⁠Fans LOL as Jessica Chastain shares article calling Blue Origin space flight “the utter defeat of American feminism”

Jessica Chastain shares article calling Blue Origin space flight “the utter defeat of American feminism” | Source: Getty, Instagram/@katyperry
Jessica Chastain shares article calling Blue Origin space flight “the utter defeat of American feminism” | Source: Getty, Instagram/@katyperry

Jessica Chastain just launched a new kind of space drama—and it didn’t involve aliens or wormholes. The Oscar-winning actress stirred up cosmic controversy after sharing an article that described Blue Origin’s recent all-female space flight as “the utter defeat of American feminism.” Cue the internet imploding. In a retweet that had both feminists and Katy Perry fans in a digital chokehold, Chastain seemed to question whether sending pop stars and influencers into orbit was really the feminist win it claimed to be.

The moment went viral after @PopCrave posted:

“Jessica Chastain shares article mocking the Blue Origin space flight as ‘the utter defeat of American feminism.’”

And just like that, America’s girlbosses were suddenly floating without gravity—or context.


Why Jessica's space comment has people in orbit

So, what exactly is the backstory behind this intergalactic girl drama?

The all-female Blue Origin mission—featuring Katy Perry, Gayle King, and other celebrities—was marketed as a groundbreaking moment for women. The suborbital flight lasted about 11 minutes, giving its passengers a few minutes of weightlessness, Instagram-worthy views of Earth, and, evidently, some questionable press coverage.

Chastain’s repost of the now-viral article criticized the mission as a superficial display of empowerment, arguing that sending famous women to space without meaningful scientific roles or contributions isn’t exactly a feminist milestone. The phrase “white feminism in a rocket ship” was the article's not-so-subtle jab at performative progress, and Chastain’s silent co-sign lit the match.

In the article she shared, the tone made it clear: feminism isn’t just about representation, it’s about impact. And floating around in zero gravity for a glorified space tourism stunt, critics argue, doesn’t exactly push the feminist agenda forward—unless that agenda involves luxury branding in low-Earth orbit.


The internet responds: One small tweet for Jessica Chastain, one giant meme for the timeline

The moment Jessica Chastain reposted the now-viral article calling Blue Origin’s all-female space mission “the utter defeat of American feminism,” X (formerly Twitter) ignited faster than a rocket launch. Opinions blasted off—some in defense, others in deep sarcasm—and the memes? Immaculate.

First came the Jessica stans, praising her like she just saved feminism from a PR black hole:

“mother is on the right side of the history” -@mihailo__
“Queen .. she knew it was one giant commercial” -@g0nex010101
“miss interstellar KNOWS” -@telegraphclvb

Then came the skeptics and the softly unbothered, questioning the vibes and the point of it all:

“Is she just jealous she didn’t get to go?” -@yourdailybirds
“they went and came from space 2 days ago, let it go bruh” -@katyroulett
“Wut even is american femininism” -@IdiotIdiotboyy

And of course, the meme brigade wasted no time turning Katy Perry’s cosmic cameo into comedy gold:

“Katy Perry’s trip to space 💀"-@TheImmortal007

It wasn’t just about space—it was about what kind of feminism gets airtime (and jet fuel). Some users saw the mission as inspirational, others saw it as a billionaire-backed branding exercise orbiting in the name of “girl power.” But one thing united everyone: they all had something hilarious to say about it.

So yeah, the mood? Somewhere between “miss Chastain said what needed to be said” and “let the pop girlies float in peace.”


A bigger debate: Is this feminism or a flop?

Jessica’s move reignited the long-standing debate about what "American feminism" even means in 2025. Critics of the Blue Origin mission say it's another example of “corporate feminism” or “white feminism”—where empowerment is equated with visibility and branding rather than systemic change.

On the flip side, supporters of the mission argue that visibility is power, and that seeing high-profile women in space—regardless of why they’re there—can inspire young girls to dream bigger (even if those dreams now include intergalactic selfies).

This tension between symbolism and substance is at the core of why Chastain’s tweet sparked such intense debate. Is a short trip into space a bold feminist statement, or a $1.2 million reality show moment?

Edited by Sugnik Mondal