Hopefully it looks better than the television studio in the 60's.
It's well known that they "switched" to a "television studio" for the landing video when they "accidentally" fried the camera to cover themselves up. It's really likely that they just did the same thing for the rest of the landings, and will do it for Artemis.
About all the way at the bottom...
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20191108-the-switch-that-saved-a-moon-mission-from-disaster
"""
Despite the best efforts of the astronauts and support engineers in mission control, no amount of adjustment could get the picture back. It seemed the image sensors were irreparably damaged.
Fortunately, the TV networks had a back-up plan. While continuing to carry the live voices of the astronauts, CBS switched to a studio where two actors dressed in spacesuits simulate the Moonwalk.
NBC, meanwhile, commissioned puppeteer Bil Baird to build astronaut marionettes. Baird (who would train Muppet creator Jim Henson) operated the puppets from an overhead gantry above a simulated lunar landscape. Despite having the word “simulation” on the screen, Baird is quoted as saying that many viewers never realised it wasn’t real. """