The Dive That Shouldn’t Have Happened
When OceanGate’s Titan submersible dove toward the Titanic wreck in June 2023, it was supposed to be a $250,000 adventure of a lifetime. But it ended in tragedy—an implosion that killed all five people on board. Now, a new Netflix documentary titled Titan: The OceanGate Disaster is revisiting the heartbreaking incident with fresh revelations.
And this time, the warnings are impossible to ignore.
A Whistleblower’s Warning—Silenced
David Lochridge, the Titan’s former chief submersible pilot, says he saw the danger coming. Loud and clear.
“There was nothing safe about that vehicle,” he said in an interview on NBC’s TODAY show. He didn’t just speak up—he wrote his concerns in a formal quality inspection report. His reward? A two-hour meeting that ended in him being fired.
His main concern? The carbon fiber hull. While sleek and innovative, it wasn’t built to survive the crushing pressures of the deep sea, he argued.
$250K Per Passenger—But at What Cost?
OceanGate sold Titan expeditions as elite experiences for those who could afford the steep $250,000 ticket. Lochridge wasn’t just helping to build the sub—he was meant to take customers to the ocean floor. But as the project progressed, his doubts grew.
After his termination, Lochridge filed a whistleblower complaint and a lawsuit to make the public aware of the potential risks. Unfortunately, it wasn’t enough.
The Final Descent
On June 18, 2023, Titan lost contact during its dive. It later became clear the sub had suffered a “catastrophic implosion.”
Among the victims were:
Stockton Rush, 61 – OceanGate CEO and pilot
Paul-Henri Nargeolet, 77 – Titanic expert and deep-sea explorer
Hamish Harding, 58 – British billionaire
Shahzada Dawood, 48, and his son Suleman, 19 – Businessmen from Pakistan
It was a harrowing moment that stunned the world.
OceanGate’s Closure and Aftermath
OceanGate has since shut down its operations permanently. In a recent statement, the company expressed its condolences once more and confirmed its full cooperation with ongoing investigations by the Coast Guard and the National Transportation Safety Board.
Why This Documentary Matters
Titan: The OceanGate Disaster premieres this Wednesday on Netflix, and it’s more than just a retelling. It asks the tough questions:
Why were critical warnings dismissed?
Was the desire to innovate stronger than the need to stay safe?
Could these five lives have been saved?
With haunting interviews and firsthand accounts, the documentary shines a light on a tragedy that should never have happened—and the voices that tried to prevent it.
If you’re intrigued by tales of ambition, risk, and consequence beneath the ocean’s surface, this is a story you can’t afford to miss.