The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - Hour 1: Submarining is Safe, As Long As You Know It’s Dangerous
Episode Date: June 21, 2023We have an expert's comment on the lost submersible near the Titanic: Cardi B. Then, it's time another expert. David Marquet, retired U.S. Navy Submarine captain and author of “Turn The Ship Around,...” joins the show. Marquet explains the biggest factors to grapple with in this story and the decision making that needs to be made around the rescue, the specific danger the passengers face, and the differences between how this sub and a Navy sub operate. He also explains the safety behind submarining and questions whether or not this specific rescue mission is worth it. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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You're listening to Giraffe King's Network.
This is the Dunluba Tarshou with the StugatSpotCas.
I am looking at a picture that JJ Reddick has put out of JJ Reddick's sitting next to Victor Wembañama.
JJ Reddick is 6'4".
JJ Reddick looks cartoonishly the way that Amin El Hassan looked Photoshop next to Antonio Davis,
the way that Billy looked Photoshop next to Derek Henry an NBA player next to Victor
Wambunyama looks like a tiny tiny person just so that you understand in the room here
JJ Ratic is taller than anyone who works here not true you're not six four
Yeah, we're good aren't you six four I'm six three I'm tall than you though Dan
You're not six four.
What are we even doing?
Okay.
This is like everyone knows everyone now.
Everyone knows tall than JJ Redding.
He's not that tall.
No, it looks like Stu got sitting next to Dan.
I saw a video, a little bit of big guy.
A photo of Shaq next to the rock yesterday.
It was like, I was one of those like Instagram things.
You guys, one of those Instagram things is like, things that Shaq makes look tiny. And then it was just a bunch was one of those like Instagram things. I was one of those Instagram things. It's like things that
Shaq makes look tiny and then it was just a bunch of pictures of him and Kevin
Hart and then we started getting to hear Shaq next to the rock and it is crazy.
I saw Chris Staps' persingus and Yuki Senota next to each other.
I, yeah. That was crazy.
I played Crap's once with JJ Reddick.
It's taller than JJ Reddick. Tony, you're good.
Thank you.
JJ Retic, taller than JJ Retic, Tony, you're good. Thank you.
I also played Crabbs with Virgil from WWF.
I can be the him.
Yeah, but he's actually sneaky big.
Do you actually get how to play Crabbs?
Yeah.
It confuses me.
You just sit around and do what you want to do.
It's a tough match.
Really?
You guys are confused by Crabbs. Tommas, Matt. Really?
You guys are confused.
I've watched YouTube videos.
I've never actually gone to a casino to play it
because I'm intimidated by it.
I've watched YouTube videos about it
and I still don't understand what I was doing
if I were at a crappiness table.
You could lose your money very quickly there,
quicker than most tables,
and you can make a lot very quickly.
It sounds like something I would love.
Like, it sounds like a game that I would enjoy playing
and I just don't get it.
It's the best game when it's cooking.
There's no better gambling game than a hot table.
Cough, crap.
Crap's table.
There's just nothing better.
Put it on the poll at Lebitard show,
is there anything better than a hot crap's table?
Shadow Divers is the name of the book I was telling you
about that I read 20 years ago about the difficulties in diving and sea exploration and the bends.
I just, I'd recommend it because it's one of the better books I've read on any subject.
I really enjoyed it. But we are talking to an expert here,
a Navy submarine expert at the end of this hour
to find out what is happening with this submersive
and get more informed than we are about this subject.
A Navy submarine expert has to hate this vessel, right?
Like there's no way that a Navy submarine expert thinks
that a vessel that's run by a video game controller is a good idea.
I think we're going to get more expertise than we have on this subject matter.
I have the most expertise and I have heard that the technology of the PS3 controller actually isn't the most startling thing about this.
That's actually fairly common for it to be a simple piece of technology that steers a submersible. I'm curious what the expert that you're talking about
things but he's probably agreeing with me or wrong if he disagrees. So.
You fancy yourself the greatest of the Titanic experts. I want to have a
quiz off with you and Mike Ryan because Mike Ryan for two days has been saying
that we don't need any other i thought he's on titanic stuff that he's the
world's authority on titanic information is it the uh... the lights from
camping world
no like to camp in world would alarm me the i can't believe that that can
sustain the pressure
you know what it probably can't because that was what one of the lawsuits was
about and i do want to retract something i said in the local hour which is
that i wouldn't trust equipment bought at a company that sponsors a bowl game.
Because I remember Lockheed Martin sponsors a bowl game.
And I feel like their equipment is the equipment
that's probably saving the submarine now.
So, you know, sponsors.
The armed forces.
Yeah, I feel like the products I use exclusively
promote bowl games.
Yeah, I feel like I don't know.
I do your bad boy, Moorgas.
Do anything that not a smeltable bowl game. Yeah, yeah, I feel likeaires that's missing on the water from
that submarine ship. One of the billionaires, they stepson, is at a concert, right?
I blink when I do two concerts and people say, um, well, what is he supposed to do?
Be sad at the house. Is he supposed to go look yourself. Yes, you're supposed to be at the house
sad. You're supposed to be crying for me. You're supposed to be right next to the phone waiting to
hear any updates about me. You're supposed to be constantly your mom and shit. I isn't sad that you
are whole family and billionaire and nobody gives a bunch of like you like you missing and
mother of a bitch to shake dicks at concert. That's crazy. I'm gonna be broke. I'm gonna be broke then like
and poor but knowing that I'm love like
The steps on upset billionaire was indeed saying his father would want him to go enjoy the blink 182 concert
Why is Cardi B being held by some sort of cartoon skeleton?
Well, it's not a skeleton because it has a skin in the muscles.
It's a muscular vascular system.
Is that what it's called?
Yeah. Any anatomy majors in here?
They had that at Sons of Place once, the human anatomy.
Yeah, the body's...
I saw it at the tropic anus.
I love your real bodies.
I know. But it has eyes and teeth.
Yeah.
So that's interesting.
And he blinks too.
And he's got a very devious look.
Ooh, maybe it's because Blink 182 is why she did it.
Salted it.
Did you hear that Courtney's pregnant?
Hey, so one of the billionaires that's missing.
I don't know why Lewis did that.
He thought he had comedic time in Quimpilli.
He does not.
Lewis, please don't play video when you're not
asked to play video.
I still don't think the audience knows what that skeleton thing is that you guys.
It's a filter.
Dan, make your own top five list of things that make you feel old.
We all know what it's like.
We already covered this.
That's very clearly a TikTok filter, unless you actually think she exhumed one of the bodies
from the bodies exhibit in Vegas.
But why is she doing that while giving commentary on the submersive?
I would also shake dick at blink when 82
because turnsell is opening and that's a bill.
That's a once in a lifetime bill.
I would shake so much dick at that concert.
I went to a blink when 82 concert maybe 10 years ago,
which I feel like was their first reunion
in the last concert ever.
Yes, I was at the same tour.
Really? Did you go to the one in West Palm Beach?
No, I went to one in Chicago
and everyone I was with got drinking tickets except me. Was that the one where Travis was on the roller of the same tour. Really? Did you go to the one in West Palm Beach? No, I went to one in Chicago and everyone I was with
got drinking tickets except me.
Was that the one where Travis was on the rollercoaster
drum set?
I don't, yes, I think it was.
It was upside down drumming, Dan.
It was the weirdest thing.
It was kind of a weird show.
I was so bothered by the Courtney Kardashian thing.
Really?
Because she said Travis on pregnant and she was showing
for several months.
Well, it was just for us.
It's not for Travis. It was a call-up assigned saying Travis on pregnant and she was showing for several months. Like it was just for us, it's not for Travis.
It was a call up a sign saying everybody on pregnant.
It was a call back to one of their music videos
where some of the crowd held up a sign
to Travis on pregnant.
Okay, but she's just doing that to tell everybody else.
But it's just a very look-a-me-lui thing.
It's weird.
She's a celebrity.
Not like no.
Yeah.
And did she consider how Lord B Bizx would consider any of this?
Mm, none of his business.
Do you think that she drew it up on a cardboard cut out
by herself?
They have people for that.
Nope, they, I saw pictures of her doing it.
I'm sure you did, boy.
Yeah.
You're grabbed the sharpie, making it look like you're going
to go to your place.
No, she came in and like maybe like crossed a tee.
The only thing that could have made these two,
these, this tragedy of the titanic submersible
more in French and pop culture would be if the stepson
was at a Tom Sandeball concert and saying
that that's where his stepfather wanted to be.
It's a Fender Pump joke, Dan.
I think I would hold in a far the entirety
of my time in this sub.
I probably would have perished already from constipation just because I don't want to
fart around people, it's not something that I do.
How do you think that's going?
Seeing how that bathroom situation was, because we're like, three days in now or something,
they obviously have all had to go to the bathroom, but you don't want a food down there?
They might be drinking the pee.
I hope not.
They do go.
They do go down with a certain amount of items.
They don't generally use the bathroom.
I was actually reading a Simpson writer's account of having done it because the Simpson people make so much money that they can
afford things like this and he said, I think it's Mike Reese's his name, he said that nobody used the bathroom in the 10 hours or whatever it took to get up and down.
Do you think the steps on screamed where are you without irony?
Hola, alguien me escucha, necesito ayuda. Estoy en Barcelona y las criaturas están por todas partes. A raíz, bluque, a raíz. Escucheis lo que escuchéis, tapados los ojos.
La calle vamos todos a cieras, pero lo más aterradores no saber en qué confiar.
Uy de las personas que os piden que mireis, si queréis seguir convido. Did not have one really let's walk through your phone history. What kind of I never had a motorway racer. I did not have a motorway
first phone. Oh
Telegraph machine after that the motor roller razor Dan was the one that was like really really thin that it flipped over
But it was like as thin as like a razor blade. That's why they called it the razor. What is a telegraph machine?
I don't know they had one in
Down nabby still got the Titanic stop has sunken stop John take a bastard stop What is a telegraph machine? I don't know, they had one in Down Naby. Stugats!
The Titanic stop has sunk in and stopped.
John take a bath to a stop.
It's missing, stop!
You think that was my phone?
You think that my first phone was the Titanic's emergency signal.
This is the Dan Lebathar show with the Stugats. David Marquette is a retired Navy submarine captain.
He's the author of Turn the Ship Around, a true story of turning followers into leaders.
Thank you for your expertise here.
Thank you for making the time for us.
Before I ask you any of the questions I have and I have many.
What are the questions that you have right now as an observer of this story as the world
has been captivated by what is happening with this submersive that went down to as a
tourist attraction to check out the Titanic and now can't be found and there are reports
that there are pinging sounds but we don't know who's alive.
So what are the questions you have and thank you for joining us, David? Yeah, well, I have two
two kind of sets of thoughts about this. One is about the immediacy of the rescue and the recovery
and they're either going to be recovered or they're not and we're all it's all going to play out in
the next 24 to 48 hours because that's really all the oxygen that they have left.
But when I step back and think about it, the kind of things I'm thinking about are what
are the roles of these highly innovative, experimental, pushing the edge of what's possible
with the laws of physics in human, advancing human endeavors, and if the company is going to not do the normal
certification and regulation path with they chose not to do because they want to be
very innovative and fast moving, then what is the obligation on society to then come to
their rescue?
And how much money are we going to spend saving these people and wouldn't that money at some point be better spent
providing fresh water, mosquito netting, vaccinations, and things that will save people's lives
at a lower cost. I think those are the things we're going to eventually have to grapple with.
Okay, the micro, the macro just was felt a little unfeeling for the present predicament but I understand
why you're looking at the macro ocean gate was warned of potential for catastrophic problems
with titanic mission experts inside and outside of the company warned of potential dangers
and urged the company to undergo a certification process explained to me how dangerous what
they're doing is for someone who doesn't understand.
This is extremely dangerous. The pressure down there is 380 times what we feel here at the atmosphere.
Now, you might think a spaceship going into space, oh, it's got to deal with the difference in pressure.
That's simply one atmosphere. One inside the spaceship, zero outside.
It gets a little pinhole leak in the
airs rushing out. This is 380 times that. The slightest flaw, like for example, this thing
is a carbon fiber tube with two titanium end bells bolted on. The slightest flaw, crack
because maybe it's gone up and down and up and down. There've been some kind of fatigue
crack in either the metal. Now titanium is very resilient, which is why we use this. Or the carbon fiber, or the junction,
where one meets the other, or bolts, got a little bit loose, or a little fitting. It's just got a tiny,
tiny little hole because of rust or corrosion. That, 380 times atmospheric pressure is going to come
rushing in there. Nature doesn't care.
It's pressing on all sides of this thing and any little defect will be exploited in a sense.
You've been 300 times the atmospheric pressure down there, correct?
You've experienced that.
Can you tell me how claustrophobic that is or what we're talking about there?
Actually, no.
In our submarines, we don't have a need to go that deep.
Our submarines aren't designed to go that deep.
They're 10 times deeper than we would go in our submarines.
As a person though, you don't really feel the pressure.
It's not like being on an airplane.
You're sitting in, but you do feel very claustrophobic.
You're in there with four of your best friends
and it's uncomfortable.
There are no seats. You're exhaling with four of your best friends, and it's uncomfortable. There are no seats.
You're exhaling, carbon dioxide,
you're inhaling, oxygen.
The oxygen levels are starting to go down.
You're starting to get headaches.
The carbon dioxide levels are building up.
You're poisoning yourself in essence.
You're getting headaches, the nausea, confusion,
and finally, you'll, asphyxiation and poisoning from carbon dioxide.
So it's not comfortable at all.
There's a little tiny, basically they have a baggy
for a toilet behind a curtain, and they turn the music up when someone goes
and needs to go to the bathroom.
Hey, David, it's Mike.
Say they actually locate this submarine here in the next couple of hours.
Then what? Do they have any way to actually bring it up because that process seems even more complicated than
trying to locate the thing? Yeah, you're right, but we there is a system, the US Navy has a system
design almost exactly for this. And what it is, it's a long cable and a big giant spool and it's designed to be taken apart
into different parts where it fits on these big C-17 airplanes those it normally lives in San Diego
they've been sent and they've arrived in Newfoundland and they'll take that and do a temporary mount
on one of these big oil well servicing chips that can then drive it out
and be standing by in the location. But the problem is you drop this cable, you got to get that
hook onto the submarine, and so that's probably one of those remotely operated vehicles with an
arm can do that. But that's still pretty dicey because currents are moving things around,
the hook is swaying, it's two and a half miles now. But we got to find them first.
Otherwise, we don't get to, we don't even get the step to what you make of the
sounds being heard or reported about that they are hearing tapping down there.
What does that mean?
Is it them?
Yeah, it's possible.
The oceans are noisy.
There's whales, there's shrimp, there's waves, there's other ships passing by.
So we're trying to sort out what could be from them and what's just all the rest of this
noise.
When we hear something, like bang, bang, bang, bang, bang, that's man-made.
Fish generally make metal on metal sounds like that.
So it's possible to them. the ROB went over there.
So now we're looking at a much smaller area.
But we really can't see much.
It's pitch black, the ROB's got lights, cameras.
Someone's looking at a screen up on a ship driving around,
trying to drive back and forth in a pattern,
and see if they can see anything.
We didn't see anything.
So we're sort of back to square one.
Would you ever go down in that thing?
No, a couple reasons. One is if you think about exploration and crossing a continent or going up
a mountain, for me, there's a lot of physical, there's physical ever, physical
stamina, exploration here. I'm not trying to detract from what these people are doing, but it's really
more about the vessel than the people.
If you can just tolerate sitting uncomfortably for eight hours, then you just take a ride.
So, for me, that's not that interesting.
And then visiting the Titanic, it doesn't have, I mean, it's a graveyard for 1500 people. It doesn't really have a draw for me. How about the idea that the certification for this is not
something that you would advise, period? Like, this is, would you advise this for anybody? People
got to make their own decisions and how they want to live their life. And, but I think there are risk mitigating techniques
that can be used to reduce the risk of something like this.
For example, instead of just going out and going deep,
going out and sending it deep
and then bringing it back without any people on board,
or going out and just going in shallow water,
just going down for 100 feet,
and making sure everything works, and then coming back up,
and then loading all of it with just a pilot,
and then coming back up, load everybody, and then go down.
So I think there are some, like, in the Navy,
we've learned over a long period of time,
how to mitigate risk so that when we finally do go out
and do these risky operations,
we've done everything possible to find all possible problems and get rid of them before we go out there.
Does it seem to you like this company oceangate did that given some of the details that have
come out in lawsuits and other news reports since this accident happened?
Yeah, I don't see evidence in the timeline and the way they've talked about it, that they have
done the kind of things that we would do on the nuclear submarine before.
We would go to sea, that doesn't mean they didn't do them.
It's just I haven't seen any evidence in terms of the way the CEO talks about it or the timeline
for these tourists as I sign up and go out.
What do you make of the PS3 controller aspect of it?
I've seen a lot of debate on social media from people saying that I would never get on
a submarine that's controlled by a PS3 controller, and then the rebuttal to that being like,
well, it's a pretty simple technology.
Maybe you'd be surprised that similar technology exists on other craft as well.
Yeah. I mean, there's billions of dollars being spent in the gaming industry. And so they're
making advances in these areas, and a lot of these areas like the human machine interface
faster than it's going on in the military. I don't really have a problem with using a $35 controller and not a $35,000 controller, if you have four of them
on the submarine, because that controller is not designed to be so robust, it's going to work in
all conditions all the time. And if you really need to rely on it, then you need four of them.
It doesn't work. Unplug it, plug in the next one, kind of a thing. So when we build a submarine,
if we need one, we put on two, we need two, we put on three,
it's always about redundancies, backups,
and having alternate plans.
Given what you know, explain to me the differences
between this vessel and a vessel that you have used,
the submarine properly trained by the military
to endure conditions not this deep.
So, first of all, we have a nuclear reactor, which has a lot of power.
We have a giant propeller, so we lead fort on our own power, drive out to see, go deep,
where the, quote, bad guys don't know where we are.
And within a matter of days, we can be anywhere, anywhere in the world.
This is a submersible has needs to be towed out by a mothership and it has little propellers that can then maneuver it down to the
Titanic and come back. This is designed to go underwater for maybe a half a day,
a few hours, maybe a couple days. We're underwater for 36, the 90 day. I was
underwater once for 87 days. So it's a much bigger program. We have 130, 140 people. It doesn't
feel claustrophobic to us, but fundamentally, you're operating a machine in the corrosive
pressure of the ocean. And we always would say, sub-arranging a safe as long as you remember
it's a dangerous. Well, you say that, but David, this thing sounds like you're looking at it
and saying this is total insanity
that these people were doing this,
that anyone was profiting off it
or anyone was even trying it.
Yeah, but Dan, I look at a lot of things that people do.
I look at people, a guy climbed the face of the eye
here in three hours.
That's total insanity.
People drive an F1 car, 200 miles.
I'm not sure I can judge for that. They're very safe these days.
Yeah, I got it. I got it. They got to choose. And I appreciate from the human race,
from the level of the human race, we need people who are willing to go out and do things before
they're 100% safe,
or we never go, we never get to the second valley. David, stay there for a second. I've got a
thousand more questions, please. I'm going to come back with you after this. Dan Lebertard.
I just heard a song that had Frank Sinatra singing from the window to the wall to the swat drop
off my balls. Two guts. The window to the walls. To the sweat drops down my balls.
So what I'm saying here.
All these females crossing and all skits,
kid god damn.
Old blue eyes.
Congratulations on your suing on the nation.
This is the Danlebatar Show with this two cats.
MUSIC David, I want to go back to the very first question
that you talked about in the macro,
which is, should we be spending any of this money
to save these people?
I have not heard that coldness anywhere,
but I understand it.
And what is this cost?
Let's start there.
What is a rescue mission like this cost?
Yeah, I don't know, Dan, I don't know if it's cold. I mean, we got to make hard decisions in life.
You got one heart, two patients. It's not cold to make a decision. It's, we're saving one.
So in our brains, humans often neglect what we call the opportunity cost. So the money that we're
if we're spending money here, what are we not spending it on? This is a very
costly mission. There have been three, four, five airplanes out there flying
since Sunday, the Navios flown this equipment out there. Now at the same time
that's what we do. We have Coast Guard and that's what these people are designed to do. It's good.
Just from a cold calculating point of view, it's good to exercise the system. It's good to load it up and check it out and make sure
can we talk to the right people in the right places on the right commercial companies. Do we have a map? Do we know where these ships are at any one time
with something happens?
Let's say tomorrow it happens with an American submarine.
Well, we've got the system in place to,
it'll help in the future.
So I don't think we should spend no money,
but at some point, and it'll probably be once,
we're pretty sure that the oxygen runs out,
is we got to decide
how much are we going to spend because we're not spending it on other things.
What do you think right now is happening down there? Like do you have just can your expertise
lend any additional insight to us when you're talking about it can be anything if one crack
this is not
intended to be down there for multiple days. So it would appear based on your expertise
and what you're saying that it would be extremely unlikely for, for them to be able to survive
where we already are. Never mind where we'll be 18 hours from now.
Generally, the problem occurs when you're increasing pressure when you are changing system
conditions.
Once you get down there and everything is stabilized, I'm not worried that the things are going
to sort of suddenly rupture.
Now that it's down there for three or four days, I think that's probably okay.
It's an astatic situation.
What I worry about was during that hour, 45 minutes, it's making that descent, the pressure
is gradually increasing and it hasn't gone that deep
in a long time. So now there's some component of it. There's a fitting. There's something that
wasn't quite connected quite right. And we get to certain pressure, pop it, it breaks loose,
and then the vessel floods and it's game over. Let's say everything's still intact. These are people who have gone down there with no training.
Can they still be alive?
Yeah, they're basically passengers.
I don't think there's a lot of training that you need.
The only thing that really need to do is bang on the side and try and minimize the breathing
so they extend their oxygen as long as possible.
The people who are down there are not naive people.
There's the CEO, the company, a couple of billionaires who've done this exploration before,
the French pilot who's been down to the Titanic three times. These people are not, they're
not just, they're not like tourists like, hey, we like the dumb guy with a hat. Like, these
people know what they're doing. So they would not be susceptible to panic. So I'm confident
that if they're still alive, they're doing everything they can. What is there to see on the Titanic the fourth time
that you missed the first three? Well, here's what they're trying to do. They're saying, look, if we
can study the Titanic, we're going to see how it how fast it it corrodes away, what's attacking it,
that it corrods away what's attacking it. We can get a sense of how warming is affecting the oceans
and the organisms in the ocean, and that's laudable.
But in order to fund that, what we're gonna do
is we're gonna piggyback it by sending some rich people down.
We're gonna charge them $250,000 each.
And that tourism industry will then support the development and the building of vessels that the scientists can use.
So it's a good cause.
What would be your certification process for something like this?
Certification starts with design. Do you have the systems in place?
Has the thing been tested? What computer models have we sent through the thing?
Then, do you take it to operations? How are we operating it? Not so much the tours that are
just writing for the day, but the people around it. What's the operational schedule look like?
If we have it in port all winter because the weather is bad, when the first day of good weather
breaks, what do we do?
We did test everything at the pier.
Then we're going to go in shallow water.
We'll test it in the bay.
Then we're going to go in deep water with nobody on it.
What are those programs that we're going to do and then lay that out?
Let somebody else check your, like improve your thinking, make it better.
But these guys, again, it's a commercial entity.
So all those things cost money.
The more time you have the submarine
that you're not using it for revenue generating tourist trips,
it's like an airplane sitting at the gate.
It's not making money.
David, I just wanna know what you're telling
your fellow submarine captains about this
in the most honest moments. Are you saying what is wrong with these bad shit crazy
people
now we don't say that but we we're we're like yeah they're dead
uh... because i i'm looking at this you respect the ocean you were so you
you just you just got done saying
do you understand how dangerous this is? Like every time you go underwater
without the capacity to breathe for yourself,
you understand how dangerous it is.
And this, it seems to me, I don't wanna put words
in your mouth, that this kind of exploration,
why you think it a worthy cause,
you also think that this is a bit foolhardy
because it's almost impossible to guarantee it,
those depths that we have the human equipment to know what we're doing.
Yeah, and I think full hearty is a little strong,
but for example, the company,
after the accident happened,
the company's running around,
they're claiming they're not getting responses
from the good governments aren't helping as much as they could
Which I'm not sure about but look you're four years too late sending that email you figure all that out before
You figure that out when you're sitting at the pier and the sun is shining not when your ship is 13,000 feet underwater and
And so I think there things that we could have done better the company could do better to these kind of risks. Is there an element of this story that has shocked you the most?
This may sound uncaring warning.
The thing that shocked me the most is how much interest there is.
We have five people in a submarine.
Meantime, two years ago, we had 50 people in an Indonesian submarine lost.
All of them died.
We have 500 people on a migrant
ship trying to get the Europe sank probably dead. But I've been on the news 30 times in
the last 24 hours. There just seems to be a whole lot of interest. And I don't know if
it's a Titanic or oh, we got a couple billionaires or people pushing
the edge of the envelope, but they're just unbelievable.
All of the world, there's just unbelievable interest in the story.
Thank you, David.
I appreciate your time, sir.
Dan, thanks so much.
Try and make me look smart.
All right.
It will not be hard.
One of the things that he said there, because for this to be the most shocking part of it
that all of us are suddenly interested in this somebody writes in to me dan is so
woefully out of touch with the common man and doesn't know it
nothing about paying two hundred fifty k to take a sub to see the titanic wreckage
is relatable and most people aren't seeing their vacation fears realize
when they hear about this story
wait did you say that?
no I did not say that of course I did not say that
that was like dang he's right
I think we can all connect with the idea of oxygen running out of being lost at sea
I think the reason this is captivated everybody
more he's right he's right when he talks about
he said 500 people 300 people outside Pakistan trying to get
to freedom sinking at sea.
Yes, that's a greater horror with more people, but anyone listening to this can be captivated
by the idea of stuck with three or four other people at the bottom of the sea and air is
running out.
And that's not final, even though he's saying, yeah, they're dead.
It's not final.
We're imagining they're still alive,. Rolling Stone is reporting pinging sounds,
and we're hoping.
I don't think Peter Travers is on the beat.
I think they probably aggregated that story.
Yeah, Rolling Stone is in who I do first.
It came from like a military memo.
I think there's a few things that play
because I think the last point that he made
is extremely important in terms of things
that we render newsworthy, like we being the media.
There has been so much time and attention spent on this missing submersible because I think
it scratches an itch that a lot of people are genuinely curious and mystified about.
These are people that have decided to put their lives at extreme risk to do something that
they did not have to do.
This isn't a life or death situation you have to go on this vessel. They are doing it because they can, because they have the money to do it. They're putting
themselves at risk for it. And it involves one of the most iconic things of the last century,
which is an unsinkable ship, the Titanic, something that there's been one of the highest grossing
movies in history. That's still claiming lives. A human interest element in that, which he mentioned,
and then there's also the aspect of like,
none of us could ever do this even if we wanted to.
And people have the amount of wealth
that they can do a tourist trip to the unsinkable Titanic,
just because they can.
And now they're missing.
It is incredibly uncommon and strange,
which is I think why it's getting
so much attention right now we've been long fascinated with uh... the the titanic for several reasons it
was this indestructible thing that was obviously famously destroyed and and several thousands
lives lost but uh... i can't get over what a nilis that submarine captain was he was just very
matter of fact about everything and he was
a sub-captain, was he?
A captain of the USS Nietzsche?
Man, you worked a long way to set that joke on.
You interrupted me, like you tried and run me like four times for that, so.
Man, you didn't take the signal well.
I powered through.
He said one thing though, that is something that should be on T-shirts, that he should
sell, which is submarineing is safe as long as you
know it's dangerous the bar that was another another bar was billionaires that he led off with
and here that when you made it basically said it and it was not worth it.
They're dead too. Jessica are you aware that you powered through the entire entirety of that segment, waving a tiny little plastic hand at me?
It did make me feel stronger to have this in my hand actually the whole time.