Wow Chernobyl already has us fully invested! to think this is based on our history is insane.. All 5 Episode Reactions are available 4 weeks EARLY and UNCUT over on Patreon! www.patreon.com/spartanandpudgey
@norberto60055 ай бұрын
Hi guys so the thing is people back than didnt know how a nuclear plant works or what is radiation.. thats why they were so careless and easy going liike it was nothing.. :) also it was a communist country no information whats so ever... and u couldn't argue with your supervisors or u might end up in a labor camp.. :D Different world back than especially in Russia and Ukraine...
@Station-Network5 ай бұрын
Without people like Legassow, many of your European channel members would not be here today.....
@ccronk5 ай бұрын
How bad was the schooling in Vic that you were unaware of Chernobyl? Guess standards must have dropped? Spartan, Aussie history isn’t something to just dismiss btw… immigrants like your family benefited from what was offered here… that’s something to acknowledge and be thankful for😊, yeah?👍
@SJ-GodofGnomes215 ай бұрын
I honestly can't believe that you didn't know of Chernobyl, one of the worlds worst disasters of the modern age.... And one of Russia's worst moments. The Iron Curtain and cold war were in full effect and Russia's paranoia and fear of the west caused untold damage.... Don't forget at the levels of Radiation involved being anywhere near meant certain death.
@doctorcorps55905 ай бұрын
You guys should check out the TV show reservation dogs it is a really funny TV show
@nbamaniac5 ай бұрын
"I would just leave, i would just go" oh pudgey and her innocence on how the Soviet Union operates.
@resin8075 ай бұрын
I thought the same thing. 😂 they are probably playing the fool on purpose for the “reaction” . it’s hard to believe anyone can be this ignorant of Chernobyl/the Soviet union. Reaction creators love stating videos claiming “ we honestly have very heard of this” and tilting it “first time watching- “
@MaynardsSpaceship5 ай бұрын
🙄🙄🙄
@grantdillon34205 ай бұрын
I get that vibe from a lot of reviewers, but not them. I've learned to trust my gut and I have a good feeling about them. They were born after the Soviet Union fell and they live in Australia. I think it's perfectly reasonable what they're saying.
@Butzemann1235 ай бұрын
@@resin807i dont think so. They always make it from the start clear if they know something about the series or thematic.
@Mangolite5 ай бұрын
@@resin807Have you heard of the Secret War in Laos without looking it up?
@SonOfBaraki3594 ай бұрын
It's easy to say "oh, they are so stupid" Remember, they didn't have a soundtrack telling them it was dangerous The core was not supposed to explode, it was impossible. they didn't act right, but it was impossible for those in the control room to figure what happened.
@Jmiranda702 ай бұрын
They actually were stupid, the people in charge were experts knew exactly how dangerous the situation was, they chose to deny the obvious thinking the problem could go away or quickly covered up. The civilian population did not know
@iamDemotivationalSpeakerАй бұрын
@@Jmiranda70 they didnt know that the AZ-5 was a detonate button and the core could explode . did you skip the final episode of this series by any chance
@Jmiranda70Ай бұрын
@@iamDemotivationalSpeaker I was talking more about the people in charge after the accident happened
@derangedberger20 күн бұрын
As was said in the beginning, there were worse villains than Dyatlov. But (assuming this is real and not part of the show) there's no excuse for the disregard he paid many warnings. Especially when a capped dosimeter reading doesn't immediately tell you "we need to use one with a higher cap." I have never worked with nuclear in my life and I can tell you that's common sense.
@Jmiranda7019 күн бұрын
@@iamDemotivationalSpeaker no I didn’t skip that part, but even before that, the people in charge knew it was already dangerous to take it to the breaking point on purpose especially when the conditions for the tests were not met and it should have been cancelled but they continued anyway. Just like you’d know not to drive a Honda Civic at 150 miles an hour with bad breaks, just because you have faith that you can pull the emergency break to stop the car
@mrcool73585 ай бұрын
8:56 yep that's the real phone call recording being played
@SweetLou05234 ай бұрын
Its always frustrating watching these reactions when they havent listened to the podcast with Craig Manzin. There is SO much subtlety that went into this show that is often missed.
@mariekeho4 ай бұрын
@@SweetLou0523 People shouldn't have to listen to a podcast before watching a show to enjoy it though.
@dave_h_87424 ай бұрын
When i saw the series for the first time it was a reaction from another person I didn't need a pod cast to understand the different levels going on @mariekeho
@Cassxowary4 ай бұрын
@@SweetLou0523and most people don’t know about that though
@Cassxowary4 ай бұрын
@@SweetLou0523I was a baby from a nearby country around that time and I didn’t even know about the podcast (or the person)…
@Ahzpayne4 ай бұрын
Lack of intellectual curiosity IS lack of intelligence.
@Fydron7 күн бұрын
To me its weird thing how younger people nowadays seem to have zero interest at all what happened before they were born because when me and my friends were kids we were like a sponge towards history and past events. I was only 4 when Chernobyl happened but i still remember that we stayed inside for couple of weeks because all the rain.
@Station-Network5 ай бұрын
That was my first lockdown. I'm from Berlin and we weren't allowed to play outside all summer. Berlin is about 1000 miles away from Chenobyl. We even had to spend our school breaks indoors. As I already knew a lot about physics and chemistry at that time (i was 12 years old), it was quite scary.
@mrcool73585 ай бұрын
So sorry it happened it Must have been scary. I heard many people still get diagnosed with Cancer there is that true?
@Station-Network5 ай бұрын
@@mrcool7358 At least not in Germany, but in Ukraine the cancer rate around Kiev is far higher. However, increased radioactivity can still be detected in wild mushrooms in Germany today.
@marcota94615 ай бұрын
Same in Italy. I was outside anyway, but even as a child, I remember i was scared about those "radioactive winds" I barely understood
@schtrib5 ай бұрын
@@Station-Network in boars too. to an extent
@heatherauton6555 ай бұрын
Similar age in Wales and remember it like yesterday. Growing up during the cold war years was wild. Our local reactor would release enormous amounts of “waste” to avoid melt downs and stay very quiet about it, but after months of weird happenings they would eventually make tiny statements hidden in middle pages of the news. The media would help keep it quiet too. West and East were both adepts of propaganda.
@sweaquitygaming35495 ай бұрын
So many people miss the forest overview scene. The trees are all starting to die along the path of the smoke from the fire, they are still green on either side of it.
@tealsquare5 ай бұрын
It was called the Red Forest after that
@chrismcginnis14074 ай бұрын
@@tealsquare it's still like that today from what I've heard/seen
@G1NZOU4 ай бұрын
@@chrismcginnis1407 Yeah, the worst effected part they felled all the trees and buried them, but for a large part of the area that was still effected but not all of the trees died, they have a problem with in the modern day because the radiation effected small microbial life and insects, causing the wood to not rot down as fast, which puts the area at risk of wildfires. I think back in 2019/2020 there was a wildfire quite near, which they were worried would spread to the most contaminated area and contaminants might get carried with the smoke. When Russia invaded Ukraine they also stupidly dug trenches and camped in the Red Forest, a few of the rooms at Chernobyl where some of the Russian troops stayed have belongings that are contaminated with Red Forest soil, and it's thought many of them were evacuated back to Belarus and Russia with acute radiation syndrome, they didn't heed warnings from the civilian Chernobyl staff.
@chrismcginnis14074 ай бұрын
@@G1NZOU Yeah contaminants being spread by not just smoke but ash as well would be a huge concern if there was a wild fire. I keep hearing people say 'burn them' in reference to the clothes in the basement of the hospital but that would be a horrible idea for the exact same reason. the ash and smoke would carry contaminants wherever the wind went. Kinda sad that with everything we know today, especially from the lessons learned from the Chernobyl disaster, those soldiers didn't heed the warnings of the staff.
@nnelg81394 ай бұрын
@@tealsquare and recently the russian soldiers dug trenches in it, disturbing buried fallout
@veronikatomanova40695 ай бұрын
You need to know, that Soviet union doesn't make mistakes. Propaganda says it. That's why Diatlov refuses to see what has been Done. He really doesn't believe, that something in SU or he could done wrong.
@zammmerjammer5 ай бұрын
He had also survived serious radiation accidents before so I think he actually thought it couldn't possibly be that bad. His generation was shockingly cavalier about the dangers of nuclear power.
@G1NZOU4 ай бұрын
Also the way politics work in the Soviet Union, people in middle positions are determined to pass the buck of blame and try to advance. Really though the series did Dyatlov dirty, in reality he realised quickly what had happened and helped walk around to inspect the exterior, some of the lines of denial were actually from Akimov who didn't believe such a thing could happen, I understand why they did it, they need a more clear villain type character rather than a bunch of relatively more competent individuals who made a mistake based on incomplete info and also complacency about procedure and safety.
@ScarriorIII4 ай бұрын
Communism/Fascism/Socialism is the replacement of a religious deity with the state as god. That's why its perfect and you cannot question it. Of course the state didn't screw up despite evidence to the contrary, you were obviously seeing things. One more reason why Communist insane asylums are full of political prisoners, they're obviously crazy.
@DaveF.4 ай бұрын
It's not quite that straightforward - this was a black swan event - Nuclear reactors do not explode. There was no reason to believe what peple were saying - it simply didn't make any sense. Diatlov was very experienced at his job - and had every reason to trust his own judgement and to assume the impossible thing people were says was impossible. Imagine taking your car to a mechanic and him calling you up to tell you the engine melted. Not caught fire, or exploded, but melted. You'd just assuming he was mad.
@G1NZOU4 ай бұрын
@@DaveF. And they were going off limited information, a closed control room where panels stopped working and the damage control procedures were to keep the core cool and prevent a meltdown.
@woeshaling64215 ай бұрын
To many, history is words and dates on a page. This mini series is a small miracle in not overly sensationalize the events. They still condense a lot for a compelling narrative, but the message survived. We should be thankful for the sacrifice of ordinary people cleaning up the disaster.
@DaveF.4 ай бұрын
Erm - I dunno - what it does with the miners is the very definition of 'overly sensationalize'
@alm5195 ай бұрын
Chernobyl is today actually in Ukraine, and at the time was controlled by the USRR. It's never too late to learn, glad you guys are reacting to this :)
@ladyhotep51895 ай бұрын
USSR
@alm5195 ай бұрын
@@ladyhotep5189 Yes USSR sorry typo !
@Trepanation215 ай бұрын
@@alm519 You can edit comments when you want to make corrections. The function is right there.
@robtintelnot91075 ай бұрын
It was always in Ukraine.
@jesses54635 ай бұрын
@@Trepanation21 Source?
@Griexxt5 ай бұрын
I was 17 years old at the time, living in southern Sweden. The Soviet government tried to keep the accident secret from the rest of the world. But a few days after the accident, personnel from a Swedish nuclear plant on the Baltic coast detected increased levels of radiation in the surrounding areas. Analysis quickly revealed that the radiation didn't come from the local nuclear plant but instead had to have come from the southeast with the winds. The Soviet government eventually acknowledged to the world that there had been an accident at Chernobyl, but the full extent was still kept secret. All of Sweden was affected by the radioactive dust from the accident, but northern Sweden was hit the hardest with particularly a huge impact on the food industry there. Meat from pasturing animals had to be destroyed, and so on.
@darcypenn67025 ай бұрын
I have even read that Swedes were warned off from eating fruit off trees and that a particular berry, forgive me for not remembering which, was only recently declared safe to eat...
@hastrom5 ай бұрын
Growing up in the north of Sweden during this period, and the aftermath, all adults also told us not fish in the lakes and absolutely not eat the fish.
@PeterDB905 ай бұрын
Given that they haven't seen the show and it stays mostly accurate to historical events, it may be best to leave cool personal stories for after the show, otherwise it could be a spoiler :P
@Griexxt5 ай бұрын
@@PeterDB90 Given that I was nowhere near the events depicted in the show, I don’t get what you think my comment spoils.
@PeterDB905 ай бұрын
@@Griexxt I’m referring to Soviet Union trying to hide the accident and other countries discovering that the accident happened because they detected radiation and traced it back to Chernobyl - you literally listed things that happen in the show in the next few episodes, what do you mean that you “don’t get” what your comment spoils?
@konieczny4175 ай бұрын
As a European, not hearing about Chernobyl is like not hearing about the World Trade Center.
@Cassxowary5 ай бұрын
they’re not north american either :p but yah, or the emu war lol
@kylerb26315 ай бұрын
Were you alive during the meltdown? I can still remember the exact place and time I was on 9/11 so I’m curious if you do too
@tilltronje16235 ай бұрын
@@kylerb2631why does it matter if they were alive? They should know about Chernobyl regardless
@Shaesi.5 ай бұрын
To be fair, I'm from Europe and Chernobyl was never mentioned in school. I heard about it regardless, but the education system is lacking.
@rileytruax7665 ай бұрын
@@tilltronje1623 if its not taught in school how can you expect someone to know about it? someone would either have to tell them about it or they would have to by chance see a post on social media talking about it, and thats not gonna happen to everyone in the world. do you know about Halifax?
@thekamotodragon4 ай бұрын
All your questions about their weird behavior can be answered with 1 sentence: It's the Soviet Union. They're all terrified of the consequences of messing up because messing up like this means death, disobeying means death, so Dyatlov is gaslighting because he doesn't want to be held responsible and experience said consequences. Also, you can't just "say no" to authority or leave, because that's also death.
@watchjoy1215 ай бұрын
Pudgey: I'd be walking out KGB: Our bullet wants to get to know your skull
@samuelchallis34205 ай бұрын
Honestly, Siknikov might have been better off going with the bullet compared to what he went through
@hoathanatos61794 ай бұрын
The reality is that they didn't need any threats from the government to make the sacrifices they needed to to save their families and communities. They did what they had to because of their love of those groups.
@caribbeanman33794 ай бұрын
Pudgey: I'd be walking out. KGB: No need, we will carry you out ... go stand against that wall...
@archaeobard14 ай бұрын
You might get out, but your family would be dead.
@andreamuller90094 ай бұрын
@@hoathanatos6179 Yes , they were heros !
@Lance_Arn4 ай бұрын
It disturbs me that so many young people know so little about history, and Chernobyl is such a recent event.
@sp0r264 ай бұрын
Yeah this is frightening to see these oblivious westerners who have absolutely no clue about whats going on beforehand. This must be what its like to be attractive people and having life on easy mode. Cant believe these people are gonna reproduce. They probably dont even know about the soviet union and how the socialism in the soviet union was way worse than the national socialist under hitler.
@TheMilkMan80083 ай бұрын
It isn't a global event of importance. You would learn about it in higher education like Uni classes, bur primary and secondary? If this isn't an important part of your local history, why would you learn it?
@sp0r263 ай бұрын
@@TheMilkMan8008 i learnt it in primary/secondary school. In physics class during the topic of radiation. But i do live in Denmark, so it's closer to home for Europeans than Americans, our government advised the public to not be outside because of the radioactive fallout from Chernobyl. So it's definitely more important for us to learn about, compared to the US where you have never experienced an event like this. I bet most children in Europe learn about it in the formative years of school. We don't have primary/secondary school, most countries in EU have just one school from around 6 years old to about 15, called grade 1-9 or "Folk school" because everyone has to have it, and it's free. Then you can go to "Gymnasium" which is a high school equivalent, and then university like the US, with bachelor and candidate degrees. So it's a bit different in Europe than in the Americas.
@TheMilkMan80083 ай бұрын
@@sp0r26 Yes, I believe that is the thing. The closer you were to the disaster, the more you learned about it. Some parts of Europe were totally unaffected. That is where we see nobody learn it. The same is true with the Americas and such. It makes sense that people don't learn things that aren't big for them. If you were closer to Russia during this and had a real threat of issue or real scare, then you would learn some. If you have a real threat and non hypothetical issue, you learned more. If you were in the range of danger, you learned even more, and so on and so on.
@hannahbeanies88553 ай бұрын
@@sp0r26I learned about it in high school in America. But these two are from Australia.
@jonathanwilliamson29485 ай бұрын
One thing to keep in mind, back then most citizens didn't understand radiation or its effects. The Iron curtain was a real thing. The firemen and authorities responded to something that never happened before, that was not supposed to happen with that type of nuclear reactor.
@technofilejr34015 ай бұрын
In the Soviet Union that is . Outside of it people were pretty aware of the dangers of radiation.
@hoon_sol5 ай бұрын
Let them find these things out as the show progresses. You're kind of spoiling the later episodes.
@RealBradMiller5 ай бұрын
@@hoon_solYeah, they totally dive into that in later episodes. 😮💨🥂😬
@RealBradMiller5 ай бұрын
@@hoon_solSurely they have filmed most of the series so far, but for anyone else who may not know... But honestly, I'm thinking it doesn't really ruin anything
@anitasmith77645 ай бұрын
Ya it’s insane they weren’t prepped for something like this, as in how to deal with it safely! Aka RUN AS FAR AS AWAY AS POSSIBLE AS QUICKLY AS POSSIBLE! Not evacuating everyone in the town immediately IS CRIMINAL
@darcypenn67025 ай бұрын
As an Aussie who teaches high school history, what happened in 1986 in Chernobyl is most definitely included in our curriculum. However, the Cold War is usually a topic of senior schools' syllabus, so if S&P didnt take history as an elective subject, they would've missed this... but really even the young should be aware of global events... Edit: I was 8 yrs old watching this horror unfold on the news at the time, and feeling scared shitless that this occurred and not being able to even understand what it meant for Europe or indeed the rest of us...
@bobbwc70115 ай бұрын
Why is history an elective? In Germany, at least when I went to school, you were obligated to take history until 10th grade in "real school" and until the end in "high school" (12th or 13th grade). Yes, the German curriculum is absolutely crammed but the state tries hard to teach all students a comprehensive knowledge about mankind's history from 20000 BC to now. Other subjects such as geography and biology expand and complete the timeline back to how homo sapiens emerged and further back to 4.567 billion years ago when Earth emerged from the proto-solar disc. History as a subject starts in 5th grade and focuses on the transition from nomadic mankind (hunters and gatherers) to men settling down, with the Sumerians creating the first ever civilisation and high culture. Later, after intense months and years on the history of Germany and Europe, and some brief excursions to the Americas, Africa and Asia, 9th grade arrives in the 20th century. There, German students get bombarded with the chapters Wilhelminian Empire, First World War, Weimar Republic, world economic crisis, fascist dictatorship/Hitler-Germany and Second World War. It is a neverending barrage carried out in other subjects as well. It dominates larger aspects of schooling in 9th and 10th grade, and in the months before the examination at the end of 10th grade there are chapters on the Cold War, on the second half of the 20th century, and on the German reunification. Students who carry on to attend high school will then spent most of their time in the subject history with the trifecta of Wilhelminian period, Weimar Republic and Hitler-fascism again, followed by a substantial amount of time on 1950-2000 and onwards. The difference between middle school and high school is that the history courses in high school typically integrate the subject history with the subject civics and politics (Gesellschaftskunde) while in middle school those remain separated. I personally think it should be illegal to make history an elective. It is one of the most important subjects in school. If people would pay more attention, we would stop repeating the same mistakes over and over again, and younger people would be better enabled to make good choices at the age of 18 when they are allowed to vote for the first time. A lot of teenagers do not know enough about the world, the political parties and the many failures of many political parties and politicians.
@darcypenn67025 ай бұрын
@@bobbwc7011 I couldn't agree with you more! In Australia, education and curriculum are set by state governments. I was schooled and teach in Sydney so under the New South Wales Dept. of Education. Our reactors S&P are Victorians so I can't speak as to what they did or didn't learn. Now in NSW, history is first taught in primary school,Kindergarten to sixth grade. We introduce students to ancient civilisations and cultures around 5th grade (age 10 for most kids) and Ancient Egypt seems most popular. In the 6th grade we teach British/Irish and therefore early Australian history, with emphasis on the aboriginal culture. A recent criticism is that 'woke' teachers are 'black washing' and preaching the displacement of native peoples at the detriment of 'Australian' and white history and culture. High school begins 7th grade, aged 12 or so and junior high school is grades 7 to 10. In yr 7 we teach more English history, with emphasis on the War of the Roses and Tudor England. We introduce histiography and analysis. This is where many students are done with history. In 8th grade they select elective subjects, choosing between History and Geography. Not to malign the subject of geography, but lazier students will have elected this. Their reasoning? 'I won't have to learn dates'... The separation here between History and Geography especially in public schools, comes down to numbers...not enough teachers and not enough money or resources. In the private school system, they can be offered both, but this tradition of history or geography seems to have prevailed, since when I was in high school 1990-1995... Students who continue with the subject in 8th grade will continue learning and honing critical analysis methods. We delve further into ancient civilisations Chinese and Egypt most popular. Then more British Empire...and we now introduce WWI and WWII. In 9th grade they focus more heavily on the wars. In 10th grade post bellum Europe and Cold War, including Korean war and Vietnam. By the 11th grade, you will find you can tell which students enjoy ancient vs modern history. Senior high school is grades 11 and 12. We split the subject into 2 subjects: Ancient History and Modern History. Interestingly few students select both...but this is where we lose a lot of kids who are into history. 11 and 12 grades are for preparation for the Higher School Certificate exams taken at the end of 12th grade and secure entry into university. Many students' parents will have them drop history to concentrate their efforts into so called 'real' subjects like Economics or the sciences. In 11th and 12th grade we focus on The Revolutions, American, French and Russian. This is where they delve further into political and civic concepts. This very long answer (apologies 😂) is very generalised but unfortunately these days, students and their parents are very much looking to take the subjects that are likely to gain them entry into undergraduate degrees of more prestige. Many students call it the Curry 5: taking English, Mathematics, Chemistry, Biology and Physics for their final exams. English is the only compulsory subject and 'Curry' is a slur on students who are the children of Asian and particularly Indian migrants, who tend to push their kids towards medical, engineering and scientific careers. But those of us who love history and love to teach history are also teaching English and English literature. This keeps us in work...the demand for us as educators would be severely diminished if we only taught history unfortunately...and while our education system is nowhere near as broken as say the American public school system, it leaves a lot to be desired, especially in comparison to Western European education standards...in the private schools in Australia it is more on par with you guys and indeed our students will take the international baccalaureate program to attend at least one yr in a European university. Sadly education is becoming monetised here too....
@Gaspar3144 ай бұрын
I don’t think we learned about Chernobyl in school either. Granted, we’re in Asia, and there’s so much Asian history to cover lol. And to add to that all ancient history, European history, up to WWII. But I’ve heard of Chernobyl from other stuff. It’s just a very important event that it would too hard to miss. You must be living under a rock to miss it at all growing up 😂.
@Cassxowary4 ай бұрын
@@darcypenn6702both of you have explained it really well but I hope that your claim to love history and therefore teach english stuff too doesn’t mean you prioritise that over Aboriginal one and the real history of the country (and world) and you’re against those racist beliefs claiming teaching the truth is blackwashing…
@jessbellis95102 ай бұрын
Anyone who took science should've at least had Chernobyl mentioned to them.
@gregpeacock54975 ай бұрын
Hey guys, great reaction! I know you have seen the entire series by this time. One thing I would like to point out, since you both are too young to experience it, but the Soviet Union was a police state. Their socialistic society was "perfect" and anything that contradicted that was classified as a state secret and withheld from the public and anyone who spoke out against it was either jailed or outright killed. The people were never told of the dangers of radiation. Also, the people of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics did not have the right to refuse. Anything.
@gavinderulo125 ай бұрын
It wasn't socialist. It was communist.
@DavidEllis945 ай бұрын
@@gavinderulo12 If we're being technical, the system was socialist. The whole business of state ownership of the means of production is classic, textbook socialism. The Soviet system was ideologically founded in communism in that the goal was to build a true communist society as outlined by Marx but where the socialist system established by the Bolsheviks was to be the transition between capitalism and the intended communist future.
@NHunterRU5 ай бұрын
How nice, that people who never lived in the USSR discuss whether it was socialist. How easy to live with myths about the KGB, totalitarian state and others. Study fucking history, not by the one side - luckily today it is possible. Otherwise, the world will stay black and white.
@MidnightKittehBoi5 ай бұрын
@@DavidEllis94state ownership is the opposite of Communism or Socialism. It was a fascist state.
@DavidEllis945 ай бұрын
@@MidnightKittehBoi That's literally the core of socialism my guy. Central ownership of the means of production.
@RicWalker5 ай бұрын
I was born just a few days before the chernobyl accident. While the whole western world knew practically within 24 hours that something major happened. the sad part is, that all the eastern countries under Russian control like poland, and eastern Germany were not informed and warned until it could no longer be hidden. But by that point my mother was outside with me for extended periods of time because the doctor said all the fresh air would be good for me. I realised what that had done when we had a geiger counter in physics class in school i believe i was 12. The teacher had showed us some natural radiation sources, so it was on the most sensitive settings. when the hour was over i passed the teachers table on my way out. a buddy from west germany passed the table without issues. but when i passed the geiger counter started clicking like crazy. My teacher jumped away from me until he remembered the settings and checked me for real. i have above average radiation emission than other normal humans, but nothing concerning. I will have an increased cancer chance so its now bi- yearly medical checkups.
@Cassxowary4 ай бұрын
soviet not russian and that mess you’re vegan too then?
@RicWalker4 ай бұрын
@@Cassxowary soviet union is just a name for russia and its puppets. until they disbanded after east germany was finally allowed to merge back into germany and the puppets figured now is the time to break free. And no, i love my meat.
@rou_meili5 ай бұрын
This is my country history, my grandparents told a lot of stories about this tragedy, i always get teary. Thank you for the reaction ❤
@Alexandra_Indina3 ай бұрын
Grandparents?! How old are you?😅 It should have been your PARENTS!😅
@rou_meili2 ай бұрын
@@Alexandra_Indina my parents born in 1973 and this tragedy was at 1986, so basically my grandparents know much better this history than my teenage parents back in the days
@Ray565.5 ай бұрын
23:39 I was shocked to see Maester Luwin turn into a sneaky snake just like Pycelle.
@SphericaICow5 ай бұрын
And a big redemption for the Baron Harkonen
@AcidicJazz19995 ай бұрын
Xd@@SphericaICow
@DrFeelgood11274 ай бұрын
He would play a good Anthony Fauci...
@sam040194915 ай бұрын
Living in Australia, I understand that you were not affected by Chernobyl, especially being a young couple. Did you hear about the Japanese earthquake / tsunami that affected the Fukushima nuclear plant in 2011? A reason why there wasn’t a massive disaster in 2011 is because of lessons learnt of Chernobyl. This is a fantastic mini-series, which apparently, is pretty accurate.
@gavinderulo125 ай бұрын
What lessons learned? Don't be an idiot? Don't build your reactor shutdown rods with a material that briefly spikes fission? Chernobyl would not have happened if they either just followed the protocols or didn't build a fatal flaw into the reactor design due to greed.
@RealBradMiller5 ай бұрын
@@gavinderulo12So... There were lessons to ve learned, you just have to word ot in a way that makes you seem more correct than OP. What silliness, Gavin.
@BigMateo244 ай бұрын
@@gavinderulo12 I think I see your point, but none of these are what happened at Fukushima. The problem there was a terrible reactor design that had the control rods raising up from the bottom. When the tsunami hit, it took out power and the back up generators, they were unable to raise the control rods to scram the reactors. I think the lessons learned were how to contain and recover from a nuclear disaster. Fukushima is still an ongoing problem, just like Chernobyl still is today.
@gavinderulo124 ай бұрын
@@RealBradMiller you are right. I'm sorry for being harsh. There are lessons to be learned. I'm just fed up with human incompetence.
@gavinderulo124 ай бұрын
@@BigMateo24 Fukushima and Chernobyl were very different. Imo there was no real flaw in the design nor the procedure of Fukushima. They just completely underestimated the force of nature at it's worsed. And still the earthquake itself claimed way more lives then the powerplant.
@xanaxww5 ай бұрын
Graphite itself isn't radioactive, it becomes contaminated with radioactive isotopes because it is located inside the 'core'
@Lovemy1911a14 ай бұрын
The graphite itself isn't really the big problem. The problem is the graphite is part of the reactor core and if the graphite is on the ground that means the core is now outside of the building, including extremely radioactive irradiated nuclear fuel.
@JDela104 ай бұрын
When the core exploded, fuel rods and fuel pellets containing Uranium and fission byproducts also ruptured and so a lot of radioactive isotopes were literally mixed into graphite that was shot out of the core. That said the depiction of the firefighters hand being basically burned from the inside out in minutes of holding the graphite is unrealistic. A lot of the depiction of radiation and it's effects were off in this show. Good entertainment but inaccurate.
@DavidEllis944 ай бұрын
@@Lovemy1911a1The graphite, itself, will have becoming highly radioactive, itself, because of activation products due to prolonged exposure to very high neutron flux.
@Lovemy1911a14 ай бұрын
@@DavidEllis94 carbon activation is not that big a problem, at least not in context of what else is happening. Yes it happens but C14 has a 5000 year half life so it's not very active and the capture rate of carbon is very low, that's why it's used as a moderator. I will maintain that by far the greatest threat was fission products also blasted from the core. Which would be around, on or in the graphite chunks.
@DavidEllis944 ай бұрын
@@Lovemy1911a1 That's fair, and you're certainly right that fission products could also be an issue since you have a meltdown in this context. Under normal circumstances, when a reactor doesn't melt fown, fission products shouldn't get outside of the fuel cladding. In this case..... yeah you'd get a lot of nasty stuff embedded in the graphite, but when that graphite is exposed to high neutron flux for a long time (I forget how long reactor 4 was active), it's not just that C14 you need to care about, but also the activation products of previous activation products. In much lower concentrations, sure, but they build up.
@mattybob123105 ай бұрын
Never heard of Chernobyl? Ohh dear, get ready for a bumpy ride! Edit for after watching: Remember, when you're calling people Idiots in this Show, this is the Soviet Union (Ukraine), so, the control of the Narrative is paramount above all else, regardless of truth, keep Legasov's openning monologue in mind throughout this show.
@nephastgweiz10225 ай бұрын
How do you get to adult age without knowing about Tchernobyl though 😭
@mattybob123105 ай бұрын
@@nephastgweiz1022 Well they're Aussie, about as far away as you can get from Chernobyl. I'm sure there's a lot of Australian history I am oblivious too, and I like my history.
@zatgeye73205 ай бұрын
@@nephastgweiz1022 the australian education system doesnt teach anything bad about left wing/socialist ideologies.
@aaronderunheilige3855 ай бұрын
@@nephastgweiz1022 i knwow plenty of people who never heard of it i mean its sad but true most people go through life without learning about some events and i come from germany we where effected from the icident
@GentleGiantJason5 ай бұрын
At the time of event the USSR did as much as possible to downplay. Most people knew it exploded but not how bad it was. It wasn’t until recently years after the collapse of the USSR that the details were revealed.
@Reblwitoutacause5 ай бұрын
"This should be fun." Ah, sweet summer child
@fzwilling5 ай бұрын
I was 11 years old when it happened. Chernobly to Frankfurt, Germany is 950 miles/1500 km, we had to stay inside during recess and if it started raining and you were outside on the way home you were supposed to seek shelter immediatly. Since nuclear fallout was a harsh reality during the Cold War and living in Germany meant you were some of the first in a blast zone we allready were aware of dangers ( The Day After in '83, in '87 Die Wolke a book about a nuclear event at a powerplant in Germany was released ). My school was in the event zone for the nearest nuclear powerplant in Biblis, Germany, so in case something happened there we wouldn't be allowed to leave the containment zone anymore. I remember a few of my friends and me participated in anemergency drill playing injured civilians simulating such an event ( decontamination etc. ) around '88 or '89. Crazy times....if you wanna see something remotely similiar in the West, check out the The Mile Island incident in '79.
@laurelg95864 ай бұрын
Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania
@Casey0934 ай бұрын
I was tiny when it happened. My father told be about how parents bought instant milk powder, because they were afraid that mother's milk was contaminated. Just imagine that thought of "we consume contaminated food and water, but at least our children should be save".
@kaenopi5 ай бұрын
"The wise man knows he doesn’t know. The fool doesn’t know he doesn’t know." -Lao Tzu. We are all ignorant to certain things, but a fool doesn't bother and take the time to learn. I wouldn't dare laugh about someone's ignorance, and better late than never to find out about new things. I hope you two enjoy(ed) the show, no matter how dark and haunting it may be.
@salmarwow5 ай бұрын
This. I can only second that. S&P are very fast with their judgement and forget that this is about real life, real events, real people. Well, they are young and naive, who think they know everything. Hopefully, they will learn in time.
@Cassxowary4 ай бұрын
well said and agreed are you two vegan and even activists or even kind to all kind yet then?
@keanancupido5 ай бұрын
Guys just prepare yourselves for one of the most emotionally draining and traumatic show ever 😭
@commander_fu64574 ай бұрын
I remember my older sisters telling me they could not go into the woods to play and everyone was prohibited from picking mushrooms even here in germany cause the particles from the incident came over with the wind and settled with the rain. Radiation is a scary invisible killer.
@sld17765 ай бұрын
"There's graphite in the ground" is a surprisingly scary utterance.
@marchlander13 ай бұрын
You didn't see graphite.
@catperson71653 ай бұрын
You didn’t, because it’s not there!
@samiraja-halli67284 ай бұрын
I'm from Finland. I was 15 when Chernobyl exploded. Finnish military detected radiation 1-2 days after explosion, but kept quiet because of fear of the Soviet Union. Swedes detected the radiation too and soon after that it was top news around the globe. Nuclear fallout from Chernobyl travelled From Ukraine across Europe all the way to Nordics. It can still be detected in our forests, in berries and mushrooms. This is scary shit, while Russia and Ukraine ar at war, there is risk that even more devastating "accident" happens in the biggest nuclear power plant in Europe. That could make large parts of Europe vey toxic.
@big20335 ай бұрын
The collective "ooooh shit" at 14:12 is hilarious as reality as to what's going on starts to sink in.
@ladyhotep51895 ай бұрын
And the follow up "ohhh fuucckk"
@timlois4 ай бұрын
Ahwr shit
@heffatheanimal22004 ай бұрын
It's amazing to see how they're taking it! I've watched a lot of reaction to this series, and researching nuclear disasters has been a hobby of mine for decades. Seeing this through the eyes of people who know zero about it is both wild and fascinating
@laierr4 ай бұрын
a few key points. 1) most of those immediate effects of radiation was there for dramatic effect. it wasn't that obvious for people on site. 2) That was undocumented flaw in the reactor. Crew were clueless of that's really had happened. The situation was way beyond the worst-case scenario. There was no contingency plan for that. 3) The station was on fire; it was the middle of the night, and the situation was truly unthinkable. It was almost impossible to night shift crew assess full scale of the event.
@mareksvacina69285 ай бұрын
What Dyatlov saw when he looked outside the window was the rubble from exploded core.
@mfzgoo4 ай бұрын
Fun fact: Russian Troops Suffer ‘Acute Radiation Sickness’ After Digging Chernobyl Trenches in March 2022. The occupiers received significant doses of radiation and panicked at the first sign of illness. And it showed up very quickly.
@gl15col4 ай бұрын
The Russian troops had also never hear of Chernobyl, it was not something the Soviet government had taught in school. They didn't know what had happened and they had no clue what trouble they were in.
@veo37355 ай бұрын
My uncle was one of the men who went to Chernobyl after the explosion to help manage the aftermath. Even though this series is not entirely accurate, it provides a good insight into this terrifying accident. I hope you enjoy watching it!
@DaisyKmua4 ай бұрын
Ok i couldn't resist replying to Spartan saying "you're bringing a baby to see a nuclear power plant on fore , come on use your brain." This was the 80's, the common knowledge of how radiation works was just not known by normal people, they honesty thought it was just a fire. It's not like they could google it. I was in elementary school that day in Belgium, and we were told to stay inside because a radioactive cloud was coming our way. Even though i I didn't know what that meant as a child it was so scary!
@grebenrA5 ай бұрын
I was 4 in 1986, so I don't exactly remember the disaster, but I was alive for it. I live in Norway, well over 2000 km away from Prypjat, but I know Norway was one of the countries that recieved the most radioactive fallout except from the immediate neighboring countries. The radioactive contamination is still measurable in some areas still to this day, although of course it's thankfully declined significantly over the years. It's insane, the impact that event had.
@savagefleur20245 ай бұрын
I was 21 and was horrified to my soul upon being told by our media in the US what the ramifications would be. I grew up terrified of the nuclear capabilities of the USSR and they were still trying to pass this off as nbd in Russia for weeks after that reactor blew.
@Thule214 ай бұрын
Yeah. And it also heavily affected Reindeers due to them eating moss, lichen and fungi, which absorbed radiaton easily. The Norwegian government allows a _relatively high level of radiation_ in reindeer meat, 3,000 becquerel. To this day, they still monitor radiation levels in many of the Norwegian plateaus. Most affected I believe was the area around Jotunheimen/Dombås and Nord-Trøndelag.
@alanmacification5 ай бұрын
There have been reactor mishaps from the very beginning. It is a very unforgiving technology. The very first core meltdown occurred in 1952 at Chalk River, Canada. One of the technicians who helped with the cleanup was future US President Jimmy Carter. He was in the US Navy and was one of the few people on the planet certified to enter the reactor room. BTW. The cleanup was done " by the numbers " and nobody was hurt. All involved had to submit body fluid samples for the next 5 years.
@ravensdark995 ай бұрын
This is one of the best series of all time...EVERY actor was brilliant in any role in every episode. Also I want to add something: I have been to the Chernobyl museum in Kyiv as well to the radiation zone to Prypjat and that is the single scariest sh*t I have done in my life...the series captures the fear and horror really well..but reality is far worse...the fact that you cannot see or taste the danger..it is really scary...once you have seen this your view on nuclear tech as well as bombs changes completely and I urge everyone to research on the matter because it can affect us all and we went THAT close on being fcked..so we must prevent that in the future at all costs..They have pictures of people who died there not knowing whats going on and of those liquidators...I cant forget their faces and eyes looking at me from pictures...
@gavinderulo125 ай бұрын
Since you watched the show it must be clear to you that chernobyl was caused by a mixture of extreme incompetence and a severely flawed reactor design. And even still it caused only about 50 casualties. That's less than fossil fuels cause each year. If you look at the stats it's quite apparent that nuclear energy is the safest and cleanest energy source we currently have.
@blinkachu52755 ай бұрын
@@gavinderulo12 It did not cause "about 50 casualties" That's the propaganda number DIRECTLY it may have caused that few, but its lasting effects on tens of thousands of people cannot be ignored
@cam7945 ай бұрын
@@gavinderulo12this comment might take the cake for being the brain dead comment ever. I never thought I’d see someone actually believe only 50 people died from this. You watched the show then believed the Soviet Union? You learned nothing from watching this then.
@gavinderulo125 ай бұрын
@@cam794 those are the UN numbers. The propaganda is all of the nuclear fear mongering. You believe a drama series over official United Nations numbers and I am the idiot?
@gavinderulo125 ай бұрын
@@cam794 you believe a drama series over the official United nations number? The propaganda is all of the Nuclear fear mongering.
@atuuschaaw5 ай бұрын
Great to see y'all watching this wonderful documentary! Happened in 1986 and today there are still over 2,000 square kilometers of land that's restricted due to high levels of radioactive contamination. Horrible catastrophe! ♥
@gavinderulo125 ай бұрын
This is definitely not a documentary. It has a ton of inaccuracies. Also, look up the radiation levels in that zone. It's completely safe now.
@jerthon15 ай бұрын
This is a True Horror Show, What makes it scary is how much of it is true. Obviously the show took some Creative licenses but for the most part they stuck to History as much as possible.
@lizgreer68884 ай бұрын
Yes my husband studied every facet of the Chernobyl tragedy at the US Naval Nuclear school. We heard about the show from his fellow Nuclear sailors who gave it rave reviews. According to my husband, this is the most accurate nuclear based show he's ever seen.
@TheXephyr334 ай бұрын
Person from northern Sweden here. To this day, wild boar in Sweden are still checked for radiation levels within the meat, and once in a while you hear of cases where the levels found are still INSANELY high. (Boars forage for food, especially mushrooms etc, so they absorb a lot of it)
@Cassxowary4 ай бұрын
those poor angels, hopefully you don’t partake in that and have access to real food
@formatique_arschloch3 ай бұрын
Mushrooms here in Finland still have radiation. Not dangerously high, but it's there. When this happened the authorities recommendend not to eat mushrooms and berries for the next couple of years.
@formatique_arschloch3 ай бұрын
@@CassxowaryI guess that in one of the wealthiest nations on the planet, they have access to many sorts of food 😂
@keanancupido5 ай бұрын
Remember, this was during the time of the Soviet Union, so they tried to prevent this information from spreading to the rest of the world, because that would have badly impacted the S.U. It explains so much when you have this in mind when you watch on.
@AJ-jf7cl5 ай бұрын
Tell us the truth. You researched the subject, didn't you?
@keanancupido5 ай бұрын
@@AJ-jf7cl I didn't honest. My friend and I had a deep discussion of this and the Union after we both watched it. Plus those things are taught here in history classes
@Kunoichi4ever43 ай бұрын
Fun fact is you look at the Ukraine radiation map, you can still very easily see where Chernobyl happened. Another fun fact, thanks to the war we get a fire here and there near nuclear plants even these days ...so if you are Easter European, the fun enver stops. We just had a nice scare a few days ago. Additionally, to be fair to all of them in the Chernobyl story, it is hard to accept something that scientifically by then was seen as impossible, and not only accept that, but also accept you are dead and probably everyone around you is gonna die the worst possible death...Honestly, I d be in denial too probably, which is why I d never take that job, coz I doubt I d be able to process something as horrible and act accordingly.
@rozau.24045 ай бұрын
My mum told me how after the reactor explosion the authorities in Poland gave iodine to children. A lot of women, including my aunt, had miscarriages and a lot of children got cancer. After the Russian attack on Ukraine, the local authorities immediately ensured that iodine was stocked for citizens just in case. They literally wrote about it in the newspapers to reassure elderly residents.
@ladyhotep51895 ай бұрын
😒
@caballeroPL5 ай бұрын
I was one of these children. It's one of my earliest memories going with my mom to our local hospital in Poland to drink the iodine solution. I was 4 really hated the whole experience.
@AJ-jf7cl5 ай бұрын
And you got brain cancer. So sad
@rozau.24045 ай бұрын
@@AJ-jf7cl I don't really understand the comment... According to you I have a brain disease because I mentioned the giving of iodine by the authorities?
@kylecedrickgraciano97435 ай бұрын
@@caballeroPL are you ok now?
@user-wb2tm3hv8w5 ай бұрын
As a former USSR citizen I'm amazed at how great the decorations are
@ray240515 ай бұрын
One thing about first responders like firemen they will rush into danger without giving it a second thought. Just like during 9/11 all the firemen that went to the towers. My childhood next door neighbor was one of the firefighters that went into the building that day and never came out.
@Victoratify4 ай бұрын
There was no one on the mythical “bridge of death” at the time of the accident. It was late at night. Immediately after the accident, a radiation survey of the nuclear power plant and the city of Pripyat was organized. There was no radiation on the bridge at night yet. During the day, the bridge was generally closed to the public. So no one was there and no one died from it. But the screenwriters need more blood, more deaths, more suffering - after all, this is a film about the bloody Soviet Mordor.
@patrikneperfekta75755 ай бұрын
Sounds insane to me, that a school wouldn't cover it, but then... I live in a country that was affected by it so, of course we covered it.
@killerbas405 ай бұрын
It is insane, im as surprised as you are. This should be mandatory education next to lessons about the cold war
@samueljones66995 ай бұрын
@@killerbas40yeah in my school (Wales) we learned about Chernobyl and the aftermath of it as we were learning about the Cold War and the potential of nuclear conflict.
@megageek85095 ай бұрын
I went to school in Australia in the 80’s and 90’s. We learnt about it as part of social studies / history.
@alem905 ай бұрын
I live in Peru and know about this. I thought everyone knew.
@Shaesi.5 ай бұрын
I live in Spain and my school didn't mention Chernobyl at all. I heard about Chernobyl through documentaries and such.
@flanker62125 ай бұрын
30:40 "Luscious, green.." the orange colour of the forestis the radiation ionizing and killing the trees, hence why they're all only orange underneath the cloud of smoke. Neat touch. The music is incredible. All of the music in this show was composed from sounds made inside a nuclear reactor - the composer went to various nuclear power plants around the world and recorded the machinery, pumps, bellows, screeching sounds etc.
@ray240515 ай бұрын
When those three guys went to look in the reactor all that smoke and steam is basically radioactive it was radiation going right through their bodies. At that moment that was the most dangerous place on the planet.
@technofilejr34015 ай бұрын
Exactly they were looking at something no human being is ever meant to view with their naked eyes
@rickcoona4 ай бұрын
@@technofilejr3401 most of them didn't live long enough to tell anyone... the KGB is so proud of the way the reactor silenced those who would counter the narrative of the central government
@tomatinitomatini45135 ай бұрын
I grew up in Poland where the disaster happened nearby, and for me, Chernobyl has always been associated with radiation, mainly because of that disaster (which I didn't live through, but I learned about from school and my parents' stories). The first time I learned about the existence of radiation was because of this event.
@sankharaYT5 ай бұрын
"What is wrong with people?" Soviet Union. That's what was wrong.
@bambusbjorn35085 ай бұрын
you can generalize that to communist and socialist systems
@flavinhofortino84835 ай бұрын
Gorbatchov's Soviet Union*.
@zh21845 ай бұрын
One would think that people would evolve from this Soviet (now Russian) mindset of a strange cultural pride in total obedience and generational sacrifice - but they mostly haven't. The proof is in the fact that Russian troops went into the Chernobyl zone two years ago and dug into the irradiated ground during their invasion of Ukraine, and how the Russian army mindlessly charge to their deaths today in so-called 'meat wave' attacks in Ukraine.
@sankharaYT5 ай бұрын
@@zh2184 Exactly. It's horrifying.
@Antoine-du5qo5 ай бұрын
@@zh2184 get off the internet, buddy, you're spitting some fiction
@JC1306764 ай бұрын
Some "fun" facts: there was a reference about shining floodlights. People indeed saw a blue beam shining up in the sky, but that was actually radiation from the exposed reactor core making the atmosphere glow. The amount and the intensity of the radiation released are incredible. The reactor may have gone up to a 100 times it's rated power and the only reason it didn't get even worse, is that the reactor blasted itself apart. The core got so hot, it burned through 2 meters / 7ft of reinforced concrete. The area around the melted blob that was once the reactor core is the most radioactive place on Earth and even today it's so dangerous, that going near it for 5 minutes leaves you a mere 50% chance of surviving the next few days. The second most radioactive place is the basement of the hospital in the nearby town of Pripyat, where they dumped the clothing and equipment of the first responders. Very few of them survived for more than a year.
@heffatheanimal22004 ай бұрын
Reminded me of a very dark joke: a Soviet news reporter appears on the television. "Comrades, we bring you good news! Early this morning the V.I. Lenin Nuclear Power Plant in Chernobyl, Ukraine SSR achieved it's 40 year target for energy production in 0.1 seconds!"
@Ryan-km7kd5 ай бұрын
omg house of the dragon, stranger things, and chernobyl all in your rotation at once? this is the best day of my life.
@brass4274 ай бұрын
I live in Switzerland and the days after Chernobyl were the most helpless. In Basel, there was a banner that said "Danke Russland für das strahlende Wetter", a double-meaning word 'Strahlen' can mean 'wonderful weather' or 'radioactivity'. Weird days.
@kappa_065 ай бұрын
"I've honestly have never heard the term of Chernobyl untill this show" I'm 38 year old. I was born the month Chernobyl explode!! So basicly I have the exact same age the baby we saw on the bridge
@missteeny16385 ай бұрын
I was familiar with this event and I still learned a lot from this series. Just embrace the ride. It’s a mind-opening one.
@yasmina39995 ай бұрын
So surprising! I live next to this place and many of my patients' friends and even my physics teacher used to live in Chernobyl and would tell me stories about this period. Horrible times.
@JulioVirrueta5 ай бұрын
I found this show almost by accident when it aired, my friends and I were watching GoT and it just came out... soon it became the show we were looking for every week, I hope you guys enjoy it. “Every lie we tell incurs a debt to the truth. Sooner or later that debt is paid.”
@akizaizinskii5 ай бұрын
How have you never heard of Chernobyl? 😭 It’s one of the most known human disasters in history. It’s up there with Titanic and World War II in terms of recognizability.
I wouldn’t say WWII level. But I’d say it’s just bellow Titanic. A lot of people can’t remember the name of the event so they forget 😂
@keanancupido5 ай бұрын
Not everyone heard about it
@ravensdark995 ай бұрын
I think it is not a bad thing if you dont know about those things, because you made an effort to learn it now and show interest..even if a tv show guides you to it. So you should be commended on not to stay on status quo but to expand knowledge
@Haplo-san5 ай бұрын
It is understandable. There are immediate reasons comes to my mind how you can heard of Chernobyl: 1) you lived in the time of event, 2) you live somewhere close so the aftermath was long lasting and people who lived in the time of event like your parents kept talking about it time to time for reasons like increased rate of thyroid cancer cases in the Blacksea region, 3) you heard from a video game, 4) you heard from a some youtube content like Kyle Hill or Veritasium and Tom Scott etc because they have talked about it or visited the site. 5) you have a special interest for history of radioactivity, nuclear energy etc. I can checkmark 4 out of 5 right away, so that's how I do know about Chernobyl even if I did not lived in the time of event. But I did never heard about Chernobyl in history classes. And I don't think there are history classes teaching about Chernobyl unless you are from Ukraine or your history class is specialized on history of USSR/CCCP.
@zf57825 ай бұрын
One thing you have to keep in mind: All the things that we know nowadays about the dangers and effect of radioactivity, came only after and partly BECAUSE of Chernobyl. So you can't really blame the ordinary people for not knowing some things that might seem common sense to us now.
@Triskaan5 ай бұрын
Still holding out hope you watch Black Sails one of these days, but Chernobyl is one hell of a show in the meantime. :)
@Trepanation215 ай бұрын
The real magic of this production is how riveting the depiction is. It feels exhaustive and emotional watching through every. single. episode.
@jeanninebello94155 ай бұрын
This is an amazing miniseries. Looking back at cold war USSR and how the world and the russian people were kept in the dark, even to this day. I was in high school when this happened and I remembered a lot of this. My son and I watched this together and he thought it was based on a fiction novel. I had to explain the time and the world to him.
@notbubu5 ай бұрын
One thing to add to what everyone's been saying, this series was written and created by Craig Mazin, who went on to do the excellent Last of Us adaptation that I know you guys have enjoyed so far. It's funny because before writing this, his career was just not particularly well-regarded comedies like the later Scary Movie films and Hangover sequels.
@kaleidoscope19915 ай бұрын
This show is truly horrifying. The events that could have happened are a bit exaggerated but still chilling of nuclear accidents. Nice reaction
@tealsquare5 ай бұрын
Most of it is actually tonned down
@Jimmie_Rudolfsson5 ай бұрын
@GanzBestimmt You should read up on that..
@neilpatrickhairless3 ай бұрын
It's wild to think that there are people alive now that never remember this. I feel old AF and I was only born a few years before the Chernobyl incident
@BoredOnlineBoardOffline5 ай бұрын
Oh hell yeah. SO thrilled y’all are reacting to this one. One of my favorite “based on a true story” shows ever. The fact y’all know NOTHING is even better!
@danielkarlsson2585 ай бұрын
It's amazing how you say "you're an idiot you don't bring your kids there" when at the same moment showing that you have absolutely no clue about radiation. The only reason you said that was because of the show showing the ashes and playing sad music. And this was almost 40 years ago. It's ok to not know stuff and learning about it, but don't call people ignorant when showing five times the ignorance yourselves. This is a great show though and you will truly learn a lot. Keep it up!
@SpartanandPudgey5 ай бұрын
You know when you're watching a horror and you're yelling at the screen, but if you were in the position you'd be none the wiser... same, same. We just really got into the show
@astrojeet5 ай бұрын
Australian education system must be in a really bad way if you have never even heard about Chernobyl. What next, never heard about 9/11? It's just wild lmao
@madelinebell50465 ай бұрын
I’m Australian and I’m super confused as to how they’ve never heard of it. 😂 I definitely learned about it at school and I’m a similar age to these guys.
@darcypenn67025 ай бұрын
I posted myself about this: I'm an Aussie, a history teacher and we DO teach Cold War history etc .. IDK how it was missed by some..
@AJGeologyRocks5 ай бұрын
It's not. They just think history is boring because they are bogan.
@Molda225 ай бұрын
of course they know about it, they just have to have some "excuse" so they can say they are reacting blind, they never seen it, they never heard about it, they know nothing about it as with every other tv show or movie. People are so naive.
@AllMenMustServe4 ай бұрын
@@Molda22 I knew about this obviously. But the show didn't get less interesting because of it. In fact, me knowing about the event, actually made the series even more interesting. So I really don't think there's a reason to lie over this specific TV show. If they did though, they definitely didn't need to.
@stefanlindkvist49945 ай бұрын
Yes, Chernobyl! Great show, great acting and absolutely terrifying! I live in Sweden and heard about this as a child, but didn't understand the reality of it until i grew up. I felt really uneasy watching this because it really happened.
@NBD965 ай бұрын
Fully grown adults never having heard about the Chernobyl disaster is almost unfathomable to me 😮
@jesses54635 ай бұрын
Why?
@Moondragon18214 ай бұрын
I'm 34 and had heard of Chernobyl but didn't understand exactly what it was or how bad it was until this show. I was horrified watching this mini series. I've only watched it once and even watching this condensed reaction is rough. Spartan and Pudgey have no idea what they are in for.
@juliochan21125 ай бұрын
5:00 The actor who plays Valery Legasov(Jared Harris)is the son of late actor Richard Harris, who plays Dumbledore in the first 2 films
@bluehope425 ай бұрын
And he's great in Foundation. Time for some more sci fi in this channel! And then let them do Silo (Rebecca Ferguson Dune connection!)
@kikyob24735 ай бұрын
This is one good series. I am a bit surprised, that u didn't actually heared about Chernobyl, but I can understand, that it is something on the other side of the world for you. I am from the middle Europe and this event affected many countries here, so it is common knowledge, although this happened 4 years before my birth. About the radiaton effect, in this series it is a bit faster, than it would be in real life I think, but except that, it is quite accurate. And don't forget that those people lived in different political regime. They had no informations, so they really weren't aware of the danger. They had no idea what happened at that point.
@Dimmie19764 ай бұрын
Chernobyl was part of my childhood i was 10 years and raised up in Vienna (Austria) from one day to the other it was not allowed to play outside in sandboxes,eat mushrooms,deer because the radiation was to high
@aruaerian5 ай бұрын
I'M SO HAPPY YOU'RE DOING THIS TV SHOW IT'S AMAZING GUYS i hope you'll like it!!
@55tranquility5 ай бұрын
Chernobyl and the town of Pripyat are in Ukraine, in 1986 Ukraine was a constituent republic of the Soviet Union. The events portrayed are the Ukraine (UKSSR) and Russia (RSFSR) both republics within the Soviet Union. Ukraine or Ukrainian SSR was governed by the Communist Party of the Soviet Union through its republican branch, the Communist Party of Ukraine. So yes this set in the Soviet Union, each republic being one party Soviet socialist economies, free speech, freedom of information and state surveillance being very different to what we in the West experience. Interestingly it was Gorbechovs reforms; Perestroika - restructuring and Glasnost - opening and transparency that played a significant role in the rise of nationalist and separatist movements in the republics and the eventual dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 and ending of communist party rule. On 25 December 1991, Gorbachev resigned as the President of the USSR, declaring the office extinct. He turned the powers that had been vested in the presidency over to Boris Yeltsin. That night, the Soviet flag was lowered for the last time, and the Russian tricolour was raised in its place.With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Ukraine became an independent state.
@rutgerdejong16605 ай бұрын
Chernobyl is in Ukraine and it is still radioactive to this day in such an amount that the entire zone around it is still locked. The reactor is even encased in a huge dome to contain the radiation. It is very tricky with the war going on in Ukraine at the moment because at one point they were bombing/fighting very close to the reactor.
@gavinderulo125 ай бұрын
The zone does not have any harmful amount of radiation anymore. There still are some contaminated items there but you can visit with out any issues. Did they actually fight there during the current war? What for? And the building is made to withstand all kinds of bombs.
@stevenstone3075 ай бұрын
@@gavinderulo12 Dude have you seen the pictures of the recently released Chernobyl workers? They look like holocaust victims. Typical Russian prisoner treatment.
@blinkachu52755 ай бұрын
The zone itself doesn't have much radiation, it's comparable to the natural radiation in my country (held a dosimeter in my country and in the zone) There are certainly areas *within* the show that are still radioactive, and of course underneath the confinement built for Plant 4 there's still a ton of radiation.
@wildpendulum5 ай бұрын
@@gavinderulo12Chernobyl nuclear plant is still operational, so they were fighting for control of it
@gavinderulo125 ай бұрын
@@wildpendulum I don't think this is true. None of the reactors are running.
@pamurai35705 ай бұрын
I'm glad you're watching this. Like you said, there's a fair bit of dramatization, but overall the turn of events is accurate, as well as the portrayal of the politics, fashion, furniture, etc. I was born in Sweden 2 months after the incident, and my mum was especially terrified for how it might affect me while I was in her womb. She spent a lot of time hiding away in an underground storehouse (jordkällare), hoping it'd be enough to dampen any eventual effects of radiation. Imagine being heavily pregnant and being too scared to be above ground...
@blinkachu52755 ай бұрын
One of the few actually cool things to note: The composer, Hildur Guðnadóttir, used actual sounds from nuclear reactors for the soundtrack for this show
@Cassxowary5 ай бұрын
*not-so-fun fact*, the guy who played Alexei in Stranger Things is from nearby Kyiv/Kiev and was born only like 3 months later but he thankfully got to move to the uk (a whole decade later though in 96 at age 10…) and didn’t have to grow up there, 10 years is still a lot though… I was in a nearby country and I felt it (I was too little too remember but I was told) so imagine people like his fam 95km away!😬 thankfully they’re elsewhere now though and hopefully they’re alright
@Cassxowary4 ай бұрын
I meant almost 2 earlier (march 1st), my bad, but either way…
@joey15475 ай бұрын
For me this shows is similar to “Requiem For A Dream” I gave both of them a 10 but I don’t want to experience them ever again
@darcypenn67025 ай бұрын
Well put!
@rickcoona4 ай бұрын
the director refuses to consider the fact that the Reactor Core EXPLODED! in his mind it is just an issue of water not flowing into the reactor in his mind the reactor is still intact now blown to chunks with the Rods actually ON FIRE! THe core was made from *GRAPHITE* (like pencell leads) NOT METAL
@sankharaYT5 ай бұрын
That you don't know what the show is about is FANTASTIC for a reaction video! Just paused to say this. Now, onto the actual reaction! 😅 Don't sweat not knowing about Chernobyl. There's so many gruesome historical events many people don't know about. I only recently learned of Japan's WW2 unit 713. And I only learned about the Tulsa massacre through the HBO show Watchmen. And that's coming from someone who has a history degree. 🙃
@KayoMichiels4 ай бұрын
My dad worked at the Nuclear plant in Doel Belgium back in the day... one day they came in and the radiation alarm went off.. they had to go to the shower and wash everything.. after testing it was determined that the radiation came from outside... Dad called home and ordered everybody to stay inside and close the windows... a couple of days later.. Chernobyl was on the news.. Some time later.. my dad was drinking coffee and a good friend of his, his dosimeter went off! (He works as a pipe inspector and they all have a geigercounter because they take X-ray pictures of the pipes to inspect them.) It turns out that the milk in this coffee that came from Germany was radioactive..
@bambina56045 ай бұрын
This is 86 and Soviet Union, regular people didn't know about the dangers of a fire in a nuclear power plant or about radiation.
@dunbar9finger4 ай бұрын
It always bugged me in this show how the script keeps referring to the higher range dosimeters as the "good" ones. There's a good reason for most of them being low range ones. They're not bad ones for it. Their purpose is for daily precision readings where a high range dial would be useless to read since the difference between 0 and 3.6 roentgens would only be a millimeter of movement on a needle dial designed to cover a range up to say a thousand roentgens. On an analog meter like that, ability to read high numbers comes at the cost of inability to be precise. So they only need to be used for unusual situations.
@charlesbarnes69125 ай бұрын
Gorbachev is quoted as saying that the Chernobyl disaster is what brought down the USSR.
@Overlord7344 ай бұрын
Not really. USSR used about 1% of its GDP on Chornobyl disaster. It surely didn't help though.
@thecroc3 ай бұрын
@@Overlord734it's not just the money, but the loss of credibility.
@kamilkrupinski17933 ай бұрын
People discovering the Soviet Union and its way of doing things are so fun to watch.
@sammanacer5 ай бұрын
I think you guys are gonna learn a bit about soviet Russia and how mental it was, no one wants to become privy to or have to pass on any information to higher ups that makes the Soviet Union look bad cause they will silence that information whatever it takes
@redcardinalist4 ай бұрын
Love that you're reacting to this series! The symbolism of the bird dying at the end whilist the kids pass by is that radiation affects the smallest creatures first; birds, mice, cats, dogs, children...
@sagan6665 ай бұрын
Pudgey - I don't think two way communication works very well in a totally communist state. I love your innocence 🙂
@BesoffenerIslamist4 ай бұрын
"innocence"...yeah, that's how you can call it lol
@hablamosmalinois97674 ай бұрын
In November 1986 i went to a nuclear medical center. Before entering the hot room my friend activated the geiger counter. It went berserk. We panicked thinking it was a radioactive leak. The technician calmed us a bit. It was "only" the residual radiation of the grass they tested 10 days earlier. This was in Brussels the other side of Europe.
@ane99114 ай бұрын
Not knowing anything about Chernobyl is like not having a clue about 9/11 or having no idea who won WW2
@Пень1Бук14 ай бұрын
What do you know about 911? Also, how do you know about Chernobyl from such a pseudo-documentary? 0 information about the incident, the main thing is to shed tears to the viewer, put pressure on emotions, and during this period blame whoever is profitable. psychology...And there is already so much distorted information about the Second World War. The Japanese believe that the USSR dropped atomic bombs on them, given that it did not yet have these weapons.
@forzabarca23534 ай бұрын
@@Пень1Бук1 интересно, тут только от наших адекватные комментарии можно встретить?))
@hdk-20243 ай бұрын
It really isn't. Stop exaggerating
@bigsarge87954 ай бұрын
I live in the USA, and I was 14 when this happened. I've watched this four or five times through. Get ready for an emotional roller coaster.
@elliot86175 ай бұрын
Don 't think I could have clicked on this any faster
@jillronan67865 ай бұрын
It’s definitely not your fault that you don’t know more about history, I’m a huge history buff but honestly 90% of the stuff I know, I learned as an adult from movies, tv and documentaries. I would LOVE if you guys delved more into some good historical series and movies!
@TechnicallyTexan5 ай бұрын
Same.
@krakulandia4 ай бұрын
Movies and TV-shows are a really bad place to learn about history as most of it are heavily modified versions which in some cases give almost completely opposite idea of how things happened and who were to blame. Hollywood has filled their productions with propaganda for most of its existence.
@prico33584 ай бұрын
A gas station company gasoline reserves was sabotaged years back in my country and blew up. I heard the boom cities away. Me and my boys drove there, and people were camping with chairs and picknics just like the show. The sky was red. It looked cool. When i got back home, i got really sick for days, a sore throat and hard breathing. When i saw this show i remembered that, and how stupid i was. People really do that. Without thinking of the chemicals and danger. This show made me give thanks it was just gasoline, and not something else.