Sleepless History: Sleep Documentaries
The complete history of the Titanic, told slowly for sleep. Fire sounds, gentle narration, and the full story. She was the largest moving object ever built by human hands. She sailed for four days. And more than a century later, her name still commands silence. Tonight on Sleepless History, we tell the complete story of the Titanic; not just the iceberg, but everything before it and everything after. This is a long, slow, deeply detailed episode designed to carry you gently through history and into sleep. Fire sounds play softly in the background throughout. We begin in the shipyards of Belfast, where two men sketched the outline of something the world had never seen and follow the Titanic from concept to construction, from drawing board to departure. We walk through the ship herself: the grand staircase, the first-class parlor suites, the third-class cabins, the boiler rooms where stokers worked in brutal heat to keep her moving. We spend time with the people on board: the Astors, the Strauses, the Irish emigrants, the coal trimmers, the entire social world of Edwardian society, compressed into one floating vessel. Then, slowly and carefully, we trace the chain of decisions, assumptions, and extraordinary bad luck that sent her to the bottom. And finally, we follow the legacy: the inquiries, the survivors, the wreck two miles below the surface, and the reason this story still will not let us go. This episode is narrated at a slow, deliberate pace with fireplace sounds throughout. It is designed for listeners who use long-form storytelling, ambient sound, and calm narration to fall asleep, or simply to relax. In this episode: * The business rivalry that led to the Titanic's creation * Construction at Harland and Wolff: 3 million rivets, 14,000 workers * Life aboard in all three classes: food, society, hierarchy * The chain of errors: ice warnings, speed, missing binoculars * The lifeboat shortage and why it happened * Survival rates by class and what they reveal * The inquiries, the controversies, and the aftermath * The discovery of the wreck in 1985 and its ongoing deterioration * Why the Titanic still matters and what it still has to teach us Timestamps: 00:00:00 — Introduction: Welcome to Sleepless History 00:02:43 — Chapter 1: The Making of a Leviathan: Conception, Construction & Design 00:31:24 — Chapter 2: A Floating World: The Sociology of Life Aboard 01:01:33 — Chapter 3: The Chain of Errors: How a Ship Is Lost 01:33:11 — Chapter 4: The Rescue and the Reckoning: Aftermath & Inquiry 01:50:28 — Chapter 5: The Undying Ship: Legacy, Wreck & Meaning Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/sleepless-history/donations [https://redcircle.com/sleepless-history/donations]
77 episodios
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