@Random Number On this episode of 'Reactor Nightmares' almost everybody coincidentally had some kind of disease which made them puke and die losing their hair in a few days with their blood rotting without white blood cells. What a freaking coincidence!
Dyatlov: *Gets home from work.* Dyatlovs wife: "Honey how was work?" Dyatlov: "Not great, not terrible." Dyatlovs wife: "BTW your skin is falling off." Dyatlov: "You're delusional."
@@AndrewNenakhov He was scared, just like everyone else. He wasn't a very good person, we know very well, but I bet he was trying to convince himself as well that the truth wasn't the truth. I don't like Dyatlov as much as the next guy, but I can try to understand how he'd be feeling. Of course he knew the truth. Of course he knew he saw graphite, and knew what it meant. But he was afraid. He was responsible for one of the worst nuclear accidents in history. He knew he'd be in trouble and he knew it would destroy himself and his reputation. (Which yeah, was already not great)
@@boradoriryu One of the firefighters says it in this series when they go to the roof top to clear rubble. If you've ever worked around metal particles (cutting, milling, forging etc) you know when you can smell it, or taste it in the air, the metallic taste on the tongue. now imagine that, except its radioactive metal and concrete dust that is ticking minutes or hours, or years off your life every second you're exposed.
Comrade Boris Schebina : I'm told Dyatlov's management style is only 3.6 roentgen toxicity, that's the equivalent of a chest x-ray. *5 Minutes later* Comrade General coming from Main control tower : It's not 3.6, it's 15 000.
No, if Gordon was in Chernobyl, looking at all the sh*te going on, he'd be like "F* off! You're useless, all of you! I'm holding meat in my hand, and it's cooking because of the radiation!"
@Tom R not only that they also managed to set a new record for amount of power that an RBMK reactor can output they got it up past 33000 megawatts before she blew🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@nemo-x it is true there were many flaws in the reactor design that were hidden from the operators but they made mistake after mistake and bad judgment after bad judgment. They had all the safety systems turned off and were running things way outside normal parameters. There is enough blame to go around to everyone, including the entire Soviet system and culture. But there is still blame for the operators.
@George Thomas The show does exaggerate his hostility. But he was over bearing as a supervisor and had been reprimanded for it. But this was his second nuclear incident, and he was the man in charge during the test. There was a chain of critical failures leading up to the explosion from the installation of the reactor onward and Anatoly Dyatlov was a link in that chain.
We need all scientists on a mma workout plan. When the board tries to come down and start barking orders, they can give them the sweet chin music the world is asking for👍🏽
While it would've...the disaster revealed drawbacks in the power plant's systems...that and Legasov's suicide FORCED Soviet Union to make changes to their remaining reactors... . Imagine such a disaster happening in today's time...
@Ryan that doesn't excuse him from doing what he did...he was a jerk and became greedy over the potential promotion he'd be given if he successfully completed the test ... There were opportunities when he could've stopped the rest based on readings from the reactor and seeing how it was functioning properly but he didn't... . While it wasn't entirely his fault it would be wrong to say that he was completely innocent...
@@chickencurry7642 Definitely negligent. But the USSR intentionally censored multiple studies showing how unstable the reactor is at low or even normal power levels. They could’ve easily installed better safety measures and informed the power plant engineers. But they didn’t. Dyatlov was experienced, and had no idea anything he was doing was dangerous. He wasn’t a dick like he was in the show. You get bad safety features, and engineers trying to please authoritarian party officials, it leads to problems. The RBMK was so cheap and powerful, the USSR built the thing en masse before there was even a fully functioning prototype. Once the thing was so widely used, no one wanted to piss off the government by publicly talking about its faults.
This mini series came out on HBO right after disastrous ending of Game of Thrones. Chernobyl mini series provied us with an example of how series should be made.
The show needed an antagonist. That being said, obeying orders you knew were stupid and dangerous was the norm in USSR. That's what this show captures the best imo - how if everyone keeps giving up to non-sense, closing their eyes, it leads to millions of dead in the gulag.
@@alexandrubaginean7369the answer is everybody tolerates them, with the exception of other Dyatlovs. That why there's so many Dyatlovs all over the place.
Nonsense! My door is open.... always! I've been sayin' that for twenty-five years. See if I say I listen to my employees and treat them right, then my employees are are listened to and treated right. And if anyone disagrees; they have an attitude problem and don't have to work here anymore.
The most shocking revelation of this mini series is that despite Dyatlov's recklessness, he wasn't 100% to blame here. The positive void coefficient flaw with RBMK reactors was unknown to him because it was censored by the Soviet state.
True, but Dyatlov's ultimate decision to bypass multiple safeties to run the test under lower power than it was supposed to have been conducted with was the trigger that caused the series of events that led to the core exploding. Dyatlov never admitted his part in the incident, even if he helped cover for coworkers who the Party was trying to blame.
@@SilverPrince_ It's like in so, so, so many accidents - be it Eschede or the 737 Max crashes - even if it all goes back to literally a single element that failed, there were numerous decisions along the way - some of them of the "they should have known at the time that was wrong" kind, some of the "well, you take one of the two options per a coin flip, this time the coin came up the wrong way up - which could have prevented the accident. The lesson is to design systems in such a way that such decisions can never result in terrible catastrophe. And if they can to ensure that those who take them are people who will always take the correct one. And as the latter is impossible, try for the former as much as you possibly can.
@@SilverPrince_ I can't say that Diatlov wasn't reckless for the rules he broke. But then again knowing his expression in the trial , he was surprised when AZ5 was not the kill switch to the reactor but to the actual life around that area. They all believed that at the end of the day as long as AZ5 works, nothing can happen. Although it is clear that all 3 directors knew about the graphite tips rods, but they were probably all in the mind to bring the power back up from the poisoned state that they missed the part that AZ5 actually reinserted the Graphite tip rod to the graphite moderator base of the core that endlessly create steam pressure that ultimately kills it.
I feel bad for the real Anatoly Stepanovich Dyatlov. His experiences and what happened to him left him scarred. His reputation was ultimately known as the man who blamed was for the chernobyl disaster. Even more worse and sad how, since HBO released the TV series, Dyatlov will be known as the monster who deserved everything that came his way. That couldn't be farther from the truth. Real Dyatlov was actually a good guy, a firm boss, but he was caring and respectful. None of the altercations seem in the show happened IRL at the control room the night of the disaster. In reality the room was completely calm and no arguments leading up to the explosion. Unfortunately HBO had to create more drama for the characters, so the took a poor old man and turned him into the devil we know as Comrade Dyatlov. The real Anatoly Dyatlov ultimately died from his efforts done that night (not shown in TV show conveniently). He got a fatal dose of radiation while trying to find missing Khodemchuck. He also tried multiple times to tell Akimov and Toptunov to go home, the refused (which would lead to their deaths). Real Dyatlov cared about his coworkers. We should all just let the man rest in peace. The things he saw and the mistakes he made (including accidently sending two men to their deaths) scarred him for life. He was put in the worst situation possible... maybe let's give this man a rest. Also realize a lot of HBO Dyatlov is Hollywood. Anatoly Stepanovich Dyatlov's life was not great, -not- -terrible- ua-cam.com/video/N8__v9EswN4/v-deo.html
I think possibly, in this case where this is the first western representation of a real historic moment from the time of old school USSR , the character representation is something of a stand-in for all the previous actual dictatorial leaders and occurrences in the old USSR. I know it's not necessarily comforting but I see it that way . Praying for change there, hate to think the curtain is being lifted again with no recourse.
I agree with you, Dyatlov is scapegoat of USRR politic. In Soviet Union they must find victim, so it’s Dyatlov and Briuchanov convicted to 10 years of labor camp… I think that the main reason of the disaster is faulty construction of reactor and that’s USRR side can’t admit because is „the only right line of the party“.
@@łukasz726-f4x Honestly so many people are like "This shows just how bad the USSR really was!" because of Dyatlov or whatever, meanwhile the ACTUAL problems with the USSR were putting 100% of the blame on one dude who may or may not have been kind of a shitty boss but who was not solely responsible for the disaster. Maybe not even primarily responsible. The show is great but it gives people totally the wrong impression of the problems leading up to the disaster. It's a realm shame--the show spends so much time talking about "truth" but then gives us stuff like this.
Dyatlov's actor Paul Ritter just passed away at 54. He played the character so memorably and anyone who has seen his other roles knows that he had a remarkably diverse talent spanning comedy, blockbuster action movies and miniseries dramas.
Dyatlov was an educated, cultured, well-mannered person. He did not shout at his colleagues and did not use foul language. And he was not an idiot. The real person was blatantly slandered. And this whole show is full of lies.
I believe he received the fatal dose down in the pump room. Had he and Akimov fled the plant then and there there is a probable chance that they would’ve survived. Even with an increased risk of cancer.
@@stoneylonesome4062 almost all of them lived a long time and didn't die (or are even still alive in 2021) from cancer etc. The radiation was only really bad at the reactor, the graphite, under the reactor etc. It's not like it wiped out anyone that went near it.
@@testy462 Only one guy from the control room is alive today. I think Dyatlov himself was second to last to die more than 20 years ago. Most of them died within one month. It is true that most workers survived the accident, mainly because they and their chefs were intelligent enough not to run around where one shouldn't run around. However, THESE guys from the control room got tons of radiation.
Those who worked under the real Dyatlov described him as efficient and straight-laced but never abusive as portrayed in the show. The writers needed a villain, so it was Dyatlov. Still, great acting by Paul Ritter.
He did indeed threaten his co-workers that night though, probably due to the fact that his career was on the line if the safety test didn't go over well. A crew of workers who don't know what they're doing + a supervisor who screams and threatens them with termination = catastrophic failure.
@@Kaipyro67ALT to be fair he was making his decisions based on BS data that was provided by his higher ups. In that situation you don't have time to play games debating what to do. If he had the proper information that whole thing probably wouldn't have happened.
The fact that Akimov gets to endure the highest radiation dose and gets most painful death, while Dyatlov goes on to live his life, is proof enough that one must walk the earth knowing there is no amount of good karma or love can save you from your fate.
@@thecheeselord5943 He was even worse. Much worse. There is interview with him after accident. He blamed reactor for the accident. It is docomented, that he was often yelling at his staff. He changed test parameters himself, below safety limits. When crew objected, he forced them to throw away safety procedures.
Gordon might be a jerk but at least he cooks well. If Dyatlov was a chef he'd be still jerk and his dishes would taste like crap. And conversely, if Ramsey was the nuclear expert in charge of Chernobyl right now he would have listened to the other scientist and stopped the test as soon as it would have gotten any funny reading.
"Safety first, always. I've been saying that for 25 years." I absolutely love how he says this. It's arrogance, ignorance, and a hunger for control all rolling into one moment where he does the dumbest, most unsafe thing that could be done. Sure, some of his ignorance was because things were hidden from him, but that arrogance does not allow for the unknown.
while i was watching the series i didn’t notice that when Dyatlov looked down to the window he knew there was graphite on the ground, he knew that the core exploded. he was scared and mostly, he couldn’t swallow his pride and say that he failed his job.
@Lana he wasn't indocrinated, no one was in the way you say it, everything there worked on lies, The workers will do everything for their own good, the people above them will think it's all fine and good, when the problem goes on them, they preserve themselves and blame others or say everything is fine, then the people above do the same thing. The goverment was all lies, all professional interactions between people we're all lies ( in their jobs), even personal interactions we're all lies.
Guys you all got it wrong..It's not possible that Dyatlov saw graphite..The control room is below the reactor so it's not at all possible for Dyatlov to see graphite.. In the series they have shown that control room is at 2/3 floor well in reality it wasn't..
I cant understand this, my grandparents lived in soviet times and they say that thats exactly how things were, but if somethin that big happens....well you dont hav to care about your pride in this moment because you most likely are going to die anyway , only thing that you can do is to try to sve others from it
Dyatlov was actually a very good person, but when I say really, really. It's just Chernobyl HBO really wanted to blame dyatlov for what happened so they of course made people think that Dyatlov was rude. Everything you see here in the HBO Chernobyl about Dyatlov begin rude, that never happened, Dyatlov wasn't rude, and never wanted to be rude. Dyatlov even risked his own life to death to try and rescue his fellow mates in the Unit 4 Block, he went in all rooms, trying to search for people to rescue. HBO Chernobyl is just, 100% inaccurate, 100% useless movie to watch, none of the facts In the movie are right. Dyatlov was arrested for regulations that in 1986 didn't exist, basically that he got falsely arrested for death sentence, but since they were added in like early 1987, In the final trial in 1987, he was accused of those, there was none of the regulations he was accused of in 1986.
It's just that Comrade Dyatlov isn't anymore with us and he can't defense his self sadly, everyone thinks that Dyatlov was a really rude and toxic person but actually he was a very good person.
@@OsmanEner The problem is with the wide audience of western society that they cannot comprehend anything outside the field of what was fed to them and they actually belief a lot of nonsense that is historically inaccurate. The story of one mens failure is just another cover-up story, in the same way that one lone guy killed JFK. It doesent matter what reality is, the puplic is only accepting what the general consensus is that was told to them by the MSM in the long run.
@@OsmanEner Ok komrade lol Fuck off. Dyatlov was an extremely intelligent man but his hubris and confidence mixed with the lying of the soviet union cause they worst man made disaster in history. I know about the inaccuracies about this show. This show wasnt really meant to be a history biopic. It's a drama based around true events and people.
@@SaithMasu12 the problem is you expect anyone to care enough nobody will go out there way to to read into it out of there daily lives half the people we see probably weren’t even real even if you were right what does shaming him do he’s already passed away it’s just stupid and so are you if you believe this is exclusive to Americans
“I saw graphite on the ground.” “No, you didn’t.” Authoritarianism in a nutshell. Edit: Unreal, had no idea this comment would get a response like this. Best wishes to all, positive & negative!
I actually saw a person with a shirt on with Dyatlov's (Paul Ritter) face on the other day at my local cafe with the quote "Not great, not terrible" written on it. This show made quite the impact on the younger people! I personally have watched it three times already.
@Pooty Pump I do agree. If someone posts it today it's *just too old* ... but the fact that someone had a shirt made (presumably custom-made) and printed with that specific quote shows quite an amount of dedication. And *that* dedication I admired.
I also read in something like the UK Times or Herald that there's a stone/marble plaque of Paul Ritter that says "R.I.P Paul Ritter, His Acting Was *Not Great, Not Terrible* (with the first 'Not' being crossed out). I hope that's real haha.
Same for the others, Toptunov and him stayed afterwards, even as their shift ended, and went on opening the valves under the reactor, absorbing lethal doses of radiation...
Equipment stealing was extremely common. It was common even when locked, because it was stolen by the guy with the key. So they made twin key locks, two people were required to open them. But the locks were crap, and equipment kept being stolen.
Chernobyl wasn't the first reactor he melted down... much earlier in his career he was involved in another reactor incident while installing reactors to nuclear submarines. Safety first indeed.
@@tylisirn read up on him... He's not the arsehole portrayed on TV. You talk like he's personally liable for both accidents, lmao. He was just the corrupt party's scapegoat for the incident.
I love how even when they guys saying he looked right into the reactor core Dyatlov is oblivious to the fact that maybe the reactor core did in fact explode
@@raven4k998 To be fair, they were told over and over again that it was impossible for the core to explode, and the mind generally doesn't want to accept something so horrific anyways, so a double whammy of somewhat understandable denial.
Speaking of British humor, can you imagine if they cast John Cleese to play Antoly Dyatlov? I think it would’ve would ruined the miniseries’ drama having a well known comic actor in the cast.
I've worked with these kinds of bosses before. Barking orders all day and always causing unnecessary burden, leading to many problems. And when something goes wrong they are ready to point the finger at their subordinates. Never actually owning responsibility and always using their rank to belittle the one at "fault". It's one of my biggest reasons why I shift to solo work now. Living a much happier life and never looked back.
I've had a Boss who acted Like that in a small company. Just snapped one day and told him he'd either Stop being an Ass or im off and it couldnt have been better since.
Every time I see a clip from this movie on youtube, I immediately want to watch the whole series again. Seen it three times already, back to back. So good!
The director wanted to paint Comrade Dyatlov in a more flattering light but Dyatlov slapped the script out of his hands and said, "I've had chest x-rays with more roentgens than this script!"
The visual of Dyatlov being carried off is striking. The way guards carry a sick man in need of help and a suspect under arrest is indistinguishable. They drag a man in need of help in the same way you'd expect them to treat an enemy. I imagine the director likely wanted to impart an early visual reference to his guilt onto us, but I think it's interesting to look at both framings.
same as the radiation, the lies carried all the way to the highest people. Eventually you will get exposed and the truth sets in. Chernobyl killed the Soviet Union and the Communist party. It was karma at the highest order.
There are plenty of witnesses stating that Dyatlov was tough on carelessness and incompetence but understanding about problems which could not be avoided. And that is necessary when dealing with something like a nuclear reactor. This isn't some office job where knocking a cup of coffee over your desk is the biggest "disaster" likely to occur, and safety meetings center around the air conditioning being set too low for the female employees.
@@forestdenizen6497 Dunno what cartoon world you live in where thats the case... Also spilling coffee on documents is annoying cause you have to then go print off new documents wasting time. Its worse if they are original copies.
Nessie Andrew There's a reinactment movie that is MUCH more accurate and just plain dank compared to this. This HBO version's more about entertainment.
@@youtubecensors5419 Good example of misinformation there. He never said that. His quote was, "I represent science" when it comes to the GOP and their petty insults.
"I think there's graphite" "You didn't see graphite" "Yes I did" "No, you didnt" "Yes I did" "No" "Yes" "No" "No" "Yes" "See ? I told you ..." "Please shoot this man."
@@nikosgreek352 Of course they had to cover up for him what else do you think they'd do? He was the one who raised the power to 700, he told his co-workers it would be still safe if they did so... He ignored the graphite on the ground and most of all he also ignored 3.6 roentgen or maybe even higher which is equivalent to 4 million X-rays.
@@nikosgreek352 I GET IT, the original comment was being sarcastic.... I'm just telling the truth unlike other people there who just chooses to believe lies no matter the consequences.
He got it based on his experience in the Russian far east installing nuclear reactors in submarines... where he was involved in another reactor incident... Chernobyl wasn't the first reactor he melted down. Typical day and safety first indeed.
how hé got it? Well, thats showcased in the start of the series where Fomin tells Dyatlov that Bryukhanov will be promoted away to a fat job in Moscow, Fomin receive a promotion to Bryukhanov's station of Plant Director, and Dyatlov asking Fomin that 'he'd like to be considered' for Fomin's job.... Friends-policy, corruption, arselicking, and covering for eachother... Bryukhanov hád already signed off to Moscow that the Test was completed succesfully, yet Moscow demanded to see the test-results: Fomin and Dyatlov were to 'produce' those test-results, ASAP, to cover up for Bryukhanov's lie. As a reward for covering for him, they'd also be promoted, as it'd be Bryukhanov's call, at his new station in Moscow. Though this sort of 'procedures' isnt 'patented' by the Communist Party... this sort of covering up, arselicking, and 'giving away prestigious jobs' to eachother, is happening éverywhere in the world! Perhaps even more so in Capitalist Nations nowadays... Chernobyl was a good example of how corruption, greed, and all the lies that come with it, can lead to ultimate disaster! As Legasov stated 'beautifully' in the show's finale: "Every lie, incurs a debt to the truth. Sooner or later, that debt will be paid".
Durig the construction of Chernobyl units 3 and 4, Dyatlov complained to much about the poor quality of construction materials and was re-assigned to a different job.
6:30 I just love how he throws up and immediately apologized, he was quite the gentleman who was unfortunately caught in a disaster while in the toilet
@Random Number I wake up every day, knowing I'm definitely on the right track, when internet randos take more time on their ad hominem against Rand, Friedman, Sowell & others like them, than any negative comment I've seen about H1tler...
It's actually HBO portraying CAPITALIST leadership and pretending that's what happened in Chernobyl. The series is over-the-top anti-socialist propaganda packed with disinformation to make the USSR look bad and portray Soviet leadership like selfish, power-hungry sociopaths. This series is especially unfair to Anatoly Stepanovich Dyatlov. His real experiences and what happened to him left him scarred. His reputation was ultimately known as the man who blamed was for the Chernobyl disaster (even though it was mostly an accident that EVERYONE across the leadership line tried to prevent). Even more worse and sad how, since HBO released the TV series, Dyatlov will be known as the monster who deserved everything that came his way. That couldn't be farther from the truth. Real Dyatlov was actually a good guy, a firm boss, but he was caring and respectful. None of the altercations seen in the show happened IRL at the control room the night of the disaster. In reality the room was completely calm and no arguments leading up to the explosion. Unfortunately HBO had to create more drama for the characters, so the took a poor old man and turned him into the devil we know as Comrade Dyatlov. The real Anatoly Dyatlov ultimately died from his efforts done that night (not shown in TV show conveniently). He got a fatal dose of radiation while trying to find missing Khodemchuck. He also tried multiple times to tell Akimov and Toptunov to go home, they refused (which would lead to their deaths). Real Dyatlov cared about his coworkers and everyone cared about the safety and preventing disaster. We should all just let the man rest in peace. The things he saw and the mistakes he made (including accidently sending two men to their deaths) scarred him for life. He was put in the worst situation possible... maybe let's give this man a rest. Also realize a lot of HBO Dyatlov is Hollywood. Anatoly Stepanovich Dyatlov's life was not great, not terrible.
@@lynth Cool story. I guess all that, including the capitalist claptrap, is exactly why the Soviets tried him, found him guilty, and sentenced him to 10 years in a labour camp? Or did HBO make that part up too? 🙄
@@lynthChernobyl is literally an event that happened in real-life soviet union . How does it portray capitalist leadership ? Plus you don't need misinformation to berate the USSR . All you need is a history book . It's not hard at all to portray the soviet union as evil .
No wonder the reactor exploded they have chefs working in the reactor room
Underrated
:)
Raise the power you fucking donkey! *smashes graphite flat*
@Random Number Dyatlov would make Ramsey cry
@Random Number On this episode of 'Reactor Nightmares' almost everybody coincidentally had some kind of disease which made them puke and die losing their hair in a few days with their blood rotting without white blood cells. What a freaking coincidence!
Dyatlov: *Gets home from work.*
Dyatlovs wife: "Honey how was work?"
Dyatlov: "Not great, not terrible."
Dyatlovs wife: "BTW your skin is falling off."
Dyatlov: "You're delusional."
Take her to the infirmary!
dyatlov vomits
also dyatlov: i must be pregnant!
Just realized he's the nutty dad from Friday Night Dinner
@@apollon6870 has to be.
@@NickThorbjørnsen2207 ?i have to be pregnant is the correct way?
Dyatlov: *Sees graphite on the ground*
Dyatlov: "I'm delusional, take me to the infirmary."
YOU DID NOT SEE VOMIT, BECAUSE IT IS NOT THERE!!!
I only just realized.. that he quite literally saw the graphite on the ground himself.
@@Korkzorz it is likely he understood everything and was just covering his ass since then.
@@AndrewNenakhov He was scared, just like everyone else. He wasn't a very good person, we know very well, but I bet he was trying to convince himself as well that the truth wasn't the truth. I don't like Dyatlov as much as the next guy, but I can try to understand how he'd be feeling. Of course he knew the truth. Of course he knew he saw graphite, and knew what it meant. But he was afraid. He was responsible for one of the worst nuclear accidents in history. He knew he'd be in trouble and he knew it would destroy himself and his reputation. (Which yeah, was already not great)
@@danielpeppapigpowers With such a nasty personality ive never thought the fear that man went through
"do you taste metal?" the scariest fucking thing to hear at that moment.
You can't see the monster, but he's here among us.
@@davidcox3076 AMONG USS
sus
Why does he taste metal? =Where does that come from?
@@boradoriryu One of the firefighters says it in this series when they go to the roof top to clear rubble.
If you've ever worked around metal particles (cutting, milling, forging etc) you know when you can smell it, or taste it in the air, the metallic taste on the tongue.
now imagine that, except its radioactive metal and concrete dust that is ticking minutes or hours, or years off your life every second you're exposed.
Alexander: the great
ivan: the terrible
dyatlov: the not great, not terrible
Lol
like Alexader hamilton or?
@@ru4758 Alexander the great
@@taylorrice3183 i was just looking for other theather kids
Peter the great
The liquidators had a less toxic work environment, and they had to scoop up nuclear waste.
I mean,it didn't really matter since everyone in a 5 kilometer radius of the plant was considered a dead man in 5 years.
@@hindolbhattacharya9715 Nvrmind,I get it
that's a genius comment wow
Give this man a cookie!
I dont think some people understand the joke
Dyatlov: *sees graphite on the ground*
“This graphite is delusional, take it to the infirmary.”
But in actual Dyatlov had not seen graphite..
@@EngineeredFemale of course not, he was in the toilet throughout that entire year
@@Schatten2712 bruh. :P
LMAOOOOO
These comments are good, but this one got me. I almost choked on my pizza.
*Employees: following safety protocols by the book and being professional.*
*Boss: "You're procrastinating"*
"Reactors don't make mistakes. Only people do"
-Dyatlov himself.
Guessing Boeing execs watched the movie and though that is a good idea....
Dyatlov's management style - not great, not terrible
3.6 out of 5
Dyatlov's management style gives off twice the radiation as the bomb in Hiroshima. And that's every single hour, hour after hour.
Yurii: management style -- super terrible. stupid, arrogant, destructive. perfect example of what NOT to be.
3.6/15000 Roentgen
Comrade Boris Schebina : I'm told Dyatlov's management style is only 3.6 roentgen toxicity, that's the equivalent of a chest x-ray.
*5 Minutes later*
Comrade General coming from Main control tower : It's not 3.6, it's 15 000.
girlfried: "You can go out and have some beer with your friends"
Me: "I would like you to record your command"
Did she slap the book out of your hands and tell you to raise the power?
@@marsh2202 She slapped the book out and angrily ordered him to go have some beer with friends
Why's the girl fried
@@mohamedzaki9171 Because of the radiation from the core.
This man is delusional Comrade. Take him to the infirmary.
I wonder if the director told him, "So, what we need is for you to be Gordon Ramsay, but you work at a power plant instead of a restaurant"
I mean they already dress like chefs, so you’re halfway there
This fucking graphite is raaaaw
I mean gordan at least is competent at his job
Unlike this guy
And be terrible at being a nuclear worker
No, if Gordon was in Chernobyl, looking at all the sh*te going on, he'd be like "F* off! You're useless, all of you! I'm holding meat in my hand, and it's cooking because of the radiation!"
"It's not 3 roentgen, it's 15 000."
Comrade Dyatlov: "Not great, not terrible"
Another faulty meter? You're wasting our time.
*4,000,000 exrays* “not great, not terrible”
"It maxed out. It only goes up to 15,000."
@@arnoldlee4625”4,000,000 x-rays? That’s all the check ups I would need in my lifetime and more! Praise the USSR!”
F*ck the meters, we need water pumping trough the core!
“Call the fire Brigade!”
Doomed them all in one sentence.
If it were not for the firefighters, whole world would be doomed. Their sacrifice was unpayable.
@@MojiMikato well, aint you gonna get your top most liked comment in youtube from here.
they would have been called one way or another...
@@MojiMikato Not really... Adding water to that kind of fire only made things worse if I'm not wrong
An Insane Shocktrooper That’s not true, their lives were wasted for no reason. They only made the situation worse
"I take it that the safety test was a failure."
Understatement winner of 1986!
I think they were very successful at testing the safety of the plant, they just didn't like the test results...
It wasn't great but it wasn't terrible
"We have the situation under control"
Overstatement winner of 1986!
@Tom R not only that they also managed to set a new record for amount of power that an RBMK reactor can output they got it up past 33000 megawatts before she blew🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@George Thomas well it did just not for the reason he thought it did the reactor blowing up will set the hydrogen in the tanks off
Dyatlov: "pump water into the core"
Guy: "there is no core"
Dyatlov: "okey lets pump water into the core"
The core was delusional and needed to be taken to the infirmary
@George Thomas I kinda agree maybe he was a bit greedy but I don’t think he was as bad as he was portrayed.
😂😂😂
@@nemo-x it is true there were many flaws in the reactor design that were hidden from the operators but they made mistake after mistake and bad judgment after bad judgment. They had all the safety systems turned off and were running things way outside normal parameters. There is enough blame to go around to everyone, including the entire Soviet system and culture. But there is still blame for the operators.
@@finnheisenheim8274 I spit my drink out from your comment Jesus have mercy on me it was too funny
Ground: sees Dyatlov on the grafite
“This infirmary is apologise. Take it to the delusion.”
"You didn't see Dyatlov..."
@@MS831985Dyatliv was in the toilet 😅
During my schizophrenia episode I read basically every text like this.
Graphite: *sees ground on the Dyatlov*
“I’m told it’s the equivalent of 4,000,000 chest X-rays”
@@jaegermann4170 lmfaoooooo I love these
Dyatlov: *Sees graphite on the ground*
Dyatlov: This infirmary is delusional, take it to the graphite.
Radiation also causes brain damage! It begins with the taste buds with the "metallic taste"
200th like.
@@chicxulub2947 Every explosion begins with a single test. This is test one. AND NOW. WE BLOW UP PRIPYAT!
Also Dyatlov: *hair falls out*
@George Thomas The show does exaggerate his hostility. But he was over bearing as a supervisor and had been reprimanded for it. But this was his second nuclear incident, and he was the man in charge during the test. There was a chain of critical failures leading up to the explosion from the installation of the reactor onward and Anatoly Dyatlov was a link in that chain.
“I’ll supervise the test myself”
Proceeds to barge in yelling at everyone, tossing books, then leaves...
leaves to toilet of course
A true superviser
Than lying about everything.
I didnt know my boss had clones. Oh well.
I see you've never done government work before
I just read that Paul Ritter has passed away. His portrayal of Dyatlow was outstanding! Rest in peace 🙏🏻
He certainly was an excellent actor. 2021 the continuation of 2020 I'm afraid.
Rest in peace, Paul Ritter 😔
You're delusional
He was ABSOLUTELY PHENOMENAL
@@everyvillainislemons8712 Take me to the infirmary if this 2020/21 nonsense has to continue into 2022 🤒
Yes, sadly, actor Paul Ritter has passed away. That's not good and it's damn terrible!
Nooo shit?
"There is no core! The stack is burning, I saw it!"
"...no core. Not great, not terrible."
This guy is a brilliant actor.
The most unpleasant non-violent character in screen history maybe.
In a very limited definition of non-violence
non violent? Did you see how he slapped that folder off of the other comrade? His hands are fire
Mmm don't forget about Skyler White...
He's a very realistic "workplace asshole".
There the truth with eng subs: ua-cam.com/video/J1InILI-jMQ/v-deo.html
When a nuclear disaster could have been avoided by a simple throat punch.
We need all scientists on a mma workout plan. When the board tries to come down and start barking orders, they can give them the sweet chin music the world is asking for👍🏽
It was communist Russia. Them guys lower on the totem would've been shot.
While it would've...the disaster revealed drawbacks in the power plant's systems...that and Legasov's suicide FORCED Soviet Union to make changes to their remaining reactors...
.
Imagine such a disaster happening in today's time...
@Ryan that doesn't excuse him from doing what he did...he was a jerk and became greedy over the potential promotion he'd be given if he successfully completed the test ...
There were opportunities when he could've stopped the rest based on readings from the reactor and seeing how it was functioning properly but he didn't...
.
While it wasn't entirely his fault it would be wrong to say that he was completely innocent...
@@chickencurry7642 Definitely negligent. But the USSR intentionally censored multiple studies showing how unstable the reactor is at low or even normal power levels. They could’ve easily installed better safety measures and informed the power plant engineers. But they didn’t. Dyatlov was experienced, and had no idea anything he was doing was dangerous. He wasn’t a dick like he was in the show. You get bad safety features, and engineers trying to please authoritarian party officials, it leads to problems. The RBMK was so cheap and powerful, the USSR built the thing en masse before there was even a fully functioning prototype. Once the thing was so widely used, no one wanted to piss off the government by publicly talking about its faults.
You didn't see puke on the table. YOU DIDN'T!
Because it's not there!!!
I apologize!
*pukes graphite*
**puke burns through table**
This comment! The answers! God I love the internet.
There the truth with eng subs: ua-cam.com/video/J1InILI-jMQ/v-deo.html
This mini series came out on HBO right after disastrous ending of Game of Thrones. Chernobyl mini series provied us with an example of how series should be made.
The moment he looked out the window he knew what had happened.
Did this actually happen though? I can't imagine anyone pretend like this
@@zizmares yeah it did. This part of the story was accurate.
@@zizmares Denial is one hell of a drug.
@@zizmares You have enjoyed your freedoms too much...
in that moment he knew he fucked up
Dyatlov gets home from work.
Dyatlovs wife: Honey how was work?
Dyatlov: Not great, not terrible
Dyatlov gets home from work.
Dyatlovs wife: Honey how was work?
Dyatlov: *promptly vomits on the ground and dies*
Dyatlov gets home from work.
Dyatlovs wife: Honey how was work?
Dyatlov: Woman where's muh caviar, and butter sammich?
"Who wants chowder?"
You're delusional, totonav take him to the infirmary
@kmurder02 there's no graphite on the ground.
Isn't it ridiculous that his crew is doing everything he asks them to and when it predictably goes wrong, he goes, "What did you do!"
A television drama has to be ridiculous. If it was like real life it'd not captivate attention.
@@The_Real_Maxajax is it?
The show needed an antagonist. That being said, obeying orders you knew were stupid and dangerous was the norm in USSR. That's what this show captures the best imo - how if everyone keeps giving up to non-sense, closing their eyes, it leads to millions of dead in the gulag.
@@lumpa1987 I acknowledge this, but simultaneously it has blackened the man's name more effectively than the Soviet regime did.
@@lumpa1987 easy to say when it's not your job on the line
The problem of our society is that we have way too many Dyatlovs in every workplace.
People who aspire to be at the top of the totem pole invariably deserve to be at the very bottom
The problem is why do we have them in the first place? Somebody tolerates them, who exactly is the real question
agree
@@alexandrubaginean7369the answer is everybody tolerates them, with the exception of other Dyatlovs. That why there's so many Dyatlovs all over the place.
Nonsense! My door is open.... always! I've been sayin' that for twenty-five years. See if I say I listen to my employees and treat them right, then my employees are are listened to and treated right. And if anyone disagrees; they have an attitude problem and don't have to work here anymore.
"If I say it's safe, it's safe".
Spoiler: It wasn't safe.
he's been doing this for 25 years. it's safe.
Bro, why did u spoil it for me?
2:28
NO SHIT.
Ur such an asshole no one likes spoilers
The most shocking revelation of this mini series is that despite Dyatlov's recklessness, he wasn't 100% to blame here. The positive void coefficient flaw with RBMK reactors was unknown to him because it was censored by the Soviet state.
Confluence of arrogance.
True, but Dyatlov's ultimate decision to bypass multiple safeties to run the test under lower power than it was supposed to have been conducted with was the trigger that caused the series of events that led to the core exploding.
Dyatlov never admitted his part in the incident, even if he helped cover for coworkers who the Party was trying to blame.
@@SilverPrince_ It's like in so, so, so many accidents - be it Eschede or the 737 Max crashes - even if it all goes back to literally a single element that failed, there were numerous decisions along the way - some of them of the "they should have known at the time that was wrong" kind, some of the "well, you take one of the two options per a coin flip, this time the coin came up the wrong way up - which could have prevented the accident.
The lesson is to design systems in such a way that such decisions can never result in terrible catastrophe. And if they can to ensure that those who take them are people who will always take the correct one. And as the latter is impossible, try for the former as much as you possibly can.
@@heysemberthkingdom-brunel5041 its called the perfect storm
@@SilverPrince_ I can't say that Diatlov wasn't reckless for the rules he broke. But then again knowing his expression in the trial , he was surprised when AZ5 was not the kill switch to the reactor but to the actual life around that area. They all believed that at the end of the day as long as AZ5 works, nothing can happen.
Although it is clear that all 3 directors knew about the graphite tips rods, but they were probably all in the mind to bring the power back up from the poisoned state that they missed the part that AZ5 actually reinserted the Graphite tip rod to the graphite moderator base of the core that endlessly create steam pressure that ultimately kills it.
"I apologise for this unsatisfactory result."
I love that line.
Welcome to СССР axaxaxaxa
I was born in USSR.) Never heard it before, but after this film - I use this phrase, sometimes, at work)
Me in bed
@@Gooberpatrol66 her: 1:17
the best part about that line is that it's the only line in the entire episode that manages to de-escalate dyatlov
I feel bad for the real Anatoly Stepanovich Dyatlov. His experiences and what happened to him left him scarred. His reputation was ultimately known as the man who blamed was for the chernobyl disaster. Even more worse and sad how, since HBO released the TV series, Dyatlov will be known as the monster who deserved everything that came his way. That couldn't be farther from the truth. Real Dyatlov was actually a good guy, a firm boss, but he was caring and respectful. None of the altercations seem in the show happened IRL at the control room the night of the disaster. In reality the room was completely calm and no arguments leading up to the explosion. Unfortunately HBO had to create more drama for the characters, so the took a poor old man and turned him into the devil we know as Comrade Dyatlov. The real Anatoly Dyatlov ultimately died from his efforts done that night (not shown in TV show conveniently). He got a fatal dose of radiation while trying to find missing Khodemchuck. He also tried multiple times to tell Akimov and Toptunov to go home, the refused (which would lead to their deaths). Real Dyatlov cared about his coworkers. We should all just let the man rest in peace. The things he saw and the mistakes he made (including accidently sending two men to their deaths) scarred him for life. He was put in the worst situation possible... maybe let's give this man a rest. Also realize a lot of HBO Dyatlov is Hollywood. Anatoly Stepanovich Dyatlov's life was not great, -not- -terrible-
ua-cam.com/video/N8__v9EswN4/v-deo.html
Don’t know about other countries, but a boss like portrayed here would probably fired for harassment, acting like this.
@@RayRayCrazy it was Soviet Russia. They could punish you by death if they wanted.
I think possibly, in this case where this is the first western representation of a real historic moment from the time of old school USSR , the character representation is something of a stand-in for all the previous actual dictatorial leaders and occurrences in the old USSR. I know it's not necessarily comforting but I see it that way . Praying for change there, hate to think the curtain is being lifted again with no recourse.
I agree with you, Dyatlov is scapegoat of USRR politic. In Soviet Union they must find victim, so it’s Dyatlov and Briuchanov convicted to 10 years of labor camp…
I think that the main reason of the disaster is faulty construction of reactor and that’s USRR side can’t admit because is „the only right line of the party“.
@@łukasz726-f4x Honestly so many people are like "This shows just how bad the USSR really was!" because of Dyatlov or whatever, meanwhile the ACTUAL problems with the USSR were putting 100% of the blame on one dude who may or may not have been kind of a shitty boss but who was not solely responsible for the disaster. Maybe not even primarily responsible. The show is great but it gives people totally the wrong impression of the problems leading up to the disaster. It's a realm shame--the show spends so much time talking about "truth" but then gives us stuff like this.
Dyatlov's actor Paul Ritter just passed away at 54. He played the character so memorably and anyone who has seen his other roles knows that he had a remarkably diverse talent spanning comedy, blockbuster action movies and miniseries dramas.
I got to know that right now. I went to his Wikipedia page and got a shock. I can't believe that.
@@TheGiulioSeverini Talk about method acting.
I'm surprised he lasted that long, being so close to the reactor.
Dyatlov was an educated, cultured, well-mannered person. He did not shout at his colleagues and did not use foul language. And he was not an idiot. The real person was blatantly slandered. And this whole show is full of lies.
@@Vladdy89 LOL
“Do you taste metal?”
And that’s were we see a dead man
I believe he received the fatal dose down in the pump room. Had he and Akimov fled the plant then and there there is a probable chance that they would’ve survived. Even with an increased risk of cancer.
@@stoneylonesome4062 You're not tasting metal. You're delusional
@@stoneylonesome4062 almost all of them lived a long time and didn't die (or are even still alive in 2021) from cancer etc. The radiation was only really bad at the reactor, the graphite, under the reactor etc. It's not like it wiped out anyone that went near it.
@@stoneylonesome4062 the ones who died were the firefighters on the roof and the handful of technicians in and around the reactor.
@@testy462 Only one guy from the control room is alive today. I think Dyatlov himself was second to last to die more than 20 years ago. Most of them died within one month. It is true that most workers survived the accident, mainly because they and their chefs were intelligent enough not to run around where one shouldn't run around. However, THESE guys from the control room got tons of radiation.
Those who worked under the real Dyatlov described him as efficient and straight-laced but never abusive as portrayed in the show. The writers needed a villain, so it was Dyatlov. Still, great acting by Paul Ritter.
He did indeed threaten his co-workers that night though, probably due to the fact that his career was on the line if the safety test didn't go over well. A crew of workers who don't know what they're doing + a supervisor who screams and threatens them with termination = catastrophic failure.
@@Kaipyro67ALT to be fair he was making his decisions based on BS data that was provided by his higher ups. In that situation you don't have time to play games debating what to do. If he had the proper information that whole thing probably wouldn't have happened.
@@Kaipyro67ALT Seems like an usual company in France
@@cv6thebige that’s Soviet Russia for ya
They are delusional, take them to the infirmary
The fact that Akimov gets to endure the highest radiation dose and gets most painful death, while Dyatlov goes on to live his life, is proof enough that one must walk the earth knowing there is no amount of good karma or love can save you from your fate.
Ananenko, Baranov and Bezpalov would like to differ.
Besides, Real Life Dyatlov wasn't as portrayed in this scene.
It was not first nuclear accident for Dyatlov. That gave him some advantage.
@@hvnterblack lol
Dyatlov was not as terrible as the show depicts him to be at least
@@thecheeselord5943 He was even worse. Much worse. There is interview with him after accident. He blamed reactor for the accident. It is docomented, that he was often yelling at his staff. He changed test parameters himself, below safety limits. When crew objected, he forced them to throw away safety procedures.
Just once in my life in, I would love to toss a book at someone and say "there, review it" like Dyatlov.
Just walk into a book store and live that dream.
i have threw a file on the face if my sub ordinate staff once,that felt so good😆
@@nxjais318 your a 3rd world arsehole
Consider a career in the academic world. Lots of books and scared students there.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Gordon Ramsay of Nuclear Reactors
Gordon might be a jerk but at least he cooks well. If Dyatlov was a chef he'd be still jerk and his dishes would taste like crap. And conversely, if Ramsey was the nuclear expert in charge of Chernobyl right now he would have listened to the other scientist and stopped the test as soon as it would have gotten any funny reading.
@@enricmm85 if dyatlov was a chef all of his dishes would taste like graphite
@@Dominique9325 Graphite? Impossible! There is no graphite.
It’s FUCKING RAW!!
Dennis Hancock I mean your not wrong.
My mom: "I saw porn sites on the laptop history".
Me: "You DIDAAAANT! Because its NOT there!"
Dad: ”i looked right into it... i looked into the laptop’s history”
Jake Johnson Are you schupid?
Lmfao
Did you projectile-vomited after that?
Stepbrother help me I’m stuck... what are you doing! 😂
"Safety first, always. I've been saying that for 25 years." I absolutely love how he says this. It's arrogance, ignorance, and a hunger for control all rolling into one moment where he does the dumbest, most unsafe thing that could be done. Sure, some of his ignorance was because things were hidden from him, but that arrogance does not allow for the unknown.
tbf, he didn't know that the az-5 which was suppose to be the emergency shut down can also act as a detonator
@@alvawijaya6922 did you copy and paste this from the show? lol
@@Gingenuity of course because that's exactly what happened on the show and there's no better way to explain it
@@alvawijaya6922 In Soviet Russia AZ-5 button SCRAMs you.
He says safety comes first but what he really means is safety comes third 😂
“I need water running through *my* reactor core!”
Comrade, I though this was *our* reactor.
Allright. Now that it has been blown up, my reactor can be our reactor.
@@u.v.s.5583 No its your reactor... I'm not responsible for this...
Da comrade, our reactor
Underrated
The acting.
The acting by each and every one.
Class.
Hamza Ansari
I measterbaiet to des
Loop Is Dedz Found the C00MeER
The acting? YOU DIDN'T SEE IT BECAUSE IT'S NOT THERE!
Acting is good but this show and everything related to it, including acting is so overrated.
There, officer! There's the horny!
while i was watching the series i didn’t notice that when Dyatlov looked down to the window he knew there was graphite on the ground, he knew that the core exploded. he was scared and mostly, he couldn’t swallow his pride and say that he failed his job.
@Lana he wasn't indocrinated, no one was in the way you say it, everything there worked on lies, The workers will do everything for their own good, the people above them will think it's all fine and good, when the problem goes on them, they preserve themselves and blame others or say everything is fine, then the people above do the same thing. The goverment was all lies, all professional interactions between people we're all lies ( in their jobs), even personal interactions we're all lies.
Guys you all got it wrong..It's not possible that Dyatlov saw graphite..The control room is below the reactor so it's not at all possible for Dyatlov to see graphite..
In the series they have shown that control room is at 2/3 floor well in reality it wasn't..
I cant understand this, my grandparents lived in soviet times and they say that thats exactly how things were, but if somethin that big happens....well you dont hav to care about your pride in this moment because you most likely are going to die anyway , only thing that you can do is to try to sve others from it
You guys are delusional he did not see graphite.
fucking true... i didn't see it either
6:23 gotta say, that sudden cut from "are you stupid" to dyatlow puking really cracked me up
Dyatlov collapsing had me wheezing laughing because he looks like he toppled from hitting a bong too hard
When your character is so toxic, even your stomach acid doesn't want to stick around...
Dyatlov was actually a very good person, but when I say really, really. It's just Chernobyl HBO really wanted to blame dyatlov for what happened so they of course made people think that Dyatlov was rude. Everything you see here in the HBO Chernobyl about Dyatlov begin rude, that never happened, Dyatlov wasn't rude, and never wanted to be rude.
Dyatlov even risked his own life to death to try and rescue his fellow mates in the Unit 4 Block, he went in all rooms, trying to search for people to rescue.
HBO Chernobyl is just, 100% inaccurate, 100% useless movie to watch, none of the facts In the movie are right.
Dyatlov was arrested for regulations that in 1986 didn't exist, basically that he got falsely arrested for death sentence, but since they were added in like early 1987, In the final trial in 1987, he was accused of those, there was none of the regulations he was accused of in 1986.
It's just that Comrade Dyatlov isn't anymore with us and he can't defense his self sadly, everyone thinks that Dyatlov was a really rude and toxic person but actually he was a very good person.
@@OsmanEner The problem is with the wide audience of western society that they cannot comprehend anything outside the field of what was fed to them and they actually belief a lot of nonsense that is historically inaccurate.
The story of one mens failure is just another cover-up story, in the same way that one lone guy killed JFK.
It doesent matter what reality is, the puplic is only accepting what the general consensus is that was told to them by the MSM in the long run.
@@OsmanEner Ok komrade lol
Fuck off. Dyatlov was an extremely intelligent man but his hubris and confidence mixed with the lying of the soviet union cause they worst man made disaster in history.
I know about the inaccuracies about this show. This show wasnt really meant to be a history biopic. It's a drama based around true events and people.
@@SaithMasu12 the problem is you expect anyone to care enough nobody will go out there way to to read into it out of there daily lives half the people we see probably weren’t even real even if you were right what does shaming him do he’s already passed away it’s just stupid and so are you if you believe this is exclusive to Americans
“I saw graphite on the ground.”
“No, you didn’t.”
Authoritarianism in a nutshell.
Edit: Unreal, had no idea this comment would get a response like this. Best wishes to all, positive & negative!
NO IT DONT!
Ah yes
Is America a joke to you?
wwbdwwbd
America used authority through
FREEEDOM!!
Are you saying there was graphite on the ground? HMM?
Graphite: sees Dyatlov on the ground
“This delusion is infirmary. Take it to the I apologize.”
You're messing with my brain.
These comments are slaying me, haha!
Especially if you read them one after another.
You think you’re smart/cool. You’re not.
I fuckin love these lol
This had me in stitches
I actually saw a person with a shirt on with Dyatlov's (Paul Ritter) face on the other day at my local cafe with the quote "Not great, not terrible" written on it.
This show made quite the impact on the younger people!
I personally have watched it three times already.
@Pooty Pump I do agree. If someone posts it today it's *just too old* ... but the fact that someone had a shirt made (presumably custom-made) and printed with that specific quote shows quite an amount of dedication. And *that* dedication I admired.
I also read in something like the UK Times or Herald that there's a stone/marble plaque of Paul Ritter that says "R.I.P Paul Ritter, His Acting Was *Not Great, Not Terrible* (with the first 'Not' being crossed out). I hope that's real haha.
Dyatlov: Safety first, thats what i've been saying for 25 years.
Also Dyatlov: RAISE THE POWER!
Poor Akimov he was a good worker..
Same for the others, Toptunov and him stayed afterwards, even as their shift ended, and went on opening the valves under the reactor, absorbing lethal doses of radiation...
he had some cool glasses
I feel bad for toptunov he is to young to be dead
@@tangocharliedd-2146 akimov was sort of young too unfortunately.
Everybody was a good worker, Dyatlov included. If Dyatlov died in the hospital, then he would be remembered as a hero same as Akimov and Toptunov.
"Have them use the good meter, from the safe." That was the USSR in a nutshell.
15000 röntgen later...
No
Equipment stealing was extremely common.
It was common even when locked, because it was stolen by the guy with the key.
So they made twin key locks, two people were required to open them.
But the locks were crap, and equipment kept being stolen.
@@neutronalchemist3241 crap locks were stolen too
@@neutronalchemist3241 hey boss, when do we get the new flashlight? we sure could need it here" - "as soon as everyone got one at home"
"Is it too much to ask that you all know what you're doing?"
"Yes, absoloutely"
Graphite: falls on the roof
Dyatlov: The graphite is delusional, take it to the infirmary.
Lmaoooo
You didn't see graphite on the roof...
Guy with graphite: Do you taste metal?
You CAN'T TAKE IT to the infirmary, because it's NOT THERE!
😂😂😂😂😂😂
"YOU DIDN'T!" That's the scream of a man who knows his secret is out, and he's fucked.
"Safety first! I've been saying that for 25 years."
Promptly proceeds to do something quite unsafe.
Year 26 proved elusive
Chernobyl wasn't the first reactor he melted down... much earlier in his career he was involved in another reactor incident while installing reactors to nuclear submarines. Safety first indeed.
@@tylisirn read up on him... He's not the arsehole portrayed on TV. You talk like he's personally liable for both accidents, lmao. He was just the corrupt party's scapegoat for the incident.
“3,6 Not great, Not terrible”
-Comrade Dyatlov 1986
"I take it the safety test was a failure"
Love that they found a way to slip some dry British humor in there
I love how even when they guys saying he looked right into the reactor core Dyatlov is oblivious to the fact that maybe the reactor core did in fact explode
@@raven4k998 To be fair, they were told over and over again that it was impossible for the core to explode, and the mind generally doesn't want to accept something so horrific anyways, so a double whammy of somewhat understandable denial.
Speaking of British humor, can you imagine if they cast John Cleese to play Antoly Dyatlov? I think it would’ve would ruined the miniseries’ drama having a well known comic actor in the cast.
That's actually not exclusive of britrish humor but w/e
do brits really believe that's specifically british humour
I've worked with these kinds of bosses before. Barking orders all day and always causing unnecessary burden, leading to many problems. And when something goes wrong they are ready to point the finger at their subordinates. Never actually owning responsibility and always using their rank to belittle the one at "fault". It's one of my biggest reasons why I shift to solo work now. Living a much happier life and never looked back.
Own my own business because my dads like that, fake it till you make it but no real thought behind it. Just fall forward and hope for the best
Yup, dealt with people like that too. The urge to sock 'em in the face gets unbearable sometimes.
It's called narcissism
I have a boss like this right now lol
Luckily my 2nd job i work alone !
I've had a Boss who acted Like that in a small company. Just snapped one day and told him he'd either Stop being an Ass or im off and it couldnt have been better since.
R.I.P. Paul Ritter. May there be enough water in Heaven.
Because he didn't see Graphite from the sky.
Is he dead!?!?!
@@NickThorbjørnsen2207 yes
Every time I see a clip from this movie on youtube, I immediately want to watch the whole series again. Seen it three times already, back to back. So good!
The director wanted to paint Comrade Dyatlov in a more flattering light but Dyatlov slapped the script out of his hands and said, "I've had chest x-rays with more roentgens than this script!"
you stalled the reactor how the fuck did you get this job?
HaHaHaHAHA!
The most British part of Pripyat.
British engineering and general procedure aren't shabby, what are you talking about
@@alexanderm2220 accent.
Alexander M WHOOSH
@@alexanderm2220 Then explain this: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windscale_fire
@@alexanderm2220 British (Pakistani) engineering
4:15 "I'm gonna pretend I didn't see that"
Nun with Dual Berettas xd
Blahaha
He didn't see that because I WASN'T THERE!
The visual of Dyatlov being carried off is striking. The way guards carry a sick man in need of help and a suspect under arrest is indistinguishable. They drag a man in need of help in the same way you'd expect them to treat an enemy.
I imagine the director likely wanted to impart an early visual reference to his guilt onto us, but I think it's interesting to look at both framings.
The moment Dylatov sees the graphite himself and just goes further past the moral event horizon at increasing velocity... Darkness made brilliant.
"aw man, i must be delusional, i gotta go to the infirmary!"
Perfectly describes Russia in another present-day international disaster of its own making.
They gave him a death sentence
same as the radiation, the lies carried all the way to the highest people. Eventually you will get exposed and the truth sets in. Chernobyl killed the Soviet Union and the Communist party. It was karma at the highest order.
RIP Comrade Ritter. This was an amazing performance.
F
No he didn’t !
You’re confused. His performance was outstanding.
Take yourself to the infirmary.
@@adman1381 good one!
Not great, not terrible.
The boss from hell.
There are plenty of witnesses stating that Dyatlov was tough on carelessness and incompetence but understanding about problems which could not be avoided.
And that is necessary when dealing with something like a nuclear reactor.
This isn't some office job where knocking a cup of coffee over your desk is the biggest "disaster" likely to occur, and safety meetings center around the air conditioning being set too low for the female employees.
@@forestdenizen6497 well he seems not very tough on himself.
It's typical Russian boss. More or less. Never seen different kind of bosses here. Ignorant, stupid, tyrannical
. Very common for Russia.
@@forestdenizen6497 Dunno what cartoon world you live in where thats the case...
Also spilling coffee on documents is annoying cause you have to then go print off new documents wasting time. Its worse if they are original copies.
Dyatlov: DO THIS DO THAT
*Stuff goes wrong*
Dyatlov: WHAT DID YOU DO?!
Staff: "I did what you said! "
Dyatlov: "Well you should've done what you knew you should've done!!"
I saw the news that Paul Ritter died yesterday.
"YOU DIDN'T!"
Take him to the infirmary he is delusionnal
I forgot how good this show was.
Nessie Andrew There's a reinactment movie that is MUCH more accurate and just plain dank compared to this. This HBO version's more about entertainment.
@@joshgellis9463
I watched the whole series and I wasn't entertained even a second. Inwas terrified most of the time.
This and band of brothers are perfect or 99% perfect shows / movies 👌
Josh Gellis can you please give us the name of the movie?
Josh Gellis which movie
He's the only on that didn't die in till 7 years later
Too mean to die
Would have deserved it
Joseph Cribari he died 1995, so 9 years. He was sick the whole time though.
He would not be happy if people knew that he would have said they were delusional like in the show
His denial that he did anything wrong or that he cause the explosion kept him going I bet.
I gotta say in the history of bad days at work, this has gotta be no.1
3:51 the horrified breathlessness with which he says "do you taste metal?"
The nuclear family: Mom + Dad + 3,6 children
Not great, not terrible.
It's actually 15 000 children.
Ahahhahahhaha
They gave them the propaganda number!
2.45 children to be exact!
I can't seriously be the only one thinking that the thumbnail looks like Joker.
Just came here to say that
No, you're not.
You're delusional. You'll be taken to the infirmary.
@@gretathuumberg how dare you , supporting memes , when you should be saving the world
Joker in his later years :D
6:23
"Sitnikov are you stupid?"
Dyatlov vomits.
Nice cut, lol.
"Safety first, I've always said that. So when I say it's safe, it's safe." That's some 1984 speak right there
Reminds me of Fauci declaring, "I AM the science!"
@@youtubecensors5419 Good example of misinformation there. He never said that. His quote was, "I represent science" when it comes to the GOP and their petty insults.
1984 is an important book for sure
@@-CharIes he doesn't represent science, who is he, Jesus? Science is the study of Gods creation, no human represents that.
"When the President does it, that means it's _not_ illegal."
"I think there's graphite"
"You didn't see graphite"
"Yes I did"
"YOU DIDN'T"
*raises hand so he can solve the situation*
"Are you stupid?"
"I think there's graphite"
"You didn't see graphite"
"Yes I did"
"No, you didnt"
"Yes I did"
"No"
"Yes"
"No"
"No"
"Yes"
"See ? I told you ..."
"Please shoot this man."
Under rated comment
It sums up the Soviet system quite well.
BLEUUUURRRRGH
ArE yOu sTuPid?!?!
They did an amazing job at capturing the feeling of Communist bureaucracy and the frustration and manipulation it manifested in its citizens.
Capitalist Russia has three times more bureacrats than USSR, and with 3 times less effectiveness.
More like state capitalist bureaucracy, we're talking about the late Soviet Union :)
So still government goons in charge instead of actual professionals who built the business in the first place.
Communism is poison
@@sissyphussartre2907 Soviet Government has invented and built nuclear plants in first place, while US capitalist government invented atomic bomb.
When coal miner talked back to a Minister of CCCP it kinda ruined it for me. Wouldn't have happened in am million years
Dyatlov obviously did not watch his annual mandatory anti-harrassement workplace video
Safety first!
Ofcourse he's not responsible
He was on the toilet
He is not 'responsive' to the accident
The witnesses said he wasnt according to prosecutor Roose Bolton.
@@nikosgreek352 Of course they had to cover up for him what else do you think they'd do? He was the one who raised the power to 700, he told his co-workers it would be still safe if they did so... He ignored the graphite on the ground and most of all he also ignored 3.6 roentgen or maybe even higher which is equivalent to 4 million X-rays.
@@rogue8903 you didnt get the joke did you?
@@nikosgreek352 I GET IT, the original comment was being sarcastic.... I'm just telling the truth unlike other people there who just chooses to believe lies no matter the consequences.
Dyatlov: “How the f*** did you get this job?!”
Me wondering how he got it.
Ass kissing to the Party
He got it based on his experience in the Russian far east installing nuclear reactors in submarines... where he was involved in another reactor incident... Chernobyl wasn't the first reactor he melted down. Typical day and safety first indeed.
how hé got it? Well, thats showcased in the start of the series where Fomin tells Dyatlov that Bryukhanov will be promoted away to a fat job in Moscow, Fomin receive a promotion to Bryukhanov's station of Plant Director, and Dyatlov asking Fomin that 'he'd like to be considered' for Fomin's job.... Friends-policy, corruption, arselicking, and covering for eachother... Bryukhanov hád already signed off to Moscow that the Test was completed succesfully, yet Moscow demanded to see the test-results: Fomin and Dyatlov were to 'produce' those test-results, ASAP, to cover up for Bryukhanov's lie.
As a reward for covering for him, they'd also be promoted, as it'd be Bryukhanov's call, at his new station in Moscow.
Though this sort of 'procedures' isnt 'patented' by the Communist Party... this sort of covering up, arselicking, and 'giving away prestigious jobs' to eachother, is happening éverywhere in the world! Perhaps even more so in Capitalist Nations nowadays...
Chernobyl was a good example of how corruption, greed, and all the lies that come with it, can lead to ultimate disaster!
As Legasov stated 'beautifully' in the show's finale:
"Every lie, incurs a debt to the truth. Sooner or later, that debt will be paid".
Durig the construction of Chernobyl units 3 and 4, Dyatlov complained to much about the poor quality of construction materials and was re-assigned to a different job.
@@thegreenreaper6660 That's the show, NOT real life.
3.6 not great not terrible
the radiation was so strong they started speaking english
as opposed to english with a fake russian accent, which is russian characters' native languange
If you want to hear them in Russian, watch the Zero Hour Documentary about the Disaster at Cernobyl. The actors there all speak Russian.
I thought it was common knowledge that citizens of 1980’s Soviet Union Ukraine spoke English
Imagine working in a nuclear reactor and having to constanly fight the urge to parody this
i imagine those that do have no desire to take safety so lightly. there's a time and a place for everything
@@chrisstovall5116 Nah, but if the powers gotta come up somebodies gettin' told to, "Raise the power!"
You're delusional. Go to the infirmary
"Hey man, i saw you slacking on the job this noon"
"You're delusional,get into the infirmary"
I’d fight the urge even in chemistry class
6:30 I just love how he throws up and immediately apologized, he was quite the gentleman who was unfortunately caught in a disaster while in the toilet
The way Paul Ritter plays Dyatlov s character is simply amazing! Despite his negative position, he s one of my favourite actors in the series.
Masterpiece... This movie can be re-watched so many times and it still gives you goosebumps and anxiety in shovels...
“You can ignore reality, but you cannot ignore the consequences of ignoring reality.” - Ayn Rand
A hypocrite and a zealot, but nonetheless one with some good quotes.
If only that were true immediately. People want to forget their mistakes so they can repeat them later
@@FreemanicParacusia in what way was Rand a zealot. Living for yourself isn't a crime
@Random Number I wake up every day, knowing I'm definitely on the right track, when internet randos take more time on their ad hominem against Rand, Friedman, Sowell & others like them, than any negative comment I've seen about H1tler...
@@herrGreg They hate even on Carl Jung more than any of the staff from Hitler.
This is one of the best series every created. It's a masterpiece.
Yes.
HBO's apology for f*cking up GoT...
Yep
Even better than the Sopranos, Boardwalk Empire and the Wire? Doubt it, still a great miniseries.
It really isn't - a lot of it is completely inaccurate.
I didn’t realize Chernobyl was a comedy until I watched Dyatlov clips on UA-cam. Lol
The office parody is a gem!
> Comes in
> Ruins the Test
> Vomits
> Refuses to elaborate
> Leaves
This video is a lie, take it to the infirmary
This video is AI rendered...! Take it to the infirmary
Hi Dyatlov :D
Your right comrade Dyatlov.
Hi dyatlov have you said sorry
Where are you at all that time.... toilet?
"are you stupid?"
Diatlov : *vomit
👀
They should’ve thrown him in the core
Epic
@@abhishekmandal3289 Gamer
Alex Yoloswagger moment
*tHeRe iS n0 c0RE!!*
too quick of a death, should have strapped him somewhere dangerous enough and kept him there.
Dyatlov stopping dead in his tracks as soon as he sees broken glass on the ground outside the control room gave me chills. Great acting.
The power of "I want a promotion"
"I deserve" ;)
I’ve had sooo many bosses like him... in Alabama
None at a nuke plant I hope
2and900 - War Thunder Weekly Homer Simpson works there.
Dyatlov is the personification of just about every middle manager Ive ever known. The Peter Principle at work.
Yeah, everything managerial plays out like a week's worth of Dilbert strips
It's actually HBO portraying CAPITALIST leadership and pretending that's what happened in Chernobyl. The series is over-the-top anti-socialist propaganda packed with disinformation to make the USSR look bad and portray Soviet leadership like selfish, power-hungry sociopaths. This series is especially unfair to Anatoly Stepanovich Dyatlov. His real experiences and what happened to him left him scarred. His reputation was ultimately known as the man who blamed was for the Chernobyl disaster (even though it was mostly an accident that EVERYONE across the leadership line tried to prevent). Even more worse and sad how, since HBO released the TV series, Dyatlov will be known as the monster who deserved everything that came his way. That couldn't be farther from the truth. Real Dyatlov was actually a good guy, a firm boss, but he was caring and respectful. None of the altercations seen in the show happened IRL at the control room the night of the disaster. In reality the room was completely calm and no arguments leading up to the explosion. Unfortunately HBO had to create more drama for the characters, so the took a poor old man and turned him into the devil we know as Comrade Dyatlov. The real Anatoly Dyatlov ultimately died from his efforts done that night (not shown in TV show conveniently). He got a fatal dose of radiation while trying to find missing Khodemchuck. He also tried multiple times to tell Akimov and Toptunov to go home, they refused (which would lead to their deaths). Real Dyatlov cared about his coworkers and everyone cared about the safety and preventing disaster. We should all just let the man rest in peace. The things he saw and the mistakes he made (including accidently sending two men to their deaths) scarred him for life. He was put in the worst situation possible... maybe let's give this man a rest. Also realize a lot of HBO Dyatlov is Hollywood. Anatoly Stepanovich Dyatlov's life was not great, not terrible.
The real Dyatlov is rolling in his grave. He is being done dirty
@@lynth Cool story. I guess all that, including the capitalist claptrap, is exactly why the Soviets tried him, found him guilty, and sentenced him to 10 years in a labour camp? Or did HBO make that part up too? 🙄
@@lynthChernobyl is literally an event that happened in real-life soviet union . How does it portray capitalist leadership ? Plus you don't need misinformation to berate the USSR . All you need is a history book . It's not hard at all to portray the soviet union as evil .
When Dyatlov vomited I half expected him to say: *Im delusional take me to the infirmary*