Science

Maezawa wants to take you to the moon: Japanese billionaire seeks passengers for 2023 SpaceX trip

Japanese billionaire Yusaku Maezawa is searching for eight people to join him on the first private SpaceX trip around the moon, planned for 2023.

Fashion entrepreneur Yusaku Maezawa, CEO of Zozo, needs 8 people to join him for first private moon flight

Yusaku Maezawa, the CEO of the fashion business Zozo, pictured in in October 2018, is searching for eight passengers to join him on his week-long voyage to circumnavigate the moon aboard SpaceX's launch vehicle, the Starship. (The Associated Press/Koji Sasahara)

Japanese billionaire Yusaku Maezawa on Wednesday launched a search for eight people to join him as the first private passengers on a trip around the moon with Elon Musk's SpaceX.
 
He had originally planned to invite artists for the week-long voyage slated for 2023.
 
The rejigged project will "give more people from around the globe the chance to join this journey. If you see yourself as an artist, then you are an artist," Maezawa said.

Maezawa to pay entire cost of trip himself

The first stage of the selection process runs to March 14, with applicants needing to pass medical checks and, eventually, an interview with Maezawa.
 
The entrepreneur, who sold his online fashion business Zozo Inc. to SoftBank in 2019, is paying the entire cost of the voyage on SpaceX's next-generation reusable launch vehicle, dubbed the Starship.
 
"I thought there might be delays but everything is on schedule," said Maezawa in an interview.

Recent Starship prototypes exploded during testing

Two recent Starship prototypes have exploded during testing, underscoring the risks for Maezawa, 45, and his fellow  passengers, who must also contend with the strains of space travel in the first private journey beyond Earth's orbit.

An image of the so-called BFR, or big falcon rocket, spacecraft SpaceX plans to use for its 2023 moon trip. The company's CEO, Elon Musk, announced Maezawa as the first private passenger on the Starship in September 2018 in Hawthorne, Calif. (The Associated Press/Chris Carlson)

"Elon Musk says there is no problem and I believe him," said Maezawa. SpaceX ferried four astronauts to the International Space Station in November on its Falcon 9 rocket.
 
Maezawa said he is not in training — which he expects to take a few months at most — but is watching his alcohol intake and exercising while spending a few hours a week considering the mission.
 
"I'm only preparing mentally," said the fashion guru, wearing a Dior shirt over a T-shirt depicting the iconic 1968 Earthrise photo.
 
Seeing the whole Earth and the far side of the moon would be highlights of the trip, said Maezawa, who had considered a trip the ISS before choosing the more ambitious moon voyage.
 
"This mission we expect people will go further than any human has ever gone from Planet Earth," Musk said, days after SpaceX completed its latest $850 million US fundraising, which has helped turn the businessman into one of the world's richest people.

Costs for the trip remain in line with the original contract with SpaceX, said Maezawa, who has declined to say how much that is, but says is more than his $110 million US purchase of a Jean-Michel Basquiat painting.
 
Both Musk and Maezawa have built loyal followings on social media, with the latter's cash giveaways helping to make him Japan's most-followed Twitter account.
 
Maezawa, who recently introduced SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son to audio app Clubhouse, said he plans to feature mission preparation on his YouTube channel, which also offers videos of him playing golf in Hawaii and racing supercars.
 
Last year he launched a short-lived documentary search for a new girlfriend to join him on the trip before pulling out citing "mixed feelings."