Omega Speedmaster Owner Corrects Stranger's Moon Landing Facts for 11,000th Time
The unsolicited horological lecture has been delivered at parties, airports, dentist offices, and once during a funeral eulogy.

Greg Hensley, 46, owner of an Omega Speedmaster Professional, delivered his 11,000th unsolicited correction of a stranger's moon landing facts on Saturday, maintaining what friends describe as 'an absolutely relentless commitment to horological evangelism.'
The milestone correction occurred at a backyard barbecue in Naperville, Illinois, when a guest mentioned that 'astronauts wore Rolexes to the moon.' Hensley, who had been standing within earshot holding a paper plate of potato salad, intervened within 0.8 seconds.
'Actually,' Hensley began — a word his wife says he has uttered more frequently than his own name — 'NASA selected the Omega Speedmaster Professional, reference 105.012, after rigorous testing that included exposure to temperatures ranging from minus 18 to plus 93 degrees Celsius, as well as humidity, vibration, and vacuum conditions. No other chronograph survived. Not Rolex. Not Longines. Not Hamilton.'
The correction lasted fourteen minutes and covered the topics of NASA qualification procedures, the Tachymètre bezel's utility in calculating velocity, and the specific wrist over which Buzz Aldrin wore his Speedmaster (left, over his spacesuit).
'He carries a laminated card with the test specifications,' confirmed Hensley's wife, Laura. 'He has given this speech at our children's school events. He gave an abbreviated version during his mother's hip surgery pre-op. The anesthesiologist asked him to stop.'
Hensley maintains a spreadsheet logging each correction, categorized by venue, audience receptivity (rated 1-5), and 'factual severity of the original error.'
'Someone once said the moon landing was fake,' Hensley recalled, his eye twitching. 'That was a two-parter.'
Hensley says he has no plans to stop. 'The Speedmaster went to the moon,' he said. 'People should know.'
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