Video URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cLR1VwxSQrU
the jogan experience do you know the one one of the dudes that survived the Titanic he was in the water for two hours I think he was a chef and the story was that he got drunk before he went in the water he just got hammered because he knew he was going to die and somehow or another because he was drunk he survived see if you can find that got it I was reading this I was like how does that makes sense how a baker survive the Titanic sinking by getting really drunk Dam blockers these [ __ ] there we go okay so can you go back up so I could read scoll so it says Charles how do you say that joen how do you say that Jamie johen join was one of the disaster's most unlikely survivors and he did it thanks to Industrial amounts of liquor so this dude got super duper hammered before he went in the water and somehow or another it helped him survive uh it was an almost physiologically impossible feat of survival and according to the British Titanic inquiry is because the 33-year-old Englishman had the presence of mind to greet History's Greatest Maritime Disaster by getting smashed so he knew he was dying he knew he was dying so he just decided to get [ __ ] up but he survived uh in survival situations having all that warm blood away from the vital organs means that the Drinker at a greater risk of hypothermia however Canadian hypothermia expert Gordon GB figures in the min-2 de C temperature of the North Atlantic the water was cold enough to quickly tighten joen blood vessels and cancel out any effects of the alcohol so then at a low to moderate doses of alcohol cold will win out says uh G BR a University of Manitoba professor has performed hundreds of cold water immersion studies what yohen would have had however is the awesome life-saving power of liquid courage alcohol remains a leading cause of humans getting into fatal situations including freezing to Deaths nevertheless the relaxing qualities of the drug have long been known to give humans an uncanny ability to survive trauma this reminded me of the story the lady that passed out in the in the snow and her friends found her like the next
day and they brought her in she was still alive yeah they're saying right here in the ER cold patients who are really drunk can walk in and they're conscious at a temperature that we that they shouldn't be so did being drunk keeps you alive keep scrolling down a little more that's it that's it no no no yeah um his actions might speak to a man unfazed by impending disaster immediately upon hearing the collision with an iceberg the chief Baker leapt out of his bunk and began dispatching his staff to stock the lifeboats with bread and biscuits this done he popped back into his cabin for a drink before heading topside to help load lifeboats not not only did walking what how what however I say his name joking refus his own place on a boat but he and there's no men like that today but he and a few other men became forcibly chuckling chucking reluctant women into empty seats likely saving their lives he said we threw them in he testified later top deck of the increasingly listing Titanic was mostly cleared of lifeboats by 1:30 a.m. to most this was a panic inducing sign that all hopes of rescue was gone but to uh whatever his name is it was a CU to head back to his cabin for another drink so this dude's just getting [ __ ] up he sat down on his bunk and nursed it along aware but not particularly caring that the water now rippled through the cabin doorway wrote historian uh Walter Lord in a night to remember Lord was in touch with the dude uh before the baker's 1956 death he said the dude then uh splashed top side again where he took upon himself to begin throwing deck chairs overboard with an eye to filling the water with impromptu flotation devices so the people could float around on the chairs his perched he then worked his way back to the pantry to get a drink of water the baker was standing on the stern when the ship broke in half and yet he remembered the violent catastrophic breakup only as a great list over to Port there was no great shock or anything he told the inquir so he was just hammered definitely moving through the Swarms of people he made it to the stern rail of the ship exactly 2:20 a.m. he rode the sinking Titanic into the sea like an elevator
woo as with all surviving Titanic crew members 2:20 a.m. on April 15th 1912 was also the exact moment at which the White Star Line stopped paying him oh boy the first stage of cold water immersion is known as cold shock horrifying sensation to having the skin cool the feelings with the Titanic Second Officer Charles light Towler uh described as being like a thousand knives being driven into one's body so this how did this dude survive what did he float around on for two hours does it say paddling and Treading Water you said I was just paddling and treading water for two hours oh my God how come couldn't do that then in the movie Just sunk in the water after two minutes but this Leo wasn't hammered and he gave up this dude didn't give up he paddled water for hours I guess it took a couple hours for them to get someone to get to them yeah he after two hours which is pretty impressive that they got to them in two hours eventually hold in 19 what what was this like 19 or somewhere around there I don't know the exact 1912 some I don't know the early 1900s so the fact they got to them in 2 hours is pretty May 1919 2019 oh no 107th yeah okay so 12 yeah 1912 wow
