While the story is fiction, it represents a realistic scenario in which two young entrepreneurs realize the goal of orbiting 25 mini-satellites aboard Ariane 5 to create a European digital radio service.
The comic book, entitled Destination Arianespace, was first issued in French during this year’s Paris Air Show in June. Its original goal was to bring the excitement of Arianespace’s operations to younger readers, and to inform them of the possibilities that commercial launch services can bring to the public. Destination Arianespace became a popular item for readers of all ages at the Paris Air Show, and it was followed by an English version that was distributed for the first time at this month’s World Satellite Business Week, a gathering of high-level industry professionals in Paris.
Arianespace’s sponsorship of Destination Arianespace attracted the attention of Zoo Magazine, which is one of France’s leading publications on the genre of comic books. Zoo Magazine interviewed Arianespace Chairman & CEO Jean-Yves Le Gall, who spoke about his passion for comic books since childhood. Le Gall said he feels the same excitement at each Ariane 5 or Soyuz launch as experienced in the famous Tintin comic book, Destination Moon, where the young reporter departs on an historic space trip.
“The ambiance prior to the nighttime liftoff of Tintin’s Moon rocket is just as I’ve experienced at real launch sites before an actual mission,” Le Gall explained. “At Kourou [for Ariane 5] or Baikonur [for Soyuz], the same atmosphere exists…the reality is even better than fiction.” Download the “Destination Arianespace” here.

