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The Last 2 Hours of the Unsinkable Ship | Titanic, 1912 April 14th, 1912, 11:40 PM. The RMS Titanic, the largest moving object ever created by human hands, was four days into her maiden voyage. "God himself could not sink this ship," they said. The richest people in the world were aboard — John Jacob Astor IV, Benjamin Guggenheim, Isidor and Ida Straus. First-class suites cost more than most people earned in a year. The ship was a floating palace, proof that humanity had conquered nature, that engineering could overcome any obstacle. Then the lookout saw something in the darkness. An iceberg, dead ahead. For 37 seconds, the ship turned. Almost fast enough. The iceberg scraped along the starboard side, opening six compartments to the sea. The unsinkable ship had two hours and forty minutes left to live. 2,224 people were aboard. The lifeboats could hold 1,178. Even if perfectly loaded, over 1,000 people would gone. But the boats weren't perfectly loaded — they launched half-empty because people didn't believe the ship could sink. First-class women had a 97% survival rate. Third-class children had a 34%. The poor were locked below decks while the wealthy boarded boats. The band played hymns as the ship tilted into the sea. 1,500 people froze in the -2°C Atlantic waters. The greatest ship ever built sank on her first voyage. Using advanced AI reconstruction, we've brought the Titanic back to life — the luxurious interiors, the moment of impact, the two hours and forty minutes of slow-motion catastrophe, the desperate loading of lifeboats, the ship breaking in two, and the 1,500 souls who went into the freezing water. This is not just a story about a shipwreck. It's a story about class, hubris, heroism, and the night the modern world learned that nothing is unsinkable. This is the Titanic, April 14-15, 1912. Two hours and forty minutes that changed everything. SUBSCRIBE for more AI-reconstructed history documentaries.