Chernobyl 1x1 "

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explorewith india Movies

Күн бұрын

#chernobyl #chernobylreaction #disaster
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Пікірлер: 55
@DaisyKmua
@DaisyKmua Ай бұрын
The people don't know, it was the 80's in the Soviet Union, a very oppressive regime. This happened when i was 5, i was in school when we had to stay indoors because radioactive clouds were potentially coming across Belgium, scary shit.
@mosovanhe
@mosovanhe Ай бұрын
Same here in The Netherlands! Pregnant women were scared to go outside and there was a ban on a lot of crops that grew in the East of this country. Crazy how many countries were affected.
@DaisyKmua
@DaisyKmua Ай бұрын
@@mosovanhe I don't even remember that part, maybe I was too young or my parents sheltered me from it cause I was scared. I should ask ^^
@totchi6
@totchi6 Ай бұрын
I was born in Riga, Latvia on June 6 that year. A month and change before, my mom was visiting family in Ukraine and remembers sunbathing, watching that cloud spread overhead, and being told over the radio that it's just a normal fire and to not worry about it. None of the people knew anything but what they were told, and all they were told was the same coverup as other countries.
@coffeindrinker2581
@coffeindrinker2581 Ай бұрын
We woke up to the news twelve hours after the accident and didn't know what to belive , but soon , and it only took a day before the alarms became reality here in Sweden and in Stockholm where we live about the accident in Ukraine. And still after almost forty years it is forbidden to pick berries , fruit or mushrooms in certain areas along Sweden's east coast .
@jrafel1707
@jrafel1707 Ай бұрын
I was a young teen when this happened. It was a very scary time because very little news was released by the Soviet Union, so no one knew how bad it actually was.
@kateawake
@kateawake Ай бұрын
I was 15 at the time. We were not allowed to eat food from the garden or drink milk from the cows. I grew up in the eastern part of germany. I needed to take iodine pills too. You need to know that in communism back then, image of the perfect state, was the most important before the truth. It was a dictatorship. In East Germany was also a rise of Thyroid cancer at the time. 4 of my family got it. But until today there are no statistics. Thank you for your reaction.
@BrianBogiaBricky
@BrianBogiaBricky Ай бұрын
I was 23 years old. This is something you can't forget. So terrible!!
@gottagowork
@gottagowork 21 күн бұрын
What was their age? It matters, because usually kids are the ones who are affected badly. Thyroid cancer is probably not something they even looked for prior to Chernobyl, at least in the adults, so an increase based on increased screening could be a likely source. Not trying to belittle cancer, as it's probably scary for those affected, but many old today die *WITH* thyroid cancer - not from - without ever having had any symptoms from it. As for radiation, I heard you're advised against eating wild boars in Sweden to this day, due to elevated radiation levels in their meat. Probably not super hot particles, but any alpha source is probably not something you want to digest, given that it is 20 times more dangerous than beta and gamma radiation even if it doesn't penetrate anything. Same as neutron radiation, which does penetrate, but also far harder to "produce".
@IulianYT
@IulianYT Ай бұрын
Regarding quarantine - radiation sickness is not infectious like flu or covid. Still, the clothes, and even the bodies of people who were exposed to high doses of radiation are somewhat dangerous, as radioactive particles are still present in the dust which they inhaled, or which got into the clothes. But even so, if the patient got radiation sickness, quarantine is needed, but not to protect the spread of the radiation sickness, but to protect the patient himself, as high doses of radiation destroy immune system, so any "simple" infection with which our organisms deal daily like a piece of cake are dangerous for patients without proper functioning immune system.
@gottagowork
@gottagowork 21 күн бұрын
If exposed to radioactive particles such as dust, you - as a soldier - are thoroughly scrubbed down; first with the uniform/protective gear on, then naked. These guys were exposed to extreme levels and immediately got radiation burns, preventing that procedure. So even if their clothes come off, they could still have super hot particles embedded in their extremities. Those few particles of extremely hot radiation could still be dangerous to those nearby; maybe not to the level of causing acute radiation sickness, but still have long term implications. Read up on what a tiny (something like Ø6x9mm?) pellet of a hot gamma source (Ceasium 137) - embedded in the buildings concrete by accident - ended up doing to its occupants; "Kramatorsk radiological accident". That was only 1800R per year. Later on, when transferred to Moscow, the patients were likely thoroughly scanned; that plastic cover will only stop alpha radiation. So then, I agree, the protection was for the patient. But back at the first hospital before deterioration set it, I'm pretty sure it was to protect those closest to the patients.
@instigatorartworks
@instigatorartworks Ай бұрын
I think it's really good that you're reacting to this and sharing it with your viewers. It's a hard watch but it is still sadly so relevant in our current times. The story of Chernobyl is full of examples to what an autocratic regime is truly like. The fact that the state kept secret the dangers of this melt down from their people just to save face is disgusting. How a government decides to let their people die over ego is mind boggling. It is why information is very important. Experts are very important. Denial is dangerous. Keep on educating yourself and your viewers. It is our history and if we don't know what it is, it will be repeated. Please, if you're of age, Vote.
@cherylsims5636
@cherylsims5636 Ай бұрын
Glad your watching this. The show is historically accurate. i must tell you some things. First they do take film makers license about the effects of radiation. if your at the spot where an atomic bomb explodes you die instantly from the heat. The effects of radiation work much more slowly over days, weeks, months, years. Ive recently learned that immediate nausea does occur but once an exposed person cloths removed and body washed one CANNOT get radiation sickness from them. Now in the Soviet Union all things about Nuclear Energy were classified as Secret by the KGB (Soviet Secret Police) thats why people have no idea how dangerous radiations is, thats why theres no safety equipment and no plans. The MOST IMPORTANT thing to the Soviet Govt is IMAGE. To report and accident is just as bad as the accident itself. Thats why everyone trys to deny. In the USSSR a person also cannot refuse to do what they are told to do. if so you are shot on the spot of sent off to prison.. I must warn you the series emotionally is hard to watch. Be ready to cry and each episode is worse then the next. Also you will not find out exactly how, why and what caused the accident till the last episode. BE SURE YOU WATCH ALL OF THE ENDING CREDITS TOO.. Ok girl onto next one tissue box on the ready
@craiglortie8483
@craiglortie8483 Ай бұрын
based on the real events! watched it unfold on tv over several days and weeks.
@DaisyKmua
@DaisyKmua Ай бұрын
@@craiglortie8483 kind of wish I could see the news footage of the time, but I was 5 lol, little too young back then. They just told us to stay inside one day because of possible "poison rain".
@craiglortie8483
@craiglortie8483 Ай бұрын
@@DaisyKmua look up "Chernobyl on tv announcement" comes up with some of the news from days after the event.
@domainmojo2162
@domainmojo2162 Ай бұрын
I'm African. I can remember my dad had to go to Sweden for work at the time because of some contract, and his company decided to break contract and refused to let em go, cause this happened during the week they were supposed to depart for Stockholm. It was quite shocking- the whole thing.
@brianforrester5693
@brianforrester5693 Ай бұрын
Girl this series is so good but sad 😔 hope you like it!
@DavidMacDowellBlue
@DavidMacDowellBlue Ай бұрын
This is one of the best miniseries I have ever, EVER seen. It is not always accurate. Lots of things have been tweeked for dramatic reasons. Radiation sickness takes longer to manifest these symptoms for example. And Dyatlov was NOT at all the villain portrayed here. He personally checked out the reactor and realized what had happened. He tried to send some people home, but they refused. Dyatlov was a highly respected man at Chernobyl, but became the scapegoat. But the essence of the story is accurate--and horrifying. For one thing, hardly anyone really understood much about radiation. Not ordinary people anyway. The Soviet Union was a place where people lived in constant fear, where obedience to one's superiors was supposed to be absolute, and there was nowhere to run.
@pedrolopez8057
@pedrolopez8057 Ай бұрын
To put it in perspective, no one knew RBMK reactors could explode. They were supposed to be super safe
@myphone4590
@myphone4590 Ай бұрын
It helps to distinguish radiation from radioactive material. Think of a leaking glowstick, that emits a light that gives you very bad sunburn. The light is bad, but tracking the liquid everywhere is worse. It's not visible light so you can't see it, and as with most sunburn you don't know how bad the burn is until hours or days later. And a lot of it is at frequencies most things are at least translucent to, so it doesn't just burn your skin, it burns your organs directly and can make it through your bones to the bone marrow. Being in line of sight of that is bad, and the longer you're exposed the worse it is, but the real problem is the glowstick is leaking (the core is on fire and belching out smoke), and the stuff that's coming OUT is glowing brightly in those frequencies we can't see. And it's getting on everyone and everything. And because they can't see it they're tracking it everywhere, and breathing it so it winds up inside their bodies, and the plume of smoke going up into the air is mixing with the clouds and coming down as rain who knows where...
@frankwitte1022
@frankwitte1022 Ай бұрын
I was 19 when this happened, living in the Netherlands, 1200 miles from Chernobyl. In the days following the accident public health advice was not to collect mushrooms and to avoid long exposure to rain. We had project work to do out in the open, so we got iodine pills and a Geiger-counter with us to monitor if there was any change in radiation levels in the landscape we were working in, no dosimeters available. I still remember the night of April 30th to May 1st, an overnight thunderstorm struck the area where we were camped. We had our counter switched on and nervously observed the counts of the wet ground around us ... luckily all we suffered that night was a lack of sleep. Many far further east were not that lucky.
@apulrang
@apulrang Ай бұрын
On whether or not ordinary people knew the dangers of a possible nuclear accident at a nuclear power plant -- What others say is true. Most people were ignorant of the dangers at least partly because of the Soviet Union's very restrictive control of information and their heavy use of propaganda,. However, my sense is that there was another stream of propaganda that was enthusiastic about nuclear power, which sold the public on how safe it was. And I think this happened in dictatorships AND in freer countries too, including the U.S. In the earlier days of nuclear power, people got very excited about it as a cheap, never-ending, and less polluting source of electricity -- and they either convinced themselves about its safety, or intentionally minimized the dangers because they wanted people to accept nuclear power.
@myfriendisaac
@myfriendisaac Ай бұрын
You are going to be furious with some of these characters 🤦🏾‍♂️😭 24:09 The “why” and “what now” are going to shock you!
@DaveBukowski
@DaveBukowski Ай бұрын
11:40 the thing to remember this is cold war Soviet Union. It was controlled by the Communist Party. Media (news) and education were state controlled. Only government approved information was allowed to be published. This becomes.more apparent in the rest of the show in later episodes. I was 7, turning 8 in a week and I remember the little information we receieved here in the US because of lack of communication from the USSR. Also, in 1986, there was no Internet like we have today. What existed was educational/research networks. So no email, no social media, no chat rooms, nor instant messaging. One big reason why the idea of the current administration of having a "misinformation department" in the government. The government is only has truthful as the people who run it. This is a big thing to worry about on whichever party is in control, Democrat or Republican. Never give them control of the flow of information. 15:23 this is how the Communist Party in the Soviet Union works. They control all information. They believe everything is safe and the government is powerful and perfect.
@RFReactions
@RFReactions Ай бұрын
heyy hun how are you doing love the video.. do you have Netflix?
@_PuckFutin_
@_PuckFutin_ Ай бұрын
This show was banned in Russia, and as you watch the next episodes, you will understand why
@user-yu1bt5go6y
@user-yu1bt5go6y Ай бұрын
Не ври! Ничего у нас не запрещали! Это сериал в открытом доступе! Лжец!!!😡😡😡
@_PuckFutin_
@_PuckFutin_ Ай бұрын
@@user-yu1bt5go6y Запрещали. По телеку его не показали, а только в интернете, и то пиратские копии. Так что не ври!
@_PuckFutin_
@_PuckFutin_ Ай бұрын
@@user-yu1bt5go6y На пропаганду против сериала HBO Чернобыль власти России потратили около 3 миллионов долларов. В 2020 году в сети была опубликована взломанная переписка, которая относится к Агентству интернет-исследований. Эта организация известна как фабрика кремлеботов. Среди переписки содержались мероприятия по контрпропаганде в отношении этого сериала с общим бюджетом в несколько миллионов долларов. Многочисленные площадки, где обсуждался сериал HBO, наводнили тролли, которые выражали негативное мнение по сериалу. Помимо этого Кремль решил снять свой собственный пропагандистский контропроект, которым стал фильм Д. Козловского «Чернобыль». Его прокат в России закончился полным провалом. По мнению экспертов неприятие сериала властями России связано с тем, что в нем критикуется советская система управления, а путинская Россия считает себя наследником этой системы. Опрос, проведенный в России в 2020 году, показал, что сериал Чернобыль понравился 86% посмотревшим.
@arkadiuszskrim9618
@arkadiuszskrim9618 Ай бұрын
It's probably not banned, and besides, there is now a permit for piracy (such sanctions against behavior). Russia does not block films that are inconvenient for it, for example they showed the film "Katyn" which was extremely inconvenient and accusatory for Russians.
@_PuckFutin_
@_PuckFutin_ Ай бұрын
@arkadiuszskrim9618 However, Chernobyl was banned. None of the TV channels in Russia showed it ( Google it) It is only available to watch online, but not on TV
@arkadiuszskrim9618
@arkadiuszskrim9618 Ай бұрын
Then, in 1986, a very oppressive regime ruled in Russia(The area of ​​today's Ukraine, on the border with Belarus) , despite the apparent freedom, nothing could be questioned, party people and the government were right, not professionals and experts. Knowledge about radioactivity was zero, even in a nearby hospital only 2-3 people knew what could happen (they had no gloves, stable iodine tablets, protective masks) Libraries had no books at all about radioactive contamination, nucleoids and the dangers associated with with nuclear energy, this knowledge was prohibited at that time. Only people in the highest positions and scientists knew about the topic. Appropriate equipment (masks, suits, anti-chemical equipment and specialists in chemical and radiological threats appeared only 18-20 hours after the explosion) Moreover, the events and people presented correspond to the truth and true events. The level of ignorance, endangering the civilian population, taking care of one's own interests and promotions, general chaos among decision-makers and incompetence was similar to the chemical disaster in Bhutal (India) There was a thermal explosion with a power of 100 KT, which threw radioactive graphite, Uranium-235 particles and other fragments of the nuclear reactor core into the air, the reactor and actually its core was burning due to the heated uncooled uranium which cannot be extinguished nowadays, this happened powerful radiated emissions (people who looked inside the burning reactor were exposed to about 40 sieverts per hour. In the control room itself there was about 1 sievert per hour. Lethal doses.
@user-yu1bt5go6y
@user-yu1bt5go6y Ай бұрын
Вы не правы! Сериал лживый! Все кому положено было знать о радиации знали о ней ! Проводились учения среди сотрудников АЭС и в ближайших больницах по предотвращению радиационной болезни! Репрессий тогда уже давно не было! А то что всё скрывали и замалчивали для обеспечения имиджа союза это ПРАВДА к сожалению!
@arkadiuszskrim9618
@arkadiuszskrim9618 Ай бұрын
@@user-yu1bt5go6y First of all, don't write to me in Russian, this is an international channel, we write in English here. Secondly: There were no gloves and masks in hospitals, there was only one Geiger counter in the power plant control room (scaled to 3.6) All the information I provided comes from interviews with people who took part in the removal of contamination, from an employee of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant and a nurse who took part in the action from the first day, I know it is the painful truth. If it makes you feel any better, things weren't any better in the US in this respect. Only after 2000 did knowledge and training become widespread. But thanks to the heroic attitude of many people (General Vladimi Pikalov, pilot Nikolai Melnik, Chief Scientist Valery Legasov, Boris Shcherbina, firefighters, miners, Biorobots, the pollution team from Kiev and many others) They saved Europe from death.
@user-yu1bt5go6y
@user-yu1bt5go6y Ай бұрын
​@@arkadiuszskrim9618First of all, who are you to tell me which language to write in?!Secondly, send a link to these interviews! And thirdly, were you there personally and saw everything that happened? And radiation sickness has been known since the United States dropped two bombs on Japan! Learn the story woodpecker 😉
@arkadiuszskrim9618
@arkadiuszskrim9618 Ай бұрын
@@user-yu1bt5go6y I am from Poland, I studied physics, and I have been following the history of Chernobyl from the beginning, and I have also learned about the history of Fukushima. You can find interviews on KZbin, you don't have to look for long. Moreover, I provided the names of all the heroes who had the greatest influence on eliminating the consequences, Russian, Ukrainian and Belarusian heroes. He gave the information in siverts so as not to spoil the series too much. Anyway, thanks for your answer and showing me sensitive data.
@carlox1266
@carlox1266 Ай бұрын
@@user-yu1bt5go6y Radiation sickness was known before that , I think it was an assistant of Edison who was officially the first to die of radiation sickness .
@kellahella5286
@kellahella5286 Ай бұрын
India, you are getting a crash course on the inner workings of the former Soviet Union.
@abrahamguzman3773
@abrahamguzman3773 Ай бұрын
Can I recommend you watch instructions not included!!! Don’t look anything up so you don’t spoil anything for yourself, it’s a comedy written by a famous Mexican comedian and he also stars in the movie please watch it!! I know you’re audience will also enjoy and I hope it will get the movie more fans!! INSTRUCTIONS NOT INCLUDED!!!
@cathyvickers9063
@cathyvickers9063 Ай бұрын
Welcome to the Soviet Union, where State security & compartmentalized knowledge (security clearance level) are infinitely more important than the health & safety of the Soviet people. Propaganda is more important than truth. Propaganda says only capitalist nuclear reactors blow up, not Soviet ones. If a Soviet citizen in an important position refused the way you said you would, you would be arrested for treason by the KGB (State Police), tortured, & finally shot in the head. I remember when this happened. Radiation being airborne meant they couldn't contain it as easily as they could news out of Chernobyl. Europe & the rest of the world heard about this catastrophe as the radiation cloud hit sensors outside the USSR. The US learned about it from Scandinavia. Our newspapers were full of info about Soviet reactors & the spread of radiation. I remember walking on the street of a neighborhood adjacent to mine, in southern Ohio, looking up at the bright blue sky aware of the Soviet radiation high in the atmosphere over my head. There were certain imported foods destroyed by Customs agents to keep us safe.
@Victoratify
@Victoratify Ай бұрын
So what? But there are millions of zombies roaming the US, people are also being killed by hordes of aliens and predators, and Godzilla has already destroyed half the cities. I saw it on TV myself. And a feature film can't lie.
@maryhubbard2889
@maryhubbard2889 Ай бұрын
This is good, but it is sad . Russia wanted to keep everything hush up, please react to the next episode
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