Why do people even want to see the Titanic in person?
Why do people even want to see the Titanic in person?
pictures that there was only a computer screen in that submersible, and no window.
There was a Washing machine sized glass window Directly at the shitter so you could see out while having the "tasty" smell of fresh pee / poo directly under you.
Aaaah alright so the point does make more sense to me now. Particularly when you describe it so attractively. 😉
It still feels like visiting other people’s graves from a horrid and painful mass death, so definitely not for me even if it was safe and cheap, but at least now I get why some people do it, when, ya know, they don’t know what to do with their money and don’t mind dying.
Particularly when you describe it so attractively. 😉
Forgot to add a picture so for the toilet so yeah here it is you can see the window on the left of the Photo
So yeah... if you needed togo you had vision outside and if you wanted to look outside you literarily needed to sit next or on the toilet
The Titanic was only found in 1985. Imagine if we found the Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 today intact at the bottom of the ocean. Also it wasn’t just some common vehicle like a Boeing 777, the titanic was the biggest luxury ship ever built at the time. So change Malaysian Airlines flight 370 with Air Force One for cultural parity.
It would be incredibly interesting for someone of our generation to visit it. But a young person in 2060 would just ask why anyone would find an old airplane wreck of any interest.
Why do people want to see a concert in person, or a famous building, or a piece of art? You can see the Mona Lisa anywhere in the world on your computer screen, why would you want to go to see the actual picture itself? There are better videos of a Beyonce concert on YouTube than you'll get from a seat in the audience. A football game on ESPN has better coverage than a stadium seat. Why do any of that?
Because the thing itself is special. Viewing it through the screen isn't the same as being there, as having your breath taken away as the sheer enormity of the moment hits you.