13:48 Paul Ritter RIP, fantastic actor better known for comedy roles but you wouldn't think it to see him in this!
@Bruce-Wayne-1012 ай бұрын
“ what is the cost of lies?” Greatest line in the show.
@matt_canon2 ай бұрын
Agreed. Also what's said right before: "The truth doesn't care about our needs and wants, our governments, our ideologies, our religions. It will lie in wait for all time." What I like most is that the quote applies to basically any and all lies, not just the events of this series. Where the cost of lies is losing one's integrity and credibility, which are hard if not impossible to regain.
@NPA10012 ай бұрын
After the critical and award winning success of this production HBO told the show runner, Craig Mazin, to say whatever project he wanted to do next and they would back it and Craig said he wanted to adapt his favourite video game ‘The Last of Us’ into a television series so that’s what they did … to similar critical success.
@JeremyPage-q4p2 ай бұрын
Truly one of the best series ever made. I would highly recommend listening to the Chernobyl podcast featuring the creator of the show. It's only a six part series but really takes you inside the development of the show. I was pleasantly surprised to learn that there is very little of the series that was "dramatized" for effect. In fact, some of the more tragic aspects (such as the effects of acute radiation poisoning to the first responders) were tampered down to make the show perhaps easier to take in. I would also suggest reading "Voices of Chernobyl", it was a sort of blueprint for a good deal of the series. Anyway, enjoyed your reaction and best wishes over the holidays. Take care.
@cherylsims56362 ай бұрын
Do not bother telling them that....the will never read it...
@jonathanrenfro71262 ай бұрын
I remember reading Voices of Chernobyl when I was younger. I had never heard of Chernobyl until I played the Stalker games, and then I wanted to know the real history.
In case you didn't know. "Vichnaya Pamyat" means eternal memory
@szabivan2 ай бұрын
A minor detail I like in this episode: the room into which Legasov is escorted around 19:17 looks like a typical KGB interrogation room (no carpets, only tiles, everything is easily cleanable with high-pressure hoses, complete with a sink hole in the center of the room being capable of directing the flow of the blood and the cleaning water away) so in those minutes waiting for KGB Chairman Charkov in that room he could have been pretty sure in that he would be killed off straight up there, after getting tortured and maybe admitting Deputy Minister Scherbina was involved if Charkov wanted that, whether it was the case or not (in real life, Legasov was not attending the trial so this shot is dramatisation but still, nice detail I think)
@carkawalakhatulistiwa2 ай бұрын
24:49 Before Chernobyl electricity from nuclear was cheaper than coal.But after the accident the cost of building a nuclear power plant tripled in the world. Because of the rising Safety standards. No nuclear power plants were built during 1993-2007
@marchordie212 ай бұрын
Chernobyl is a different town (and the name of the nuclear power plant). The town closest to the power plant (where all the employees lived with their families) is named Pripyat - this is now a ghost town in the exclusion zone. Chernobyl was also evacuated, but now it's partially inhabited, because it's at the edge of the exclusion zone and poor people don't have anywhere else to go...
@ct56252 ай бұрын
I once checked google maps and discovered the Bridge of Death was just 1.3 miles (2km) away from the open reactor. I don't know why I thought it was much further than that, but it really explains why so many died. Also, there's a great KZbinr who was either working as a nuclear scientist or studying nuclear physics in Ukraine a few years ago and she made several videos about the locations in Pripyat. I believe that footage at the end of the firefighter's clothing in the basement still being highly radioactive might have actually been from one of her videos. She did a lot of investigating just for fun, finding hotspots in the area and measuring the radiation, explaining how it probably wasn't dangerous as long as you weren't there for extended periods of time, or taking anything with you. There are still very dangerous locations in the area though. They allow visitors to the town but you have to stay on recognized paths, otherwise you could wander into a spike of radiation that hasn't been cleaned up and you might not even know how bad it is until it's too late.
@FutureMartian972 ай бұрын
The bridge of death never happened, it was a myth. The explosion didn't wake up the whole town or anything so there was no reason for a crowd to be on the bridge.
@gawddamnnotthisagainАй бұрын
22:31 imagine surviving Chernobyl and then having to endure the most destructive war since 1945 in a single lifetime.
@NicholasSarsby2 ай бұрын
Xenon has a half life of 9 hours so where legasov says that the only way to restore power would be to do it over a 24 hour period is true in concept because xenon is a very strong neutron absorber so it was effectively preventing the reactor from restarting after they had run it at half power for 10 hours.
@Pluviophile231927 күн бұрын
This is awesome, thank you for explaining!!
@Rooster---oooАй бұрын
Amazing show. The best thing was that overnight, tens of thousands of people in comment sections became instant experts on RBMK reactors & the correct use of the AZ-5 button when in a xenon pit (myself included) 😂
@rnkelly362 ай бұрын
Three Mile Island was the US accident which was bad but was not as bad as an open core but the release of radioactive coolant fluid into the environment was very bad. These accidents as well as a number of nuclear reactors sunk in the oceans onboard naval vessels from the US and USSR really fueled an anti nuclear movement world wide. Speaking honestly it was a major over reaction to nuclear power but Chernobyl was the nail in the coffin for the global opinion. It is still one of the cleanest ways to produce power and future power programs will have to include nuclear generation to meet a growing global demand. Society just needs to come to grips with safety, costs and disposal to make it even safer for the future. Fukushima is the largest accident since Chernobyl. The SL-1 accident in 1961 is probably the first major accident in Idaho Falls, Idaho that is honestly really scary when you read about it. The one thing we all don't realize is we live on a radioactive planet and we get light from a fusion generations of a sun. It is the Earth's natural radioactivity that makes life possible. It is also a thing that can destroy if handled wrong.
@aleksanderdomanski2222 ай бұрын
2:57 they were soviet elite. Living way better than ordinary people. Not only better pay but special housing, special supplies (better shops). Special health care, special schools for children. Easier way to university. Whole city was treated way better than others. That's why keeping that work is so important and threats of being blacklisted so strong.
@devinedragoonАй бұрын
when it blew the lid went like 100+ feet into the air
@sofa_king_kool2 ай бұрын
The channel HistoryBuffs just covered this series going over the (relatively minor) discrepancies between reality and what's portrayed. For example, the fact Legasov had a wife and children who aren't ever mentioned in the show... Makes the opening of the series hit harder for sure.
@adamgray92122 ай бұрын
As a follow-up to this I highly recommend checking out That Chernobyl Guy's video about Dyatlov. Imo the biggest flaw in the HBO series is their depiction of Dyatlov as a complete villain. It's very unfair that this is how Dyatlov is remembered
@-Knife-2 ай бұрын
I had family directly affected by this. This show does a great job showing real Soviet heroes who pretty much saved the world. My family moved to the U.S. right after this event happened.
@auntvesuvi38722 ай бұрын
Thank you, Sam! Thank you, Tristan! ☢ Admitting screw-ups is necessary in the pursuit of avoiding similar disasters. Alas, authoritarians don't believe in being honest if it besmirches them. We might see more catastrophes (maybe not nuclear, but preventable) in the near future.
@Callsign-Blade_RunnerSGАй бұрын
Failure is the mother of all Success.
@Sultans-World2 ай бұрын
Sam reminds me so much of the actress that plays Kim Wexler on Better Call Saul and I love her!
@KevDaly2 ай бұрын
The one in the US was Harrisburg - the Australian band Midnight Oil wrote a song about it: - I was working in France when the Chernobyl disaster happened. I was 24 and had recently bought the album on cassette - As we heard the reports of the radioactive cloud drifting over Europe I kept thinking of these lines from the song: "And when this stuff gets in You cannot get it out"
@llorona78472 ай бұрын
Legasov said they’d be dead within five years and Boris made it nearly five years.
@emoartist122 ай бұрын
The American one was 3 mile island. It’s also a series. It was also pretty damn good!
@daydreamer76182 ай бұрын
Just watched all of your Chernobyl reaction videos this weekend and I loved them. Btw, are you planning on watching Dune: Prophecy? It's also a miniseries on Max.
@Readwandx2 ай бұрын
The Last of Us next?
@Pinkielover2 ай бұрын
Please no
@matt_canon2 ай бұрын
"The truth doesn't care about our needs and wants, it doesn't care about our governments, our ideologies, our religions. It will lie in wait for all time."
@DJFalkoHannover2 ай бұрын
Netflix show! ... You are talking about "Meltdown: Three mile island" Its about the almost nuclear catastrophy in the US (Middletown PA in 1979). It was also really really good!
@glennfitzroy43522 ай бұрын
The miniseries is very good, but there are still several inaccuracies in i, some for dramatic effect. One of them is the portrayal of Dyatlov. It is true that he was a stern man, but not the villain they portrayed. The helicopter that crashed in the first second episode, actually happened much later, and there were far more people involved working with Legasov and Scherbina, but they simplified the number of supporting scientists and other people that contributed into one character.
@tomclanys2 ай бұрын
The crash I believe happened during the sarcophagus build, but the rest was pretty similar. I now wonder why they didn't show the glue strips they used to clean the roofs.
@ZacharyLoeser2 ай бұрын
If you want to watch Stellan Skarsgård chew even more scenery, I can’t recommend watching Andor enough. First three episodes are a little slower paced but it really picks up from there and becomes one of the best shows of the last 5-10 years. Prior Star Wars experience not required.
@havok62802 ай бұрын
It's important to note that Chernobyl occurred because of a design flaw. Western reactors aren't designed the same way. There are only two other major incidents at nuclear power plants. Three Mile Island in the US (which was not covered up; people just don't know their history) was basically caused by operator error and one in Japan recently. That one also wasn't covered up and was caused by a tsunami. Nuclear power is incredibly safe. Modern reactors even recycle nuclear waste. I have friends who literally lived on top of reactors for years. US Navy ships (all of our carriers and most of our subs) all run on nuclear power. The cover up and secrecy is common to all governments but it is especially true in totalitarian states.
@larrybremer49302 ай бұрын
Its also important to note 3 mile island hardly released anything, and Fukushima was also a BWR type (not common in the west) that is very similar to the RBMK in design that is also basically a BWR type and in fact the loss of electrical power caused a loss of cooling water circulation which is what the Chernobyl test was simulating so the events causes were actually very similar. Operated correctly the RBMK is as safe as any first generation plant. The issue is a reactors current and future power levels are dictated by the past 24 hours of power. The power level prior to the test had been too high so safely lower it to the needed power level for the test in the time allotted. It was basically an impossible task and leaders should have known it. They were forced to lower power too fast and stalled the reactor and in a foolish attempt to bring it up again (remember the operator said they need to shut it down for 24 hours per operational protocol) they had to push through the xenon pit and once that xenon burned off they overshot into an overpower. A-Z5 completed the chain of disaster. The operators knew what they were doing, were aware of the xenon pit, and knew they should have shut it down but the leaders orders do not get ignored in Soviet Russia. Had one of the techs choose to shut down the reactor once it stalled, it's hard to say what would have happened but rest assured he would have a lot of explaining to do and the leaders would all have covered their tracks well so he would likely either get vindicated and promoted or sent to a work camp for his actions. The problem is by evading the disaster would require the investigation acknowledging the mismanagement of the test (the leadership) or the fundamental shortcomings of the design that allowed the unsafe conditions to be possible, put another way, an embarrassment for the Russian Government. The interesting question was whether or not they could have brought the rector back under control in time once the power started running away uncontrolled without scramming (small numbers of rods at a time). Possibly, but the reactor would have probably still been heavily damaged by overheating since it ran up past its designed output by a wide margin. As you pointed out a PWR reactor is more common in the west (and US Navy ships and subs) and have a lot more inherent safety in the physics by which they operate making them more difficult to mismanage and create unsafe conditions because the water in a PWR is not boiling, so if the reactor overheats and starts to boil the steam voids will reduce reactivity and cool the reactor naturally while a BWR relies on the fuel heating to naturally reduce reactivity which is not as effective.
@tomclanys2 ай бұрын
Fukushima was also a design flaw. Nobody sane puts the backup power generators on a floor that gets flooded first whenever a tsunam big enough goes through.
@ashleyowen76642 ай бұрын
please watch "Battle of Chernobyl", i would LOVE to see your reactions to the information in the documentary a FEW(!) bits of info about Chernobyl and this episode: 12:36 - not to be "that-guy", but Dyatlov is right - there was NO rule for reactors that fall from 50% power, so the logical course of action would be one of two: shutdown or continue Legasov gave his life three times: 1) by going to Chernobyl, 2) at the trial where he told the truth, 3) when he actually did take his on life they actually used different powerplants that had the same Layout of Chernobyl to be as authentic as possible, however, all crew and actors were under armed guard at certain points for filming on a side note, no musical instrument was actually used for the music, except for one of the nuclear reactors at various stages of power Akimov, (the guy who pressed "AZ-5") went to his grave saying "i did everything right", which is true, he did everything by the book it was the reactor at fault, but the State kept secrets for a long time "S.C.R.A.M" - old reactors used ropes for the fuel, because the tech didn't exist back then, but if something went wrong with the reactor, they would cut the ropes, "S.C.R.A.M" means Safety Control Rod. Axe Man but some in the industry changed it to mean Start Cutting Right Away Men Legasov was basically silenced by the KGB and State, in reality, i believe it was actually hand written diaries on the events that were found, but ONLY by his death, which in itself, was a Statement and the first "breadcrumb" if you like YES, as Legasov says "it's a show trial", the State gave those involved THEIR version of events, who was to blame, how and why it happened, the "wild card" was Legasov himself, the State could not control what he said and for what he did say, he should of been shot and killed, but as was said "it would be embarrassing to kill you now", so they let him live, stripped of his job, but alive 17:06 - the guy that stands up and says "your testimony is concluded" is from the State, he KNOWS about the flaw, but given it's a "State Secret", he HAS to shut Legasov down so he doesn't tell anybody about the flaw, the Judge ask's "why" because only around 25 people knew about the flaw Legasov was hoping that his death was get the tapes found, given who he was, it was a BIG thing when he died, there was media coverage world wide, i think it was a couple of hours before they found the tapes as somebody noticed something that wasn't right and looked around the area, and there, among a lot of documents, were the diaries of Prof. Legasov, when these diaries were made public, the State tried to "bully" the police into getting them, but given they they "evidence", they were kept, eventually, the contents were made public and the world started to understand the rabbit hole that was the Soviet Union 12:24 - "safety first": Dyatlov really WASN'T a bad guy, he attended several meetings to improve reactor safety, at the hospital, he even talked with Akimov and toptunov about what could of caused the accident as he didn't know himself, but he was a lobbyist for reactor safety across the Soviet Union, he himself got hit with a dose of radiation in previous incident that SHOULD of killed him, the films and documentaries paint him to be the bad guy, but in reality, he cared more for reactor safety than anybody else, when Chernobyl exploded, he KNEW he would get blamed for it and tried to protest his innocents in the disaster, but given the country he was in, he got painted as the bad guy and suffered for it the soviet death-toll (31) is in a way correct, the reactor exploded and thousands died, yes, BUT, in the initial explosions themselves (as Reactor 4 actually exploded three times in rapid succession (first one blew the lid off, oxygen came in causing a larger second explosion that caused more air to get in, causing the third and final explosion that destroyed it)), only 31 people died and these "31" are the official death-toll, pardon my wording here, but everybody else is a side-effect of the accident - think of a grenade that exploded and kills 3 people, then two years later, one more died due to the effects, the official death-toll would be 3, same applies to Chernobyl - in the initial explosion, 31 died, everybody else was an "after-effect" of the radiation
@willracer1jz2 ай бұрын
29:07 Unfortunately, it happened again in 2011 in Fukushima, Japan after a major earthquake damaged the plant's backup systems.
@keef52 ай бұрын
Not exactly
@IGirt1Ай бұрын
No definitley not the same. It was a meltdown at fukushima not an explosion. It was cause by tsunami waves destroying systems to cool the reactor
@IGirt1Ай бұрын
I dont even think anyone died at fukushima and cherbobyls radiation levels were like 10x that of fukushima
@Pluviophile231927 күн бұрын
You’re mistaking meltdowns with the literal explosion of a nuclear core. The area was irradiated but nothing compared to Chernobyl.
@jameshurley95512 ай бұрын
If you guys want to go down a real mind F of a rabbit hole, look up nuclear accidents in Russia's history. Chernobyl may be the most widely known but there are areas that are permanently contaminated as a result of Russia's nuclear program. In 2016 there was a radioactive cloud hovering over eastern EU which was thought to have come from Russia. For contrast, Three Mile Island - the us incident you mentioned was a partial meltdown that involved a release of radioactive gas. It was a fraction of the release of radioactive material by comparison to Chernobyl.
@stevenb42852 ай бұрын
Wow, amazed you said it was easy to watch. Although a great drama, I think it is probably the hardest to watch show I have ever seen ... never known a show to pull on my emotions like this. Great show, great drama, such a depressing factual story though!
@AbusiveUncleJoe2 ай бұрын
the trial as presented didn't really happen. it was an old fashioned soviet show trial. The testimony we see is given for us to understand what happened.
@FutureMartian972 ай бұрын
You don't have to worry about a Chernobyl style event happening again, because it literally can't. The Soviet Union was the only nation in the world that uses RBMK's. They were the only ones because everyone knew they were a terrible design, and the Soviets never had containment buildings around their reactors like literally every other nuclear power plant in the world. What happened at Chernobyl is physically impossible in other reactors strictly because of their designs. Some new Gen 3 reactor designs are even passively safe, where if no control from the control room is given the reactor will shut itself down naturally. Not to mention now with computers you physically wouldn't be able to put a reactor into an unsafe state like that, the computer will not let you and override you long before that. The only bad thing that has happened since Chernobyl was Fukushima, but even then those just melted, and the containment building's blew up, severely reducing the spread of fallout, which is what they are designed to do.
@lunagal2 ай бұрын
Even though the containment in Fukishima kept in a lot of the radiation, much still got out and they evacuated every town in the area. Many are still abandoned like the Chernobyl area. So it wasn’t SAFE. No nuclear power is safe.
@efricha2 ай бұрын
I don't know about the other poster that talked about accidents in the West being covered up, but they certainly were dealt with quietly, probably to not panic people, because they *are* scary. The most prominent one I think of is SL-1, in Idaho, a Naval experimental reactor of bad design. Wiki articles exist. There was also Fermi-1 in Detroit, and one in California, I believe. These are generally called criticality accidents, and they happen outside of reactors, too, if you are being reckless or just didn't know. The other phrase to search on is prompt-critical, when the fast neutrons are driving the reaction rather than the moderated neutrons. Prompt-critical reactions happen in bombs, but should never happen elsewhere.
@ct56252 ай бұрын
Soviet Union/Russia: "It never happened, and if you claim it did you'll be dealt with". The West: "With an abundance of caution we have buried the entire site".
@efricha2 ай бұрын
@@ct5625 More like Soviet: It never happened, or else. West: Revealing how mind-boggling stupid we were with SL-1, Demon Core, etc, would reveal classified info that we do know, so print a one-sentence blurb in an obscure trade journal.
@user-lv5bt3nt3r9 күн бұрын
The official death toll of chernobyl stands at 31 and has never changed because of the collapse of the USSR in 1990. BUT, if you go to some of the former republics of the USSR you will find memorials to the dead among the Liquidators. Those memorials list their names. Not one of them has less than 31 names. In addition, as at 22 January 2022, when public records on this effectively ceased due to the russian invasion of Ukraine, the Ukrainian government was paying 300,000 disability pensions for Chernobyl related disabilities and illnesses. The death toll attributed to fukushima is unclear because the deaths are measured with the deaths caused by the tsunami but what is known is that of the4 thousand deaths after the tsunami and nuclear accident those from the fukushima area accounted for over half of those and that percentage had been trending upwards constantly as of July 2022- 11 years after the disaster. When someone tells you nuclear power is a viable option, do not even think about believing them.
@stephenwilliams50042 ай бұрын
The "Bridge of Death" is not actually true. I am always surprised that with as much work as they did to get so many other things accurate that they let this slip in for the sake of making the story more impactful.
@richardkaba53062 ай бұрын
The people who born in west have usually the same issue like you to understand how Soviet Union and it's satelites worked. And you also mentioned US, of course look at incident in Three Miles Island, even the accident was less severe, still very similar symptoms were visible - hiding facts, not evacuating on time ... where on US side that was powered mostly by company - the most in danger were money and credit, while i USSR with Chernobyl the main danger was credibility of the world hegemon. You also have to realize, that in USSR there were no private companies, everything was owned by a state and every poeple on leaders and managers positions were poeple of the state, only people loyal to the comunist party and members, even Legasov was the whole live loyal member. Otherwise you could not do that job. In my country, Czech Republic, (Czechoslovakia at those times) was exactely the same. (luckily this is more then 30 yours over). Even the teacher on grammer school had to be in party to have future in his job. To all positions with any kind of power were they put poeple trusted by regime. There was a class war. The inteligent and educated poeple were not preffered, preffered were workers, stupid, but loyal. You saw that in the movie, some reginal secretary was stupid fat idiot who worked as a worker in shoe factory before, he was put in charge and nothing could make him act "wrong" :) And see current Russia, the comunistic idea was put away, but all the else is still there, if you're watching the war in Ukraine you still (thanks to god) see the same issues - military leaders are idiots, they were put to their positions because of money, friendship, loaylty but not skills. Lies are everywhere, lie is everything Putin say ... Sadly people living whole live in west somehow cannot understand how that world was/is working.
@blindlemonpledge25562 ай бұрын
The comet Wormwood was supposed to aopear in the sky to signal the end of the world. The Russian translation of the word Chernobyl is Wormwood.
@llorona78472 ай бұрын
This is inaccurate. It’s a mistranslation
@blindlemonpledge25562 ай бұрын
@llorona7847 In Ukranian, the word ttanslates to "mugwort" or "wild wormwood"
@llorona78472 ай бұрын
@ Thank you for that. I remember learning about it from a religion-focused podcast episode a while back but couldn’t remember exactly what the linguist said.
@michaelescareno70482 ай бұрын
Enjoyed your reaction. HIGHLY recommend the HBO series, season 1 of True Detective. Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson. It's phenomenal!!
@wgandy95412 ай бұрын
Great reaction to this amazing series! You earned a subscription from me. I would love for you to watch some of the great classic movies and series from the past 30 years such as Band of Brothers, The Last Samurai, Forrest Gump, Rain Man, and Shogun (if you have not already seen them).
@yannfreitas56622 ай бұрын
Plis react to oppenheimer and interestellar ,you will lov it
@yannfreitas56622 ай бұрын
Hey guys ,im from Brasil and plis continue watch fast and furious saga ,your chanel is the Best!
@Pinkielover2 ай бұрын
Everything comes down to greed and money.. But nuclear power still the best form of energy.. Even new technologies That is going to be difficult to get past all the political and public scrutiny. Because of the name nuclear power
@havok62802 ай бұрын
This wasn't caused by greed. That's only true in Western capitalist countries. It was a result of Soviet pride. The state can never be seen as weak or flawed or the whole system collapses. It isn't a coincidence that the Soviet Union fell just a few years after Chernobyl.
@tomclanys2 ай бұрын
@@havok6280 of course it was also greed. Soviet Union and today's russia is known for cheaping out wherever they can. They cheaped out on containment, even on the sarcophagus. They cheaped out on safer ways to clean up the roofs, instead deciding to use men with tiny little payments. They also used the graphite displacer rods because as it's said in the show, it's cheaper this way and lets you use more burned up fuel rods for longer as you can have more flexibility of the reactor at the cost of safety and stability.
@FirefighterSweetsir29 күн бұрын
How do you not show the USSRs official death toll at the end?! :(
@azawilson1Ай бұрын
All governments regardless of what country lie
@LucasTowers__2 ай бұрын
Another fact that, at this day, the clothes of the firefighters on the hospital remains the most radioactive place on earth.
@fewwiggle2 ай бұрын
"most radioactive place on earth" More radioactive than the nuclear fuel/material inside of reactors or bombs? :-)
@tomclanys2 ай бұрын
absolutely wrong.
@rogwar95Ай бұрын
…not to that extent…so cute
@kentbarnes19552 ай бұрын
If you wish to learn more about Chernobyl I highly recommend a couple KZbin channels. One by Kyle Hill (channel of the same name). He has many many videos on Nuclear things...and has visited the Chernobyl exclusion zone, even going into the new containment structure. The other is titled That Chernobyl Guy...as with all things take what anyone says with a grain (or several) of sale...but he casts a lot of shade at some of the events this series reports as "facts". Full disclosure. I graduated with my BS in Nuclear Engineering a few months before this event happened, and worked for many year in the US Nuclear Industry.
@berlin.stalingrad2 ай бұрын
Rolex 🤦🏻
@Shelbot303Ай бұрын
Temu Chris Evans just needs to keep quiet please.
@barbarjinx38022 ай бұрын
We had three mile island. Before you use the Russian argument of “everyone does it” look up some facts. It wasn’t covered up. It was on the news. It’s an interesting story.
@randylahey18222 ай бұрын
heavy cuts on this one, even the last scenes wtf
@axelstone31312 ай бұрын
When you gonna watch terminator 3? 🤔
@ahox92832 ай бұрын
Bad cuts this episode
@cherylsims56362 ай бұрын
You skipped the last Most Important line in ending credits which was "GORBACHEV WROTE IN HIS MEMORIES CHERNOBYL WAS THE TURE CAUSE OF THE BREAKUP OF THE SOVIET UNION"....I told you to be sure to watch all them to DISLIKE
@havok62802 ай бұрын
They didn't skip anything. It just didn't make the KZbin edit... relax...
@cherylsims56362 ай бұрын
@@havok6280 YES they did just watch other youtubers who did this series, and stop your BS
@Moth-Man952 ай бұрын
@cherylsims5636 Not everyone edits their videos the same. They, like the other person, said they didn't miss it it just didn't make it through editing.
@cherylsims56362 ай бұрын
@@Moth-Man95 B.S, drop this channel and them
@Moth-Man952 ай бұрын
@@cherylsims5636why don't you because clearly you're the one that has an issue with watching them. If you want to see all of it just watch the actual series.