Connecting Humans & Earth
Somewhere between science and wonder, between a satellite image and a change of heart, is where OneHome lives.
In 2015, NASA launched the DSCOVR satellite to Lagrange Point L1 — one and a half million kilometres from Earth, the precise spot where the gravitational forces of our planet and the Sun hold each other in balance. For the first time in history, a camera was positioned to watch the full, illuminated face of the Earth in continuous rotation. No astronaut has ever been there. No human eye had ever seen this view. OneHome took these images — and gave them a heartbeat.
Founded by French mathematician and author Jean-Pierre Goux, OneHome creates short, free, open-access videos from NASA’s imagery, set to music by international artists like Yael Naïm, Agoria and Moby, and accompanied by voices including Jane Goodall, Satish Kumar and Frank White — the philosopher who first named the Overview Effect in 1987. That effect — the profound inner shift astronauts describe when they see Earth whole and fragile from space — is what OneHome wants to bring to every classroom, workplace, community gathering and living room on the planet.
The method is beautifully simple: become an Earth Ambassador, organize a projection for at least ten people, and mark it on the Blue Revolution Map. From intimate screenings to cinema events, each dot of light on that map is a moment someone looked at their home from far away — and felt something shift.