Chernobyl | Complete Series Reaction Marathon | First Time Watching

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  • Опубліковано 7 чер 2024
  • An excellent dramatization of one of the most controversial disasters in human history. Time to marathon Chernobyl. Join us on this rerun of our first time watching the award-winning series.
    Purchase Chernobyl on Blu-ray on Amazon here: amzn.to/3XjJ7Td
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    Full-Length Commentary for Episode 3:
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    Full-Length Commentary for Episode 4:
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    Full-Length Commentary for Episode 5:
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    *Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
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    All rights belong to their respective owners.
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    0:00 Start
    1:44 Episode 1 - "1-23-45"
    24:00 Episode 2 - "Please Remain Calm"
    49:30 Episode 3 - "Open Wide, O Earth"
    1:13:45 Episode 4 - "The Happiness of All Mankind"
    1:36:58 Episode 5 - "Vichnaya Pamyat"
    1:53:00 Post-Series Discussion
  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 891

  • @YouMeTheTV
    @YouMeTheTV  11 місяців тому +76

    Most of this video was recorded in January 2022.

    • @dontbstingy3587
      @dontbstingy3587 11 місяців тому +2

      Love these compilations. I'm a patreon supporter but I don't always feel like syncing up a whole video and dedicating hours and hours to a series I've seen. So Thanks.

    • @SantaClaus-kk8zr
      @SantaClaus-kk8zr 11 місяців тому +12

      That explains the 'visit chernobyl' line lmaooo, good video! I suggest not visiting for a year or two after the war, the Russians mined Chernobyl like crazy and there's still explosions going off nearly a year after their retreat from the North front.

    • @999MOBSTER999
      @999MOBSTER999 11 місяців тому +5

      ​@@SantaClaus-kk8zr They mined heavily Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, the bigest plant in Europe, so don't you worry lads, the world just might have the second exlusion zone to visit sooner 🥴🥵🤧

    • @christiansaenscheidt9056
      @christiansaenscheidt9056 11 місяців тому +2

      @@999MOBSTER999 Very unlikely as of now. Thank goodness the reactors are cooled down for months now. A dispersion like with the Chernobyl Accident it highly unlikely, though it still can of course be devastating in the immmediate surrounding area.

    • @adtu21
      @adtu21 10 місяців тому

      @@SantaClaus-kk8zrwhere did you red that? Another fake🤦‍♀️you guys have no idea about this…

  • @saviourself687
    @saviourself687 11 місяців тому +549

    The officer who said he's drive the truck himself was Vladimir Pikalov, a WWII vet and a general commanding the chemical warfare division. He actually drove a contamination hardened troop carrier, but volunteered not just because of concern for his men, but he knew that a generals word would carry more weight than a private. He also spent considerable time at the site while in command of the Chernobyl cleanup and was awarded (rightly so) Hero of the Soviet Union for his efforts.

    • @csgXIII
      @csgXIII 11 місяців тому +26

      He was also a veteran of the Afghanistan war, true hero

    • @wyldhowl2821
      @wyldhowl2821 10 місяців тому +29

      The guys who fought to stop the Chernobyl disaster, the firefighters, soldiers, engineers, are true heroes, and the world did not really appreciate how much they owed to their sacrifice. The probably saved all of eastern Europe, perhaps the world. Many did not survive, but many knew that was the deal and went in anyway.

    • @TheArrowedKnee
      @TheArrowedKnee 9 місяців тому +7

      The guy was a true badass, apparently he fought and was wounded multiple times in the battle of Stalingrad, the largest battle in history, in addition to being one of the most brutal.

    • @philipped.r.6385
      @philipped.r.6385 8 місяців тому +4

      The guy is such a chad! Being ready to put your life in jeopardy to save your own men is the mark of a true leader. And he also understood perfectly how the politics of USSR worked. The courage of the liquidators is absolutely incredible. We owe them a huge debt.

    • @charlize1253
      @charlize1253 6 місяців тому +4

      Any officer can order his men to do dangerous things, but a true leader would do it first himself.

  • @peteturner3928
    @peteturner3928 11 місяців тому +267

    Sorry I meant to mention. RIP Paul Ritter. As a testament to his acting prowess everyone hated him as the reactor supervisor Anatoly Dyatlov, that's how good he was. But to us Brit's he was best known as a comic actor. Taken too soon by a brain tumour in 2021.

    • @jorgelmao4992
      @jorgelmao4992 11 місяців тому +7

      Lovely bit of squirrel tonight

    • @immortaljanus
      @immortaljanus 11 місяців тому +12

      Damn, I didn't know that. That's a shame.

    • @twisterdavemd1
      @twisterdavemd1 11 місяців тому +8

      It is amazing, because just his presence onscreen in that role was enough to make me physically distressed with disgust, and even more so at the archival footage of Dyatlov himself.

    • @Tim_3100
      @Tim_3100 11 місяців тому

      Rip

    • @sweetchinmusic99
      @sweetchinmusic99 11 місяців тому +3

      Felt so strange him playing such a horrible lying bloke when he played the legend Martin . Rip Paul your sorely missed

  • @nicklaque7706
    @nicklaque7706 7 місяців тому +33

    As a Radiation Technician, i can tell you seeing 3.6 in the Control Room would have me extremely concerned. Also for the levels of radiation they were dealing with, no amount of protective gear or clothing will have helped them, except for Lead.

  • @arze1226
    @arze1226 11 місяців тому +40

    I'm from Latvia, ex USSR state country. One of my colleagues who finished his mandatory military service in 1984 was offered by the state quite significant money and two military rank upgrade that meant bigger pension, more privileges to go to "secret mission" in 1986. He was just married with wife working at hospital and being pregnant at that time. Rank he was supposed to be receiving was so high that just professionally trained military school guys could get so he was suspicious of it. His wife being doctor used her contacts to fake miscarriage that allowed him to stay home. Only after that he understood that this "secret mission" was to the clearing brigade of Chernobyl disaster as one of the possible supervisors. Another colleague went there because he was in mandatory service at that time and he died two years ago from liver and lung failure. We will never know how much did radiation affected his life, how many years did it took away from him.

  • @marciusmarciukas5467
    @marciusmarciukas5467 11 місяців тому +25

    My uncle was one the 500k people deployed liquidators in chernobyl, died at 41 of cancer still a lucky man.

  • @SteveNaranjo
    @SteveNaranjo 11 місяців тому +30

    The most powerful phrase in this series and the one that give me goosebumps everytime I heard it its "You are dealing with something that has never occurred on this planet before. "
    To understand that you need to picture this: in the billions of years the Earth had we have seems many natural disasters, earthquakes, floods, massive vulcanic explosions, meteors hitting Earth and extinguishing life, multiple ice ages and yet not once had we seen an event like that.
    Let that sink in.

  • @stevenroberts1392
    @stevenroberts1392 11 місяців тому +203

    I see this gotten wrong often. But a point of correction, in Ep 2 when the helicopter crash occurs, this has absolutely nothing to do with radiation of any kind. This is based on actual events during the disaster and if you watch closely, you can see the main rotor strike the cable from the adjacent crane and the crane hook fall to the ground in sync with the helicopter. This is exactly what took down the MI-8 helicopter during the actual events of the Chernobyl disaster. It's a very fine detail but one that 90% of people misinterpret as a result of extreme radiation exposure.

    • @jessbellis9510
      @jessbellis9510 11 місяців тому +9

      To be fair, the pilot was gonna be dead pretty quick no matter which way it went.

    • @88balloonsonthewall70
      @88balloonsonthewall70 11 місяців тому +24

      @@jessbellis9510 Thats an overstatement considering how many years the people lived who where exposed to the core. The big man who held up the doors to the core in episode one still lives today.

    • @patrickmchugh9366
      @patrickmchugh9366 11 місяців тому +1

      ​@@88balloonsonthewall70 thats incredible

    • @Roobadoon
      @Roobadoon 11 місяців тому +16

      @@88balloonsonthewall70actually it would have 100 percent been fatal you didn’t take into account the building is lead lined so it protected a lot of the radiation from escaping sideways but the radiation was leaking heavily through the roof that’s why they couldn’t clear it remotely so the helicopter pilot would have been hit by all escaping radiation as he was right above it and even in the smoke

    • @budgreen4x4
      @budgreen4x4 11 місяців тому +5

      They used the actual footage of the crash, and yes it hit a crane cable which happened a ways after the initial accident and the containment was being constructed, the exposures at that time would be more tolerable and be measured in several minutes before you would go over an acceptably safe exposure. Considering at this time being on the roof for 2-3min would be the limit

  • @Mangolite
    @Mangolite 11 місяців тому +288

    Emily Watson as Ulana Khomyuk, a nuclear physicist from Minsk. Khomyuk is fictional. She represented a team of scientists who worked to resolve the Chernobyl disaster.

    • @fredfinks
      @fredfinks 11 місяців тому +17

      That radiation aged her so quickly , she look heaps older than when she was in Harry Potter.

    • @adventuresinlaurenland
      @adventuresinlaurenland 11 місяців тому +26

      ​@@fredfinksI know it's a joke, but you know Emily Watson and Emma Watson are two different people, right? 😂

    • @fredfinks
      @fredfinks 11 місяців тому +28

      @@adventuresinlaurenland So youre saying the radiation so strong it not only mutated her name, but caused some extreme mitosis that now theres two mutant emma watsons? RIP in peace

    • @adventuresinlaurenland
      @adventuresinlaurenland 11 місяців тому +8

      @@fredfinks yes, that is exactly what I'm saying 😂

    • @613and802
      @613and802 11 місяців тому +2

      Someone watched the epilogue

  • @josekiss4610
    @josekiss4610 11 місяців тому +59

    I live in one of the countries of the Eastern bloc, now in the European Union, 550 miles from Chernobyl. I was a child when this happened, but I still remember it. The wind did not blow the bulk of the pollution towards us, but there were restrictions and closures. People were afraid because they didn't really know what was going on. Information was censored and there were lots of rumors. My parents were gardening and that year all our crops had to be destroyed. Later, the media gave a lot of attention to the truckers who visited the site and later all fell ill and died. The other big topic was the case of stolen aid supplies.
    When I watch the series, old memories come flooding back. It really happened a long time ago, but of course we don't learn anything from it.

  • @lizgreer6888
    @lizgreer6888 9 місяців тому +6

    My husband graduated from the US Navy nuclear school and served 14 years as a nuclear safety and lab technician. In nuclear school they take an entire course on the Chernobyl disaster, a deep dive studying everything learn from their mistakes and small successes. They read all of the first hand accounts you see being interviewed, the official records, interviews and testimonials, court records, everything. He says this is the most accurate retelling of the events he has ever seen. The judgement scene in the final episode where they explained exactly what happened is word for word exactly what is written in the record. This show is a masterpiece!

  • @johnmonk66
    @johnmonk66 11 місяців тому +183

    Those men who went down saved millions of lives, and incredibly, they all survived

    • @RaidenDragonClaw
      @RaidenDragonClaw 11 місяців тому +2

      how the woe tats insane i was sure none of them did i hope they lived good lives

    • @bigmikem1578
      @bigmikem1578 11 місяців тому

      And they did it in complete darkness. The lights were there so we .. the viewers had something to look at. They didn’t just save MILLIONS OF lives. But billions. Eventually that radiation would spread the whole earth and kill us all if not stopped.

    • @JGD714
      @JGD714 11 місяців тому +6

      @@RaidenDragonClaw 2 are still alive.

    • @pvtj0cker
      @pvtj0cker 11 місяців тому

      They were given Stoli after the mission which mitigated the damage of radiation.

    • @carlhartwell7978
      @carlhartwell7978 11 місяців тому +3

      It depends on perspective with concerns to 'who survived'. Radiation poisoning can take decades to translate to death. People are certainly still dying or at least have cancer from the radiation they absorbed. And though it'd be impossible to tell whether 'a cancer' is due to this or from any other cause, we can say for certain many would be due to this event for perhaps even decades to come.
      It wouldn't surprise me if there are people now only in their late 30's, who were babies when evacuated from Prypyat on 27 April 1986. And are dealing with cancers right now as a result of this. If they died all these years later, hard to call them 'survivors'.

  • @munchkinmunchkin
    @munchkinmunchkin 11 місяців тому +90

    I’m from Romania, and I can definitely confirm it came all the way to us as well. Many babies were born with deformities, all of my grandparents died from a form of cancer in their 60’s. Iodine pills were handed out, but my parents and sister were only given 2 pills so my parents had to split one.

    • @RaidenDragonClaw
      @RaidenDragonClaw 11 місяців тому

      Im from Romania too i wonder if no maybe not it was 1995 surely it was safe then right

    • @Nyx_2142
      @Nyx_2142 11 місяців тому +6

      Multiple studies have shown that there were no pregnancies affected by radiation from Chernobyl.
      Dr. Robert Gale, “We estimate incorrect advice from physicians regarding the relationship between maternal radiation exposure from Chernobyl and birth defects resulted in more than one million unnecessary abortions in the Soviet Union and Europe."
      Dr. Gale is a world-renowned expert on bone marrow transplants who immediately went to treat the Chernobyl victims after the accident and spent two years working there. For the next 30 years, Gale worked on several studies of the long-term medical consequences of Chernobyl.
      National Institutes of Health declared that, “In spite of the best efforts of statisticians and epidemiologists, the claimed thousands of Chernobyl-induced cancers and mutations have yet to manifest themselves.”
      In 2006, researchers at the U.N. International Agency for Research on Cancer estimated that Chernobyl-induced cancers by 2065 will total 41,000, compared with several hundred million other cancers from other causes.
      In short, there is very little to no conclusive evidence to prove what you said. If you can't provide anything to prove it that has been properly cited and peer-reviewed, fuck off with your bullshit.

    • @Tallgeese556
      @Tallgeese556 11 місяців тому +3

      @@Nyx_2142 Sorry what now?

    • @4Kandlez
      @4Kandlez 11 місяців тому +31

      @@Nyx_2142 Yes comrade, this misinformation must be stopped. You will be handsomely rewarded with a promotion and 400 rubles for your devotion to the party

    • @MrTrevisco
      @MrTrevisco 11 місяців тому +3

      Namegamex101, nuclear industry troll.

  • @PeanutBrn
    @PeanutBrn 11 місяців тому +27

    Fun fact my grandfather was one of the guys, that was drafted to clean up the reactor zone, he went later in the process, so there was less debris, but he went there, did his 90 sec, still alive today.

  • @gregory3499
    @gregory3499 11 місяців тому +276

    This horror series is one of the scariest of all time. Because most of it is absolutely true. Horrific.

    • @gavinhall6040
      @gavinhall6040 11 місяців тому +1

      Because its British American viewers should automatically know they are gonna get either/or gruesome shit, sex and or nudity (loads normally), violence constantly, very bad language, and finally bloody good acting.

    • @sassymenses
      @sassymenses 11 місяців тому +5

      "most of it", yeah :)

    • @Ragnar452
      @Ragnar452 11 місяців тому +8

      It's not horror. Not in a true sense. But it is scary knowing people acted that way. A note to those who still believe communism was good.

    • @bogdannila1478
      @bogdannila1478 11 місяців тому +7

      most of it is NOT TRUE...do your research

    • @Ragnar452
      @Ragnar452 11 місяців тому +17

      @@bogdannila1478 "Most of it is not true" are bold words. Yes russian version is that it was sabotage not lies and severe incompetence. So which part was not true? It wasn't very accurate, I agree. But not true? Really? 🤣🤣🤣 Are you one of those who believe the Russian version? They sure are trustworthy.

  • @lisalessa8893
    @lisalessa8893 11 місяців тому +34

    Many people in Russia find this series as propaganda against Russia. I myself, being born in Soviet Union and being Kazakhstani citizen believe these series praise the braveness of all people who had the courage to work on figuring staff out, cleaning the are etc. this series show how people were brave to take part in suicidal job. This is not anti soviet propaganda. This is a series abt brave people

    • @RageForSeven
      @RageForSeven 9 місяців тому +5

      Totally agree with this, that's how i saw it too, how the human kind, as always, can both be the worst and the best at the same time in the same situation.

    • @samihyleh865
      @samihyleh865 8 місяців тому

      Well what you except from those ignorant brainwashed tools? Russian newspapers and news are just delusional BS... And people believes everything without even thought against those news. Sounds kinda same like one North Korea...

    • @adambazso9207
      @adambazso9207 6 місяців тому

      They see it as propaganda? How brainwashed are the people there? Jesus Christ. It's fictionalized history, every sane person knows that, but it has elements of truth and a certain amount of accuracy. But of course a lot of people in Russia maybe think that Stalin was a hero, a blessing for mankind and not a sociopathic remorseless murderer, one of the true demons of the 20th century and of human history in general (among others, like Mao-Ce-Tung and Hitler of course, but one could also mention Pol-Pot for example.)

    • @Cnightz
      @Cnightz 6 місяців тому +1

      Exactly how I took it. Not as incompetence but as bravery and the fight for human kind.

    • @NuclearFantasies
      @NuclearFantasies 6 місяців тому

      The Russians who think this is anti Russian have been brainwashed since birth.

  • @alaric_
    @alaric_ 11 місяців тому +12

    The news anchor talking about the accident is literally the first memory i have of 'news' or the world outside our safe neighbourhood. I was 8 years old and the thought that i had then, i can still remember it: "this is bad, really bad". I couldn't compare it to anything as i was so small but i knew in my bones it was very bad. Something about the anchors demeanor, his absolutely dead seriousness, the stream of papers handed to him of new developments... Small kids are really good at picking up social cues.
    We here in Finland got a decent dose. Not great, not terrible...

  • @sethraelthebard5459
    @sethraelthebard5459 11 місяців тому +20

    Radiation is quite possibly one of the most horrifying ways to die. Slow, inevitable, and like he said...unimaginably painful.

    • @RealBradMiller
      @RealBradMiller 7 місяців тому

      Pshh.. that's just life!

    • @radioactiveassassin5218
      @radioactiveassassin5218 Місяць тому

      @@RealBradMiller Yeah, I don't think death by life includes choking on your own lungs

  • @sethraelthebard5459
    @sethraelthebard5459 11 місяців тому +40

    What I find utterly gut-wrenching is that while Soviet policy led to the disaster at Chernobyl, it was also the bravery and sacrifice of the Ukranian and Russian people that stopped a potentially apocalyptic nuclear explosion. When those three men went into the underbelly of the plant to drain the tanks, they inadvertently saved the world.

    • @yellowrose0910
      @yellowrose0910 Місяць тому

      Historically, Russian government from the Czars through the 'Communist' (not really) Revolution, to current day Dictatorship has sucked beyond comparison in its evil and inhumanity, while historically the Russian people have just been decent humans trying to survive. Present-day Putin-supporters excluded of course.

  • @brachypelmasmith
    @brachypelmasmith 11 місяців тому +14

    I really like the scene where scherbina smashes the phone upon hearing the info about false information about the rover. It shows how much he was involved and disgusted.

  • @wozzab9136
    @wozzab9136 11 місяців тому +23

    The guy who played Dyatlov, Paul Ritter, was a brilliant comedy actor in a British comedy called Friday Night Dinner. Sadly passed away from a brain tumour in 2021

    • @4Kandlez
      @4Kandlez 11 місяців тому

      Probably caused by the radiation poisoning

    • @lucianaromulus1408
      @lucianaromulus1408 10 місяців тому

      His acting was FANTASTIC. I HATED the character. Super memorable

  • @Fraggelmann
    @Fraggelmann 11 місяців тому +21

    I lived in Gävle, Sweden, when this happened. I was just a baby (born in March, 1986) in a stroller at the time, but the winds and the weather brought with it stuff from Chernobyl here, and I can’t imagine how worried my parents were at the time.

    • @formatique_arschloch
      @formatique_arschloch 11 місяців тому

      How many times you personally have burned that straw goat in Gävle?😅

  • @jacklyons2088
    @jacklyons2088 11 місяців тому +7

    the line about misinformation ,near the beginning, hits harder now after what were going through

  • @matasa7463
    @matasa7463 11 місяців тому +6

    The general that drove through the ruins with the dosimeter, was a hero of WWII, and fought at Kursk. He's the real deal.

  • @Carpartz
    @Carpartz 11 місяців тому +14

    I've definitely noticed a trend in reactions to this series that a large percentage of time is the watchers being silent, especially in the 1st 2 episodes. Nothing wrong with that. It's just an awesome show.

    • @deaconstjohn4842
      @deaconstjohn4842 11 місяців тому

      True. Although 90% of the "audience" that reacts here on UA-cam is comprised of a bunch of borderline illiterates. Ofc all americans. So it's no surprise that they keep their mouth shut, they wouldn't know what to say anyway

  • @pant-hootingchimp8917
    @pant-hootingchimp8917 8 місяців тому +2

    I live in the UK, thousands of miles from Chernobyl. The radioactive clouds reached us here. I'll never forget one day, in the weeks or months (can't remember which month) following the disaster, my mother and I going into our garden and noticing something weird on the surface of the water of our pond. It was a strange looking, whiteish coloured layer of dust that almost seemed to glow. It had a luminous quality to it. We pretty much guessed what it was but it was later confirmed in the news to be radioactive dust from Chernobyl that had been carried by the wind and dropped in our area by heavy rainfall. Our area (Devon in South West England) was particularly being affected around that time. Other times it was North Wales being affected, then it was Cumbria in North West England. Different pockets of the UK were being affected at different times according to which way the radioactive clouds were being blown, and their intensity plus the level of it that was dropped to the ground by heavy rainfall. For years the UK's livestock and fruit and vegetables in our fields were contaminated and inedible. The whole of Europe was affected by Chernobyl, some countries much worse than others, like Austria. People were told to stay indoors with our windows shut. Kids couldn't play outdoors. I can only imagine how horrific it was for the people of Ukraine and Belarus and other neighbouring countries. All those people who bravely risked and sacrificed their lives to save the world are true heroes and must never be forgotten.

  • @meanpersona4686
    @meanpersona4686 7 місяців тому +3

    I am from Poland (it wasn't a soviet state, but a satelite state). I wasn't born when it happened, but my parents remember that they were told about the disaster only after the May victory day. Only after that they were given the lugola fluid and iodine but it was already too late. Weirdly enough, the initial radiation cloud missed a large area of Poland (it "came back" later), but people were terrified. Even though atomic power is very safe, people still have this distrustful dispositon when it comes to having a nuclear power plant in the country.
    Also, sidenote. The effect of radiation on the body are kinda exaturated (in some cases). The radiation poisoning that the technitians and the firefighers got are even worse in a real life, but the stuff like in the episode 1st - the bloody worker or the man who was holding the doors and started bleeding (sorry I don't remember the name) they suffered beacause of the blast itself and the heat that it brings, the radiation started 'working' later, beginning with the "radiation tan". Ludmila didn't lose the baby beacause she was near her husband (basically, the moment you decontaminate the person, they become relatively safe to be around)- it was mostly combination of the radiation she got when she was around Pripiat and a horrible stress she suffered. As I said, some stuff is exaturated, some would be too horrific to show.
    Also, also - the helicopter didn't fall beacause of the radiation, but it got tangled in the wires and the smoke didn't help.

  • @rikardottosson1272
    @rikardottosson1272 11 місяців тому +7

    The firemen’s uniforms are still there in the basement of Pripyat hospital. Or were, who knows what’s there after Russia occupied the area. They “didn’t believe the hype”about Chernobyl and dug systems of trenches in the most radioactive soil in the world. Reportedly many soldiers showed symptoms of radiation poisoning as they retreated.

  • @sonosoloio
    @sonosoloio 11 місяців тому +12

    I was 16 when this happened and even though I lived about 1700 kilometers (about 1050 miles) away from Chernobyl, the fear was enormous.

    • @Granny_Cat_Lady
      @Granny_Cat_Lady 11 місяців тому

      I was 13 & remember watching the news & it became a fascination for me ever since.

  • @steveallen8987
    @steveallen8987 11 місяців тому +18

    This series highlights the BEST of humanity & WORST of humanity. TRUE HEROES some.

    • @kw7378a1
      @kw7378a1 11 місяців тому +4

      In the series podcast, Craig M. (Writer and show runner) said that in some ways, the Soviet Union was the only nation who could handle a catastrophe like this. Can you imagine the US following through on the human cost required to complete the cleanup? It’d be tied up in Congress/courts forever.

  • @DanaSenn
    @DanaSenn 11 місяців тому +443

    Chernobyl is not Russia, It is in Ukraine.

    • @budgreen4x4
      @budgreen4x4 11 місяців тому +105

      A.k.a the Soviet union

    • @6891x
      @6891x 11 місяців тому +102

      @@budgreen4x4 Still not in Russia.

    • @budgreen4x4
      @budgreen4x4 11 місяців тому +39

      @@6891x correct, Russia did not exist

    • @Mondy667
      @Mondy667 11 місяців тому +90

      ​@@budgreen4x4Well it did exist but as a Soviet Socialist Republic

    • @jimjames6074
      @jimjames6074 11 місяців тому

      Ukraine is part of Russia

  • @Station-Network
    @Station-Network 11 місяців тому +10

    For me, that was the first "lockdown". I was 11 years old at that time and lived in Berlin, Germany almost 2000km away from Chernobyl and at that time we were not allowed to play outside anymore, not allowed to eat fruits and Vegetables, only imported things for example from Spain. Cows and and other farm animals were left in the stables. It was not funny...

  • @lucasrokitowski8707
    @lucasrokitowski8707 11 місяців тому +8

    I was just a year old when this happened, living in Poland. My aunt was a doctor and even though the TV broadcasts tried to downplay it as much as possible, she told my mom to stock on iodine and give it to me.

  • @ispbrotherwolf
    @ispbrotherwolf 10 місяців тому +8

    I was 18 when it happen, I remember the warnings going out in Sweden about eating mushrooms and Wilde meat, due to radioaktivt cesium. The news about this was really scary.

  • @jamesnell7224
    @jamesnell7224 11 місяців тому +12

    No matter how scary, insulting or damaging to your ego the truth is more important than anything. If you really think about it their response to Chernobyl isn't that much different from what western politicians have been doing to their people over the past 3 years. This whole series is a warning that has been repeatedly ignored in so many situations and places throughout history.

    • @Mansplainer2099-jy8ps
      @Mansplainer2099-jy8ps 11 місяців тому +2

      Correction: "Importance" is a narcissist myth, that is part of the truth. That said, I absolutely agree with you that you choose ego over truth at your peril.

    • @jamesnell7224
      @jamesnell7224 11 місяців тому +1

      @@Mansplainer2099-jy8ps The importance of truth is a narcissist myth? What?

    • @Mansplainer2099-jy8ps
      @Mansplainer2099-jy8ps 11 місяців тому

      @@jamesnell7224 "Importance" itself is a narcissist myth. In seven words: We organisms prioritize, the universe does not.
      In other words, all life on this planet could have died out before it even gave rise to the dinosaurs. "Importance" exists nowhere but in the imagination i.e. it is imaginary, a fiction.
      We humans are narcissists trying to make the universe revolve around us even though it obviously does not. "Importance" is one concept with which we do this, there are others e.g. "imperatives", "necessity", "value" and "purpose" to name a few.
      (Some people I talk to tend to at this point immediately leap to the conclusion I am advocating nihilism since they equate the fiction of "importance" with the reality of meaning. Which is another expression of the narcissism I speak of; _"The universe not revolving around me?! Then everything would be meaningless! That's nonsense, you're just trying to manipulate me for some reason of your own.")_

    • @lestatdelc
      @lestatdelc 9 місяців тому

      "…have been doing to their people over the past 3 years."
      ROFLMAO

  • @samuelberz1476
    @samuelberz1476 9 місяців тому +3

    There is some fear mongering in this series; if a person is exposed to radiation, they won't usually become dangerously radioactive themselves. They may become contaminated if radioactive particles settle on their clothes or skin, but after given a thorough wash, it is perfectly safe to be close to and touch someone who has been exposed.
    The only potential risk is if one ingests the radioactive materials and it becomes absorbed within the body, like iodine-131 in the thyroid or strontium-90 in your bones, but most of those nucleotides only undergo beta decay, which is far less energetic than gamma decay, and therefore less damaging and less penetrating. A sheet of aluminum foil can stop beta rays, but to completely shield yourself from gamma rays would require a plate of lead 16 inches thick, or a concrete wall 80 inches thick.

  • @Cagon415
    @Cagon415 11 місяців тому +24

    This format is perfect. I know it's a pain to edit. Thank you.

  • @Silver-rx1mh
    @Silver-rx1mh 11 місяців тому +11

    "What is the cost of lies" a sentence thats still sadly relevant today, especially when it come to world events like the current pandemic. Chernobyl is one of THE best slices of TV that i have ever seen and i'm 66 now....

  • @Leoluvesadmira
    @Leoluvesadmira 11 місяців тому +5

    The RMBK reactor is a unique to the soviet union. The reactor was know for hot spots and had cracked fuel roads before in 2 other RMBKs one at Leningard and Chernobyl number 2.

  • @QuantumS1ngularity
    @QuantumS1ngularity 11 місяців тому +7

    If you wonder how much of the recreation is true to live - the blue trash bin with the white lid that Legasov was taking out at the beginning of episode 1, is the the exact same bin that like 80% of the people used back then across the entire USSR and Eastern Block. That thing stood with my family for so long i even remember it well into the 90s.
    As for the political play that was taking part behind the curtain and The State keeping everyone in the dark - it's actually a bit watered down. They showed only the main things that everyone found out right after. My grandad was a colonel here in Bulgaria during this crisis and he knew that things were bad once he was sent to guard a train, filled with canned food, vegetables, meat and livestock from my country to Moskow. Once they got there he saw that the political elite was preparing basically for the apocalypse. He had orders to shoot anyone on the spot if he starts asking the wrong questions or try to spread the information. Later that same week when they came back, all of the soldiers in the army (not only the ones that were sent on that train), nationwide all soldiers were given potassium iodide through their food, to which they were completely and blissfully unaware. I was conceived right about that time, down to +/- a few days and in the following months, doctor who was following my mom's pregnancy was having her for really frequent monitoring and tests, but never said really why. I was born in February of 1987 and like 75% of the babies that were born in that year were overdue their delivery (i was 2 weeks late) and we were all abnormally large at birth. Even in school we could see it clearly - we were 4th grade, but we were taller than the kids that were in 5th, 6th and 7th grade at that time. But yeah, the USSR never confirmed this incident had any effect outside the exclusion zone.

  • @KillerSniper55
    @KillerSniper55 11 місяців тому +53

    Fun fact, in the recent war in ukraine, when russian forces invaded ukraine, they captured the Chernobyl Power Plant and dug defensive positions. They forgot about the radioactive soil that was buried and many of their soldiers received radiation poisoning.

    • @JC_Cali
      @JC_Cali 11 місяців тому +7

      War is terrible and this is another reason. It should be the leaders of the war who suffer the consequences, not random front lineman!

    • @4Kandlez
      @4Kandlez 11 місяців тому +1

      @@JC_Cali Putin and Zelensky should have a knife fight to settle it

    • @joesheridan95
      @joesheridan95 11 місяців тому +10

      Yes :( But it doesn´t seems like they forgot about the radiation but as it looked back then, it´s probably more like: They just did not tell most of the soldiers where they were. I am pretty shure that at least some of them would have thought about digging when they would have known that they are in the exclusion zone.

    • @excesssum
      @excesssum 11 місяців тому +5

      They used military maps of the area issued in 1985 - a whole year before the incident took place.

    • @jamescole4441
      @jamescole4441 11 місяців тому +1

      If that is true, then were is the fun in that?

  • @999MOBSTER999
    @999MOBSTER999 11 місяців тому +3

    You was acctually right about those 3 divers! They weren't asked IRL, just told to go there.

  • @frankwitte1022
    @frankwitte1022 11 місяців тому +6

    Thanks for recording and posting your reactions. I appreciated that. I did feel the steady cynicism was a bit tone-deaf but hey, everyone has their way of processing this series.

    • @lucianaromulus1408
      @lucianaromulus1408 10 місяців тому

      Thats their typical behavior, just their personalities. They're German of course 😂

  • @norwegianblue2017
    @norwegianblue2017 11 місяців тому +23

    I agree this is one of the best dramas in the last 20 years. Maybe the best. Absolutely riventing and top notch performances. Bone chilling because it is based on fact. I remember when this went down when I was in high school.

    • @kibervatniki7552
      @kibervatniki7552 10 місяців тому

      This is a fantastic series, and it's a comedy, not a documentary.

  • @gallendugall8913
    @gallendugall8913 11 місяців тому +13

    Fun Fact! The third worst nuclear disaster took place twenty years before Chernobyl about a hundred miles away where the Soviets had been dumping their nuclear waste in a lake and one summer there was a drought, the lake dried up and radioactive dust blanketed everything killing tens of thousands of people. The Soviet response was to cover it up and keep dumping radioactive waste in that lake. Lake Karachay.

    • @ghostabastard2208
      @ghostabastard2208 11 місяців тому +2

      Fun fact! There was a ton of nuclear disasters in other countries(in US for example) which was more hardcore than in Chernobyl, but who needs to talk about them if they were made in right, capitalist way, right?

    • @4Deadserious
      @4Deadserious 11 місяців тому +3

      ​@ghostabastard2208 Gonna need a source on that one chief

    • @tinnasell4161
      @tinnasell4161 11 місяців тому +3

      @@ghostabastard2208 You do know you must name at least one if you bring the topic up, right? Otherwise, it is just manipulation and an attempt to shift focus. And even if you do provide smth substantial here, Soviet crimes are still crimes. The fact that someone else did similar things does not normalize the Soviet's criminal behaviour. Not to mention that modern Russia continues the chain of crimes. Like with the Kahovka dam, which Russians blew in one blast and then said to the locals that everything is fine, the dam is still there and they should stay in their homes. And they said it while standing in the flood and filming the water going up. They also took most of the boats locals had and physically stopped them from leaving when they tried. Russians were shooting down civilians who tried to evacuate, did not allow volunteers to enter the flooded zone and help, were trapping those who had UA passports, while enabling those with Russian passports to relocate, and were stealing humanitarian aid that Ukrainians delivered to the flooded area with drones. And on top of that, the Russian media told their population that the dam collapsed because of its age. Same behaviour as with Chernobyl. And now they are doing something on another nuclear power plant in the area. This gonna be Chernobyl 2.0, which everyone will try to downplay again

    • @StandingHereI
      @StandingHereI 11 місяців тому

      @@tinnasell4161 You just told so many lies that you could be shot for it

    • @tinnasell4161
      @tinnasell4161 11 місяців тому +1

      @@StandingHereI Ah, who we have here... Russia's defender with a Stalin-like mindset. Birds of a feather, why not stick together?

  • @gumshoe2273
    @gumshoe2273 11 місяців тому +13

    A true horror series if there ever was one. More frightening than most.

    • @dennismoore2752
      @dennismoore2752 11 місяців тому

      Nothing more scary than the truth. The damage done by the explosion was severe, but the damage done by the government was even greater. Lives lost to contain a failure and a lie.

  • @LucianDevine
    @LucianDevine Місяць тому

    The relationship between Boris and Valery was one of the best parts of the show. Watching Boris go from telling Valery he was in charge and commanding that he not call him by his name to that heartfelt conversation at the end is just awesome. Even though the woman was fictional, I can't help but wonder if those 2 developed at least some kind of friendship through all of the time and hardship of it all.

  • @whitescar2
    @whitescar2 11 місяців тому +4

    Love to see more "Scandinavian" feels among Americans.
    Especially with the haunting ending music there.

  • @LtColSoundboard
    @LtColSoundboard 10 місяців тому +1

    Howdy peeps! Glad you had fun watching this 1.5 years ago. Wanted to give you some info on a few things:
    AZ-5 was the shutdown button for the reactor. The emergency button. That's why it was astonishing that the emergency button caused the explosion!
    You can't receive radiation from another person, and this was a misconception at the time. Soviet scientists knew that touching a radioactive object would apread radiation to another human, but not that humans don't pass it to each other. To keep things simple, if you imagine getting sunburnt, you don't make someone else near you sunburnt by touching you. You absorbed the beta radiation from the sun. It's your burden, your burn.
    The "elephant's foot", the melting nuclear fuel, never went through the concrete pad after all. The miners that worked under Chernobyl died for nothing. It was wise to send them there with what information was available at the time, but their work was ultimately unneeded. More than half of them died of radiation-based complications like cancer.
    The unborn child absorbing radiation for the mother is not biologically possible. It's just not how radiation is absorbed and spread. I'm really not sure why this was included in the show...
    You asked how Dyatlov was able to survive for longer than Akimov and Tuptonov. The latter two went into the belly of Chernobyl to pump water into the blown-up core. Dyatlov took a crap and went to the lead-shielded bunker. He wasn't as exposed as those two were.
    And lastly, why did so many people lie or try to protect their professions at Chernobyl? It's because those jobs were some of the highest paid in the Soviet Union. Being a nuclear physicist or nuclear engineer was one of the best paths to the "good life", and Pripyat was considered a wealthy vacation town compared to other parts of the USSR. Tuptonov was crying because he didn't want to lose his job. Akimov kept saying "we did everything right" because of his job. Dyatlov wanted the test done so he could be promoted for a better job. Same with Fomin and Byrukhanov. They wanted to avoid being disgraced and then forced to live lives of poor labor with poor wages. So they all bowed down to their superiors, and in some cases, lied to protect themselves while selling out others.

  • @Mark-xh8md
    @Mark-xh8md 7 місяців тому +1

    Also, when Chuck Norris goes to bed, he checks his closet for General Pikalov!

  • @wrldchamps04
    @wrldchamps04 11 місяців тому +11

    The heroic efforts of so many cannot be understated...it was horrible but would have been SO MUCH worse...as hard as it is to believe.

    • @4Kandlez
      @4Kandlez 11 місяців тому

      Yes very heroic those guys telling someone else to go look at the reactor or suffer the displeasure of the party

    • @StandingHereI
      @StandingHereI 11 місяців тому

      @@4Kandlez What are you suggesting, idiot? Let the planet die?

    • @lucianaromulus1408
      @lucianaromulus1408 10 місяців тому

      ​@@4Kandlezthe heroism is the poor people under Communism that still sacrificed, not for the regime, but for their people. Our Politicians aren't much better here lol

  • @Travelinmatt1976
    @Travelinmatt1976 11 місяців тому +2

    There's a really good documentary on how the new cover was built. It was actually constructed at a safe distance and then slid into place, one of the biggest buildings to be moved.

  • @beamertoy
    @beamertoy 11 місяців тому +12

    This mini series really got under my skin. I don't think anything has ever been more disturbing to me than this

    • @aeliusdawn
      @aeliusdawn 10 місяців тому +1

      Under your skin, just like radiation

  • @heydude1112
    @heydude1112 11 місяців тому +4

    This Film is the most horror level than any other movies out there. There's no big bad evil monster coming to get you and you can't seem to "see" it. Im in the field of Radiology and the worst and best explanation it gave was the "bullet" scene where the scientist is explaining the equations/equivalent of getting exposed to high levels of radiation.

    • @LtColSoundboard
      @LtColSoundboard 10 місяців тому +1

      On one hand, definitely wasn't accurate in terms of the role a neutron plays in the science of it all. On the other hand, the Soviets sure understood bullets. They lived and died by them. And as for us, the audience, it was an excellent metaphor to instill the proper fear for this invisible, lurking antagonist.

  • @wakkadakka9192
    @wakkadakka9192 11 місяців тому +28

    A really good show loved it 👍
    Just keep in mind that even it is based on true events and real people - it's still mostly fiction with overdramatic scenes plus a bit of stereotypes for recognition
    My father was one of the volunteer liquidators, he gone 2018
    Eternal memory and glory to all heroes who risked their lives to save the world

    • @buddystewart2020
      @buddystewart2020 11 місяців тому +6

      "it's still mostly fiction with overdramatic scenes", of course it is. Because we don't know what really happened in that control room of the plant. It's not like a modern commercial jet where everything said on the flight deck is recorded (cockpit voice recorder). Most if not all of the conversations between the major figures in this, we don't have records of it, because the Soviet Union would never let them out, if they even had them. The depiction of the radiation wounds were severely criticized by a nurse that was there, and attended to the actual victims, in an extensive interview. I'm paraphrasing but she said it looked like the art director was let loose and given free reign to concoct whatever they thought. The actual victims didn't look like that. I think what they got right was, the sense of dread of the situation. The condemnation of the Soviet system that tried to cover it up. The sacrifice that many decent people made to try to get things under control. I won't say it's an enjoyable watch, but I think it's an important watch, even though it makes a lot of people scared of what is one of the most safe forms of energy production available today.

    • @Curraghmore
      @Curraghmore 11 місяців тому +3

      The parts that are not true or added for dramatic effect are pretty small.

    • @wakkadakka9192
      @wakkadakka9192 11 місяців тому +5

      @@buddystewart2020 "of course it is - because we don't know what really happened in that control room of the plant"
      I wasn't talking about what happened in control room, I was talking in general.
      Many events after explosion - are shown over dramatic or were completely invented from scratch specifically for this show.
      Once again all I'm sayin - it is a good show, but it is a fiction tv show for intertaiment. It's not a historicaly accurate documentary.

    • @wakkadakka9192
      @wakkadakka9192 11 місяців тому +5

      ​@@Curraghmore The parts that are not true or added for dramatic effect are 70% of the show.
      Quick example - first episode starts from showing us how Legasov record tapes and then secretly hide them because evil KGB are spying on him.
      Nice overdramatic scene, really sets the right mood, there is just one problem.. nothing of that ever happen.
      Yes indeed Legasov had personal tapes - but he freely gave them to his friend, there was no secret about that. And thats just first minute of the show.
      Real events and real people mixed with fictional plot and fictional dialogues.
      Nothing wrong about that, it just has to be realised to avoid perceiving entertainment show as documentary.

    • @jessbellis9510
      @jessbellis9510 11 місяців тому

      @@wakkadakka9192 He gave them to his friend but it was still a major risk to try and spread the info on them.

  • @Dmilewis
    @Dmilewis 11 місяців тому

    I loved how the description at the end with the cards made it so easy to understand.

  • @pjnolan7989
    @pjnolan7989 11 місяців тому +2

    Few *Spoiler* Facts:
    1. Obviously the wife of the fireman lost their baby, and every pregnancy afterwards, she miscarried.
    She eventually did have a baby many years later, who she loves dearly.
    BUT the interesting part is that if she had not been pregnant, she would have died of Radiation poisoning too.
    Apparently the unborn baby protected her by soaking up the Radiation from her husband. Which meant losing the child, but getting to spend their final days together.
    She's written books and made a TV Show/DVD telling the untold stories of women from Chernobyl.
    2. Instead of 3 eyed fish, theres actually a massive amount of rare animals in Chernobyl.
    Wild animals flourish there due to the area being uninhabited by humans, and because of the lack of hunting.
    There was a show hosted by some famous Fisherman who usually fishes in strange places, and he caught loads of rare fish in seemily great condition in the waters at Chernobyl.
    Although there are farms nearby that still have stillbirth animals, or born mutated. Its crazy.
    3. There's brilliant acting overall.
    The main Scientist Jared Harris is excellent and is the son of famous actor Richard Harris.
    Also Irish actor Barry Keoghan stars (in Episode 4 I think it is).
    He's a big actor you'd know from Dunkirk, The Batman, The Banshees of Inisherin, plus many other TV & Movies. A very good Actor.
    4. Most of the series is extremely accurate. Like the helicopter crash is true, but it crashed a later on.
    And the Miners stepping forward, but unfortunately nearly all either passed away or currently have health problems.
    Also the 3 Divers did step forward, but crazy as it seems they survived without ailments.
    Which considering the odds is amazing.
    Also the German Robot did arrive and break within minutes. Because USSR lied about the level of Radiation.
    Also the guys did end up cleaning off the roof by shovel and brush. Unfortunately to my knowledge, they did end up sick too.
    Things like the Fire Brigades are accurate for that era, as are the buses.
    There's actually a Ukranian guy called Sergei Sputknikoff who has a UA-cam Channel called @UshankaShow who is worth checking out.
    He is now married with a family in the US, but originally lived in Ukraine when it was the Soviet Union.
    He's written a few Books about living in the USSR, moving to the US, getting married & having kids, etc.
    But he remembers the Chernobyl era and how well the Series got little details correct.
    He's like an Encyclopedia for that timeframe.
    He's worth contacting if you wanted to follow up.
    Contact:
    Sergei Sputknikoff
    UA-cam Channel: @UshankaShow
    But overall he was very positive about the little details.
    If I think of other details I'll be sure to post.
    Sláinte

    • @BiRios
      @BiRios 4 дні тому

      Fetuses DO NOT absorb radiation; that was a common misconception of the time. An actual partner to a fireman spoke up against the show for making it seem like she killed her baby when that baby’s fate was sealed when the bomb went off and no one was evacuated.

  • @Curraghmore
    @Curraghmore 11 місяців тому +98

    Chernobyl is most definitely not open to the public today. It's in Ukraine, most of which is a war zone. Russian forces even briefly occupied the Chernobyl site last year but they withdrew again after they dug defensive trenches in the ground there and some of their men 'started to feel ill'. Apparently they STILL did not learn their lessons from 1986.

    • @donaldjz
      @donaldjz 11 місяців тому +35

      Who was the idiot that was putin them in danger?

    • @gwaeron8630
      @gwaeron8630 11 місяців тому +9

      And from all accounts they've mined the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, so no they definitely haven't learned.

    • @adventuresinlaurenland
      @adventuresinlaurenland 11 місяців тому +5

      The exclusion zone is 100% open to the public, you just need to get a permit. Once you have a permit, visitors to Chernobyl must book either a licensed group tour or purchase a private tour. Tours within Chernobyl can take one day to several days. A one-day tour remains the most popular option.

    • @aaronjoyce9569
      @aaronjoyce9569 11 місяців тому +4

      ​@@adventuresinlaurenlandI doubt its teaming with tourists recently 🤔

    • @adventuresinlaurenland
      @adventuresinlaurenland 11 місяців тому

      ​@aaronjoyce9569 crazy enough there are still a few tour companies who will take you...I guess they figure if you are insane enough to want to go they are willing to take your money 😂

  • @joachim2464
    @joachim2464 9 місяців тому +1

    The helicopter actually chrashed because the rotors hit the crane. It is a little bit difficult to spot. This accident actually happened and there is video footage of it, but it did not happen during that timeframe. It actually happened a good while later during clean up efforts

  • @johnmonk66
    @johnmonk66 11 місяців тому +6

    I remember this, the east-north side of all plant life in England and Ireland turned brown. This could have ended half of Europe.

  • @ligman100
    @ligman100 11 місяців тому

    Fantastic reaction guys to one of the best short shows ive ever seen.

  • @mollymillions5438
    @mollymillions5438 11 місяців тому +2

    During this whole time the power station kept running, until 15 December 2000 (they don't mention this in the doco). So people kept returning to work for everyday for many years because this plant provided the power for Kiev and other cities.

  • @nomenestomen3452
    @nomenestomen3452 8 місяців тому +2

    Chernobyl is in the Ukraine, not Russia (it was part of the Soviet Union then). I was 11 years old then, growing up in Germany. Playgrounds were closed for almost a year and it was dissuaded to collect mushrooms for many years or to eat wild animals like wild boar or deer. Mushrooms still have a higher dose of radiation here in Europe till these days (but is now considered on a harmless level).

  • @jameslen83
    @jameslen83 11 місяців тому +6

    Crazy i forgot about these coffins in the show. I just learned about them from learning about the history of previous russian wars. The coffins they were buried in are a normal government thing they used to transport dead soldiers in the Afghanistan War. They are lined with Zinc and welded shut, super weird. There were some empty ones found dumped recently near some russian town, so i guess they still use them today as well. Cargo 200 was the term they used for them.

  • @Dmitriy.0
    @Dmitriy.0 11 місяців тому +8

    I was 11 years old living in Kyiv at the time of Chernobyl disaster. We didn't hear anything about this from the government until at least a week later, and even then nobody knew much. Only in mid-May (and mostly through the western media) when my parents realized how bad things really were, they took me out of school and we went to Moscow to live with our relatives for the Summer.
    Lies and coverups was USSR's MO, and Putin's Russia is no better.

  • @Krackonis
    @Krackonis 11 місяців тому +5

    You know what was scary? Living through it.... Trust me.

  • @vision2g422
    @vision2g422 11 місяців тому +6

    this really is a great show, they did it very well, made even better by the facts of the story

  • @lucaacatalepsy9725
    @lucaacatalepsy9725 10 місяців тому +1

    Fun fact: the grannies that are portrayed in the small huts still live there! obviously they aged, and some are reeeally old. they were evacuated at first, but once the quarantine was lifted (15-20 years i think) they went back to live in Pripyat (the actual town this happened in, Chernobyl reactor is named after a different nearby city)

  • @jobanh7ify
    @jobanh7ify 11 місяців тому +4

    I love how in any other movie Chernobyl is abandoned and with mutants, arms dealers and terrorist fighting each other for attention when in reality there’s a whole scientific community working there and keeping everyone safe by monitoring conditions in the whole area. However with the current russian invasion the world is holding its breath again so we may all die by asphyxiation before something worst happens again

  • @user-wi1pm7yx7j
    @user-wi1pm7yx7j 4 місяці тому

    As of 2015, it was reported that two of the liquidators were still alive and still working within the industry. The third man, Boris Baranov, passed away in 2005 of a heart attack.

  • @charlieeckert4321
    @charlieeckert4321 11 місяців тому +2

    1:05:21 it is a painting of Ivan the Terrible and his son by Ilya Repin.

  • @americanopenwheelracing3596
    @americanopenwheelracing3596 7 місяців тому +2

    0:15 Welcome to the world that WE grew up in.

  • @johnnyd1790
    @johnnyd1790 11 місяців тому +6

    The mind blowing part is that the whole disaster could've been averted by the simplest knowledge: don't mentain the reactor at reduced power of 1600 MW/h for 10 hours, but restore it to nominal 3200 MW/h until the test and only reduce it then, and the test would've failed like usual and everyone would've gone home on their marry way like always.🙄

    • @LtColSoundboard
      @LtColSoundboard 10 місяців тому +2

      Yes, and no. The test needed to be completed before the plant was even open. Bryukhanov lied to the Soviet Government and said he had ran the test and that it was a success. He did that before the end of the year, so he could earn the Soviet Union's second highest honor: "Hero of Socialist Labor". Bryukhanov needed that safety test to be a success, to prevent his arrest and being stripped of his luxurious position in Pripyat. That's why the Chernobyl Disaster was the 4th attempt at that test...

    • @johnnyd1790
      @johnnyd1790 10 місяців тому +1

      @LtColSoundboard what you just said did not contradict my statement of restoring the power plant / core to it's normal 3200 MW/h output instead of half. If you remember the nightshift, Tuptunov did say "I have never done this with the power so low, before!", meaning the test wouldn't have been a success most likely if they had found the power output normal instead of halved when they began the test, but at the very least it would have had the same result instead of that catastrophe.

    • @LtColSoundboard
      @LtColSoundboard 10 місяців тому

      @@johnnyd1790 The whole point of the safety test was for the plant to run at low power, to see if at a low power state the turbines could last 60 seconds until the diesel generators came online. Running the plant at 3200 mw wasn't part of the plan from the beginning. The night shift was inexperienced, yes. But the day shift safely failed this test 3 different times already.
      The way Bryukhanov and Dyatlov chased this test, I have a difficult time believing that the night shift alone was responsible for this. Dyatlov could have put the same pressure, the same threats of blacklisting those engineers and their careers, on the day teams. And under such reckless guidance, the results would have been the same.

    • @johnnyd1790
      @johnnyd1790 10 місяців тому +1

      @LtColSoundboard I think you're confusing some elements, the power for the test needed be 700 Mw, the reduced state at 1600 was implemented just before the day shift started, because the test was programmed to take place during the day. But they didn't get the clearance to drop it to 700 in day so they postponed it for 12 hours. What they should've done is raise it back to 3200 then drop it again before the test to 1600 then to 700 even if it would've took half an hour more or so. That was a big mistake easily averted: knowing that 1600 Mw is not enough to burn the xenon away and you should never mentain under 3200 for more than an hour, 2 at the very most.

  • @nobodyepicz7538
    @nobodyepicz7538 11 місяців тому

    FINALLY! wanted you to watch this since it came out! (didnt know you hade a second channel tho so very glad i found it!) xD

  • @TheCrazyCanuck420
    @TheCrazyCanuck420 11 місяців тому

    Thank-you for posting these marathon runs

  • @user-uy9tw2zb6g
    @user-uy9tw2zb6g 7 місяців тому +1

    47:00 400 rubles ($700) is an average of two salaries per month. At that time. Now the survivors are paid about $ 500.

  • @pogosmama1
    @pogosmama1 10 місяців тому +1

    The roentgen readings were ultimately recorded between 12,500-14,000 roentgens per hour in and at the base of reactor 4. The highest (exponentially) reading ever recorded on the planet. Small pieces of the core that lie in the exclusion zone are super-hot still and will be for hundreds of years, along with all of the abandoned equipment. The melted core is still sky-high which is why the new safe confinement was built, and it will take roughly 250 years to contain and remove safely. It is still the most dangerous place on earth.

  • @Supadrumma441
    @Supadrumma441 11 місяців тому +2

    Boris Boranov, the diver that passed away, died of a heart attack in 2005.

  • @braincruser
    @braincruser 11 місяців тому +6

    1:16:39 It is actually the opposite. Inanimate objects don't retain a lot of radioactive materials, and animals and plants do absorb nuclear materials, since they cycle matter through them and accumulate the radioactive minerals as if they were normal minerals. The process is called bioaccumulation. What is worse is that if you eat the exposed plants and animals, then the radioactive matter accumulates in you. So you get radioactive strongtzium(behaves like calcium) in your bones, irradiating you with 10-100X the normal dose since it stays in your body.

  • @rickcoona
    @rickcoona 11 місяців тому +2

    thise chunks littered all over were the Graphite CORE that reactor was made from a solid block of Graphite and was drilled for fuel and control rods to pass through, *THE HANFORS Reactor in Washington State is the EXACT SAME Model of Reactor as the one that exploded in Ukraine*
    The ionizing radiation levels in the worst-hit areas of the reactor building have been estimated to be 5.6 roentgens per second (R/s), equivalent to more than 20,000 roentgens per hour. A lethal dose is around 500 roentgens

  • @lorenzsabbaer7725
    @lorenzsabbaer7725 11 місяців тому

    rly enjoyed your reaction! you got a new sub

  • @mKaInNnGyS
    @mKaInNnGyS 11 місяців тому

    I've been waiting for this reaction. Awesome.

  • @discipuladavinci
    @discipuladavinci 11 місяців тому +6

    I'm from Türkiye. It's a country with one coast facing Black Sea. And my big family lives in one of the Black Sea provinces. After Chernobyl explosion, following the next years in that coast provinces cancer cases have skyrocketed. Specially in my family, we have lost so many people from cancer. That coastal area is famous for producing tea and hazelnuts. That year, tea and hazelnut exports were interrupted on radioactive grounds. Imagine how far we are from Ukraine and yet its effects on us.

    • @PeterDB90
      @PeterDB90 4 місяці тому

      Is Türkiye Turkey? Just curious how your country translates to English

  • @peteturner3928
    @peteturner3928 11 місяців тому +5

    Great reaction as per usual guys. I visited Pripyat and Chernobyl back in 2020 just before Covid made the world go tits up and well before Putin decided to invade the country en-masse instead of just the Donbas region as his 'green men' were fighting in at the time. The attention to detail of this show to get the look and feel of the place correct is quite incredible. If the war ever sorts itself out I cant recommend a visit enough, so much was aloud to go wrong because of ridged party dogma that things could have actually gone a lot worse for most of western Europe if not for a few VERY brave souls. For another older HBO show that shows how the Soviet system stopped people from doing their jobs properly look up 1995's 'Citizen X' which tells the story of the hunt for the notorious Soviet serial killer Andrei 'The Butcher of Rostov' Chikatilo. Lives could have been saved if not once again for Soviet institutional dogma and officials trying to save face.

    • @kathyastrom1315
      @kathyastrom1315 11 місяців тому +1

      Citizen X is a fantastic film! Stephen Rea is terrific in it.

    • @TheCrazyCanuck420
      @TheCrazyCanuck420 11 місяців тому +1

      Curious did you catch the virus that shall not be spoken of? Because after visiting Chernobyl that might put you on edge 😂

    • @peteturner3928
      @peteturner3928 11 місяців тому +2

      @@TheCrazyCanuck420 it was just kicking off when we got there. Some people had already started wearing masks etc in Ukraine, this was March 2020 but nothing was being closed etc until about a week after we returned (I'm from the UK and we never really made them a required thing until June-ish, so our Govt. dropped the ball big time yet again). Never crossed my mind it would be related to where we where as the rumours had been flying about outbreaks in China since January.

  • @49kevi
    @49kevi 11 місяців тому +1

    One of the best Docu/Series ever made. Barring the horrific nature of those that lost their lives of course, but partly because I was too young to understand just how horrific and close they were to losing a massive part of Eastern Europe. I find it mindboggling there's been conflict going on extremely close to nuclear sites similar to Chernobyl over these last 18 months or so. They've been warned after all. Great reaction!!!!

  • @thoso1973
    @thoso1973 11 місяців тому +9

    The Kursk submarine disaster in 2000 taught the World, that the Russian government had learned very little from the Chernobyl disaster. It also proved Legasov's warning about 'government lies incurring a debt to the truth' to be prophetic.

    • @Michael-it6gb
      @Michael-it6gb 11 місяців тому

      I think you've been watching too many "documentaries" and TV-fiction. Legasov didn't even mention anything about "lies and not recognise the truth" in his tapes. Its all made for propaganda, dude.

    • @borgun96
      @borgun96 11 місяців тому

      How Chernobyl disaster would teach anybody for fire in torpedo room? There was no issues with reactor

    • @thoso1973
      @thoso1973 11 місяців тому +3

      @@borgun96 I'm not talking about about the cause of the disasters: I'm talking about the aftermath and the web of lies and propaganda both the Soviet and Russian political leaders promotes to cover up their own incompetence and the failure of their regime.

    • @borgun96
      @borgun96 11 місяців тому +1

      @@thoso1973 then you should read more about Montana train crash to compare. Was it better about lies?

    • @PUARockstar
      @PUARockstar 11 місяців тому

      @@borgun96 russians always lie. That's the difference.

  • @conchfritters01
    @conchfritters01 11 місяців тому

    Well done - good review!

  • @ashley4889
    @ashley4889 3 місяці тому

    I don't know if you'll see this comment, since it's so late - but I recommend putting both of you in the thumbnail! I love when people can talk to each other during a reaction, rather than just the comments, and I'm sad I overlooked this reaction for so long thinking that it was just one person TT^TT

  • @1989Goodspeed
    @1989Goodspeed 10 місяців тому

    1:21:41 That's Fares Fares, he's known in Sweden primary as a comedy actor. He was also one of the character-actors in the game "a way out". A game directed by his brother Josef Fares

  • @adamrak7560
    @adamrak7560 10 місяців тому +1

    iodine pills only help against the radioactive iodine poisoning. It does nothing against the radiation coming from outside.
    While this may not seem to help much, actually most long term effects from radioactive contamination are associated with radioactive iodine, (if you have only received very mild amount of activity)
    This is because the body collects iodine in the thyroid, if it is radioactive, even a tiny amount is extremely damaging. Other radioactive substances rarely accumulate at one spot, or not accumulate at all, and to make it even worse the iodine isotope we are afraid of is very highly active too.

  • @johnfish1194
    @johnfish1194 4 місяці тому

    The intense radiation from the exposed core was ionizing the oxygen above the plant. Hence the blue glow everyone went out side to see, and were playing in the fallout like it was fun.

  • @moarschtuff9233
    @moarschtuff9233 Місяць тому

    1:52:28 - there actually was a documentary on the New Safe Confinement, I think called Chernobyls Megatomb. It was on Netflix a few years ago but I haven’t been able to find it recently.
    The NSC was a collaboration of scientists and engineers from throughout Europe; I believe the design they went with came from a French firm. It included an interior apparatus that would further dismantle the remaining fissile material and reactor components from within.

  • @iamtheowl9631
    @iamtheowl9631 11 місяців тому +1

    The depressing painting was "Ivan the Terrible and his Son Ivan" by Ilya Repin. Its is a very depressing painting, Ivan IV (known as Ivan the Terrible) accidently killed his son during a fit of rage.

  • @bcn1gh7h4wk
    @bcn1gh7h4wk 11 місяців тому +2

    by the time the German bomb bot shows up, I had already forgotten this was Ukraine in 1986.
    I mean, compared to the rest of the series, the robot looks like it comes from another dimension.
    remember that while all of this was going on, the rest of the world was witnessing Michael Jackson do the craziest performances with fireworks and videoclips, Blade Runner featured neon lights and androids, and game consoles were taking the market by storm.

  • @krashd
    @krashd 11 місяців тому +1

    1:16:08 This scene here stems from a notorious misconception about radiation in that metal objects somehow become irradiated and can become dangerous, they can't. The only effect ionising radiation has on metal is that it can make it brittle over time until the metal eventually fails by breaking down and crumbling. This misconception that metal that has been exposed to radiation can somehow become dangerous to people stems from the many "vehicle graveyards" surrounding Chernobyl where everything from buses to tractors to helicopters were abandoned in their hundreds. These metal vehicles _are_ dangerous to go anywhere near but that is only because they were used in the clean-up and so they are coated in a thick layer of highly dangerous alpha and beta particles. These vehicles had to be abandoned and isolated after the clean-up because there was no way of completely cleansing them.

    • @CoastalSphinx
      @CoastalSphinx 7 місяців тому

      "Induced radioactivity" is a very real thing, however it is usually caused by exposure to neutron radiation. On Earth, neutron radiation is almost entirely inside nuclear reactor cores, so it is mainly parts of the core and its immediate surroundings that become dangerous due to induced radioactivity.
      I agree with you that vehicles and similar large objects are very unlikely to have induced radioactivity. But there are many small pieces, for example bolts, that I would treat with great suspicion if they were found near a destroyed nuclear reactor, because they might have been in an area with high levels of neutron radiation.

  • @j94_couch
    @j94_couch 11 місяців тому +1

    1:53:00 Sorry if it's been mentioned and I missed it, but all the music for this series was created from sounds made by nuclear reactors

  • @alexc119
    @alexc119 11 місяців тому +1

    Watching your reactions reminds us of how quickly we as humans forget. This affected millions over most of Europe, and wasn’t comparatively speaking that long ago. And yet most of us aren’t taught what happened in school so that we can understand the many steps that led to this happening.

    • @wessexdruid7598
      @wessexdruid7598 10 місяців тому

      So much so that, when Russia invaded Ukraine last year, it claimed more lives and injuries.

  • @inquisitive6786
    @inquisitive6786 11 місяців тому +1

    1:24:00
    Reactor: Is having a meltdown
    Boris: Hold my phone

  • @spikedpsycho2383
    @spikedpsycho2383 10 місяців тому

    Sum up exactly What happened at Chernobyl.
    They were running a test to see how much residual power they could get from the reactor after an emergency shutdown in optimum conditions because the time frame to bring diesel generators to run the pumps needed to cool it, but the reactor design made such tests problematic and the crew was not apprised to the state they were supposed to conduct. Since the reactor used different materials, shutdown actually triggered a surge of additional power and with control safeties shut off to conduct the tests. That surge, resulted in a high pressure thermal runaway reaction and result it exploded, then superheated water turned to flammable hydrogen gas and exploded again casting materials out into the environment.
    Unlike US reactors encased in Containment domes made of several feet of solid concrete, Chernobyl and reactors like it, had no such feature.

  • @christopherkaylor2940
    @christopherkaylor2940 11 місяців тому +1

    Kyle Hill a UA-cam science communicator has a very good series on Chernobyl and actually got to visit the site before the war began so he is one to watch to gain knowledge