Something Evil In The Walls

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  • Опубліковано 16 лип 2024
  • ► MY HAT mrslavs-hideout.creator-sprin... A real story of a strange apartment where residents suddenly started dying. What was the reason?
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    ► Discord / discord
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    0:00 - intro
    0:32 - soviet buildings
    1:57 - apartment 85
    4:49 - investigation
    6:17 - theory
    8:28 - end
    #mrslav #mystery #scary

КОМЕНТАРІ • 354

  • @jesseromo7646
    @jesseromo7646 Рік тому +1073

    A story about radiation and Mr. Slav to talk about it.
    The perfect combination.

    • @Tutisclutis
      @Tutisclutis Рік тому +12

      The only way it could be better is if there was black holes involved.

    • @dr.dalewad
      @dr.dalewad Рік тому +2

      bars

    • @nicholasvargas6397
      @nicholasvargas6397 Рік тому +2

      It would be even better if he was from Ukraine but I think he said he's Latvian

    • @Rhinestone-wg7wf
      @Rhinestone-wg7wf Рік тому +3

      ​​@@nicholasvargas6397 Yes LoL(he's Lithuanian)

    • @Rhinestone-wg7wf
      @Rhinestone-wg7wf Рік тому +1

      Yup true fr

  • @KhrisKross.
    @KhrisKross. Рік тому +405

    Hi Mr Slav, since I work in the nuclear medicine industry I figured I would give some insight into how much radiation that source was actually giving off.
    So we have survey meters that measure in Sieverts per hour (Sv/hr), basically how much radiation as a rate; hence the per hour.
    An important thing to understand is the Sieverts is a big unit, 1 Sievert is massive amounts of radiation and if we were to have a spill of anything close to that we would have to evacuate the building.
    So 0.002 Sv/hr doesn't seem so bad right? Nope.
    That is 2 milli Sv/hr and even that is considered a massive, major spill requiring a radiation safety team to handle the spill.
    To give even more context our lab where all the radioactive material is stored has a background of ~0.5 micro Sv/hr which is normal, world background. That is 0.0000005 Sv/hr. So 0.002 Sv is 4000x higher than background.
    On top of all that Cs-137 has a half-life of 30 years so it wasn't going to decay anytime soon.

    • @blametheghost
      @blametheghost Рік тому +9

      @anarko9490 youre handling radiation, something that is extremely dangerous if used improperly, of course it pays well

    • @Nitrex725
      @Nitrex725 Рік тому +7

      @@blametheghost have you ever been tempted to feed a spider radioactive materials and let it bite you?

    • @blametheghost
      @blametheghost Рік тому +12

      @@Nitrex725 last time I did that my patient died from radioactive poisoning
      So no

    • @BoogiePicker9000
      @BoogiePicker9000 11 місяців тому +3

      @@Nitrex725spider man?

    • @Nitrex725
      @Nitrex725 11 місяців тому +5

      @@BoogiePicker9000 its his canon event bro

  • @Flesh_Wizard
    @Flesh_Wizard Рік тому +207

    This makes me wonder if "cursed" places or items with a lot of deaths to their names in past legends were just horrendously radioactive

    • @fumothfan9
      @fumothfan9 Рік тому

      Considering the atomic age of the 50's america where they put radioactive materials in everything more so than glow in the dark watches for GIs it wouldn't surprise me
      Since radioactive materials give off TONS of energy rays radioactivity it can really explain all the paranormal stuff

    • @suicideisproofoflife51119
      @suicideisproofoflife51119 Рік тому

      maybe supernatural entities might possess radioactive parallelism? because they are deadly forms of energies themselves the more meditation is being practiced & mastered by an individual that individual emits energies like ultrasound because of which snakes , scorpions etc are attracted due to such high vibrational frequencies since they’re the one’s who can pick up such frequency signals & mainly everything in this world is made up of energy which is again vibration & frequencies perhaps demons or other entities including humans carry such massive energies a person who had summoned a demon said it was like being stabbed the force of the energy was devastating in this world science & occult both coexist even the mind also emits energies which people think maybe the subconscious mind might’ve also have the affinity for being radioactive since its very powerful finally as nikola tesla had said it himself if you want to understand the creation of the world then think of it in terms vibrations & frequencies even he had hinted towards the occult

    • @dickJohnsonpeter
      @dickJohnsonpeter 11 місяців тому

      They couldn't concentrate anything back then to make it radioactive enough to hurt anyone and there's nothing natural that's that radioactive. Even if you were on a cave with uranium ore it wouldn't kill you because there's just never that much in one place.

    • @martinsimeonov1563
      @martinsimeonov1563 11 місяців тому +25

      Definitely possible but most likely was stuff made out of poisonous materials, as radiactive stuff is really rarer compared to poisonous materials. Anyways def possible

    • @dr.altoclef9255
      @dr.altoclef9255 7 місяців тому +18

      Or there was something else going on that no one understood yet.
      The story of the ‘sessho-seki’ says that anyone who touched the stone (which was haunted by a vengeful Kitsune spirit, ‘Tamamo-no-Mae’) or got too near would collapse and eventually die. Birds flying over it were said to drop out of the sky, even.
      This stone is located in a volcanically active place known for sulphuric hot springs.
      It’s likely that this legend arose not from vengeful spirits but from the toxic gasses hiding beneath the earth, which would leak out and poison anyone who got too close.

  • @zapp7240
    @zapp7240 Рік тому +387

    this guy can make anything sound scary

    • @somename9204
      @somename9204 Рік тому +22

      cause this is fockin scary man

    • @ThatCyberpunkGuy
      @ThatCyberpunkGuy Рік тому +11

      He could talk about someone buying beans for their friend and make it sound like a horror movie, and I love it

    • @Joe-Rando
      @Joe-Rando 11 місяців тому +4

      I’d love to see a video done in the usual style about something really benign, like casually getting stuck on a carnival ride.

    • @jannejohansson3383
      @jannejohansson3383 11 місяців тому

      Radiation and man-made extreme radiation sources are most scary thing. People cannot found or know these exist or not in their walls. Or somewhere else. That time every household didn't have radiation meter. It was big thing for sure. And that's smaller as bunny's poop. Those who missed it were so idiot's that theres is nothing to compare. It's so much radiating, that it would be easy as hell to found, if they want. Even in bigger bucket of dirt.
      They maybe controlled how much there's water in cement making process, by using this source. It's like light that could see tru material's, backside need's just right type of camera or other sensitive reusable sensor or cluster of those.
      Who legally makes these, control's where these used and be aware that old one's come back and put away with other hazard materials. That cesium isotope is more dangerous than plutonium metal. Half-life is under 40 year's, so it really dosen't want to exist. That's maybe one big reason why it looses so much particles, bombing those anywhere around.

    • @Signal_Glow
      @Signal_Glow 11 місяців тому +1

      He can, although explanations are much better than from some other youtubers who are trying to make money on stories they make up. I like his videos, interesting stuff and explanations.

  • @robertschemonia5617
    @robertschemonia5617 Рік тому +55

    When I worked for a road construction company, my job was nuclear density testing. The machine I used was made by Troxler and used a Cobalt 60 source very similar to this pellet. It did essentially the same thing. Measures density of a substance. You calibrate the machine against a calibration source every day to have a baseline figure for the amount of backscatter radiation so as the source gets weaker with age, the machine is still accurate. The job I did was to test the compaction level of frehly laid asphalt roadbed and surface coat. The more densely packed the asphalt, the less backscatter reading you get to the detector in the machine. I would hazard a guess and say that quarries that use similar equipment are trying to get basically the same thing. There was a similar incident in Australian quarry of an orphan source from a machine that served the same purpose. But apparently it was being taken to be replaced due to age and decay and fell off the back of a truck. On a LOOOOONG stretch of highway with extremely little of anything along the road. The orphan source was recovered safely and an investigation launched into how exactly it happened. And of course, the goal of the investigation was to figure out how to prevent similar occurrences in the future. Hopefully, that helps a bit, and doesn't confuse anyone more.
    Great video as usual.

    • @Djmatrane
      @Djmatrane Рік тому +3

      Yes, Troxler. From USA. I have video with Trxler in my channel. In My Troxler there is a CS-137 inside.

    • @Slavicplayer251
      @Slavicplayer251 3 місяці тому +3

      yeah how the little shit got out of a locked briefcase which was inside locked shielded box and through a car door i don’t know

  • @ubiubi3418
    @ubiubi3418 Рік тому +16

    Radiation is fucking scary man! Imagine dying to Invisible death particles.

    • @dane1382
      @dane1382 Рік тому +6

      Radiation is the closest thing to real curses and ghosts imo

    • @ubiubi3418
      @ubiubi3418 Рік тому

      @@dane1382 for real. Has any actual case of radiation being mistaken for a curse happen?

  • @_Jay_Maker_
    @_Jay_Maker_ Рік тому +270

    This was awesome. I had no idea about Soviet construction, particularly that they're basically named after the Leaders of the era they're built in.
    Thanks, Slav. This was gnarly.

    • @maximpokrovskiy4416
      @maximpokrovskiy4416 Рік тому +15

      Those were not the official names, just the colloquial ones. But yeah, they got pretty popular and are still used to refer to the buildings of those eras.

  • @noob_guardianhd3345
    @noob_guardianhd3345 Рік тому +248

    cesium 137 was also responsible for the goiana radioactive incident in brazil, 1987, this radioactive element, in addition to being used in industries, is or was used for radiotherapy too.
    Also, the cesium 137 is quite safe I guess, because it shoots alpha radioactive rays. However, if this element is not controlled properly, it can turn into barium-137, which shoots dangerous gamma rays instead.
    I am not a smart guy but I hope this helps as an additional information

    • @darkin1484
      @darkin1484 Рік тому +2

      Appreciate the insight

    • @vinudaliyanage3069
      @vinudaliyanage3069 Рік тому +18

      Nope. Cesium-137 is a strong gamma emitter and is extremely dangerous. Cesium-137 emits gamma rays with an energy of 0.662 MeV and does not undergo alpha decay.

    • @noob_guardianhd3345
      @noob_guardianhd3345 Рік тому +8

      @@vinudaliyanage3069 it actually emits beta particles and cesium-137 decays itself in it, resulting in a decayment product which is the barium 137 that shoots gamma rays in small amounts. The lifespan of a barium 137 isotope is short but it's enough to destroy a whole body.

    • @noob_guardianhd3345
      @noob_guardianhd3345 Рік тому +4

      And yes, I was wrong, it shoots beta rays not alpha rays

    • @shadowmystery5613
      @shadowmystery5613 Рік тому +5

      @@noob_guardianhd3345 That's actually misleading, as the resulting decay products can be in an elevated state of energy.
      Now guess what these decay products do? Shoot of Gamma Photons to get rid of this state of higher energy xD

  • @tribblefluffer
    @tribblefluffer Рік тому +90

    Always great to wake up to some Mr. Slav narration! I've always been intrigued by orphan source stories and would gladly watch more.

  • @Stupider.
    @Stupider. Рік тому +419

    My sleep paralysis demon: and I took this to a whole other level.

  • @Sniperboy5551
    @Sniperboy5551 Рік тому +8

    There’s something so satisfying about a Slavic accent. I’m glad Mr Slav decided to go with his own narration, it’s even better than his old videos.

    • @dr.altoclef9255
      @dr.altoclef9255 7 місяців тому

      I don’t know why it’s so enjoyable, it just is.

  • @korwynze6288
    @korwynze6288 Рік тому +23

    its unbelievable how orphan sources even happen.
    such an incredibly dangerous material and people handle it like its your child's kindergarten drawing (suspiciously lost).

  • @mangonango8903
    @mangonango8903 Рік тому +9

    my friend lived in chnobol his entire life, we watched a documentry about the desaster and he could count 8 inaccuatsies on 1 hand

  • @MasonHoward-qc3hk
    @MasonHoward-qc3hk Рік тому +26

    I like Mr Slav, he always goes through interesting topics and makes them not boring to watch. 10/10

  • @plague7824
    @plague7824 Рік тому +18

    Hey Mr. Slav, I think it'd be a cool idea if you covered the Halifax Explosion. Still holds the title of largest accidental manmade explosion. Crazy event, 1700-ish dead, over 9000 injured. Much love from Canada!

    • @Robbel.
      @Robbel. Рік тому +1

      I have just searched for this because of your comment and damn I’m shocked. Mr Slav should really make a vid about this

    • @plague7824
      @plague7824 Рік тому

      @@Robbel. It was such an insane thing to learn about. Being from Nova Scotia, they taught about it in schools during history classes. I think PBS or something did a short documentary about it but I forget what it's called

  • @DimSimSam
    @DimSimSam Рік тому +5

    Radiation follows the inverse squared law so for every metre distance from the source the radiation reduces to the square of distance. 1M=1/2, 2M=1/4, 3M=1/9, 4M=1/16 which is why they died of leukaemia and not Acute Radiation poisoning. Radiation is used extensively in the measuring industry due to its penetrating power and found everywhere handheld devices like fire detectors to measuring pipes in plumbing. Radiation even used in hospitals to irradiate blood to kill the white cells and prevent graft vs host disease.

  • @neolerades2987
    @neolerades2987 Рік тому +13

    I come into contact with similar emitters, they are used, for example, in glass factories - to measure the level of molten glass. I worked in a factory where glass bottles were made as a technician - and sometimes I calibrated scintillation radiation detectors that these emitters shone on.

  • @MiamiMillionaire
    @MiamiMillionaire Рік тому +11

    a very tragic story...
    I remember an incident in the USA and Mexico where steel was mixed with radioactive material (not all of it was found, which means that some buildings must still have some in them)

  • @eddielegs344
    @eddielegs344 Рік тому +7

    Never heard of this story but incredibly that f.... orf is in your wall is baffled.
    Been very sick myself cancer metastasized so know what real pain is. Terrible for these people. Great that you made this video.

  • @M1551NGN0
    @M1551NGN0 Рік тому +9

    3:33 "What happened to *his* previous family..."
    The same man married twice after his previous family died to radiation?!?!!??!

    • @b0xbrain
      @b0xbrain 4 місяці тому +2

      No, it was mis-subtitled

    • @M1551NGN0
      @M1551NGN0 4 місяці тому +1

      @@b0xbrain ohhh I see

  • @garethjohnstone9282
    @garethjohnstone9282 Рік тому +3

    Something similar happened in South America.
    I can't remember the exact details but, radioactive metals contaminated a steelworks because they purchased scrap metal to smelt. Somehow, a radiotherapy device that had a load of cobalt60 pellets in, was disassembled and the metallic pellets were sold as scrap metal to foundries.
    By chance, a truck carrying rebar from one of the foundries passed through Los Alamos lab after taking a wrong turn and set detectors off. So it was traced back. Thousands of people were exposed.

  • @hdcandela5697
    @hdcandela5697 Рік тому +3

    When I trained at AW Beattie Technical School, in Allison Park, PA, USA, we were certified to use the radio active source with the "Pig" for the purpose of making film x-rays of reactor vessels, large pipes, huge steel structures, ships and extensive welds. The "Pig" is cheaper and smaller to carry and use than an x-ray machine. As the steel industry, train industry, aircraft industry, and other industries moved away from Pittsburgh, PA, USA, there were no more jobs in quality control for people like me who had trained for them. I have a great education, certification in nuclear metallurgy and non-destructive testing, BS in Biology and Chemistry, and a Masters in Policy, but when I looked around the USA, there were no more jobs for people like me. So, I ended up doing Ocean Rescue, Aquatics Management, and finally became an executive titled "Facility Director" at an Olympic size competitive swimming facility. I lost 20 years of my life when US politicians and corporations sold out the US manufacturing and US working class to foreign labor.

    • @ssnerd583
      @ssnerd583 Рік тому

      YEAH....that was an incredible thing to do and get away with in the USA.....they were criminals in the truest sense

  • @adamsalik7389
    @adamsalik7389 Рік тому +1

    8:34 well yeah, im wearing it right now and its very useful since it can tell the time

  • @MatteoVitello216
    @MatteoVitello216 Рік тому +29

    My man is the next Morgan Freeman.
    Top tier narration

  • @zorvlatch
    @zorvlatch Рік тому +7

    I have found a few such sources, in my life. I have found a blue metal disk, in some woods, I dropped it immediately, my fingers got numb, I buried it. My fingers are O.K., and have the feeling back.

    • @fathimamuhammad3799
      @fathimamuhammad3799 Рік тому +1

      That's so scary, I wish you could find out what it was. And why it was even in the woods 🙀

    • @RADscouter
      @RADscouter 3 місяці тому

      Obv fake

  • @Dragosteaa
    @Dragosteaa Рік тому +17

    I’m always curious about radiological incidents! I know this story! I still add to watchlist immediately because *MR SLAV voice story time* yay!

  • @PelleXGraves
    @PelleXGraves Рік тому +2

    Great video as always👍

  • @ultimatesheep
    @ultimatesheep Рік тому +8

    Imagine living your life normally while sleeping next to demon core everyday

  • @ifell3
    @ifell3 Рік тому +13

    This happened in another story where someone stole a radioactive material, hidden it in the wall then died and no one knew it was in there.

  • @yomama9712
    @yomama9712 Рік тому +3

    Really really love your content! Always grab a snack and chill out a bit when I get your notification, haha

  • @Oppositeofmyprofilephoto
    @Oppositeofmyprofilephoto Рік тому +2

    Everytime you upload a video, I get Excited for the Upcoming videos fr.

  • @Julian.nefail
    @Julian.nefail Рік тому +1

    Keep up the great content bro ❤

  • @MarvinHartmann452
    @MarvinHartmann452 Рік тому +2

    I've stay and lived in theses concrete cities. The heating was great because it's from the public water heating and the feature that I loved the most was the heating towels bar in the bathroom.

  • @jungletroll3844
    @jungletroll3844 Рік тому

    Thank you for continuing to make high quality videos

  • @pktrainerpk5supersus459
    @pktrainerpk5supersus459 Рік тому +1

    thank you really informative

  • @sandwich2447
    @sandwich2447 11 місяців тому +2

    wait a minute, how about the construction worker did they get dangerous amount of radiation

  • @ShepotVechnyh
    @ShepotVechnyh Рік тому +34

    But Stalinki were not terrible. They are still considered one of most preferable houses in Russian cities - Moscow and Saint-Petersburg included. They usually have high ceilings (about 3.5-4 meters vs khrushovkases normal 2.7), thick walls that prevent hearing your neighbours, that make home cozy and warm in winter and chill in summer. And they also had great decorations! Generally they were considered a living for high status people, such as university's professors, engineers and fabric managers.
    The thing is, stalinki were costly to construct - in measures of time and money. And plenty of people after WWII moved to cities from villages (although it was against the law in that time). They usually lived in wooden barracks and common flats (communalkas), were a family of 4 people usually lived in only one room, sharing wc and kitchen with another 2-10 rooms. Some families even lived in cellars of normal city houses...
    That is why khrushovkas were invented. And, really, they were promoted as a living only for 30 years, the government promised something else to be constructed afterwards for many families - cause these houses were so chip to construct and were not high-quality or beautiful at all. But still, at that time they were a bless for those living in comunalkas and barracks.
    [ Hello from Russia, by the way, love your videos! :) ]

    • @MRSLAV
      @MRSLAV  Рік тому +26

      There were several types of stalinkas, one was for the elite and other ones for lower ranking individuals or workers. Those were often occupied by several families per apartment or they were dormitory type of apartments. Why do people think that only buildings built for elite during stalin era should be called stalinkas, i have no idea.

    • @DeDd0k
      @DeDd0k Рік тому +6

      @@MRSLAV Have you ever lived in Russia? Because if not, it seems pretty direspectful to argue on a subject you've never even seen with your own eyes, don't you think? I'm not trying to attack your opinion, but after 30 years of living in my home country, it is the first time I read that there were "several types" of stalinkas. They're all generally of one type and, as Margarita mentioned above, they are not the communalkas you're confusing with when talking about common kitchen and WC.

    • @Real_Claudy_Focan
      @Real_Claudy_Focan Рік тому +5

      @@DeDd0k He's from baltics, he has to bash Russia in some ways..

    • @lovesiriusblack
      @lovesiriusblack Рік тому +1

      @@DeDd0k The video "Stalinist Housing - The Good, The Bad and The Ugly?" from
      Setarko can clear this misunderstanding up?

    • @CuckFinn
      @CuckFinn Рік тому

      Still a shit hole

  • @FatherMcKenzie66
    @FatherMcKenzie66 Рік тому

    Very interesting, yet tragic, story
    I’m subscribing

  • @tanzanite6695
    @tanzanite6695 6 місяців тому

    Hey Mr Slav,
    I don't work in the industry but in modern times these radioactive devices can be used to measure thick materials when xrays aren't enough like oil pipelines and finding cracks in heavy machinary which is too expensive to afford breaking.
    I'm sure you've heard of the story of Douglas Crofut who is thought to have stolen one of these devices and inflicted himself with a heavy dose of radiation directly from the source like what was found in the walls of Apartment 85. It is thought he did this to commit su1c1de but he died before admitting anything so nobody knows for sure but that is the widely accepted theory.
    Great video as always :)

  • @Okkusen
    @Okkusen Рік тому +1

    You find all the spooky stuff!
    Fast and cheap build....I never heard that they do this in old soviet/Russia! 😲

  • @biggiecheese7897
    @biggiecheese7897 Рік тому +1

    I work with radioactive stuff and I’m telling you if somehow you lost something like that you better fuckin find it. It shows there was quite a bit of neglect towards the equipment. Stuff like that just doesn’t happen without somebody being neglectful

  • @wisteela
    @wisteela Рік тому +4

    Scary. Is the building still standing now?
    A series of these would be great.

  • @eleypvr7294
    @eleypvr7294 Рік тому +1

    8:39 haha you fool I have a Geiger counter, but honestly I just got because it seemed fun to measure different background radiation levels for example in a valley or at the top of a mountain

  • @ljn0t369
    @ljn0t369 Рік тому +2

    Now I have to get myself a Geiger counter after watching this video...

  • @dante666jt
    @dante666jt Рік тому +2

    So sorry for the lives lost due to the sloppiness of the workers

  • @TwesomE
    @TwesomE 2 місяці тому +1

    Remind us not to go for vacation ever in those places!

  • @istiakkabir9363
    @istiakkabir9363 4 місяці тому +6

    So if putin built buildings like these, they’ll be called “Putinkas”?

    • @nickolayraikov6900
      @nickolayraikov6900 20 днів тому

      Those would be called so.
      Anyway we've got a lot of developments recent years that arr called "anthill" that are built for government subsidized loans. I'm pretty sure in 10 years those would be called putinkas.

  • @Atsah
    @Atsah Рік тому

    Goiania incident? Nice video sir much enjoyed :)

  • @Mach5Johnny
    @Mach5Johnny Рік тому +1

    One things for sure. Radiation Poisoning is definitely the worst ways to die because it’s a slow, painful, and an agonizing way to go!

  • @Tokyo48606
    @Tokyo48606 Рік тому

    I just watched a few mr slav videos and I got my what like my 11th dose of fear for you life for 2 weeks

  • @myeenah9111
    @myeenah9111 Рік тому +3

    I really love to hear your voice mr slav 👍🏻

  • @SlightKetchup18
    @SlightKetchup18 Рік тому

    This is quite interesting!

  • @LassetUnsSpielen
    @LassetUnsSpielen 5 місяців тому

    wow that short part of soviet history sounds like another whole horror story

  • @OzzyGoodwoman
    @OzzyGoodwoman Місяць тому

    This got me paranoid enough to walk around my whole house with my geiger counter marking hot-spots.

  • @UNCLE_ASH_BASH
    @UNCLE_ASH_BASH Рік тому

    I have seen similar in the uk fitted in a quarry plant too measure the amount of stone filled in a large hopper

  • @FortniteAII
    @FortniteAII Рік тому +1

    what a good video to watch at 2am before going to bed

  • @steve_18schannel64
    @steve_18schannel64 Рік тому +2

    The device Is called a "radiography Machine" And is usually used to shine gamma rays through welds and other joints to measure their quality and safety. Not the first time that happend, look up "Douglas Crowfoot" for example

  • @Vexthewolf03
    @Vexthewolf03 5 місяців тому

    I havent heard anyone with a strong as a russian accent as yours, its really cool and intereasting to hear how you pronounce everything! Great videos also!

  • @realtrader450
    @realtrader450 Місяць тому

    9:01 "STILL NOT AS DANGEROUS AS ROGUE GYM SOCK LOST SOMEWHERE UNDER THE BED" oh damn that's a level 9 poison

  • @IDGAF56852
    @IDGAF56852 Рік тому +1

    When i worked in the iron ore and gold mines here in Western Australia the mines had these radioactive devices that technicians used to test equipment with.

    • @Flesh_Wizard
      @Flesh_Wizard Рік тому +1

      Yeah Australia has some huge uranium deposits underground

  • @sagargaming328
    @sagargaming328 11 місяців тому +1

    That joke at the end of every video is just awesome ❤😂❤

  • @fumothfan9
    @fumothfan9 Рік тому +1

    Surely we learned from the soviets about cutting corners in building stuff and people won't try to steal items or save money.
    China: pardone? Did you say something?

  • @JotaroKujo_JJBA
    @JotaroKujo_JJBA 2 місяці тому

    Ghost: booo, i live in your walls
    Me: are you radioactive?
    Ghost: no??
    Me: then i don't care

  • @kalashnikov_47z
    @kalashnikov_47z Рік тому +3

    I ordered Geiger Counter now 💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀

  • @F-35BLightningII
    @F-35BLightningII Рік тому +3

    There are 6 people in my house.
    1 got thyroid cancer and loads of other stuff she has been fighting.
    I am slightly autistic and have celiac disease, I also have bad eyesight
    My 2 brothers have celiac disease and one is very sensitive to injuries and the other has bad eyesight
    My bigger sister is autistic and my little sister is fine right now but just like everyone else she will probably have something to deal with later.
    But everything is family genetics and my family just sucks lol🤣🤣

  • @sillylobotomisedguy
    @sillylobotomisedguy 6 місяців тому

    Gives a whole new meaning to the phrase: ' I'm in your walls'.

  • @marisakirisame867
    @marisakirisame867 Рік тому +2

    some random worker guys putting demon core inside the wall

  • @LaserTractor
    @LaserTractor 8 місяців тому +1

    Ok like...imagine your life rn
    And your whole family dies like this to what supposedly a curse (?)
    Everyone around is scared of you and your house
    You are broken down by all this.
    And then they say "So you know fam, bad luck! It was all just a mistake😂"
    I'd went insane right in that moment

  • @MrDimizz
    @MrDimizz 6 місяців тому +2

    Somewhere where we can stay,relax and walk naked😂💀

  • @davidsplooge14
    @davidsplooge14 Рік тому +1

    damn, might watch a playthrough of the game then.

  • @WilsonPendarvis-tn3wm
    @WilsonPendarvis-tn3wm 4 місяці тому

    At a silver mine in Nevada USA, we had an isotopic slurry density meter not unlike the one imaged here. Small world ,eh?

  • @AlterumVeniet
    @AlterumVeniet Рік тому

    I see video from Mr. Slav, I watch, I like.

  • @CannedShrimp
    @CannedShrimp Рік тому +2

    Glad to be acquainted mr. Slav. Your in depth storytelling skills are amazing if I must say so myself as an appreciator of a good story. You truly make the most welcoming content for one as new to your channel as I. Here’s to an amazing partnership that takes place in silence between ordinary viewer and content creator 😊

  • @tsyrenzhap890
    @tsyrenzhap890 Рік тому

    Mr slav you should do a video on top worst ways to die

  • @maxinepricefield
    @maxinepricefield Рік тому

    yay a mr slav video for my birthdayu

  • @yusufcosmopoint9945
    @yusufcosmopoint9945 Рік тому

    BRO I GOT CHILLS WITH THAT INTRO SOUNDTRACK

  • @carol.q
    @carol.q Рік тому

    Brazil had a tragedy involving cesium too

  • @Megaflytron.
    @Megaflytron. 5 місяців тому

    The Japanese man who died after receiving the largest amount of radiation of any human recorded- so medical staff decided to capitalize on the situation and use him as a teaching example, and the atomic testing videos the military made, showing a soldier standing against a wall, the flash of the explosion, then he walks off screen-
    Leaving his shadow (and so much more behind)
    Both are nightmare fuel, if anyone is interested

  • @peruanoxd1225
    @peruanoxd1225 Рік тому

    Caesium-137 is used for Road making, machines uses gamma rays to determinate different soil properties and compare them if they are optimal

  • @VLKYRI
    @VLKYRI Місяць тому

    I knew those voices were onto something

  • @julianesbro7093
    @julianesbro7093 4 місяці тому

    This video made me scared of my own walls

  • @notExpectionz
    @notExpectionz 8 місяців тому

    thx slav, now i cant sleep

  • @Lee11715
    @Lee11715 Рік тому +6

    I remember you making a vid about this already, nonetheless, thanks for more informative upload !

    • @MRSLAV
      @MRSLAV  Рік тому +4

      Never did, maybe you have Goiânia accident in mind?

    • @Norwegianboi
      @Norwegianboi Рік тому

      @@MRSLAV @MRSLAV Can you maybe make a video about Chernobyl elephant foot

  • @LotmineRu
    @LotmineRu Місяць тому

    Даже не забыл про игруху на эту тему, красава

  • @tonkstorm5503
    @tonkstorm5503 Рік тому +14

    Mr Slav is so cool that even if the dislike button was still here (R.I.P. dislike button)it would be emptier than the skull of a 9yr old tiktok kid

    • @techcenter1696
      @techcenter1696 3 місяці тому

      they still have the dislike button but it just doesn't show the amount

  • @CallSignDapper
    @CallSignDapper 9 місяців тому

    "Still got as dangerous and a rogue gym sock lost somewhere under the bed." 💀💀

  • @MikaHalonen1974
    @MikaHalonen1974 4 місяці тому

    "Still not as dangerous as rogue gym sock lost somewhere under the bed" xD

  • @litViper
    @litViper 11 місяців тому

    3 am feed is something else💀

  • @Guitar101Smasher
    @Guitar101Smasher Рік тому

    For continuous casting of steel we use Co-60 sources and a detector for mould level control

  • @sumitkumarpatra
    @sumitkumarpatra Рік тому

    Hello
    Mr. Slav can you make a video consisting of comparing countries with hardest exam ( school level/ Graduation level/ administration level)

  • @COMRADEDAVEYIPPIIIII
    @COMRADEDAVEYIPPIIIII 9 місяців тому

    This takes "I'm in your walls" to be scary

  • @lodickasvlajeckou
    @lodickasvlajeckou 7 місяців тому

    Builders could not take materials and put stuff inside those wall, because these wall were pre manufactured in a factory and then just put together in a place where they were building the building

  • @kys6557
    @kys6557 6 місяців тому

    This video gave me the ability to Slav squat

  • @DRIVA27
    @DRIVA27 Рік тому +2

    I hope there's someone in the comments that can do some research of that capsule.

  • @ErdemtugsC
    @ErdemtugsC Рік тому

    VIDEO IDEA: Most alkalic things

  • @Abegilr_Dragonrider
    @Abegilr_Dragonrider Рік тому

    Yup, this sounds like a horror game alright. Like the game From the Darkness, which takes place in a Slavic apartment building.

  • @nordicshredder4128
    @nordicshredder4128 Рік тому

    thank you for this knowledge, skal fra Norway

  • @giuseppemauceri8135
    @giuseppemauceri8135 Рік тому

    Very interesting

  • @fjoergyn
    @fjoergyn 2 місяці тому

    This makes my stalkerheart goes brrrt
    i love it. it is luckly that nobody but the families get harmed oO

  • @leevahal900
    @leevahal900 Рік тому +7

    Almost all mining quarries and metal receiving sites in the US have some sort of radiation detection device that all vehicles must pass thru when entering .Usually close to or before the scales.Dont know about Soviet sites though.