FIRST TIME WATCHING CHERNOBYL 1X2 PLEASE REMAIN CALM REACTION

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  • Опубліковано 15 гру 2022
  • Hello Knights! This is our first time watching Chernobyl. In this video we react to the second episode of Chernobyl 1x2 titled Please Remain Calm. We find this show so interesting so far. It is both devastating to watch but also such an amazing show when it comes to performances and writing.
    Thank you so much for the support and for watching! If you enjoyed the video it would mean the world to us if you could hit the like button and subscribe. See you in the next one!
    Synopsis: With untold millions at risk, Ulana makes a desperate attempt to reach Valery and warn him about the threat of a second explosion.
    Join our Patreon: bit.ly/3ICVrJ6
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 296

  • @ededdandeddytv5164
    @ededdandeddytv5164 Рік тому +52

    “You are dealing with something that has never occurred on this planet..” is f***ing terrifying

  • @JH-lo9ut
    @JH-lo9ut Рік тому +127

    That pile of firemen's clothes is still down in the basement of the old hospital in Pripyat, where they left it.
    It is one of the most radioactive places on earth.
    *Edit. Saw that someone already mentioned this...
    Anyways. There are pictures and videos out there showing, what supposedly is the very pile of clothes worn by the firemen, untouched for all these years. Truly haunting.

    • @mrdunk2955
      @mrdunk2955 Рік тому +14

      And after this show there was an influx of tourists in the Chernobyl exclusion zone. Many influensers or "big fans" that go and take stuff as "souvenirs" from the zone, I wouldn't be surprised if this exact pile of clothing had suffered the same fate.

    • @dickbong3661
      @dickbong3661 Рік тому

      @@mrdunk2955 Oh, its already happened. At least one helmet is missing from the pile, it was last seen near the edge of the pile in a photograph taken in 2013, and since then it's vanished. Probably some fucking moron stole it as a souvenir. I hope to god they at least knew to wash it off before taking it home.
      The good news is that because of nonsense like that, in 2015 the stairwell to the basement was filled in with soil, and there's now multiple warning signs informing people that going down to the uniforms without proper PPE is a violation of exclusion zone protocol, and they WILL find out when you set off the radiation alarms at a checkpoint (as you'll inevitably carry out uranium particles if you go down there without proper equipment). And when they catch you covered in uranium particles, you'll be issued a steep fine, and also given decontamination... which means you're stripped to your underwear, shaved bald, scrubbed down, then sent home like that, because that's the easiest way to handle someone getting covered in uranium particles.

    • @zacharydaly5328
      @zacharydaly5328 8 місяців тому

      @@mrdunk2955 for the sake of those dumb tourists, let's hope they didn't - the firemen's clothes and boots are to this day still emitting so much radiation that it's some of the most radioactive debris in all of Chernobyl. Even the hottest areas of the Red Forest (that the Russains stupidly dug foxholes in during the early days of the Ukraine invasion) aren't emitting half the radiation those boots and clothes are still putting out to this day.
      To the best of my knowledge, only the corium in the basement of reactor #4 is radioactively hotter than the firemen's clothes.

    • @Some_Guy6
      @Some_Guy6 7 місяців тому +12

      @@mrdunk2955 Actually, after a tourist stole a fireman helmet they closed up the basement permanently.

    • @silverdandylmao
      @silverdandylmao 7 днів тому

      ​@@Some_Guy6 the fuck?!?! Do tourists have zero brain cells?? That is literally RADIOACTIVE?!?!

  • @YolandaAnneBrown95726
    @YolandaAnneBrown95726 11 місяців тому +51

    For an episode called "Please Remain Calm", there's nothing as terrifying as the sounds of the radioactive detector screaming loudly, the lights fading, and the terrifying sounds of the workers panicked breathing.

  • @i7draco620
    @i7draco620 Рік тому +148

    I am from Kyiv, Ukraine. Was born in 1988 and whole my childhood all kids were taking pills since kindergarten and checked for thyroid changes each 6 months. There was doctor who entered each class in school and examined all kids one by one. And thank you for this amazing reaction, best I've seen!

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому +20

      Thank you so much for sharing your experience with us - it must have been frightening as a child, we cannot even imagine.
      Your support means the world to us!

    • @i7draco620
      @i7draco620 Рік тому +19

      @@OfficialMediaKnights tbh, as a child you don't understand it. Only now I actually start to understand the scale of danger

    • @Some_Guy6
      @Some_Guy6 7 місяців тому +6

      @@OfficialMediaKnights A family of mine(parents and young daughter of 10) went on vacation to Sweden before,during and after the accident. They all passed away soon after. Diagnosis of all 3 was "sudden agressive cancer". In most of Europe it's still forbidden to pluck things from the forests due radiation.

    • @TheUltimateBastich
      @TheUltimateBastich 6 місяців тому

      I was born on April 26 1986, 13 hours after explosion.

  • @aussiejed1
    @aussiejed1 5 місяців тому +9

    2:41 "Such a subtle switch in the acting..." Jared Harris, exemplerary actor, son of British acting legend Richard Harris who you may know as the first Dumbledore, among his many other famous roles.
    Such an amazing cast in this series, so many fantastic actors.

  • @ashleyowen7664
    @ashleyowen7664 Рік тому +66

    16:15 for me, this seems to be the point where Boris realises the extent of the disaster and how bad it actually is
    17:46 that announcement was real, it says something along the lines of: " ATTENTION, ATTENTION - due to unsatisfactory conditions because of an accident at Chernobyl, we are evacuating the area, please take with you ONLY what you can carry, leave everything else, including pets and animals behind, you have one hour"

    • @JoshSweetvale
      @JoshSweetvale 8 місяців тому +12

      It also involved the words "temporary" and possibly "a few days."

  • @xenomorph2056
    @xenomorph2056 Рік тому +95

    Although the 3 men who opened the sluice gate valve were likely conscripted instead of volunteers, I tear up every time I watch that scene. The utter selflessness they showed in doing what they did is absolutely awe inspiring. They could have easily deserted or killed themselves, but they chose to go in and get the job done. Heroes, in the truest sense.

    • @stpetepiper
      @stpetepiper Рік тому +22

      I saw another video that brought up their account of it and from what I remember they said they weren't really asked like that, but they weren't forced to either. Those three were just told to go do it and they considered it was part of their job/duty since they worked there and would obviously be able to navigate it better than anyone else and already knew exactly what they were looking for.
      True heros

    • @nickous.
      @nickous. Рік тому +20

      Actually all of those 3 people survived

    • @adab.3681
      @adab.3681 Рік тому +17

      There is one good thing, though: they all survived, two of them are still alive today. Baranov died in 2005 of a heart attack. (Bryukhanov died in 2021; Fomin is still alive today.)

  • @MrSporkster
    @MrSporkster Рік тому +65

    This series is a masterclass in 'show, don't tell.' I was in high school when Chernobyl happened. It was a defining event of my generation.

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому +15

      YES!!! Exactly! That's why we were so excited with the storytelling - we were not spoonfed any information, and whatever 'info-dump' we experienced, was due to the scientific aspect of this disaster, and even that was handled wonderfully!
      I can only imagine the shockwaves this event would have caused at the time - and the crazy part is that the ripples of those repercussions echo on until today!

  • @TheTsar1918
    @TheTsar1918 Рік тому +26

    Yes, high amounts of radioactivity can ruin electronics. It'll drain batteries, short circuit computers, fry wires...you name it. In fact, if you look at photographs or home movies taken in both the plant and Pripyat at that time, you will notice black haze at the bottom of the pictures, or see little sparkly white spots pop on the screen. That's radioactivity literally eating the film. It's an invisible enemy.

  • @MichelKulmann
    @MichelKulmann Рік тому +75

    The helicopter scene is so well done. It is very similar to the real footage from that time.
    Great reaction, guys. This TV series should definitely be shown in schools.

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому +6

      Absolutely!! The way the building tension was captured and the stakes elevated was masterful! Thanks for your support, we appreciate you!

  • @IandRsLoveChild
    @IandRsLoveChild 7 місяців тому +6

    I was a small child when this happened. We lived in Frankfurt and all the parents were afraid to go outside in the rain...but all the people on the TV kept assuring them that it was safe...so my parents let us go out. Twenty years later my brother got a job at a nuclear power plant...but his safety sensor kept reporting dangerous levels of exposure despite no exposure happening. He tested positive for Strontium-90. I tested positive for the same thing shortly after when he let us all know about it. Strontium-90 affects bone tissue which can lead to bone and blood cancers which we both have to get regular testing for. All because people wanted to "prevent panic".

  • @SCharlesDennicon
    @SCharlesDennicon 11 місяців тому +4

    "Because it must be done"
    => Stellan Skarsgård's performance is nothing short of stellar. Everything about this show is sensational, but the acting, mainly his and Harris', jeez. Chills, non-stop.

  • @monil2447
    @monil2447 Рік тому +18

    Self-sacrifices usually appear in action scenes: the heroes don't have much time to think and they die almost instantly and emotional music pays homage to the characters and embellishes their deaths. Here the three volunteers get up when dozens of others in the room could do it for them and there is no adrenaline from the action scene or nice music and...it really happened .
    This show really shows the worst but also the best of which humanity is capable.

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому +2

      Absolutely agree. They were heroes. They did what was needed and they saved countless lives. The way this series shows certain events really just let’s the events itself speak for themselves

    • @phh2400
      @phh2400 Рік тому

      ​@@OfficialMediaKnights And then, later russians dig trenches around Chernobyl power plant and battalion commander tells that it is safe, because on same positions the red army dug its defenses during second world war. ​

    • @budgreen4x4
      @budgreen4x4 Рік тому +1

      They didn't volunteer exactly, they just happened to be on shift and have the required knowledge, so they were told to do it and they did.. it was pretty straightforward from their accounts

  • @lastfirst5689
    @lastfirst5689 Рік тому +18

    In Northern Scotland scientists were checking the grazing land for contamination and did find positive results, animals were destroyed. Land had to be treated. In Central Scotland leaflets went to all houeholds warning us not to go out if it rained, all windows and doors had to be closed. Paranoia was high however, there are still side effects being reported especially at birth.. Nice reaction

    • @MonaroMel1
      @MonaroMel1 Рік тому +5

      Yeah we had the same in England. Its crazy to think of the damage caused by a (not going to spoil it but if you've watched the show you know)

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому +3

      My god, that is insane... Just to think how far and devastating the effects of this reached is horrifying and heartbreaking. I remember from my childhood times in Germany, the paranoia regarding Nuclear Power Plants was still at such a high. And honestly, can't blame people for being scared, it was rightfully so...

  • @Silver-rx1mh
    @Silver-rx1mh Рік тому +29

    If you don't tear up at the end of this series then you have no soul. Imo this is one of THE best shows that I've seen in decades and yours is one of THE best reactions that I've seen to it.

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому +4

      This show is fantastic so far! A lot of it is so hard to watch but the show is probably some of the best filmmaking I've seen in a while. Episode 3 had us tearing up big time already. Thank you so much for those kind words! It means the absolute world to us. We make these for you guys and knowing you guys enjoyed it makes our day. Thank you!

  • @MonaroMel1
    @MonaroMel1 Рік тому +76

    I loved watching this with you guys. You really get it!
    I live in England and I was 13 when this happened. Within a week of the explosion sheep were dying less than 100 miles away from where I live.
    When you're both finished watching it all I'll suggest a few things to look up on Google. Seriously it'll blow your mind. Absolutely devastating 😢

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому +16

      Thank you so much for watching with us! It means the world 😃 That is insane! All the way in England! Please share those suggestions when we get there. We love learning some insights!

    • @SPQRatae
      @SPQRatae Рік тому

      @@OfficialMediaKnights Sheep in the mountains of north Wales were monitored for radioactivity, and killed if too radioactive for human consumption, until...2012.

    • @MonaroMel1
      @MonaroMel1 Рік тому +4

      @@OfficialMediaKnights You're welcome and I will, definitely 🙂

  • @DavidMacDowellBlue
    @DavidMacDowellBlue Рік тому +14

    02:08 If you burn it the radiation literally turns into smoke and wanders through the air. You have to seal it away from people, preferably surrounded by lead or concrete or something similar.

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому +1

      Thank you for clarifying!! We appreciate the info!

    • @myphone4590
      @myphone4590 Рік тому +3

      They were dealing with both radiation and radioactive material. Radiation is more or less invisible light that gives you a sunburn slash cooks you like a microwave oven: it's bad and can do a lot of damage, but the exposure ends when you get away from it. (Doesn't mean you're out of the woods, there's a lot of this sunburn will be a lot worse tomorrow and is going to blister and peel, but it doesn't feel so bad yet. Only it's your internal organs because you're mostly transparent to these frequencies.)
      Radioactive material glows, emitting that light. The firefighters in the parking lot were next to brightly glowing graphite that cooked them through. But they were also doused with smoke full of radioactive material, which is why their clothes burned people hours later. And they breathed it in, it got into their bloodstream, and then they themselves were glowing from the inside. The human body generally tries to store trace minerals like zinc and selenium in the bone marrow, and heavy metals get thrown in the same storage. Uranium is a heavy metal.
      There's a bunch of different types of radioactive material. Each time a radioactive atom loses a chunk of itself, it turns into a different element with a different half-life (or two different ones when it splits into a big and a little piece), most of them on a fairly short fuse (ranging from years to nanoseconds) until you eventually wind up with something stable like lead or hydrogen. (Think popcorn that can pop a half dozen times before it's done. Radioactive iodine has a half-life a little over a week, long enough for your body to absorb it and go "iodine, I know what to do with this" and send it to your thyroid where it goes pop pop pop a few times in rapid succession and gives you cancer. That one's particularly bad because your body collects it and concentrates it into a small space that does something important, so it doesn't take much to get really bad.)
      The reactor fuel was uranium 235 with a half-life of 24,000 years, but when you stick a bunch of it together the pops set each other off. When you hit a big enough size and density of that specific kind of uranium (critical mass) the whole pile goes off at once.
      Uranium breaking down into radon gas is another common decay product: radon has a half life of 4 days and if the gas goes off in your lungs it's suddenly a solid, and further decay steps nail whatever cell it's stuck to multiple times. Cells are a lot better at recovering from one hit than several. That's why they put radon detectors in basements, if there's uranium in the soil the decay product seeps up out of the ground, and it's a noble gas heavier than air so collects in unventilated low places.

  • @jonasfermefors
    @jonasfermefors Рік тому +13

    I remember getting the news that there was Soviet radiation detected. We were not allowed to play outside between periods at school for a while. I was 16 and living near Stockholm when it happened.

  • @interviolet6675
    @interviolet6675 Місяць тому +1

    From what I could gather the main cast are comprised of actors who cover several bases of a larger group that was involved with this disaster. As part of a heavily dramatized retelling of events it's amazing and well made. This kind of series like this *should* make people feel an immense sense of dread and bleakness I know I do.

  • @itswrongtokillanimalsifyou2837

    Someone else who should be lauded for how Chernobyl is put together is the actual director Johan Renck, IMO.

  • @thamasdk8727
    @thamasdk8727 Рік тому +37

    This series is so well made and overall just incredible from start to finish.

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому +3

      Exactly right! It's been incredible so far, HBO and Craig Mazin have done it again!

  • @thatnorwegianguy1986
    @thatnorwegianguy1986 Рік тому +17

    The general who said he would do it himself and drive the truck was a veteran of ww2 and fought the nazis in some of the toughest battles of the eastern front.
    He was wounded several times during ww2.

  • @timwilson3153
    @timwilson3153 Рік тому +3

    This series is a masterclass in "show, not tell". They let the subtle motions, expressions and tonal shifts to control the atmosphere of this show.

  • @blissfull_ignorance8454
    @blissfull_ignorance8454 Рік тому +13

    Citizens were heavily supervised in the USSR by the KGB, you couldnt trust even the private phone calls being really private. More so were the scientists etc supervised, so people came up with very clever way to send their messages in code language etc.

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому +2

      That's incredible, the ingenuity people showed in the face of such restrictions... and see, it prevented a worse catastrophe in this case...

    • @JoshSweetvale
      @JoshSweetvale 8 місяців тому +1

      ​@@OfficialMediaKnightsNSA

  • @roudkaross
    @roudkaross Рік тому +5

    People tends to forget that radiations also affects electronics, that's why the lights go out, the electronics are fried

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому +1

      Yes!! Thanks so much for clarifying that, we were unsure if that's what it was or just faulty equipment (the flashlights etc)

  • @TheTuubster
    @TheTuubster Рік тому +8

    What this series is about:
    a) Incompetent, narcissistic people in power position, who are more concerned with their own self image, are the most powerful destructive force. And they still are, as the world's history documents, still to this day.
    b) Building a monument to all those who suffered and were willing to suffer, that did not have control over the destructive decisions made by these incompetent narcissists, to repair the damage done by these types of people.
    The haunting truth of the story of this series is, that it is also an allegory of what goes wrong in the history in mankind, on a small scale in families and businesses, and on a large scale with nations. Because every day good people prevent "core meltdowns" caused by the wrong people in power positions all over the world.

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому

      Thanks so much for your comment. I cannot tell you how much I agree with you - it's like we are stuck in this time loop, as humanity, where we repeat the same mistakes. Those in power and in privilege make choices to maintain appearances and it's the regular people that pay the price.

  • @QuakeCentral
    @QuakeCentral Рік тому +3

    the clothes are still there in the basement of Pripyat and they are still insanely radioactive and staying down there with the clothes can get you sick. the clothes in the basement are actually considered one of the most radioactive places on earth, or just the hospital basement itself.

  • @michellehawk282
    @michellehawk282 Рік тому +9

    Gorbachev was the last leader of the soviet union and is considered one of the better ones. He had a big role in ending the cold war and introduced new political and economical freedoms in the soviet union, allowing for enhanced freedom of speech. After resigning his presidency, he became a vocal critic of Russian presidents, including Vladimir Putin, campaigning for Russia's social-democratic movement. I think they did a very good job at showing how even though he was commitet to preserving the soviet state, he still cared for the people and he did a ton to help in the aftermath of Chernobyl.
    Little side fact: The clothing of the firemen actually still lies in the basement of the hospital and remains dangerously radioactive to this day. Also that helicopter did actually go down, there is real footage of it. We aren't entirely sure how it happened but in the real footage you can see the rotor blades get caught in the crane so it is most likely that the radiation might've made the pilot dizzy and then there was also the thick smoke, making the pilot lose control over the helicopter, so those two factors were probably the reason for that.

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому +2

      Thank you for the bonus fact! And for some great insight on Gorbachev. It is clear already from this episode that his priority was to contain the damage and make decisions that could save as many people as possible. Also that helicopter scene was devastating. This show doesn’t exaggerate what happened when it comes to these events. It simply shows, no need for slow mo or making it seem more epic. The pure rawness of it is what makes it so effective. I’m assuming the radiation hit that pilot hard. Like you said that combined with low vis caused that accident. The worst part is that the Pilot was already dead even if he didn’t crash. Again thank you for such an amazing comment, love to hear from you 😃

    • @budgreen4x4
      @budgreen4x4 Рік тому +1

      The helicopter happened during construction of the confinement sarcophagus, yes it hit a crane cable and was likely pilot error as there was no smoke or anything at the time.

  • @KayinAngel
    @KayinAngel Рік тому +5

    So I watched when it aired and rewatched it again a few months into quarantine. And let me tell you it hit very different early into COVID.

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому +3

      Ohhhh I can imagine!! It's a little disconcerting to see the commonalities when it comes to the denial in the face of a dire situation that needs to be addressed immediately, yet not being taken fully seriously can result in catastrophe...

  • @lesliewhite6784
    @lesliewhite6784 Рік тому +4

    This mini-series earned every accolade it got.

  • @619WWEFAN
    @619WWEFAN Рік тому +8

    I know I’m a bit late, and idk if someone said it yet. But during the evacuation announcement scene (which was real also), the people were told to only bring essential items and that it was only gonna be temporary, which it wasn’t.
    They still were not aware just how severe this truly was either
    It’s one of my fave scenes of the whole show cause idk what got to me more: the announcement itself or the music. Both went well brilliantly.

  • @JoshSweetvale
    @JoshSweetvale 8 місяців тому +3

    Last episode, disaster and ignorance.
    This is the episode where heroes rise.
    Next episode, heroes die.
    Episode 4: Necessary cruelty.
    Episode 5: *Government.*

  • @perenniallachrymosity276
    @perenniallachrymosity276 Рік тому +17

    I'm just gonna commend how phenomenal this entire cast is on all ends from the lead roles by Jared Harris (Valery), Stellan Skårsgard (Boris) and Emily Watson (Ulana) to the supporting roles in pre-Oscar Jessie Buckley (Lyudmilla) and our new Joker Barry Keoghan (Pavel) who you'll be seeing soon. The casting directors Nina Gold and Robert Sterne (they were the ones who did Game of Thrones and The Crown) really outdid themselves.
    If you plan to watch Dune: The Sisterhood (prequel series for the Dune movies by Denis Villenueve) made by HBO, you'll be seing Emily Watson pretty soon as the lead role there so keep on the look out for that.

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому +2

      Seriously though - this cast is just phenomenal. The subtlety, yet depth of emotion, the despair and utter terror st the face of the insurmountable... It's truly a feast for the eyes. It's also a great way for them to pay their respects to the victims of this catastrophic incident!

    • @proudofyourroots9575
      @proudofyourroots9575 Рік тому +1

      Worth pointing out this wasn't made by HBO, it was made by Sister Pictures, a uk production company.

    • @perenniallachrymosity276
      @perenniallachrymosity276 Рік тому +1

      @@proudofyourroots9575 Well, I think it was a joint production between the two.

    • @proudofyourroots9575
      @proudofyourroots9575 Рік тому +1

      @@perenniallachrymosity276 No, HBO just provided funding. Another series sister productions made was Giri/Haji.

  • @MrDarthdaver
    @MrDarthdaver Рік тому +10

    Absolute Masterpiece of a series

  • @TTM9691
    @TTM9691 Рік тому +3

    Another great reaction. Hey, sad thing to note about this outstanding series: the actor who plays Dyatlov (Paul Ritter) died a few months after this series aired! He is SUCH an amazing villain in this miniseries and it makes me a little sad that this great actor's legacy is going to be this character that we RELISH despising! Had he lived, I'm sure we would have been seeing him as the next super villain in Flying-Man-With-A-Cape Part VII 🤣

  • @hdtripp6218
    @hdtripp6218 Рік тому +6

    That pile of clothes in the hospital was still there until recently when it became a tourist destination..I believe they have moved it now

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому

      Wow, no way.... That is insane... I can't imagine what it must have felt like to still see that pile there. All those people... this is devastating😔

    • @budgreen4x4
      @budgreen4x4 Рік тому +2

      They didn't move them, they just used concrete block to seal the doorway.

  • @so-ares
    @so-ares Рік тому +5

    Radiation destroys eletronics, they had to find the valve in the dark.

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому +2

      I didn’t know that bit that radiation also affected electronics. I guess if it decays things it’ll decay everything. I never really thought of it.

    • @budgreen4x4
      @budgreen4x4 Рік тому +2

      In real life they didn't use any lights, they did it by feel only. The people they picked to do it were the ones who would know the route best and happened to be present on site at the time, there was no volunteering

  • @scottsmith6631
    @scottsmith6631 3 місяці тому

    Emily Watson's character is a 'composite' of many scientists who contributed fact and theory during and after the disaster. The ending credits of episode 5 mention this. It's an expedient way to keep the size and cost of the cast and the run time of the 5 episodes to an acceptable level for HBO. It's done frequently with documentaries.

  • @hinahanta
    @hinahanta 24 дні тому

    At the beginning of this episode, those firefighters clothes and boots are still in the basement of the hospital. Still radioactive.

  • @philiponeill6903
    @philiponeill6903 8 місяців тому

    Regarding the firefighters' clothing - it's still there, in the basement of the hospital. To this day, that pile of clothing is one of the most radioactive sites on the planet.

  • @dirdib69
    @dirdib69 8 місяців тому +1

    Oh, Boris definitely knew a lot about concrete. He was in construction, and the Soviets dearly loved concrete.

  • @sethraelthebard5459
    @sethraelthebard5459 11 місяців тому +3

    If you are interested in an even more harrowing story, look for the original script for this episode. It has conversations and events that were omitted from the broadcast. Including the fate of the nurse who first asked for iodine pills. She later died of radiation poisoning after handling the clothing of the firefighters and the exposure from the initial triage of the Bridge victims.

  • @campagnollo
    @campagnollo Рік тому +5

    You were asking about burning the firemen’s clothes. That won’t help. All you would have is contaminated ash. Worse, the contaminants would then be spread into the air. Even a microscopic particle of U-235 is dangerous.

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому +3

      Thanks so much for the explanation! It's absolutely insane how rapidly toxic and adaptive radioactivity is... an invisible killer, for lack of better phrasing

  • @MonaroMel1
    @MonaroMel1 Рік тому +18

    I'm honestly a bit gutted for you both watching the next episode, it's really hard to watch. I'm sorry for all of the comments, I posted the first one before I finished listening to your video.

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому +2

      No worries at all! We read all comments and are grateful for them. I’m already worried for the next few episodes. This show is both amazing but such a hard watch all at the same time.

    • @MonaroMel1
      @MonaroMel1 Рік тому

      @@OfficialMediaKnights It really is brilliant. I put it up there with one of the best documentary/drams based on true events I've ever seen. I'm really looking forward to watch the reso of them with you both 😁

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому

      You are absolutely right on that! Stay tuned for the rest of the episodes, they'll be coming out back to back this week!

  • @aklein7864
    @aklein7864 Рік тому +5

    Such an interesting point about feeling like an intruder watching it - it's the subject matter that makes the difference. Plenty of things are filmed intimately, but it is only when you already know that the end of this true story is such death and destruction that you begin to feel disrespectfully voyeuristic. At the same time, the educational importance of telling this story outweighs everything. Death takes everything from us and death will take us all. The living deserve whatever the dead can give.

  • @EisenTarik
    @EisenTarik 4 місяці тому

    Hi to all. I'm in Turkey. Almost all of my relatives, my grandma, grandfather, their uncles and aunts and parents, all died because of the cancer. Even those people raised in a small village and never smoked, drinked or not been exposed by toxic materials. All died because of the cancer. We believe all just because of the Chernobyl's contamination at Turkey. Still so many cancer case in Turkey happening. :(

  • @comradedog4075
    @comradedog4075 Рік тому +1

    Fun fact those fire fighters clothes a still siting in the basement of that hospital. Except for one boot that some tourists had taken with them. Those clothes btw were inside the core which was at the time emitting around 30,000 rem. And it only takes 500 rem to kill a man.

  • @hermandobernardes722
    @hermandobernardes722 5 місяців тому +1

    the guy heading the meeting was Gorbachev the former president of the Soviet Union

  • @JacKnife3705
    @JacKnife3705 Рік тому +9

    11:58 Im not sure if you knew but alot of other people and some reactors mistakenly think the radiation destroys the helicopter. It actually just hit the cable for a crane’s hook. If you look closely you can just see it and the hook and the hook starts fall after. Its also based exactly off what happened when they brought helicopters in for the fire. So yes that is exactly what happened during the actual disaster.

    • @iche50
      @iche50 Рік тому

      Yes, And the helicopter is today still inside the reactor.... This show is verry close to reality.

    • @tyrannosaur219
      @tyrannosaur219 2 місяці тому

      It is possible that it was partly due to the radiation, as metals exposed to high levels of radiation eventually undergo a hardening process due to all the particles bombarding it and changing some of its atomic structure. Basically, metals or at least steel tends to become much harder (can’t be bent or deformed as easily), but because of how hardness works they/it also become much more brittle (more easily cracks or breaks apart when flexed). I read.. somewhere, though I can’t remember exactly where - that the rotor blades of the helicopter became compromised from exposure and made the impact with the crane cable much more catastrophic.
      Could be wrong, though, and the amount of time/exposure wasn’t enough to induce a substantial change in the strength of the metal, but either way it’s fascinating and terrifying stuff

  • @iKvetch558
    @iKvetch558 Рік тому +6

    In this episode, there were a few things the makers of the show got wrong. For one thing, the character who said that they should close off the city in the first episode and is evacuated in this one, did not exist...he was added for dramatic purposes. Also, the helicopter crash did not happen so soon after the explosion...it really happened months later in October, 1986, and had nothing to do with radiation. As I mentioned in my comment to episode 1, once you are done with the series, the History vs Hollywood article on the show is a must read. ✌💯

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому +3

      Thanks so much for the clarification on that - again, we did expect some changes to be made for dramatization purposes, as long as it's kept respectful. We'll be sure to look at the article after completing the show and we'll get back to you in the comment section to tell you what we think!

    • @Diana-qi2xc
      @Diana-qi2xc Рік тому +3

      Well, they talked about all of that on their podcast, they have one for every episode. The helicopter didn’t crash because of the radiation, it was caused by pilot mistake (most likely sunset blinded him), who approached too close to the crane and rotor blades hit the cable (and you can clearly see that in the episode).

    • @iKvetch558
      @iKvetch558 Рік тому

      @@Diana-qi2xc It is good that they talk about the helicopter crash in their podcast, but not everybody listens to that, and I never like to assume that a reactor has....so I just post a short note about it. ✌

  • @Inc0gnit045
    @Inc0gnit045 10 місяців тому +1

    This is not just a miniseries this is literally a piece of art

  • @Dinstyvmorsa8539
    @Dinstyvmorsa8539 Рік тому

    "Fun fact":
    It was Sweden who pressured the USSR to admit that an nuclear accident had occurred.
    When workers at the swedish nuclear power plant came to work they had to pass control areas which could detect radiation and the alarms kept going off, from the workers arriving TO work. Which made them do an investigation and managed to triangulated the radiation as coming from the Chernobyl.

  • @craigthorne26
    @craigthorne26 Рік тому +6

    Always enjoy your reactions guys and one of the best mini series to react to, keep up the great content :)

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому

      Thank you so much for the wonderful comment, we're so glad you enjoy our videos!!! Don't worry, we're gonna keep 'em coming!! 😊

  • @dustinmitchell4711
    @dustinmitchell4711 Рік тому

    FYI they never disposed of the firefighter's clothes, they're still in a pile in that basement.

  • @kauhalephinfan2304
    @kauhalephinfan2304 2 місяці тому

    Excellent show, excellent reaction. I do have to point out that the female physicist Ulana Khomyuk that warned them about the tanks was a construct of the show, not an actual person. I believe that the character represented many scientists that wanted to help but were afraid…not 100% sure about that.

  • @Dan-gi6tf
    @Dan-gi6tf Рік тому +5

    This show was haunting. Great reaction!

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому

      It truly is... They've done a spectacular job at portraying the horrors and fears after such a devastating event.
      Thank you for your compliment, we are so glad you enjoyed our reaction 😊

  • @madwolf1488
    @madwolf1488 7 місяців тому

    2:08 - Burning contaminated thigs is the worst thing you can do - you release radiation back in to the atmosprhere

  • @sethraelthebard5459
    @sethraelthebard5459 11 місяців тому +1

    I was looking forward to your reaction to the 15,000 roetgen reading. You did not dissapoint. 😂 I am glad you love this series as much as I did. I only found it a few months ago, and I cannot watch it all in one sitting. It's a show that leaves you deeply unsettled.

  • @jerodast
    @jerodast 12 днів тому

    2:00 - I love/it's crazy how the answer to your question is basically "pour a few feet of concrete around them and leave them in that room forever."
    5:50 - Other comments have disagreed with this, but I thought Gorbachev was portrayed leading this situation with an admirable amount of wisdom and openness. He challenged Legasov's facts but still acknowledged the danger enough to send a high level party man who could get things done AND an expert on the science. And, as we find out later Shcherbina was the right man for the job, even if he didn't know it - if this was a feel good drama one might think Gorbachev did know it.

    • @jerodast
      @jerodast 12 днів тому

      My only criticism is, he would've accepted the initial report if Legasov hadn't spoken up. But based on everything he'd been told up 'til then, it was being handled, so why would he question it? To question it he would've had to acknowledge the corruption of the system, to question EVERYTHING all the time to cut through the yes-man ass-covering bullshit. While that's not TOO MUCH to ask, it's also...a high standard that few would meet in that position.

  • @rufflazy2366
    @rufflazy2366 9 місяців тому +1

    Excellent editing of the show, and reaction too thanks.

  • @Michael-dy2lb
    @Michael-dy2lb Місяць тому

    I swear, of all the emotional rollercoasters in this series, cutting this episode off with three men waist deep in radioactive runoff deep under the burning plant, they're the only people in the whole world who can stop the coming explosion and save tens of millions of lives, and then their flashlights go out because of the radiation and they're helpless in the dark. Wow! That was incredible and soul-crushing at the same time.
    At Chernobyl, almost everything that could go wrong, did go wrong. The only that didn't go wrong was people. Plenty of people did the wrong thing for various reasons, but enough people were smart enough, inciteful enough, clever enough, and/or brave enough to stave off one of the worst disasters in human history becoming by far the worst disaster in human history.

    • @jeffreysmith236
      @jeffreysmith236 2 дні тому

      The cool truth is they didn't use flashlights, they did it in pitch black darkness, they knew that layout like the backs of their hands, but that would not work on film.

  • @ThoraxFTW
    @ThoraxFTW Рік тому +8

    I'm from Romania and while there is war in Ukraine near us and they fight near Nuclear Power Plants i have iodium pils ready at home in case of disaster. My mom told me a lot about the accident of chernobyl and how they took iod pils back then, she died 4 years ago because of cancer !

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому

      Oh my god, we are so truly sorry - we wish much strength to you, and yours, and for the loss you've experienced. May she rest in peace!

  • @hazardpay8560
    @hazardpay8560 7 місяців тому +1

    @28:52 "why is it affecting the lights?"
    Yeah that's the radiation... so many neutrons are shooting through the flashlight, even the basic and robust circuitry of the light is being stripped away...eroded by particles moving at roughly 3 % the speed of light
    it's why your DNA gets scrambled into uselessness... each one of those 'bullets' blasts away little sections of your genetic ladder.
    If you ever come across anything labeled "DROP AND RUN"... I suggest you follow that instruction set.
    asap!
    Also ... those three men... Oleksiy Ananenko, Valery Bezpalov, and Boris Baranov....Fucking HEROES!
    They lived!
    Baranov died in 2005 of a heart attack, but Ananenko and Bezpalov are still alive today

  • @mohanicus
    @mohanicus 3 місяці тому

    "We are dealing with something that has never occurred on this planet before"....super strong dialogue

  • @foxinroch2085
    @foxinroch2085 3 місяці тому

    Nice job, guys. I really enjoyed it!!

  • @Wattywatasaurus
    @Wattywatasaurus 3 місяці тому

    Just FYI, a 2 to 4 Megaton explosion is the equivalent of 2 to 4 million tons of TNT. For context, the Beirut explosion in 2020 was between 500 to 1,100 tons of TNT.

  • @pedroantonioirigoyen3966
    @pedroantonioirigoyen3966 Рік тому

    Even when I have watched this so well done serie many times, I love to see you both guys reacting to it!!

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому +1

      Thank you so much for taking the time and watching our reactions, your support means the world to us! Stay tuned, the rest will be uploaded all throughout the week!

  • @Gamerloaders
    @Gamerloaders 11 місяців тому

    1:44 Those contaminated clothing are still lying in the basement of Pripiyat Hospital, they're still extremely toxic.

  • @vagabond142
    @vagabond142 6 місяців тому

    24:04 What I like about they did Chernobyl is that many directors would put dramatic, or bombastic "bad" music there. However, if you notice, there is barely ANY music in the show, and the director uses silence as a very effective dramatic weapon. When Legasov asked for permission to kill three men, there is nothing but deathly silence for a few seconds, and the actor portraying Gorbachev did an excellent, subtle job of registering the depth and shock of what the professor had just asked. Silence throughout the entire show was used masterfully.

  • @wysiwyg2006
    @wysiwyg2006 8 місяців тому

    I went to Chernobyl and pripyat in 2008. Was right near reactor 4 building on the tour

  • @trollerjakthetrollinggod-e7761

    In case you were wondering. Most electronics aren't designed to survive radiation. Even the most hardened equipment will eventually fail, for the same reason radiation is fatal. It rips electrons out of place.

  • @Bianca_Arlette
    @Bianca_Arlette Рік тому

    Those firemen's clothes are still in the hospital's cellar to this day... and they are still dangerously radioactive.

  • @sirdavidoftor3413
    @sirdavidoftor3413 8 місяців тому

    You guys were talking about the animals that were left.
    Many survived, however there have been studies done to confirm that mutations in their DNA are occurring, as suspected. I believe PBS had a documentary on life in the prohibited area. I have also seen a documentary on Nova , I believe, about building the sarcophagus around Reactor 4. Sorry I don’t have the links, but it has been over 10 years since I seen them.
    I have also watched videos on UA-camrs going to Chernobyl and filming what it looks like today. Seems there is a tourist industry building around going there.
    Stay safe, stay sane, stay strong

  • @TheBillproject
    @TheBillproject 5 місяців тому

    the clothes were thrown in the basement.... just to imagine the sacrifice of the staff and nurses... the basement is one of the most dangerous areas today other than the actual reactor

  • @stevenseelig945
    @stevenseelig945 11 місяців тому

    It took 2 days for anybody to raise an alarm about any accidents at Chernobyl. At 7 ambon April 28, 1986, they were 1st alerted to a problem when the soles of a workers shoes at a nuclear power plant in the country were shown to be radioactive. They immediately suspected that there was an accident at the Forsmark nuclear plant near Stockholm when an alarm sounded within the plant due to the radiation emitted from the soles of an employees shoes. The country's most knowledged nuclear scientists convened and correlated a map of enhanced radiation levels in Europe with wind direction and determined that the radiation had originated from somewhere within the Soviet Union. That night, Soviet officials admitted that there had been an accident at Chernobyl which was located about 1100 kilometers away from the power plant where the Swedish had thought the radiation was originating from

  • @hsmorg3640
    @hsmorg3640 11 місяців тому +2

    I am super late to this.. but its just insane to me, if these people didnt do the hardwork and sacrifices they took, the entire world wouldve been damaged by this

  • @akonsamantha
    @akonsamantha Рік тому +2

    I've watched many Chernobyl reaction videos, but you guys had the best reaction

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому

      Awww dude!!!! Thank you so much. What a compliment. It means the world to us, truly!Honestly though, this show was so expertly and wonderfully crafted, all we had to do is just pay attention and really take in everything that was happening on screen.

  • @armybear831
    @armybear831 4 місяці тому

    Actually there's video of that helicopter that crashed well dumping the boron on the core. That really happened, it's on UA-cam.

  • @matt_canon
    @matt_canon Рік тому +1

    14:00 He suspected they might be KGB agents with their observations and questions, so its good he didn't say anything.

  • @Nu_faci_tu_dastea_cu_mine
    @Nu_faci_tu_dastea_cu_mine Рік тому +1

    the 3 men who went all survived with boris baranov dying of a heart atack in 2005 with radiation still being debated on if it had a role or not and the rest living atleast till 2016 for other info i can offer

  • @MDBowron
    @MDBowron Рік тому

    I was about just over 1 years old or so when Chernobyl happened, my parents were travelling with me through America and Western Europe at the time, but were concerned about whether they should at the time. We went to Los Angeles, San Francisco, Lake Tachoe, then England, Scotland, Wales, France, West Germany, and part of Italy before going across to Malaysia and back to Australia, my home country.

  • @kevinmcpeek5799
    @kevinmcpeek5799 2 місяці тому

    I am new to your channel, but I am really enjoying your reactions. You have technical comments as well as emotional awareness. It makes for a great mix. I did want to say that I have binged a bunch of your reactions and for some reason, the young lady seems to apologize for her intelligence. She, on a few occasions, has said, " I might be wrong, or am I remembering this right?" almost making excuses for her intellect. I hate to see that, you are a smarty pants and you should be bold in your wisdom.... Just my opinion. Hope I'm not overstepping my bounds. I might be wrong,... LOL

  • @toolsreviewsandmore5326
    @toolsreviewsandmore5326 Рік тому +2

    I'm from Romania,border with Ukraine...about 600 km from my city to Chernobyl. I was 8 when it happend..

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Рік тому

      Oh my god.. we are so sorry. We can't imagine how frightening this must have been as an 8 year old...

    • @toolsreviewsandmore5326
      @toolsreviewsandmore5326 Рік тому

      @@OfficialMediaKnights I don't remember much,but i remember we were scared, being so close to it.

  • @budgreen4x4
    @budgreen4x4 Рік тому

    To be fair, it was only a temporary evacuation, gather basics for a few days and go

  • @trixus4768
    @trixus4768 7 місяців тому

    Just fyi: High levels of radiation will burn circuits in electric devices including batteries - that's why the torches of the divers went dark. This happening was probably a better indication of radiation level than any number on a dozimetr.

  • @TheBillproject
    @TheBillproject 5 місяців тому

    the divers actually survived and healthy lives btw...don't ask how but miracle.

  • @MrPicard91
    @MrPicard91 Рік тому

    The clothes taken off the fire fighters and placed in the basement are still there almost 40 years later

  • @proudofyourroots9575
    @proudofyourroots9575 Рік тому

    This was made by Sister Pictures, a uk production company. They made another of my favourite mini series, Giri/haji

  • @hongk0ngfu3y
    @hongk0ngfu3y 7 місяців тому

    an outstanding mini series when you have watched hours of documentaries and you can pair the events together

  • @LosviajesdeJimbo
    @LosviajesdeJimbo Рік тому +1

    The three unsung heroes survive and two are alive until this day

  • @sergeantliangplays
    @sergeantliangplays 11 місяців тому

    28:45 I see nobody explaining this so I will even if it's late.
    The reasoning is because the radiation was so high that the neutrons passing through were basically burning the electric parts of the flashlight out.

  • @TheBillproject
    @TheBillproject 5 місяців тому

    I remember seeing the helicopter fall on the news as a kid

  • @Mark-xh8md
    @Mark-xh8md 5 місяців тому

    Also notice the woman sitting next to the KGB-chairman when Khomyuk says "we estimate between 2-4 megatons". She FREAKS OUT and doesn't know why no one else freaks out. For reference, the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were 22 and 15 KILOtons respectively. Meaning several orders of magnitude smaller.
    This is why that woman is absolutely losing her mind and puzzled why everyone else seem to be so calm :D

  • @mglmouser
    @mglmouser Рік тому

    Radiation attacks the chemistry in the lights batteries. That’s why they’re going out.
    But they have crank-based capacitor lights too. You’ll see that in a bit.

  • @nathangenovese
    @nathangenovese 7 місяців тому

    2:07 all they did was throw the contaminated clothes in the basement, where they still remain untouched today.

  • @MooN1terra_
    @MooN1terra_ 3 місяці тому

    Historically all three divers survived.

  • @elizabethdavies5186
    @elizabethdavies5186 9 місяців тому

    The effects of chernobyl reached all the way to wales as we werent allowed to sell or eat lamb/mutton for at least 10yrs if not more, all because of the radiation that had drifted on the wind

  • @Headloser
    @Headloser 8 місяців тому

    The firemen clothes are still there. Still too radioactive even to be moved.

  • @kmvoss
    @kmvoss 9 місяців тому

    Great reaction.

  • @tillasmax
    @tillasmax 18 годин тому

    you can't burn radioactive clothing. you would burn the clothes and send radioactive particles back into the air.