It was filmed in a hangar somewhere in Nevada
During the Apollo program from 1968 to 1971, Richard C. Hoagland served as a Science Adviser to CBS News. In a surprising revelation in 2001, Hoagland shared that shortly after the Apollo 11 moon landing, an intriguing rumor circulated among journalists at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena. According to Hoagland, they were informed that the moon landings had actually been fabricated and filmed in a hangar located somewhere in Nevada. Seeking to gather more information about this incident, we kindly request anyone who was present at the press conference and witnessed the same event described by Richard Hoagland to contact us at info[at]awe130.com.
During an interview on Coast to Coast in 2001, Hoagland disclosed that it had taken him 32 years to reveal this information. Approximately one and a half weeks after the historic Apollo 11 mission, Hoagland, who was CBS' science advisor working closely with renowned TV host Walter Cronkite, experienced a perplexing encounter at JPL. While attending a press briefing, he observed a man, accompanied by NASA personnel, distributing flyers to journalists. These flyers claimed that the Apollo 11 moon landing had never occurred and was instead staged in a hangar in Nevada.
Quote of Hoagland's testimony during the Coast to Coast AM episode on February 15th, 2001.
"I walked in the door and one of the PR people for JPL was squiring around the guy who was handing out leaflets claiming that the Apollo 11 experience, which was a week and a half old, never happened, it was a fake in a hangar somewhere in Nevada.That is how old this story is and why he was being given red carpet treatment by NASA personnel themselves is a mystery that I now look back on and say why didn't I ask that question then?"
Audio
Credit Source Audio: to Coast to Coast AM, with Art Bell. Richard-C Hoagland and Wayne-Green debate the Apollo Missions 2001-02-15