Trainwreck: Poop Cruise Captivates An Emotionally Exhausted America

HomeNews

Trainwreck: Poop Cruise Captivates An Emotionally Exhausted America

“There is no coincidence. Only the illusion of coincidence,” Alan Moore famously wrote. While the V for Vendetta author wasn’t referring directly to

In ‘Echo Valley’, Julianne Moore and Sydney Sweeney Test a Mother’s Love
Karla Sofía Gascón Attends the Oscars 2025 After Controversy, but Skips Red Carpet
Warner Bros Wins Global Rights to ‘Wuthering Heights’ Starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi After Fierce Bidding War

“There is no coincidence. Only the illusion of coincidence,” Alan Moore famously wrote. While the V for Vendetta author wasn’t referring directly to Trainwreck: Poop Cruise when he had freedom fighter V make that remark, it’s strenuous not to think about Moore’s dystopian epic this week. After all, the show about a feces-filled cruise ship is at the top of Netflix’s movie rankings at exactly the same time as an oligarch renowned for allegedly expecting workers to pee in bottles took over a city known for its problematic sewage system to hold an estimated $50 million wedding. Coincidence? I still don’t know her, but I do know a lot of us are feeling like shit these days. How can we not?

The streaming series—which shouldn’t be confused with the Amy Schumer rom-com of the same name—launched June 10 with an episode about the November 5, 2021, fatal crowd crush during Travis Scott’s Astroworld Festival, in which eight people were killed. Dark stuff, maybe too obscure for the same week we watched President Donald Trump send masked troops into Los Angeles in a scene that evoked Damon Lindelof’s reboot of Moore’s Watchmen as much as anything.

The next episode, about behind schedule Toronto mayor Rob Ford, felt almost quaint. It feels like a lifetime since the one-time Toronto mayor who left office over allegations of crack utilize was in the news. (It was 2014.) Damian Lewis played Ford in a movie released in 2019. I don’t remember it, do you?

The crippled cruise liner Carnival Triumph limps into port guided by tug boats February 14, 2013 in Mobile, Alabama. An engine fire on February 10 left the ship and its 4,000 passengers without power and with meager food. While people onboard reported toilets that wouldn’t work, the ship was restocked with food during the days it was being towed through the Gulf of Mexico.

Jeff Gammons/Getty Images

I do, however, remember the ill-fated Carnival Triumph cruise from 2013, in which a two-day trip from Galveston, Texas, to Cozumel, Mexico, turned ugly when an engine room fire stopped the ship in its tracks. For three days, about 4,100 passengers and crew were adrift in the Gulf of Mexico (there goes my Oval Office access!) without electricity, which meant the ship’s toilets could not flush. And now you know why it’s called Poop Cruise.

The question of where to eliminate solid waste when the primary receptacles are out of order dominates much of the hour-long episode, as does the discomfort one experiences without air conditioning or fresh food. (The vessel was stocked with non-perishable goods that helped sustain the trapped passengers and crew; more food and other necessities were brought on board as it was towed to shore.) No one died, or even suffered sedate injury, though a passenger who spoke with SWNS claims trauma so deep that they’ll never cruise again.

Poop Cruise is a pleasant enough way to while 45 minutes away under the days-long heat dome, a weather condition caused by, scientists say, the rapidly worsening climate crisis. “At least we aren’t stuck on a boat in the Gulf,” we mutter as we click “play.” As the episode rolls, we can even scroll through images of private plane-flying B-listers (and Oprah Winfrey, in all her Phil McGraw and Mehmet Oz-boosting glory) celebrating the founder of what’s reportedly one of the world’s most notable polluters. In 2013, it was 4,100 people on a poop cruise. But today, it just might be all of us.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 0
DISQUS: