Would it not be best to keep this as an actual space and science thread, as there are a few conspiracy theorist lunatic threads? We could start another one, but this one was intended as one for people who live in the real world/universe and want to talk about the space and science aspects of it rather than get derailed giving conspiracy theorists the attention they crave.
On that note, I had clear skies last night and there is a lovely sight to be seen over the next 6 weeks or more. If you follow the belt of Orion in a line to the right, after a bit you get to a fantastic little cluster of blue white stars called the Pleiades (nick name The Seven Sisters). It looks great even just through low power binoculars or a DSLR camera lens.
However half way between the Pleiades and Orion is a V of 5 stars. This V forms the face of Taurus the bull. The top left of the V has a lovely orange star called Aldebaran, the 14th brightest in the sky and it's orange colour is really noticeable against the blue white stars around it. It is often likened to being a mini-Mars (it is much much larger than Mars but very far away). However up to the right of it is the actual Mars. Worth a look just to see the comparison between the two and the contrast to the other objects around them.
Over the next month, Mars moves a little further away from Aldebaran but does move to be directly above the V.
It should make a good photo. For anyone interested and without specialist astronomy kit, with it being a wide area, you should be able to get a decent picture with a camera on a tripod. I'm not sure what a modern phone can do, but a DSLR with a 75-300mm zoom lens will do a decent job. Set your camera to live view, manual focus and manual control. Set on a tripod, and do your best to frame your shot. Set the aperture as open as it will go (probably f4.6 depending on your lens), a mid to low ISO, 800 or 1600 and try an exposure of 15 seconds. Set your camera into live view and digital zoom on the brightest star. Focus will probably be to turn all one way and then back very slightly. Once you are happy with the zoomed image, drop the zoom back to normal. When you take the picture you will get a bit of camera shake. Set it to have a 10 second delay, if possible tap the screen rather than the shutter button. That should leave it to settle before taking the snap. Try a few different exposure lengths. Too long and you will get star trailing due to the rotation of the earth, and stars will become little commas. If it is too washed out, try dropping the ISO but play with exposure times too.
The moon will make the sky pretty bright over the next few nights, especially if there is high humidity, but we will have a new moon in a week or two, and it will start rising later over the next 2 weeks.