Chernobyl Episode 2 "Please Remain Calm" REACTION!

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Dos Cavazos

Dos Cavazos

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 443
@ingsve
@ingsve 5 жыл бұрын
How the iodine tablets work. One of the decay products from nuclear fuel is radioactive iodine-131. Iodine is accumulated in the human body in the thyroid gland. By eating iodine tablets with non-radioactive iodine the body becomes saturated with iodine so that the body doesn't take up any of the radioactive iodine if you were to get exposed by it.
@DosCavazos
@DosCavazos 5 жыл бұрын
Interesting! I was wondering how that worked.
@zammmerjammer
@zammmerjammer 5 жыл бұрын
But taking iodine pills only works as a prophylactic measure. If you've already been exposed, it doesn't matter. And then of course, if you've spent a week inhaling radioactive ash... well...
@demopem
@demopem 5 жыл бұрын
Luckily the half-life of iodine 131 is fairly short, so you only need to keep your body saturated with iodine for a few weeks.
@mscheese000
@mscheese000 5 жыл бұрын
@@zammmerjammer And of course, it only works for iodine itself. It doesn't protect you from any other form of radiation exposure.
@zammmerjammer
@zammmerjammer 5 жыл бұрын
@@mscheese000 It's true. But caesium-137 doesn't have any function inside the human body, so while it's bad news if it gets into the food chain, it can't do as much damage and is eliminated fairly quickly. Strontium-90 is dangerous because it can be "mistaken" for calcium and settle in the bones -- that's why after Chernobyl contaminated milk was such a concern.
@brachypelmasmith
@brachypelmasmith 5 жыл бұрын
Not-so-fun fact. They didn't even have lights IRL. It was pointless to give them lights because radiation would fry it, and they navigated in dark by feel and memory. It's just that there was no good way to show that so they gave them lights to start with.
@penfold7455
@penfold7455 5 жыл бұрын
Kacee: "oh nooo.....the dog!!" Those of us who've watched the whole limited series: Hoo-boy....
@barata15
@barata15 5 жыл бұрын
had the same reaction xD
@capricornus9307
@capricornus9307 5 жыл бұрын
Yes, next two episodes will be hard...
@fuzzy__dunlop
@fuzzy__dunlop 5 жыл бұрын
Pray for Kacee
@MissTeeFy
@MissTeeFy 5 жыл бұрын
Yep, invest in tissues
@thamor4746
@thamor4746 5 жыл бұрын
Episode 4 will be one big long cry about dogs...
@engineermole2688
@engineermole2688 4 жыл бұрын
The General that went and read the radiation in the truck was General Pikalov, he was a ww2 vet, fought from Stalingrad, Moscow and Kursk to Berlin, wounded several times and passed in 2003 in his late 70's, very old school officer, been in some of the hardest battles in the war, he would likely never let his men do anything he had not done, so he went and did it himself.
@AH-be6bu
@AH-be6bu 4 жыл бұрын
Say what you want about the soviet system, but some of their people were truly superhuman.
@-JustHuman-
@-JustHuman- 4 жыл бұрын
@@AH-be6bu No system is perfect, it's the people that makes the difference. That is true even today, just look at China and the Doctors who defied the state and gave the world a warning.
@stew-03
@stew-03 4 жыл бұрын
The monsters under Pikalovs bed were scared of him
@safwanshuhaib9968
@safwanshuhaib9968 4 жыл бұрын
They say picalo from dragon ball was inspired by this comrade
@DerOberfeldwebel
@DerOberfeldwebel 3 жыл бұрын
Also, a reading from a lowly soldier could have been made to go away or ignored. Pikalow as a general and WWII hero was too high on the ladder for them to ignore, coming from him, they had to take it seriously.
@gunslinger11bravo
@gunslinger11bravo 5 жыл бұрын
The reactor exploded two days before my 19th birthday, I was a nuclear weapons specialist in the Army. By the next day we were detecting radiation in West Germany. Great reaction you two.
@DosCavazos
@DosCavazos 5 жыл бұрын
Wow! Thank you for sharing that with us!!
@fredlandry6170
@fredlandry6170 5 жыл бұрын
I was 16 in high school in Louisiana.
@lionhead123
@lionhead123 4 жыл бұрын
i was 11 months...
@MarkLikesCoffee860
@MarkLikesCoffee860 4 жыл бұрын
I was 8 years old
@Danci1337
@Danci1337 4 жыл бұрын
My father got conscripted the same year the accident happened, except during November. In Hungary (western neighbouring country of Ukraine), they were measuring regularly for radiation levels. He was a border guard on the wester side of the country so on the furthest away side of the country, but even they over there were measuring plantations, especially lettuce. Appereantly radiation in lettuce builds up rather well. He only hear rumors of some plantations were disposed of on the eastern border tho.
@TheFeltbegone
@TheFeltbegone 5 жыл бұрын
The thing I remember most from my first viewing of this series is the radiation. the radiation is almost a full blown character. The production team does an incredible job of making you feel its presence. it just has you on edge the whole time. Great reaction
@DosCavazos
@DosCavazos 5 жыл бұрын
It really does feel like the ultimate threat...it is just constantly there! Very scary.
@Christopher_TG
@Christopher_TG 4 жыл бұрын
The first couple episodes of Chernobyl are almost like a cosmic horror film. An unimaginable, unknowable monster of the universe that is so huge, powerful, and unstoppable that leaves the people that face it fundamentally changed. The horror is not just that the monster will kill you, it's that the monster forces you to realize just how tiny, insignificant, and powerless you really are in this vast, uncaring universe.
@misskayelizabethdee
@misskayelizabethdee 5 жыл бұрын
It wasn’t 8 total roentgen at the lab with Ulana. It was 8 milli-roentgen. Meaning it was .008 roentgen. Which makes sense if they’re 400 kilometers away. ☺️
@DosCavazos
@DosCavazos 5 жыл бұрын
Thanks for clearing that up!
@misskayelizabethdee
@misskayelizabethdee 5 жыл бұрын
Dos Cavazos all good! Just want to clear that little bit up, so you can see that while terrifying, their lab wasn’t immediately deadly. Really loving your reactions!
@tannenfelsruplesen9870
@tannenfelsruplesen9870 5 жыл бұрын
@@DosCavazos it is literally pain for the ears to hear you mistake it, sorry.
@matthewhelton1725
@matthewhelton1725 5 жыл бұрын
One thing to consider... the decay rate is a square function... exposure drops off by the square of the distance. The fact they were detecting radiation at that level 400km away was frightening. I was 17 years old when this happened. Our Physics/ Chemistry teacher Dean Hurd, had a radiation counter setup by Tuesday the 28th... we were seeing the background count rise by the end of the second week; Carlsbad California (coastal San Diego area) May 8th, 1986...
@JoshSweetvale
@JoshSweetvale 4 жыл бұрын
@@tannenfelsruplesen9870 Nobody's perfect. (Read: Everyone's a moron sometimes) At least they're being a Scherbina and not a Dyatlov :D
@Zer0SumGame
@Zer0SumGame 4 жыл бұрын
Fun production fact: The evacuation announcement they used was a recording of the one used during the real evacuation.
@chasedunagan
@chasedunagan 4 жыл бұрын
The scene where they are throwing those firefighters' clothes into a room... that room is still there. And those clothes are still there. And they are still very radioactive.
@elroysez8333
@elroysez8333 5 жыл бұрын
This isn't a knock against you two, but you have to understand just how secretive, fearful and dangerous the Soviet Union was back then. The absolute priority was never the people, the priority was always the state. Back then, the Soviet Union was closer to what North Korea is now. Not as closed off, but certainly as secret obsessed. I was a teenager back then, and the U.S. and others found out something had happened within days. Intelligence got reports of what happened and a picture was built, but the Soviets kept denying anything was wrong for almost a month if memory serves. It was a really crazy time. It probably would have been much worse if Gorbachev (the guy with the birthmark on his head) wasn't in charge. He brought forth something called "Perestroika" which was a change in how they dealed with the West. After Leonid Breshnev, and Andropov (his predecessors) he was a welcome change in Soviet leaders.
@deepwhite2518
@deepwhite2518 5 жыл бұрын
Я пишу вам от переводчика. Горбачев был желанной переменной для Соединенных Штатов. Сейчас народ России проклинает Горбачева из-за того, что благодаря ему произошел распад СССР, а затем беспрецедентное разграбление страны, уничтожение науки и медицины, а также две войны с Чечней.
@Quotenwagnerianer
@Quotenwagnerianer 5 жыл бұрын
@@deepwhite2518 И поклоняться Сталину, и снова и снова выбирать Путина, который предпочитает обогащаться. Наверное, это голоса за то, что говорят о русских: У них у всех есть фетиш к страданиям.
@chrisformby3039
@chrisformby3039 5 жыл бұрын
I think we may be deluded in thinking governments from anywhere are more open these days, they are much more sophisticated in disinformation, that's all that's changed.
@ФедорГаврилин-д2я
@ФедорГаврилин-д2я 4 жыл бұрын
May 14 officially announced ovarian
@Lelik_208
@Lelik_208 4 жыл бұрын
@@Quotenwagnerianer Вы так много знаете про ужасы Сталина, но вряд ли вы также осведомлены о последствиях распада СССР. Нищета, голод, безработица, криминал, локальные геноциды и войны. За 10 лет демографические потери России сравнимы с потерями СССР во Второй мировой войне- 20-30 млн (например, репрессии Сталина - 700 тыс расстрелянных и 2-3 млн заключенных за 30 лет ). Но тот кто несет смерть и нищету России- герой для вас. Тот кто после этого приносит процветание и законность- вор и тиран. (Google tr.) You know so much about the horrors of Stalin, but you are also unlikely to be aware of the consequences of the collapse of the USSR. Poverty, hunger, unemployment, crime, local genocides and wars. For 10 years, Russia's demographic losses are comparable to the losses of the USSR in World War II - 20-30 million (for example, Stalin’s repressions - 700 thousand executed and 2-3 million prisoners in 30 years). But the one who brings death and poverty of Russia is a hero for you. The one who after this brings prosperity and stability is a thief and a tyrant.
@TomResnick
@TomResnick 5 жыл бұрын
Another fascinating "easter egg" about Hildur Gudnadóttir's haunting score for this series: a lot of the "instruments" used in the music are sounds recorded in a decommissioned nuclear reactor facility. So the screeching of metal, echoing pounding, percussive hits... they're literally pieces of a reactor. It's amazing.
@BlackWACat
@BlackWACat 5 жыл бұрын
kacee: "people's lives are the priority" the soviet union: ima pretend i didn't see that shit
@deanprowell7947
@deanprowell7947 3 жыл бұрын
Soviet Union: Well yes, but actually no
@Jzemire
@Jzemire 4 жыл бұрын
Fun fact: The guy at 12:16 being dragged away, saying "Dyatlov was in charge" (I forget the guy's name) But that's the same actor who played Harry Potter's father. That's James Potter ratting out Dyatlov ;)
@itsmeaimbot
@itsmeaimbot 3 жыл бұрын
Nikolai Fomin 😉
@bizibetiko9778
@bizibetiko9778 5 жыл бұрын
Don't know how a nuclear reactor works, eh? Oh you will know exactly how an RBMK rector works after watching this show!
@DosCavazos
@DosCavazos 5 жыл бұрын
They are already doing a great job of explaining the more scientific side of things!
@mattr7994
@mattr7994 5 жыл бұрын
Dos Cavazos oh man, you guys ain’t seen nothing yet on that front.
@DiegoRYT
@DiegoRYT 5 жыл бұрын
can you explain it though...?..stop spreading Fear...
@JohnYoo39
@JohnYoo39 4 жыл бұрын
@@DiegoRYT well, I know that it doesn't explode
@tomsmith5584
@tomsmith5584 3 жыл бұрын
Or doesn't work.
@demopem
@demopem 5 жыл бұрын
The old guy getting on the buss was the one who decided to cut the phone lines in the first episode. Not so cocky then...
@lionhead123
@lionhead123 4 жыл бұрын
he was fictional though.
@USCFlash
@USCFlash 4 жыл бұрын
@@lionhead123 he was also Maester Luwyn on Game of Thrones.
@240nordey5
@240nordey5 4 жыл бұрын
Skarsgard's reaction to how his life is basically forfeit is sublime. Happiness to terror to sadness to guilt in a matter of 2 minutes. From being gleeful about the success with the Boron, to agony for seeing kids on the street of a town that should be evacuated. Fantastic performance.
@Grnademaster
@Grnademaster 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah. At that moment, his character completely changes, and from then on, he respects Jared Harris's character. It just might be my favorite scene in the entire series because it's so pivotal.
@darchon5
@darchon5 5 жыл бұрын
"It's called deductive reasoning, bitch!" Love it! This is arguably my fave episode, right up there with the finale. Really powerful stuff, especially with the 3 volunteers.
@michaeltabor4176
@michaeltabor4176 5 жыл бұрын
Anything you hear in russian during this show (like the call to the fire station) is an actual recording from the event.
@spavatch
@spavatch 4 жыл бұрын
One correction: the female scientist measured eight miliroentgens, that's 0.008 roentgens (as compared to 3.6 roentgens). That aside, it's by far the most enjoyable Chernobyl reaction video I've came across so far. It's so refreshing that someone actually did a research on the topic and simply experienced the graphical depiction of these events instead of just getting emotional and jumping into conclusions alternately. Thanks for that. And all the best from a guy who at that time was 3 and, according to his parents' account, on that sunny April weekend was happily running around the playground gathering radioactive dust falling from the first wave of fallout around 500 miles away from the spot these events took place ;)
@PavanBhangoo
@PavanBhangoo 5 жыл бұрын
I love how you have so much prior knowledge about this incident. It adds a whole different level of horror to what really happened here as you see those stories and articles and books you read before, come to life.
@tonyngo8336
@tonyngo8336 5 жыл бұрын
There is no horror movie that is scarier than real life. This is why Chernobyl is scary to watch... because we know it happened. Imagine how scary it was to live through it. By Ep. 5, you will know how a nuclear reactor works... and how it exploded. Best wishes.
@boskee
@boskee 5 жыл бұрын
Well, it's full of inaccuracies and outright myths, so it's more of a sci-fi show than a documentary.
@skytron100
@skytron100 5 жыл бұрын
@@boskee they may have taken some artistic liberties, but it's not FULL of inaccuracies. If you're not listing those in here, you're debunked as a hating POS
@boskee
@boskee 5 жыл бұрын
@@skytron100 Fuck off, troll.
@maksphoto78
@maksphoto78 5 жыл бұрын
@@skytron100 I'll list some for you: Dyatlov wasn't a psychotic denialist. Nobody stormed into the control room saying "the reactor has exploded". Operators really had no idea what happened, but got to work to prevent further explosions or fires. Brukhanov, Fomin, and even Dyatlov, bear no guilt for the tragedy; the blame lies with poor reactor design.
@FutureMartian97
@FutureMartian97 5 жыл бұрын
SkyTroN Here’s some inaccuracies for you 1. No one ever forced someone to go to the roof, he did it on his own and never actually made it because the door was locked 2. The Cherenkov effect at the beginning was nowhere near that bright 3. The Bridge of Death never happened 4. The divers didn’t volunteer to go into the basement, it was just their shift 5. There was no black smoke, there was very little white smoke/steam 6. A helicopter did crash but it was not right after the accident, it was 6 months later and crashed because the rotors hit a crane cable 7. The 2-4 megaton figure and everything in a 30km radius being completely gone is so made up and ridiculous is nothing but straight fear mongering. I don’t want to post anything from future episodes in case they haven’t seen them yet
@CyberBeep_kenshi
@CyberBeep_kenshi 3 жыл бұрын
The last scene with the water, irl there were no lights. They went by touch by following the pipes. So pitch black, in the heat and water, with the geiger counter going insane. Stuff of nightmares...... they saved several countries..
@mifphilip
@mifphilip 4 жыл бұрын
just to give a perspective on how far the radiation had spread. the swedish nuclear power plant the detected the radiation was Forsmark, north of Stockholm. and it is over 1200km from Chernobyl
@calinalexandru5446
@calinalexandru5446 Жыл бұрын
i was student in that time in northern Romania and we measure the radiation of dust from the roof of University and was detectable and much higher than normal after 2 days from the explosion
@JoshSweetvale
@JoshSweetvale 4 жыл бұрын
5:30 She's one of the first wave of nurses properly trained with a full scientific background. On the other end of the spectrum you have old doctors who were basically trained up village practitioners who weren't quite on the same level.
@tigqc
@tigqc 5 жыл бұрын
That speech to the workers by Skarsgard was one of the most inspiring and sobering I've ever heard.
@pyatig
@pyatig Жыл бұрын
One thousand years of sacrifice in our veins. Only Russians can say that
@samporter7018
@samporter7018 5 жыл бұрын
The ending of the final episode is some of the most moving and emotional moments of tv I've seen this entire show is one of the best I've ever seen you guys have a great channel
@hareecionelson5875
@hareecionelson5875 3 жыл бұрын
Legasov's face when he heard he was being sent to Chernobyl. He was like "well, that backfired, should have kept my mouth shut"
@fredlandry6170
@fredlandry6170 5 жыл бұрын
To this day those firefighter uniforms are still radioactive in the basement 34 years later.
@StayInspyred
@StayInspyred 5 жыл бұрын
One fun little tidbit, those terrifying sounds in the track, the pulsing and almost alarm like sounds etc, those were recorded in a real nuclear reactor.
@folkblues4u
@folkblues4u 3 жыл бұрын
That pile of radioactive clothing is STILL there in the SAME SPOT of the Pripyat hospital basement. Seen urban explorers visit it a few years back with dosimeters and they spiked to astronomical levels over the clothing and boots.
@anguscampbell3020
@anguscampbell3020 4 жыл бұрын
10:56 That guy was General Pikalov he was a veteran of WW2 which was known as the Great Patriotic War in the USSR. He fought at Moscow, Stalingrad (the single largest battle in human history ever period fullstop) and the battle of Kursk (the largest tank battle ever). He was wounded several times during his service against the Nazis. Comrade Pikalov was not exposed to the reactor, the reactor was exposed to Comrade Pikalov.
@Sarkastik2007
@Sarkastik2007 5 жыл бұрын
I was almost 3 y old when it happened and I live aproximately 650 km from Cernobyl in neighbour country Romania. I'm telling you, it was really scary when people found out about it and everybody was ready for worse to happen. Luckly it didn't but I think still many people from all around were effected because the cancer rate exploded after, fear of another similar incident created panic and tensions between countries. This show is not just a show, at least not for me. It is a painful way to relive history all over again through other people's perspective. I'm really glad tough you've chosen to react to it. Keep it positive and God bless!
@DosCavazos
@DosCavazos 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing that! It must have been so terrifying to live through that.
@Sarkastik2007
@Sarkastik2007 5 жыл бұрын
I was too young at that time but few years after when Revolution came and we were able to talk free after 45 years of communism, I really wanted to know more myself. Being somehow in proximity of real DANGER made me appreciate life more. Same as the feelings of losing family members in WW II or being under a constant fear of censorship and punishment that my parents suffered. And to realise how serious propaganda and state secrets were in communism (same as in USSR), people who didn't comply were sent to prison and put to hard labour in salt mines or as my mother's godfather case, executed after being "mistaken" by some "witness" of things he didn't do just because he was an opposer of the regime. So you see why I get chills and goosebumps whenever I see a reaction to things like this. It's like a constant reminder of what life used to be, the sacrifice my people did for me to enjoy freedom, wealth and life. You know that motto...we forgive but we never forget.
@Honkeydoodle
@Honkeydoodle 3 ай бұрын
the cancer rate didn`t exploded after this. it`s also a myth.
@wadehwallace
@wadehwallace 5 жыл бұрын
Great reaction! Such a scary situation those people find themselves in, but the courage on display by those 3 guys was astonishing.
@DosCavazos
@DosCavazos 5 жыл бұрын
They were incredibly amazing! so brave!
@nbrain1595
@nbrain1595 5 жыл бұрын
@@DosCavazos sadly in reality they didnt really volunteer. there where very few people able to do it and they where on duty, so it was there job and they did it. at least thats what they said in interviews.
@Georgestella100
@Georgestella100 5 жыл бұрын
The three 'divers' were in fact not volunteers, they were just the guys on shift at the time! The helicopter crash (4 crew died) happened six months after the explosion, but it was included at an earlier point in the series to honour the helicopter pilots and crews that eventually managed to extinguish the fire. The guy getting on the bus was the one in the bunker who had told them to cut the phone lines!
@randomhockeyguy9149
@randomhockeyguy9149 5 жыл бұрын
If you do some searching on KZbin about people going back to visit the area in the past few years, all the radioactive clothes are still sitting in the basement of that hospital, and they are still extremely radioactive. There are several people that gone in there and put a geiger counter near the clothes and the meter jumps into the hundreds.
@JustNikoo
@JustNikoo 4 жыл бұрын
Fair play you showed the most important scenes from this episode hear and reacted. Meanwhile all other channels skipped this exact ones so my respect for that. Best reaction out of this episode
@FantasticMrFrog
@FantasticMrFrog 5 жыл бұрын
5:30 It's not explicitly adressed why the head nurse is the only one who knows how to handle radiation burns, while her superior seemed clueless about it, but there's a reasonable hypothesis that can be made, and it relates to their respective age. This is 1986 and the doctor in chief looks like he's close to the end of his career, probably in his late 60's or 70's, meaning he's probably finished medical school before nuclear technology (civilian or military) was a thing, or at best when it was in its infancy (40's / 50's). And while radioactivity was known for several decades at the time, it was mostly confined to research labs in universities, it would take many more years before we learn about the effects of high level radiation exposure on the human body and how to treat them, let alone for this information to seep from top secret military data to being taught at medical school. Also, he's a specialist (obstetrician), not a generalist, so most of his efforts to stay up to date with the medical knowledge post med-school would have been focused on his speciality field, not on radiation sickness. The head nurse, on the other hand, looks pretty young, meaning she's gone to med school during the late stages of the Cold War. Knowledge about acute radiation sickness has had time to spread into the public scientific and academic communities. There was also a very high incentive to teach it to medical students, even if it wasn't their speciality of choice, because you never have too much trained personnel when there's a constant threat of the Cold War escalating into a nuclear war.
@tsogobauggi8721
@tsogobauggi8721 5 жыл бұрын
18:09 That beautiful reaction to that scene. 19:40 The horror cliffhanger ending .
@mickem4322
@mickem4322 Жыл бұрын
To get the feeling for what times were like back then you might want to listen to the song "Russians" made by Sting in 1985.. It really describes the feeling what it was to be growing up in the 1970`s-1980`s.. It also helps to set the tone along with some other songs from that era ("Dancing with tears in my eyes" by Ultravox, "Forever young" by Alphaville, "Land of confusion" by Genesis) . This series also shows how far apart the Soviet Union and USA felt to be ... Here in Sweden every TV News show sent debates on the "Cold War" situation, not for a week or two... for years.. !! To me the Chernobyl accident was just another sign of that we all need to learn more about eachothers situations... btw..Here we were told not to eat Meat, Berries and Mushroom from the forrests for several years.. Who knows what the final result actually got to be ?? Thanks for bringing up some very important topics.. always needed..
@Geographus666
@Geographus666 4 жыл бұрын
I was in Kindergarden in Germany when that happened. I remember our teacher telling us in the most simple way she could why we were not going to play outside today and the day after and probably for a while. It didn't click for me but for some reason I remember that talk. It was years later, when I was old enough to understand the circumstances when I realized what happend on that day.
@rhino2960
@rhino2960 4 жыл бұрын
11:00 "why cant you do it from there?" for the same reason you can't get an accurate temperature from a turkey without sticking a thermometer into it to measure its internal temperature. Think of it like trying to get a feel for how hot a bonfire is, if you're standing 100 feet away, its gonna feel warm, but not necessarily hot, if you take a piece of metal and stick it right into the center of the bonfire though, its gonna come out red-hot after a moment or two
@xen0bia
@xen0bia 5 жыл бұрын
The divers did not have flashlights in real life to go through the tunnels, they immediately burned out because of the radiation. The divers were in pitch black darkness orienting themselves only from memory. The series production changed this (and the beginning of episode 3) so we would be able to see what they are doing, which is understandable. Also, the divers were not volunteers. They were the only people who knew the setup so they were very much obligated to go. Amazingly though, two of them are still alive today.
@spyroledragon
@spyroledragon 5 жыл бұрын
That episode failed to talk about Colonel Grebeniouk who was actualy the first to measure high radiation levels (2080 Roetgens) a few hours before Legasov and Chtcherbina even arrived onsite. Also the chopper crash actualy happened a few monthes AFTER the boron drops, during the assembly of the sacrophagus shelter. Appart from that, pretty accurate.
@roshi98
@roshi98 4 жыл бұрын
Every Show Ever: Yeah, we just had the best cliffhanger EVER!!!! Chernobyl: Hold my vodka, comrades....
@LisaLynn71
@LisaLynn71 5 жыл бұрын
This was a really great episode, love watching your reactions to it. P.S... Love the Baby Yoda pic in the background. :)
@DosCavazos
@DosCavazos 5 жыл бұрын
Kacee actually painted it! -Anthony
@LisaLynn71
@LisaLynn71 4 жыл бұрын
Dos Cavazos ..Freakin Awesome, She’s got Mad Skills..
@ShadyLurker84
@ShadyLurker84 5 жыл бұрын
Just a heads-up: beware of spoilers in the comments. I've seen it happen to other reactors and especially after this episode.
@geepersnc
@geepersnc 4 жыл бұрын
I'm not sure which I love more: your reactions or your in-depth discussions before and after. 💖
@RomanyGypsy92
@RomanyGypsy92 5 жыл бұрын
The place in Minsk actually got a 8 milliroentgen reading which is a smaller amount than 3.6 full roentgen but from 400 kilometers away that's still insane. And the type of reactor it was shouldn't have been capable of exploding because of the way it works but it did. They explain it later on.
@EskimoUlu
@EskimoUlu 4 жыл бұрын
I live in Alaska, This event took place just over a year before I was born. My parents told me that for weeks after the explosion there were weather reports about the airflow from USSR to Alaska.
@ViiT07
@ViiT07 5 жыл бұрын
Thanks God it was fast (I was thinking that you guys would take much more time to release EP 2) Thanks! o/
@DosCavazos
@DosCavazos 5 жыл бұрын
We try to post every other day as often as possible!
@Curien247
@Curien247 4 жыл бұрын
Wading thru hip-high water the dark, wearing a Soviet-era scuba suit with the biggest mitts they could find and your only flashlight burns out. Balls of Steel were a standard-issue back then.
@VenomGamingCenter
@VenomGamingCenter 3 жыл бұрын
I know this was a year ago, but I heard you ask how the Iodine tablets were meant to work. Basically one of the products of radioactive decay is radioactive iodine. Typically if you absorb it, it goes to the thyroid in your throat and just sits there emitting its radioactive particles. Naturally, this increases the risk of thyroid cancer exponentially dependant on the dose you've absorbed. Standard Iodine which is not radioactive essentially appears the same to the body. So you take the Iodine pills in the hope that the non-radioactive iodine within the pills saturates your thyroid so it doesn't absorb any of the super harmful radioactive iodine.
@DanielLopez-dz7ob
@DanielLopez-dz7ob 5 жыл бұрын
You guys are great! Subscribed. Look forward to seeing the rest of your reactions. Cheers!
@GeenPoblin
@GeenPoblin 4 жыл бұрын
It's so cool that you're so informed on the issue already!
@CarmenBrunnaDuarte
@CarmenBrunnaDuarte 4 жыл бұрын
5:12 One of the most dangerous components of radioctive fallout is Iodine 131 - a radioactive isotope of Iodine. Iodine is use by the body to regulate basic functions, like heartbeat, blood pressure and breath rithym. And stay for a long time in the body. Breathing Iodine 131 is basically insert radioactive elements that will make a part of your body for a considerable amount of time. Iodine pill function by saturating the organism with non-radioactive Iodine, forcing the body to get rid of the excess, eliminating the radioactive Iodine 131 in the process.
@JonsTunes
@JonsTunes 4 жыл бұрын
The firemen's clothes are still highly radioactive to this day. Only recently has the area been bricked off to prevent people viewing them and getting to close.
@pachena
@pachena 5 жыл бұрын
You guys are awesome! Thank you for reacting to this fantastic show! Subscribed.
@BlackWACat
@BlackWACat 5 жыл бұрын
also minor sidenote, the helicopter crash happened months after the reactor explosion
@magnieto1
@magnieto1 5 жыл бұрын
That general who drove the truck himself to get an accurate reading is a badass. That's how an officer should act.
@Iceman-135
@Iceman-135 5 жыл бұрын
The actor who plays Boris, believe it or not, plays Erik Selvig in the MCU, specifically the Thor films and Avengers 2012. Hard to believe it's the same person but he's such a good actor.
@sudhanshuchaturvedi5438
@sudhanshuchaturvedi5438 5 жыл бұрын
Actually Kacee is right, RBMK reactors were designed to prevent explosion (it did explode) and also some people helped afterwards.. and it will be shown later in the series and the good thing about this show is they would explain the events very well and also u will learnt how those nuclear reactor really worked... Nothing more I want to say, cos although its a true story but a spoiler is a spoiler
@derianjones1730
@derianjones1730 4 жыл бұрын
The two words that kept coming to me throughout this season were "Courage" and "Naivety"
@chrisf84
@chrisf84 5 жыл бұрын
Something that gets overlooked is that each click of a Dosimeter is a detection of one of those 'million billion bullets'.... 19:30
@onlysaneman9341
@onlysaneman9341 3 жыл бұрын
Re: 2:25, Legasov did not leave behind tapes. His notes and journals were distributed among the Soviet scientific community, and eventually dictated to tape.
@nbrain1595
@nbrain1595 5 жыл бұрын
on the flashlights going out: strong radiation just shredds electronic circuits. even just in space, where backgroundradiation is higher than on earth without an protective atmosphere, electronics need shielding and are build extra durable and less sophisticated(donno correct word, but less tiny elements etc?) where possible.
@mscheese000
@mscheese000 5 жыл бұрын
They were just shitty flashlights or old batteries. You're correct about the effect of radiation on electronics, but flashlights are about as simple as an electronic device can get. They really aren't affected by radiation.
@nbrain1595
@nbrain1595 5 жыл бұрын
@@mscheese000 pretty sure any battery driven tool has massive problems in strong radiation due to ionization. the electrodes just wont have stable charges at all.
@deanprowell7947
@deanprowell7947 3 жыл бұрын
The General who went in, Vladimir Pikalov, was the commander of the Soviet Army Chemical Corps for 18 years at this point. He was a veteran of WWII and fought at Moscow, Kursk, and Stalingrad. He went in himself because he knew that if it was anybody else, they would be accused of lying about the reading. He knew that if he did it, they'd have no choice but to believe him.
@timyotimbo
@timyotimbo 4 жыл бұрын
05:10 your thyroid absorbs iodine naturally to function. Iodine pills flood your thyroid with stable iodine ( I-127 also known as potassium iodide) to prevent it from absorbing radioactive iodine (I-131) which is a common byproduct of Uranium 235 decay.
@seleneduenes5929
@seleneduenes5929 Ай бұрын
When it comes to proximity and long term radiation detecting they use dosimeters to measure how much radiation is being released from a certain point at a certain time, so it would’ve been “best” to get close to see what the reactor itself is giving off and how much per second. Geiger counters are for detecting the total amount of radiation around at your current location so its more for the short term.
@Bruce-Wayne-101
@Bruce-Wayne-101 5 жыл бұрын
Aww Kacee such a beautiful reaction to the men that sacrificed themselves to go down into the water❤. Yea I think their flashlights went out because 1. The radiation might have drain their lightbulbs 2. That places is haunted or 3. They forgot to put new batteries in them lol.
@nicktankard1244
@nicktankard1244 5 жыл бұрын
The show took some liberties there for dramatic effect. Two of those divers are still alive and the other one died in 2005. Same with the female scientist She never existed. She is the personification of multiple scientists that worked on solving this issue.
@EnZo7992
@EnZo7992 Жыл бұрын
Always makes me laugh with how deadpan he says “you’ve made lava” 😂
@capricornus9307
@capricornus9307 5 жыл бұрын
It happened in 1986, when the Cold War era was still on the table so to speak. The USSR was obsessed with the state, its secrets, army and scientific programs, but definitely not the average people. That's why they didn't admit the disaster until other countries did measurements and found out something odd. In reality, the evacuation of Pripyat was done before the Swedish power plant found out the problem, although the time frame of 36 hours after the accident is real. They had to get about 1000 buses from cities around. Experts nowadays say, the evacuation was so successful because of paradoxically non-democratic regime in the USSR, because when the police came to evacuate the city, everybody obeyed. By the way, there are several real records used in the series. In EP1, the emergency phone call is one of them. In EP2, you can see USSR and USA newsflash on TV and also the evacuation broadcasting in russian language. In EP4 there is another real scene on TV. Boris Scherbina was originally a construction engineer, so when he says "...I know a lot about concrete", he is right. The estimated explosion between 2-4 megatons is now claimed as exaggerated, but they used such numbers at that time.
@DiegoRYT
@DiegoRYT 5 жыл бұрын
Love the Baby Joda(Don't know the species) Artwork in the wall..
@DosCavazos
@DosCavazos 5 жыл бұрын
Thanks I painted it! 😉 -Kacee
@HyperSonicX
@HyperSonicX 4 жыл бұрын
It's insane that episode 2 is probably the least shocking of the five.
@rubenlopez3364
@rubenlopez3364 4 жыл бұрын
Fun Fact the clothes of the firefighters are still in the Hospital basement and tourists would go to scan the boots and they are still deadly readioactive so i think in 2016-18 they sealed off the basement
@ggarciac1989
@ggarciac1989 5 жыл бұрын
you should listen to the podcast where they talk about the books and these events are based on.
@phh2400
@phh2400 Жыл бұрын
4:45 - 3,6 Roentgen, but here in Minsk, 8 milliroentgen - like liter and milliliter, meter and milliliter. Metrics, I know you are not used to it, but it make sense. 1 thousands of the base unit. Therefore 3,6 and 0,008 - now you see the difference.
@smichelle65
@smichelle65 4 жыл бұрын
Aw, you left out the best line--Legasov telling the helicopter pilot "If you fly over that building, in one week you'll be begging for that bullet!"
@SangsungMeansToCome
@SangsungMeansToCome 5 жыл бұрын
This is like the Titanic and much worse. They're not supposed to explode, in fact they are designed very intelligently not to explode. Yet, like the engineer says in the first episode, they do. This is another lesson from Chernobyl: All these supposedly "smart" people start to eventually start to believe their own bullshit and think they're unsinkable.
@mattr7994
@mattr7994 5 жыл бұрын
Unrelated comment as I haven’t won’t be able to watch the video until tomorrow morning - I found you guys through The Witcher and have checked out a few of your other series as well. Judging from what you seem to like, I think you all would really enjoy The Americans. It’s a 5 season show about a couple who are undercover Russian spies in the US in the 80’s and if you search the internet, it’s near the top of all the “best TV shows of all time” lists. The final season just aired last year. The cinematography of Chernobyl reminds me of the show at times. If the description interests you, it could be a good way to bring new viewers in to your channel - it seems like most TV reactors all watch the same shows, so you’re competing with everyone else for people who want to see reactions to them. There are like no reactions to The Americans on KZbin, so anyone looking for it would end up on your videos instead of having to choose from a billion reactors. Disclaimer: I may have ulterior motives for pointing this out - it’s one of my favorite shows of all time and I want to see it get a lot more attention. It kinda flew under the radar because it was on FX. Critics loved it, but it didn’t get the mainstream publicity it deserved. PS - I don’t know if you all checked out the official Chernobyl podcast, but it’s amazing. The writer/creator of the show spends 45 minutes to an hour discussing each episode of the show in depth, going into his research and how accurate each scene is or isn’t to what happened in real life. You all seem really interested in the history of the incident, so I’d highly recommend it. It’s available on KZbin as well as all the regular places to find podcasts.
@fxbear
@fxbear 4 жыл бұрын
The firemen’s uniforms that were collected by the nursing staff are still in the hospital basement to this day. It is still to radioactive to enter that room safely. All from just the uniforms.
@kevinmodding9978
@kevinmodding9978 5 жыл бұрын
When you guys are finished this you should react to band of brothers if you haven't seen it before, it's a 10 episode miniseries HBO did with Steven Spielberg in 2001, it's about a paratrooper regiments journey during ww2, it's one of the greatest tv shows every made it has a 9.5 rating on IMDB and 94% on rotten tomatoes
@paulmurphy4723
@paulmurphy4723 5 жыл бұрын
it's top 5 tv of all time, mini-series or not. just superb, harrowing and as good a tribute to those men as you're likely to see on the small screen.
@fuzzy__dunlop
@fuzzy__dunlop 5 жыл бұрын
Currahee!
@IndyMotoRider
@IndyMotoRider 5 жыл бұрын
What a great series. Astounding actually, that no one has done a reaction to it. I'm sure their many younger people who haven't seen it.
@bujin1977
@bujin1977 5 жыл бұрын
I watched it all again a week or so ago. Almost 20 years on and it's still just as amazing a series now as it was when it was released.
@thepotatoman99118
@thepotatoman99118 5 жыл бұрын
Also The Pacific!!
@GhostEye31
@GhostEye31 5 жыл бұрын
I don't know if someone said or if you knew already but that pile of firefighting equipment is still there in the hospital and is still one of the hottest places outside of the reactor area in Pripyat. You can actually go and see it now.
@mohanicus
@mohanicus 3 жыл бұрын
this happened when I was 8 years old in 86...I'm irish and I clearly remember watching the news reports and the government sending out iodine pills to every single home in the country because the radiation was traveling across Europe on the winds...this show is no joke with it's reality it was serious serious shit that was averted..."you are dealing with something that has never occurred on this planet before"..man..thats some serious dialogue right there.
@NickThorbjørnsen2207
@NickThorbjørnsen2207 5 ай бұрын
I like how at 10:28 Boris as a politician can just recognise bullshit the minute he hears it.
@Wattywatasaurus
@Wattywatasaurus 4 жыл бұрын
If you think about it, the nurse actually did know the personal risk to herself when she took the firefighters’ clothes off them and carried them down to the basement. She already seemed sufficiently knowledgeable about the dangers of nuclear radiation. She knew she had no Hazmat suit or protective gear for it. But she also knew that if the clothes stayed in the patient rooms, everyone in the hospital would be irradiated. Whether the others knew what they were doing to themselves is another matter, but in her case, she knowingly sacrificed herself. Also, if you want to know how big the explosion would have been - for context, the explosion we had in Beirut earlier this year was around 1.1 kilotons. The bomb in Hiroshima was 12-18 kilotons. 1 kiloton is 1,000 tons, and 1 megaton is 1,000,000 tons. They said that the explosion would have been 3 to 4 megatons.
@parallaxnick637
@parallaxnick637 4 жыл бұрын
Bit late but since no one seems to have answered the question: iodine pills work because one of the main byproducts of a nuclear meltdown is iodine-131, which is, naturally, radioactive. The human body naturally absorbs iodine and collects it in the thyroid gland to manufacture the hormone thyroxin. If you inhale radioactive iodine, your thyroid collects it and concentrates it, which leads to thyroid cancer. Taking pills of normal, stable iodine stuffs your thyroid to the gills, meaning it won't absorb iodine from the environment.
@ramiabdo5953
@ramiabdo5953 5 жыл бұрын
just a side note, Before Chernobyl, there wasn't a lot of progress in radiation poisoning research, and the little that was there, was studied by the new generation of doctors more than the old, that's why it makes sense that a young nurse would know more than the old doctor. It was Chernobyl and the research the came afterwards that gave us the information we needed in order to deal with the hazards of nuclear power.
@jackwisner1189
@jackwisner1189 5 жыл бұрын
That pile of clothes that was in the hospital basement? It's still in Chernobyl, and still radioactive, to this day. Also, there's been some debate over how much the firefighters knew about the radiation. Some say they knew and went in anyway, others not so much.
@fredlandry6170
@fredlandry6170 5 жыл бұрын
I heard the three men that went into the nuclear plant to let the water out survived and 2 are still alive today.
@benjaminsidneykidd-bentley3966
@benjaminsidneykidd-bentley3966 4 жыл бұрын
The 3 men who wait into that water all lived. 1 died of heart failure the other 2 are still alive today.
@Ladco77
@Ladco77 5 жыл бұрын
They do a good job of answering most people's questions about what happened as the story progresses. As for taking Iodine, your big risk from low doses of radiation is thyroid cancer. There is a radioactive isotope of Iodine component to the radiation and it can damage your thyroid. Taking Iodine pills saturates your thyroid with safe Iodine so it can't absorb the radioactive Iodine. By the time you get higher doses that can cause burns or radiation sickness, Iodine is pretty much useless. One thing to keep in mind is even people who know radiation protocol aren't prepared for the scale of this event. There had never been a nuclear event of this magnitude on the planet.
@felixd.5099
@felixd.5099 5 жыл бұрын
To be fair, in reality Boris Shcherbina actually ordered the evacuation before the radiation was detected in Sweden. That’s one of the very few deviations of the show from real timelines and events. Also the helicopter crash didn’t happen when they dropped the sand to kill the fire but much later on. And of course the idea of the possible thermal explosion was widely disregarded by almost all scientists later on and still is today, nevertheless the water mixing with the lava would have probably caused a significant additional emission of nuclear material into the atmosphere...and they did really send that divers in there to prevent it.
@FutureMartian97
@FutureMartian97 5 жыл бұрын
Quick facts about the divers. They didn’t volunteer in real life, it was just their shift and only one knew exactly where the valve was. The other two had a general idea. And all three divers ended up surviving and one is still alive today. One died about 10 years ago I think and one died a couple years ago.
@CyberBeep_kenshi
@CyberBeep_kenshi 3 жыл бұрын
Radiation indeed kills electronics. You can also see it on the original pictures, white dots and noise.
@sagitswag1785
@sagitswag1785 Жыл бұрын
My parents have told me how back during the USSR time, some of their friends were drafted to help with the Chernobyl efforts. Idk what for exactly. They said they haven't heard from some of them again. To this day they think they likely died of radiation sickness and it was just never reported to anyone apart from the person's immediate family. No news, nothing.
@rafagorny4994
@rafagorny4994 5 жыл бұрын
In Poland every children have to take the jodin. We are 1000km away of Charnobyl.
@robbysteinerman7904
@robbysteinerman7904 5 жыл бұрын
Great show. So hard to watch. Gets harder and harder and man was tough at times. Episode 4 was super tough. Episode 5 was some of the best television I've seen in a while. Enjoy the greatness of the show.
@deviljoehuntx8230
@deviljoehuntx8230 4 жыл бұрын
My aunts birthday is the day chernobyl exploded she was not allowed the leave the house until she was 2 years old, we lived near the border to CZ
@TheTossFTW
@TheTossFTW 5 жыл бұрын
Those 3 volunteers saved over 100 million lives that day! They are the real superheroes.
@slan77
@slan77 4 жыл бұрын
I was living then in Rzeszow, Poland which is about 700 km from Chernobyl. After about two to three weeks we get to go to nearest hospital to get iodine. It was like a shot of vodka in a small cup. After that it was nothing. We get on with our lives.
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