Jessica Alba Reacts After Astronaut Christina Koch Requests Honest Products in Her Care Package Aboard the Artemis II

Jessica Alba shared an Instagram Reel reacting to Astronaut Christina Koch's request for hand lotion from The Honest Company while aboard the Artemis II mission

People Jessica Alba reacts after astronaut requests Honest products in her space ship care packageCredit: Jessica Alba/Instagram (2)

NEED TO KNOW

  • Alba founded The Honest Company in 2012

  • The Artemis II mission launched its historic 10-day journey to the far side of the moon on April 1

Jessica Albais reacting toArtemis IIAstronaut Christina Koch's special request from space: hand lotion from Alba's The Honest Company.

The actress, 44, shared an Instagram Reel on Tuesday, April 7, reacting to a clip capturing the astronaut's care package request.

“Yes, this one might take some digging," Koch, 47, is heard saying in the clip. "I’m looking for a specific community hygiene item that is Honest lotion."

As the clip plays, Alba is smiling in surprise and excitement.

“What? That is wild," Alba begins her response to Koch's request for The Honest Company's hand lotion as she tears up at the gravity of the moment.

Jessica Alba reacts after astronaut requests Honest products in her space ship care packageCredit: Jessica Alba/Instagram

Alba went on to recount her inspiration for creating the company to ensure "safer products," noting that the company takes its name in homage to herteen daughter, Honor.

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Mission specialist Jeremy Hansen of CSA (Canadian Space Agency), pilot Victor Glover, commander Reid Wiseman and mission specialist Christina Koch walk out of the Neil A. Armstrong Operations and Checkout Building ahead of the launch of the Artemis II at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center on April 01, 2026 in Cape Canaveral, Florida.Credit: Chip Somodevilla/Getty

"And then…now it’s in space! What?" Alba continued. "That is wild. This is a trip. This is a moment I never thought would be my real life. And so anyone out there who has any dreams of anything, just go after it, because you never know. I mean, your products can be in space."

Albafounded the company in 2012, and served as Chief Creative Officer until 2024.

Koch is one of the four astronauts who launched from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla., on April 1 aboard Artemis II on a historic journey. The astronauts plan to venture around the far side of the moon and back in 10 days—marking the first mission of this nature since the Apollo 17 mission in 1972.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Artemis is thefirst crewed flight testof both the Space Launch System, a deep-space rocket, and the Orion around the moon.

The goal is to “confirm all the spacecraft’s systems operate as designed with crew aboard in the actual environment of deep space,” according toNASA, ahead of what are future planned expeditions back to the moon.

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Jessica Alba Reacts After Astronaut Christina Koch Requests Honest Products in Her Care Package Aboard the Artemis II

Jessica Alba shared an Instagram Reel reacting to Astronaut Christina Koch's request for hand lotion from The Honest Company while ...
'Yellowstone' made him a fan favorite. His biggest role isn't the one you see.

Mo Brings Plenty does way more than just ride horses inYellowstoneandMarshals.

Yahoo TV

An underrated legacy ofYellowstone’s mark on television is Taylor Sheridan’s approach to Indigenous storytelling, from casting Native American actors to handling scenes with sensitivity. But Sheridan didn’t do it alone. Enter Mo Brings Plenty, an actor, stuntman, musician and former model, who has been afan favoritestaple ofYellowstoneas Mo — the wise, steely and sometimes menacing right-hand man to tribal chairman Thomas Rainwater (Gil Birmingham). Brings Plenty took on the double duty of consulting on matters related to Native accuracy and spiritual respect as the show’s American Indian affairs coordinator. Now he’s carrying on this legacy into the new CBS spin-offMarshals, created by Spencer Hudnut.

For Brings Plenty, filming theMarshalsdebut season is “like being back home.” His character, Mo, is among the handful of key players who have crossed over to the new series alongside lead Kayce Dutton (Luke Grimes) and Rainwater in a series with a more procedural approach than its predecessor and centering on a specialized U.S. Marshals task force.

You might also recognize the return of Mo’s jet-black horse, Zorro. Brings Plenty’s trusted companion fromYellowstonelives at his home ranch in Kansas. The actor has been riding horses as long as he can remember, a skill that came in handy when he started auditioning for roles and doing stunt work. “The fact that I could handle horses started giving me the opportunity to start doing some acting on horseback,” he tells Yahoo over Zoom as he reminisces about the early days of his acting career. “And then other avenues began to open up.”

The actor’s first acting credit goes back to 2007, a single episode in the BBC documentary seriesThe Wild West, playing Lakota leader Crazy Horse in a re-creation of 1876’s Battle of the Little Bighorn. Since then, Brings Plenty has appeared inHouse of Cards, has done stunt work forThe Revenantand was a cast regular on the Showtime miniseriesThe Good Lord Bird, among other projects. In 2018, he was cast inYellowstoneas Rainwater’s driver, bodyguard and, eventually, lethal right-hand man, always in a cowboy hat and his signature double braid.

Looking back on the legacy ofYellowstone, the 56-year-old Oglala Lakota actor thinks first of the storylines. “To bring light to a lot of the things that Indian country faces and that we’re still dealing with … it takes great courage to be able to bring those to the forefront,” he says. “Not just that, but also the fact that a lot of our traditional identity still exists.”

Mo Brings Plenty performs the American Indian Blessing Song during the American Rodeo by Teton Ridge at Globe Life Field on March 9, 2024, in Arlington, Texas.

He does more than just embody a supporting character: Brings Plenty’s role as American Indian affairs coordinator is multifaceted. To him the role isn’t dissimilar to the duties of a stunt coordinator but on matters of accurate and thoughtful Indigenous representation. “I know things that you can't Google, and I also know where that fine line is to be able to keep it respectful to the individuals who made the sacrifices to keep our languages and our ceremonies alive,” he says. “It's an undiscovered fountain of youth for stories to be written and told, so there's a lot of opportunity there.” This came up, for example, in Kayce’s vision quest onYellowstone, a storyline on missing and murdered Indigenous women and, more recently, in culturally sensitive scenes in upcoming episodes ofMarshals.

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He also consulted on another spinoff,1923, which includes a storyline on the violence faced by youth stripped from their families and culture at a Catholic American Indian boarding school. Brings Plenty is always ready to pick up the phone and consult, show up at production meetings or remind crew on the set to be mindful of sacred items and scenes during shooting. As far as he can tell, there aren’t many like him; Brings Plenty has yet to meet someone doing similar work — and film and television productions certainly haven’t always gotten representation right. “In the past, it’s always what theythoughtwas appropriate,” he says.

During our call, Brings Plenty reminds me that Native ceremonies were outlawed until 1978, when then-President Jimmy Carter signed the American Indian Religious Freedom Act after years of activism for it. “I always want to keep that in mind,” he says. “I know the sacrifices that have been made for all of those things to still be here.” It still took him years to embrace ceremonies as a young man, and Brings Plenty hopes to keep bringing that deep history into his consulting work.

Photo illustration: Yahoo News; photo: Kayla Oaddams/WireImage

The underrepresentation of Native Americans onscreen actually goes back to the roots of why Brings Plenty began acting in the first place, in the hopes it might inspire young people on reservations. He was especially swayed after hearing from Indigenous youth who weren’t proud of their culture. “Eventually, a grandmother told me: They don’t see themselves on TV; mainstream America doesn’t accept that identity,” he said. “So I thought to myself,How do I change that?”

Along the way, Brings Plenty has tried a few different avenues of artistic expression — like modeling for Ed Hardy and touring as a drummer for Brulé, a Native American new age rock band that has released 22 albums since 1996. The group still tours frequently, minus Brings Plenty. “It was an outlet for my heart,” he says of his time with the band.

When he’s not ruminating on rejoining the band for a reunion tour someday, Brings Plenty has his hands full at home. In between set days, he identifies as a traditional individual: Brings Plenty attends ceremonies, goes back home to visit his reservation and attends grassroots meetings to stay connected with his community. But he finds balance between it all by riding Zorro and his other horses. “It re-centers me, keeps me focused,” he says.

Looking forward, the actor — whose primary film influences come from the iconic 1990 filmDances With Wolvesand the 1970 westernA Man Called Horse —hopes to see more American Indian creatives involved behind the camera. But there’s one thing he hopes to manifest himself: playing Jackson Sundown, a Native American rodeo rider and the oldest saddle bronc champion known for his mythic performance at the 1916 Pendleton Round-Up in Oregon. “I think his storyline would be wonderful to tell,” he says.

Until then, there’s lots to look forward to as the fictional Mo continues to evolve inMarshals. “We still have the same spirit ofYellowstone, but in a new show.”

'Yellowstone' made him a fan favorite. His biggest role isn't the one you see.

Mo Brings Plenty does way more than just ride horses inYellowstoneandMarshals. An underrated legacy ofYellowstone’s mark on televi...
10 one-hit wonders only real Gen Xers remember

One-hit wonders get a bad reputation they do not always deserve. The assumption is that a single chart peak means a fluke, a novelty, a band that stumbled onto something and never understood it. But some of the most perfectly formed pop songs in history came from artists who only connected once, and that one connection was enough to outlast entire careers.

MediaFeed

10 one-hit wonders only real Gen Xers remember

That is especially true of the 1980s, a decade that produced an almost supernatural volume of memorable singles from bands whose second song no one could name. The era of MTV, mixtapes, and FM radio rewarded hooks above everything else, and some artists delivered one hook so perfectly constructed it still plays in your head forty years later, unbidden and unstoppable.

These are ten songs that owned a moment and then disappeared. Every Gen Xer with a radio knows them.

Image Credit: C Michael Stewart/Wikimedia Commons.

Whip It — Devo (1980)

Red flower-pot hats, robotic choreography, synth-pop that sounded like nothing else.Devohad a cult following and a long career, but in the US mainstream, Whip It was the whole story. It peaked at number 14 and never left.

Image Credit: eBay.

Turning Japanese — The Vapors (1980)

A post-punk guitar hook so instantly recognizable it barely needed a chorus.The Vaporsdissolved shortly after it peaked. The song has appeared in films, ads, and television ever since.

Image Credit: Amazon

Mickey — Toni Basil (1982)

A cheerleader routine set to an arena-sized chant.Toni Basilwas already 38 when it hit number one. She had a distinguished background in choreography. The follow-up singles went nowhere.

Image credit: Tabercil / Flickr (WikiCommons)

The Safety Dance — Men Without Hats (1982)

An inexplicably catchy synth-pop hook and a message that seemed to be about dancing but may or may not have been about nuclear war.Men Without Hatsnever charted in the US again.

Image credit: RicoZX81 / Wikimedia Commons

Too Shy — Kajagoogoo (1983)

The hair was a genre in itself.Kajagoogoofired lead singer Limahl shortly after the song topped the UK charts, only to discover they could not chart without him.

Image credit: Amazon

Der Komissar — After the Fire (1983)

Falco had the German-language hit first, but this English-language coverAfter the Firecovered it, and that version conquered American radio. The band broke up the following year. No other single came close.

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Image credit: Amazon

Somebody’s Watching Me — Rockwell (1984)

The paranoid synth groove was irresistible, and Michael Jackson’s cameo on the chorus helped considerably.Rockwellwas the son of Motown founder Berry Gordy, reportedly hidden from label executives. The follow-ups disappeared.

Image credit: Marc Lostracco / Wikimedia Commons

Sunglasses at Night — Corey Hart (1984)

A synth riff built on a single absurd premise that lodged permanently in the brain.Corey Harthad modest success in Canada for years but never cracked the American top 40 again.

Image credit: Rechteinhaber / Wikimedia Commons

Major Tom (Coming Home) — Peter Schilling (1983)

A synth-pop sequel to Bowie’s Space Oddity, sung partly in German, that somehow became a US top-15 hit.Peter Schillingcontinued recording in Europe but never returned to the American charts.

Image credit: Udo Grimberg / Wikimedia Commons

Puttin’ on the Ritz — Taco (1983)

A 1930 big-band standard resurrected as a synth-pop novelty by a Dutch-Indonesian singer in white tie and tails.Tacopeaked at number four and then vanished. The Metropolis-inspired video was one of early MTV’s most-played clips.

Image Credit: stockphotodirectors/iStock

Wrap up

The 1980s had no shortage of great bands with long careers. But the one-hit wonders may have understood something the survivors did not. Sometimes one perfect moment is more than enough.

Ask us! What questions do you have about content, strategy, pop culture, lifestyle, wellness, history or more? We may use your question in an upcoming article!

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10 one-hit wonders only real Gen Xers remember

One-hit wonders get a bad reputation they do not always deserve. The assumption is that a single chart peak means a fluke, a novelty, a...
At least 8 dead after series of police pursuits across US

A string of high-speed police car chases resulted in at least eight deaths and several injuries over a span of less than a week, marking the latest deadly incidents in an upward trend of police pursuit fatalities in the United States.

USA TODAY

In Texas, police said a man died early on Sunday, April 5, after fleeing from officers and crashing off the roadway.The Montgomery Advertiser, part of the USA TODAY Network, reported that four people died after a driver attempted to evade a state trooper and struck a tree in rural Alabama on Friday, April 3.

In Southern California, authorities said three people were killed in separate incidents last week after local law enforcement tried to pursue two suspects who then collided with other vehicles.

Hundreds of people die each year during police pursuits, according toexperts and research. The longstanding police practice has faced criticism for years.

A study published inThe Journal of the American Medical Association(JAMA) in 2024 found that research spanning from 1982 to 2020 "suggests an increasing trend in fatalities resulting from police pursuits" in the United States. In a2023 report, the Police Executive Research Forum, a police research and policy organization, called high-speed vehicular pursuits "one of the most controversial and dangerous police activities."

Citing data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the report noted that there were more than 2,200 fatal vehicle crashes involving a police pursuit from 2015 to 2020. The report recommended that law enforcement agencies only conduct pursuits when a violent crime has been committed and the suspect poses an imminent threat.

"While officers’ decisions to initiate or continue a pursuit are driven by an understandable desire to catch a fleeing suspect, this desire sometimes results in excessive risk-taking and negative consequences for officers, innocent bystanders, the motorist being pursued, and any passengers in either vehicle," the report states.

'A real problem':Police misconduct settlements can cost millions, but departments rarely feel the impact

Driver dies after fleeing from Texas police

In anews release, the Fort Worth Police Department said officers were involved in a vehicle pursuit that resulted in a fatal crash at about 2:34 a.m. local time on April 5. Officers attempted to conduct a traffic stop after seeing a vehicle driving without headlights, striking another vehicle on Interstate 35, and failing to stop.

The driver fled from officers and then hit another vehicle, according to police. The suspect then exited the highway and later crashed off the roadway.

Officers located the vehicle and found 2 men, including a passenger who sustained minor injuries and the driver, who was pronounced dead at the scene, police said. The passenger was transported to a local hospital with his injuries.

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No other injuries were reported in the incident, according to police.

4 killed in Alabama while evading state trooper

Capt. Jeremy Burkett, a spokesperson for the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency, confirmed to the Montgomery Advertiser that four people died after the driver allegedly tried to evade a state trooper in Pike County.

Tykevious Russaw, 27, was driving with three other passengers in his 2022 Hyundai Elantra, Burkett said. He identified the passengers as Robert Hall, 27; Quamay Richardson, 24; and a 17-year-old whose name was not publicly released.

The incident occurred at around 11:57 p.m. local time on April 3, when Russaw's vehicle left the roadway and struck a tree while attempting to evade a trooper, according to Burkett. He said Russaw, Hall, and the 17-year-old were not wearing seat belts at the time of the crash, causing all three of them to be ejected.

Richardson was the only passenger not ejected, Burkett said. All four passengers in the vehicle were pronounced dead on the scene after the crash.

Hostile gunfire:How many police officers have been killed in the line of duty in 2025?

3 dead after drivers crash into bystander vehicles in Southern California

In Pomona, California, a city in eastern Los Angeles County, police said a domestic violence suspect who tried to flee from officers crashed into another vehicle on April 1, according toThe Los Angeles TimesandCBS News Los Angeles.

The couple inside the bystander vehicle, a 26-year-old man and a 25-year-old woman, were killed in the incident. Both the Times and CBS News Los Angeles reported that the couple was days away from the birth of their first child.

In San Clemente, California, a coastal city in Orange County, the sheriff's department said in anews releasethat deputies were attempting to stop a U-Haul van with no license plates that was reported stolen on March 30. When deputies tried to stop the vehicle, the sheriff's department said the driver accelerated and collided with an SUV about less than half a mile away.

The driver of the SUV was killed in the crash, and her three passengers were transported to the hospital in critical condition, according to the sheriff's department. The suspect ran from deputies and was later arrested, while the passenger of the stolen U-Haul remained at the scene and was also taken into custody.

Contributing: Sarah Clifton, Montgomery Advertiser

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Police car chases across the US resulted in at least 8 deaths

At least 8 dead after series of police pursuits across US

A string of high-speed police car chases resulted in at least eight deaths and several injuries over a span of less than a week, markin...
Jake Paul Plans To Make His Version of Druski’s ‘Conservative Women’ Skit

Jake Paulhas unveiled his plans to make a skit in response toDruski’s recent “conservative women” one. Although Paul admitted to loving the skit despite being a Republican himself, the influencer said he wants to respond with a “darker” video.

Jake Paul said this about Druski’s ‘conservative woman’ skit

During his appearance on Theo Von’s podcast, This Past Weekend, Jake Paul addressed the “conservative women” skit, which went viral after content creator Druski posted it online on March 26.

“Honestly, it’s f***ing hilarious. I loved it,” the 29-year-old YouTuber admitted. “I’m obviously Republican, and all the Republicans mad about this s**t is a f***ing L for all Republicans. Because this is f***ing hilarious.”

The influencer-turned-boxer said that the video is dark and twisted. However, he reasoned that it is what comedy is supposed to be, which is humans making fun of humans. “There’s truth in this,” he added. Paul then shared that he had been considering filming a response, even reaching out to makeup artists to create a “darker” skit.

In response, Von explained to Paul that if he wants to do it, there needs to be “black support” for the character. He said that maybe collaborating with Druski himself, or someone like former NBA star Charles Barkley, might be ideal. However, Paul didn’t agree with that perspective. He said that it might make them look “prejudiced.”

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The conversation then shifted to the two talking about examples. They brought up past controversies involving figures like Justin Trudeau and Jimmy Kimmel, asking how they got away with it without much backlash.

The host then expressed his frustration that a kid can’t dress up as a popular black person, like LeBron James, for Halloween. Paul concurred with the criticism and pointed out that there are “too many haters out there.”

Their conversation was triggered by Druski’s skit, in which he seemingly parodied Charlie Kirk’s widow, Erika Kirk. He captioned the post, “How Conservative Women in America act.” Currently, the post has garnered over 184 million views on X (formerly Twitter).

Originally reported by Harsha Panduranga onMandatory.

The postJake Paul Plans To Make His Version of Druski’s ‘Conservative Women’ Skitappeared first onReality Tea.

Jake Paul Plans To Make His Version of Druski’s ‘Conservative Women’ Skit

Jake Paulhas unveiled his plans to make a skit in response toDruski’s recent “conservative women” one. Although Paul admitted to loving the...

 

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