed that she believes the 1969 Apollo 11 moon landing never actually happened.

“For the record, do you think that we didn’t walk on the moon?” someone asked Kim during the episode.
Her reply was immediate:

“I don’t think we did. I think it was fake.”

Kim Kardashian calls Buzz Aldrin's 1969 moon landing fake, says it never  happened: 'I center conspiracies'

Kim made the claim while chatting with actress Sarah Paulson, saying she had read interviews and watched videos of astronaut Buzz Aldrin — and that some of his comments convinced her to question history. “This girl asks, ‘What was the scariest moment?’ and he goes, ‘There was no scary moment because it didn’t happen,’” Kim explained. “So, I think it didn’t happen.”

Later, back in her trailer, Kim doubled down:

“I’ve seen a few videos of Buzz Aldrin talking about how it didn’t happen. He says it all the time now in interviews.”

She even suggested her sister Khloé should invite Aldrin on a “conspiracy theory podcast.”

Kim’s reasoning included several of the most common moon-landing conspiracy theories, which she encouraged fans to “fact-check on TikTok.” Among her questions:

“Why does the flag blow when there’s no gravity on the moon?”

“Why do the shoes in the museum have a different print than the photos?”

“Why are there no stars in the pictures?”

She anticipated backlash, adding, “They’re going to say I’m crazy no matter what. But like, go to TikTok — see for yourself.”

Why Kim Kardashian Is Convinced The 1969 Moon Landing Was FAKE

However, NASA and scientific experts have long debunked these claims:

The American flag appeared to “wave” because it had a horizontal rod sewn in along the top, giving it structure in the airless environment.

No stars appear in photos because astronauts used fast shutter speeds to prevent the moon’s bright surface from overexposing the images.

As for the boot prints, Smithsonian Magazine explains that astronauts left behind their outer boots, cameras, and other gear to lighten the spacecraft’s load for the return trip.

NASA’s account remains consistent: on July 20, 1969, astronaut Neil Armstrong — whom Kim jokingly called “the other guy” — became the first person to walk on the moon, declaring:

“That’s one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind.”

Over 650 million people watched the historic broadcast live. And decades later, Armstrong, Aldrin, and their crewmate Michael Collins continued to share detailed recollections of the journey.

As Armstrong told 60 Minutes for the 50th anniversary:

“It’s a brilliant surface in that sunlight. The horizon seems quite close because the curvature is so much more pronounced than on Earth. It’s an interesting place to be — I recommend it.”

While Kim’s comments have certainly sparked conversation, NASA’s evidence — and the moon rocks, photographs, and telemetry data brought back — continue to confirm one thing beyond doubt: the moon landing did happen.

Still, in true Kardashian fashion, Kim has once again turned controversy into conversation — reminding the world that even decades later, some conspiracies never go out of style.