The Titan Documentary

"Titan: The OceanGate Disaster" - Netflix trailer: rb.gy/2235z2

This was not the film I expected it to be, not the gory details of the explosion, but the choices and behaviors leading up to it. Sure, they show some of the retrieved detritus, but there are not panicked recordings...

But you will be positively unnerved at the noises of carbon cracking as the titan descends during other dives.

So what we've got here is a self-serving educated man who believed not only that he was right, but that everybody else was wrong. Sound familiar? Absolutely yes. But most people are not playing with other people's lives.

At the end of the doc it's said that Stockton Rush was in pursuit of fame. Which he ultimately got, but not in the way he desired.

"Stockton"... On some level that's all you really need to know. Of course his first name is not "Stockton," it's RICHARD! Was he always called "Stockton"? It's possible, because prep school kids adopt these nontraditional first names that are sometimes derived out of thin air, but are oftentimes family names, which are their middle names, in this case it's "Richard Stockton Rush III."

I didn't know anybody named "Brooke" until I went to Middlebury. That's the advantage of going to an elite institution. Being exposed to those who never touched the public school system, who've been living an alternative life from day one. There were a lot of lessons this middle class Jewish suburbanite learned from being exposed to the prepsters. One, don't take anything too seriously, it's just another chapter in your life (then again, they had a job lined up from birth). The due date was flexible, not a strict deadline you had to obey. Give respect to authority's face, denigrate in private. Don't be flashy and stand out, better to wear chinos and Top-Siders than anything out of a fashion magazine. You don't want to draw attention to yourself, that's for the nouveau-riche, who are never accepted by the bluebloods. But the bluebloods run the world.

However it is a bit different today. Not everybody who is rich inherited their money, those who made it like to parade it. But the real string-pullers are people you don't know the name of but wield incredible inside power, the ones who will benefit from the tax cut in Trump's Big Beautiful Bill, if it passes.

That's who Stockton was. He went to Exeter, and then on to Princeton. He only played at the top, and the only way he could make a name for himself was to do something extraordinary, ordinary riches were not for him, he wanted to go down in the HISTORY BOOKS!

So was Stockton Rush like a typical techie, pushing the envelope despite the naysaying, or was he out of his league from day one?

The latter.

Stockton hired all the experts. Who were intrigued by the idea. But when they blew the whistle, he froze them out and/or fired them. To the point where you were afraid to speak up. This was not Steve Jobs. Steve would insult you for poor work, he was in search of excellence, but his first move was not to fire you, furthermore he liked those most who could challenge him to create ever better things. Rush had an idea, and he was going to shoehorn his efforts to fit it, science be damned.

So on one hand you're watching this documentary asking why Rush didn't listen, on the other you're thinking how almost every envelope-pusher does not. Then again, once again, most envelope-pushers are not dealing with people's lives.

And you only hear about the winners, when they're far outnumbered by the losers. Yes, delusional hypesters are plentiful, especially in the arts, where the barrier to entry is so low. People with little talent who spend decades trying to make it and don't, because they're just not good enough. They believe the system is stacked against them, that someone is out to get them, which is kind of what Stockton felt, except he had that pedigree and a modicum of intelligence.

You don't change the world by listening to the establishment.

But you can't bend the rules of science either.

So this is the story of Stockton's adventure, from having an idea for a submersible to charge people to visit Titanic to actually doing it, whilst ignoring all the red flags along the way.

Everybody else built their submersible out of solid material, like steel, whereas Rush built his out of carbon fiber, because it would be lighter and cheaper.

They've been using carbon fiber in skis for years now. It's light, and it's strong, but no one has been able to get it right to the point where the skis are cheap and as good as what's already on the market, most manufacturers have given up on the idea of carbon-fiber based skis. But if you bought a pair and didn't like them, they didn't disintegrate all at once and send you into a tree.

And you think the naysayers are all wusses who played along until the disaster. But this turns out not to be true. Are you willing to quit when you no longer believe?

Most people are not. They rationalize staying.

So ultimately "Titan" is an American story. An entrepreneur who convinces others to join the team by spinning a fantasy. Turns out being a great salesman is a key part of success. These people don't care about you, just that they get what they want. Beware of salesmen, always.

But if you can't sell, you're never going to be a successful entrepreneur. Venture capital is built upon hopes and dreams, fantasies, the cutting edge, and oftentimes it's discovered the purveyor is a huckster and the idea is faulty. This is especially true in entertainment, where everybody is full of sh*t and it's hard to separate winners and losers, truth from fiction. This is what a big swinging dick in the entertainment business can do, ferret out who is real and who is not. Which is why executives are prone to working with those they know as opposed to those they do not. Especially in a world where everybody lies and everything is built on hype. The show that's sold out oftentimes is not. The act has ten million streams on their single? Dig deep and you'll oftentimes they don't even have a hundred thousand, and when you catch them in a lie they just double-down. Hell, look at Mike Lindell, the MyPillow guy, he lost in court this week, in a definitive decision, and what did he then say? HE WON! Then again, Donald Trump is a huckster/hypester and he lies all the time. And even his minions know this. So what's the truth worth?

The truth is Stockton Rush was a bad guy whose effort was always going to end up in failure. The lights were flashing brightly. But when you see it all laid out in a movie, it makes you question more than the man, you have to rejigger your take on America, who is a bully with bluster with nothing at the core, do you do what is right or stay with the team?

There are bad actors out there. And not all of them are uneducated gang members in the inner city. Some come from the elite.

Like Stockton Rush.

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