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113 Years On, The Sinking Of The Titanic Still Fascinates Children
The Straits Times
|April 14, 2025
Parents often look down at the whorl on the top of their children's heads and wonder what, exactly, is going on inside.
NEW YORK - Parents often look down at the whorl on the top of their children's heads and wonder what, exactly, is going on inside.
An industry of books, video games, films, merchandise and museums offers some insight: They are probably thinking about the Titanic.
In autumn 2024, Osiris, five, told his mother, Ms Tara Smyth, that he wanted to eat the Titanic for dinner. So she prepared a platter of baked potatoes - each with four hot-dog funnels, or smokestacks - sitting on a sea of baked beans.
Since first hearing the story of the Titanic, Ozzy, as he is known, has amassed a raft of factoids, a Titanic snow globe from the Titanic Belfast museum and many ship models at his home in Hastings, England.
About 8,850km away in Los Angeles, Mia and Laila, 15-year-old twins, devote hours every week to playing Escape Titanic on Roblox. They have been doing this for the last several years.
Sometimes, they go down with the ship on purpose - "life is boring", explained Mia, "and the appeal is that it's kind of dramatic".
Nearly 113 years after the doomed White Star Line steamship collided with an iceberg on April 14, 1912, and sank at about 2.20am the next day, it remains a source of fascination for many children.
The ones The New York Times spoke to did not flinch at the mortal fact at the heart of the story: That of the more than 2,200 passengers on the Titanic, more than twice as many passengers died as those who survived.
This story is from the April 14, 2025 edition of The Straits Times.
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