During the real events they sent two lead-shielded APCs full of radiological protection specialists to measure the radiation levels near the building 4. General Pikalov was in one of those vehicles, but he wasn't alone.
The guy survived the battles of Moscow and Kursk. Radiation would be scared of him. He knew what he was going into and what he was going to have to send his men into,so he went in first.
Regular-ass people having to save their fellow humans from a nightmare, I'm glad they did and I'm glad that one of the main takeaways from this series is that these people, the small heroes, did borderline impossible things because it HAD to be done.
it pains me a former ussr citizen that just cause ww2 stalin era and cold war propaganda so many people dont get respect in ussr....40mil dead in ww2, who know how many in stalin purges, then chernobyl and all we see is hate... now new hate wave cause of russian war too... shame. so many achievements and heroes lived in ussr, yet they are forgotten outside former ussr countries.
So many large heroes it should be. I was a teenager in Germany the time that happened. If the Ukranian worker (seen in later episodes) and the other russians wouldn't have sacrificed themselves to stop this, I, my familly, my friends, no one would be here anymore. This would have destroyed most of Europe, made it uninhabitable for thousands of years. So I thank these people again. And it's also why I'm so vehemently against nuclear power plants.
It's not actually true, though. Early in our planet's history there would have been naturally occurring nuclear fission everywhere. The last natural self-sustaining nuclear reactor on Earth we have proof of ran for hundreds of thousands of years and stopped about 1.7 billion years ago in Africa. There may have been others more recently we just haven't detected. Maybe some still running. And in the core of our planet there is a massive amount of radioactive decay going on. About half the Earth's heat comes from natural fission. You could say that geothermal energy power plants are just nuclear power plants of another kind. And volcanoes are naturally-occurring nuclear disasters deep underground.
It has happened naturally long before humans were around. There's a place in Africa where they know natural nuclear fission happened 1.7 billion years ago. When they first discovered this uranium deposit they thought someone had been stealing it and selling it on the black market because the percentage of U235 was slightly below what naturally occurs. They soon figured out it was a natural nuclear fission plant. It is the only one that has been discovered to date, but the theory of their existence has been known since the 50s.
Please don't feel badly or stupid for crying - when I watched this a few years ago, I FULL ON ugly sobbed, from start to finish of this show. I'm talking snot running, gasping for breath, hiccuping, the works. Because it was a true story, and most of what they showed actually happened. It's a devastating series showing a devastating disaster.
You are right. In fact, what is shown in this show in terms of the consequences of radiation poisoning is a light version of the real thing (yes, including that one dreadful episode). Also, the locals were told they would be able to return soon, so they left with barely one suitcase worth of clothes. Imagine having to leave your home, your family home for generations, and having to start over with absolutely nothing. Also also, in real life, the three men who had to open the valves had zero lighting at all. They operated in pitch-black darkness and on their memory of the building and touch alone.
In the scene at the bar, he wanted the other glass because it was upside down, not exposed to the dust in the air. He was trying to limit his exposure to radioactive material as much as possible
The level of radiation in the town, it wouldn’t have made any difference. But it’s clever that they show that because even when we know something is futile we as people will still cling to our habits even if it just only for peace of mind. It’s a very subtle gesture but I’m glad they included it because it shows his state of mind and emotions and it really humanizes the story. It’s really smart that they included that 😎🍻
@@neptunusrex5195 It makes a little difference, yes your body is still absorbing rays from the contamination around you but having radioactive dust in your digestive system next to your delicate organs is even worse. The most harmful radioactive particles are very short range and most can get stopped by your skin, but cause more damage if they're being released by radioactive substances inside you.
Scary part about the 15,000 rontgen reading is I've heard that wasn't even the actual reading; it was the maximum THAT meter could read, too. 3.6, 200, 1000, and 15,000. It literally maxed out every meter they scanned it with.
The 3.6 Roentgen dosimeter was capable of measuring up to 1 milliRoentgen per second, which would be more than enough in any day to day operation of a nuclear power plant. Anything close to that value would indicate a major leak of radiation.
@@lionhead123 Certainly not mobile ones. And there's a simple reason they aren't capable of measuring such high values. It shouldn't be necessary...ever.15000rem/h basically means you would reach your allowed annual dose rate in half a second and your chance of survival is less than 50% after just 2 minutes in this hell.
@@bloodymarvelous4790 Exactly this, people think it was a failure to have such low reading dosimeters but for "normal" operation that's the ballpark for knowing whether you have a leak or not. Any higher than that and you don't really need the exact reading to know you have a problem, and once you know you have the problem you can get a more accurate reading with the more specialised high reading dosimeters. In my classic car I don't have a voltmeter or ammeter, but I do get a dashboard light that lets me know if the battery isn't being charged, I don't need to know the exact reading to know there's a problem and I can always check it manually with a multimeter if I'm diagnosing the problem later on.
@@shi01 No, he meant literally no meter would be able to read that, it would destroy the meter, dosimeters still rely on electronics and radiation that high would play havoc with electrons knocking them out of position and killing the device, as it did with the roof robots when it killed them in the same way. In fact the meter used by the general when he drove up to the destroyed reactor was likely a mechanical geiger counter with a disposable tube whereby the damage to the tube told the extent of the radiation.
That scene where the helicopter crashes wasn't from the radiation, the blades hit the line from a crane that was hanging next to the building. You can find the actual footage of that accident on TH-cam.
But the show did try to make you believe that it was because of radiation so in a way they were "right in their assesment" it's a smart thing for dramatization :)
I wonder if it happened because the pilot might've felt sick from being exposed to so much radiation that he couldn't control the helicopter as well as he had.
Haylee is such a mom to her sister, it’s very sweet and heartwarming. I do not know how they will get through the next 2 episodes. Episode 2 is comparatively light to 3 + 4.
3 gave me a panic attack (and Im not prone to those) and 4 had me ugly crying 💔💔😭😭😭😭😭😭😭 This is a rough show, but once theyre done with it they'll be stronger people for it 😊
Its okay to cry. Also, the divers survived. 2 are still alive today. Boris Baranov died in 2005 of a heart attack. Alexei Ananenko, Valeri Bezpalov, and Boris Baranov. These 3 man saved the world. The fact that barely anyone outside of the ex soviet union doesn't know their names is a absolute disgrace.
FYI : general Pikalov chose to drive the truck himself not only to be heroic and protect his soldiers but also because they will believe him when he tells them how much is the radiation, because of his status and rank no one will question the number he got while he was near the reactor. He knew if it was a simple soldier they will just say he was confused and delusional and that number is impossible. RIP General and thank you for your service !
“I love you and your big heart”. A soul like that, that genuinely cares is what we need in this world. Be Sympathetic, empathetic, etc. to those who sacrifice and put their lives on the line people to have basic necessities met than the modern world mostly goes under appreciated.
Crying means you actually understand how severe the situation actually is. It's hard for many people to even grasp the scope of everything, it just shows how emotionally smart you are. People don't watch to see a lack of emotions. We are here because you guys are able to put your true feelings out there, that is rare to find. Thank you for crying, never apologize.
A few years ago, there was a documentary on PBS about Chernobyl. They went into the room in the hospital where the firemen's clothes had been. The geiger counter went crazy and this was thirty years after the disaster.
Don't feel bad about the tears. This is a tough series. Your empathy is strong and I for one respect it. I'm right there with you. This is a tough one to watch. Just brace yourself for episode 4. It's probably the saddest and most intense.
For me it is strange how many seems to consider ep4 hardest, what happened and has unfortunately happened many more radiation victim is much more bad and hard to even fathom, living hell. Most animals had fast end, that was really sad also, but ep3 was most horrifying, I could not watch. @@Gungepup
The thyroid absorbs iodine present in the body. Taking stable iodine via the tablet preloads the thyroid, essentially filling it with non radioactive iodine so that when the radioactive stuff shows up, it's blocked.
I am crying with you too. Thank you for sympathy and for being genuine. This is very hard to watch but also very important to know and remember about what has happened. These series are devastating but incredibly made.
I subscribed to your channel just because of this series. I've watched many others react to this series and I am extremely impressed by your ability to comprehend & perceive the many dangers that are going on. The both of you are picking up on things a lot of the other reactors missed. Do not feel bad about crying. It simply means you have a heart that cares about others.
The helicopter that fell was because it could not see the crane cable. The rotor blades struck the cable and broke. I am looking forward to crying with you for the rest too.
@@proVaxxerLibertarian Since you seem to know more than the producers of the show why don't you make your own show and give us all the facts??? Mister know-it-all.
@@bernardsalvatore1929 There's nothing wrong with sharing your knowledge of the events, as long as you don't spoil what's coming up in future episodes. The only people I can't stand are those who want to appear smarter than they are because they already watched the show, and have the information that's yet to follow.
@@bloodymarvelous4790 Well that person made a stupid comment on someone else's comment or reply to their comment, which I thought was pretty much uncalled for and really no reason for it to be made and then for him to come on to this comment and reply with this just seems like he's always trying to prove that he knows more than everybody else, including the producers of the show, about this subject!! If you go back out in the thread and look for the comment of someone that said that they looked up the three guys that went in and opened the valve so that she could see their faces because she thought that they deserved to be known and he comes out with a comment that "well the show made it worse than it really was!!" How does he know first of all?? And second of all what difference does it make?? This show is closer to the factual event than anything else that has ever been produced since the actual event happened!! That's all it just seemed like a condescending type of remark and reply that really had no reason to be made in the first place!!!!
It's beautiful that you recognize and appreciate the selflessness of the people who risked their lives to fix this tragic situation. Don't ever apologize for feeling! I hope you do continue the series after a break, it does wreck you emotionally but it's so worth it.
I really agree with your statement. They provide some very good thoughts and comments. I have also seen many reactions, and many frankly don't even understand what radiation is.
@@supervhs123 Knowing iodine pills will prevent radiation being absorbed by the thyroid gland shows these are not your average Americans. These are intelligent people we're dealing with here.
Get at least a case of tissues ready the worst is yet to come... To make yourself feel better about what you're watching think of what you're watching as a memorial ,a way of honoring those who have passed To keep us all alive.. that's why we watch things like this to honor the dead ,When a tragedy happens..
Great reaction. I grew up in Central Norway and was 8 years old when this happened, and it's one of my earliest childhood memories. Remember not being allowed to eat wild berries or pick flowers, and we lived very far from Chernobyl.
I saw an interview where Stellan Skarsgard (who plays Boris Tscherbina here, the bureaucrat working with Legasov) recalled his feelings as a young man in Scandinavia when this went down, like you, not being able to pick mushrooms, being told not to hunt deer (since they’d be contaminated from eating the mushrooms), etc. One of the many great scenes in the following episodes is where he blows up in anger at the Soviet lies and bureaucracy, and he said that to build up the anger for his performance in that scene he tried to channel the anger from his childhood about this.
Not make a spoiler but its heartbreaking watching you being heartbroken: the three guys that went down to shut off the valve actually survived. Quote: "The three men would live longer than a few weeks and none would succumb to ARS. As of 2015, it was reported that two of the men were still alive and still working within the industry. The third man, Boris Baranov, passed away in 2005 of a heart attack."
Your reactions really impress me. I firmly believe the power of compassion, of empathy is the greatest single human accomplishment. Kudos to you both. 12:01 I love how Boris takes all this in, and then handles what he genuinely sees. 15:24 And there is NOTHING Boris can do at this moment to help them. He has to report to others far more powerful and ruthless than he is who will not tolerate an evacuation at this time. "I'm in charge" means "I'm the one who'll be blamed." 16:01 But he has no choice. Teh Soviet Union was like that. Notice how everyone is trying to protect themselves at all times? So much so that when someone doesn't do that others are shocked? This a real police state, one where saying the President is ugly can get you fired and your family arrested. 17:35 This level of radiation can strip away the interior of circuits, wrecking even slightly complex machines. Yet this incident (which DID happen, albeit later) was because the blades hit a dangling chain. The pilots did die of radiation poisoning, though. 17:53 "Little heroes" omg you have no idea, not yet. I have never seen any program based on true events so chock full of so many genuine heroes. Thousands and thousands and thousands before the end. 22:16 I feel you. Please brace yourself for Episode Four. You will need it. 26:40 This entire region is part of the war zone right now. 27:40 Remember their names. REMEMBER THEM. 30:06 The fact we are all still alive is pretty much proof they did succeed. Just FYI.
They are never going to be ready for Episode 4. Watching the series when it came out filled me with dread the whole time (hits close to home due to my work), but that episode broke me.
12:45 - the military commander Pikalov was in Stalingrad in WWII - one of the the fiercest close quatres battle in history. The "lead first" was in his nature. 16:17 - "what's just happened" - he preferred glasses that were up, so they did not accumulate that much radioactive dust from the air.
I saw a review for this show early after it aired. It described the show as “oppressive despair” which I think to this day is the most precise and concise description possible.
Your first reaction made me concerned about the kids of today and your second reaction made me proud. Crying for this series is absolutely acceptable... If not you might not be a human being. This is hard to watch and it's good for people to know history. Thank you for reviewing this with a heartfelt openness. Excited for the next few episodes
I remember watching this show and having my throat clutched by the sadness. The fact that this indeed happened and so many people rose up to save the others selflessly, just gives me hope for humanity as a whole. When things are dire, people will rise to the occasion for the greater good. We all have great strength, it just comes at unexpected times
Poor Kiss, you sweet soul! Also, Haylee, your compassion you show your sister while she cries warms my heart! Ultimately, this is definitely one of those shows that everyone should watched at least once to learn of what happened in Chernobyl. This show is just a powerhouse of emotional impact.
17:00 Actually, the pilot was blinded by the smoke, as soon as he came out the other side, there was a crane in the way. The propellers struck the cable for the cranes hook. Just trying to make a friendly correction.
Fantastic reaction to this, I'm subscribing. Smart and emotional, my favorite kind of channel. PS: Kiss doesn't have to be embarrassed about weeping. EVERYONE weeps at this show. (Except Haylo, apparently! Which is great! I'm happy you're watching this show together!). I had to binge watch this show in two sittings and am so happy I did it that way, rather than drag it out over five separate viewings and depress myself for a month, lol
Can't wait till you reach episode 5... This series is so shocking,especially when you realize that a huge part is based on true events,its really devastating. And prepare for the epilogue,ive seen the series when it came out all episodes at once,and the ending,i still return from time to time to watch it,it reminds me that human stupidity is endless over power.
7:00 "I didn't realize how radiation works..." It's hard to describe, but something similar is heat. It's a type of radiation. It's all about time and distance with exposure. Consider the electric heating elements in your oven. With the oven closed you can stand next to it and not really notice any heat. Open the oven and you can even reach in and safely remove a pan wearing only gloves. You could hold your hand in the oven for a few seconds before you started to get burned. Now, the guy holding the graphite - that was like grabbing hold of the heating element itself and hold it in your bare hand. So the temp of that element may be how much thermal radiation it's emitting, but depending on how far away you are or what you're wearing determines if you're safe or not. Ionizing radiation damages differently, but the time / distance / protection factors work very similar.
Crying is not stupid or silly... watching reactions where there's lots of crying always destroys me because I know the whole story and I understand the feelings entirely. It's quite the tragedy and there were definitely lots of smaller heroes that very likely went unrecognized for what they did and I think it's all these little actions that overall made a difference. Thanks so much for going through this series!
I love how those two people on the bar asking Legasov about the fire are later revealed as KGB agents and were actually just testing if he'd keep the secret about the dangers present.
Despite the fact that this is not a documentary, and they change things here and there for dramatic purposes (For example, the helicopter crash occurred not on day 2 but on day 40.) It's still so informative to just how serious and significant this event was. Don't worry about the tears. They're for our morbid entertainment. We're glad you love the show so much.
This is soooo sweet. Kiss is brave to feel so strongly and keep going. Never let anyone tell you you are silly or weak for feeling compassion. Compassion is one of our greatest strengths. Just because you got a double scoop of it doesn't make you silly, it makes you amazing. I can only watch this show and reactions when I'm alone because of all the tears, my friends wouldn't understand enough. You make a great reaction together and though I'd seen you before on something I forgot how good you were. Thank you so much for sharing your reactions. Also, be very careful dabbing your eyes close to the tear duct or rim of the eyelid. It is quite easy to irritate the duct or membrane, even with the softest tissue. Tears are meant to be shared Kiss, that's what they're for!
You should look up the general depicted in this episode, and later in the mini series. He was a true hero in this situation who understood the stakes and gravity of the situation.
Don't run from the discomfort. Avoidance lead us to Chernobyl. Go through it, and let it make you care, make you active, make you realize how fragile love is and how it must be protected. Feel it and don't look away.
I felt sick and ill after each episode in this series. It is sooo good! And yes, it was a reactor in Sweden who discovered it was a leak. At first they thought it was in their own reactor but it was then discovered it was on clothes and shoes from employees coming in from outside. When it was released on radio in Sweden my mom picked me up and brought me inside from the sandbox in like 30 seconds. We are to this day noticing the decay from Chernobyl in our forests in Sweden. I've never seen a couple reactors paying so much attention to details, both to facts and what is said in mid conversations. I also love that you are showing emotions, specially the lady in orange.😊 And as your friend said, don't be sorry for showing empathy! You are both doing awesome. Keep up the good work! 👍
And rightfully so. Im fairly certain that all cancers now days is all due to testing nuclear bombs and accidents like Chernobyl. People dont understand how we are actually living in a post apocalyptic civilization. There doesnt have to be a nuclear war. Weve already detonated many. All of that material goes into the atmosphere. Every gust of wind, rain, moves micro soecks of material re administration
6:32 I don't know if anyone has mentioned it yet but the guy with the weird birthmark on his head is Mikhail Gorbachev, the last leader of the Soviet Union. He was their equivalent of the President of the US. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mikhail_Gorbachev 16:02 Radioactive 'fallout' is basically deadly dust, it lands on everything, gets in everything, that is why Lygasov wanted an up-turned glass, he wanted his drink to be in something that had not spent the past day or two having radioactive particles landing inside it.
Adding to this: if you're hunting boar in the Swedish midlands today you still HAVE to test the meat for cesium-137 because that's the area that got the most landfall from the stuff Chernobyl launched into the winds back then
Radiation from a nuclear disaster is actually several different kinds. You get both fragments of atoms (neutrons, protons, and electrons: the "bullets"), and electromagnetic radiation in gamma rays and x-rays (very high energy light). The EM radiation is where you'll get essentially extremely bad sunburn as well as DNA damage. The atomic fragment type radiation is stopped more easily by material (even the top most layer of dead skin will stop a sizeable portion of it before it can damage living cells) but is something like 10x more damaging to DNA. In some ways it's less dangerous when the source is outside of your body, but you really really don't want to inhale or ingest dust particles that emit this kind of radiation.
I've been to Pripyat, spent 4 days with a guide there, we had masks, geiger counters and to this day the clothes of the firemen are still in the hospital basement, we were told not to touch anything, cause the dust is still highly radioactive, thats crazy to see, the appartments as well, those people left on such a hurry, leaving everything behind, that when you visit those appartments and houses, its like, a still life frozen in time, i remember in one of the appartments i visited, there was an armchair, with slippers in front of it, a little table next to it with a cup and newspapers laying on the table, pans still on the hotplates, that was crazy to see !
I went to Pripyat and Chernobyl just before the war in Ukraine. Not for voyeurism, but because I wanted to tell my kids what I saw, so the victims will not be forgotten. In Chernobyl there's a monument to the brave firefighters who died there. I stood there silent and prayed for them.
This series breaks me every time. I lived in an area of Norway at the time, it was the spring before I turned 8, that due to weird weather patterns caught a lot of fallout. My father got a job in the southern parts only four years after the accident and so we moved. My family has been talking about how several of our closer outdoorsy friends up there later got cancer and died way ahead of their time. The flashlights: batteries depend on reactions inside them made by ionized chemicals. The kind of radiation we're talking about here is ionizing radiation. It can change the charges inside the batteries so that they don't work.
I'm not sure how to find it but there's a one hour podcast episode to accompany every episode of the series, with writer Craig Mazin, that goes into some detail on the behind-the-scenes process of writing the series, including the dramatic license taken. Mazin thought this was important since the series is about truth and lies. Forget conventional horror, this is the scariest thing I think I've ever seen on TV.
I've been in Prypjat (Chernobyl).. It's like a Resident evil feeling being there...Also seen the old reactor who is now days withheld in almost a "sarcophagus".
I remember they withhold the information for a week about Chermobyl (I was in Minsk and I was 7 years old) , so the May 1st demonstration will take place. People are disposable in communism. My daily headaches started within months and didn't stop until we leaved USSR in 1991. "The guy with the birthmark" is Gorbachev - general secretary of communist party - head of the state in USSR. So far I see that you don't understand a lot of aspects of the series - you should familiarize yourself with what communism is and how communist regimes look like.
People were disposable in the Soviet Union* If anyone actually followed the tenants of the ideology this would've never happened, but humanity will be humanity no matter what system of governance we follow. The US has had its fair share of not caring about their citizens as well.
Found your channel when I was looking for Arcane reactions. I love rewatching stuff you watch for the first time. Idk if you would be willing or into it or have maybe already watched it. Andor is in my opinion one of the most competently written Star Wars shows. It has a more serious/realistic and immersive tone/environment. Unlike most of Disney Star Wars content out there now. I feel like you'd enjoy it. (If you havent seen it already) :D
Tears are a sane reaction to Chernobyl. I remember, here in Canada, when the satellite photos had been released and we all began to realize just how terrible the disaster seemed to be, we were all nervous, glued to the newscasts, worried about just what might happen. It was a global nightmare.
I was growing up in southern Germany as a kid when this happened. I still viscerally remember how for many months we were told not to eat the snow, how a lot of crops had to be destroyed (not pliéed under, they were too radioactive for that, they needed to be disposed as nuclear waste). My dad worked in a university lab and used their Geiger counter outside: he said if those readings had occurred inside the lab, they would have gotten shut down immediately. BTW: reaction videos are my go to dopamine hit, and you two are my favourites! Hope you do some others of my favourite shows, like Firefly, Game of Thrones, Good Omens, Sandman, ach there’s too many!
Well done ladies. Don't feel dumb for being upset. Empathy is one of the best qualities a human can have and you both have it in spades. It is VERY heavy material and unfortunately the worst is still coming. But it's a story that needs to be told and 90% of what you see here was the real deal. I've read a book called Midnight in Chernobyl by Adam Higginbotham (2018) that bears out the technical detail. This series does a very good job of putting that on a television screen.
I think it's really nice to see your channel doing more content than gaming and anime. Movie reactions is also popular. I look forward to watching more of your channel. Keep up the great work.
I think kiss is going to need a holiday after this , please no need to apologize for crying 🙏 we all ugly cried for weeks & you have Haylee Big sister extraordinaire who is full of love & compassion to help 🙏a truly extraordinary show that's all the more scary because it all happened, sending much love and appreciation for all you do take care 💖🌺🤗🌻🐝
I am just finishing your reaction of Episode 2. You have been my favourite reactors to this series so far. You combine a feeling of terrified calm, and an outpouring of emotion. Thank you both so much for taking time to edit and upload your video's.
Babies and animals are the innocent, beauty and purity of life itself- it’s NEVER embarrassing or silly to cry for their suffering. Caring for them proves your strength as a human as those who don’t are soulless and weak. 🤙🏻
The sad moments make you cry. The moments of sacrifice make you BAWL. I find it hard to let myself cry watching tv, but the 3 men volunteering was a powerful scene. It’s good to cry! Better out than bottled up. Honestly, the next two episodes are considerably more emotionally exhausting than this one. So I’d recommend taking a break between episodes if you guys aren’t already.
The three guys that went in weren't volunteers it was just their shift and they did their jobs. Also despite what the show implied, they are still alive.
The general who drove the dosimeter into the exclusion zone was General Vladimir Pikalov, commander of the USSR Chemical Corps from 1968-1988. He was a World War II Veteran who fought in the Battle of Stalingrad at the age of 17. He reportedly volunteered to drive the truck himself because he felt that his testimony would carry more weight when he reported his findings. General Pikalov was a real-life hardcore badass. The stuff heroes are made of.
Ah, the calmness that allows a person to work when they've accepted they're already marked for death, but they still can fight a bit more before the curtain falls.
The lead shielding on the truck wasn't to protect general pikalov from the radiation. It was to protect the radiation from general pikalov.
Comment of the day!
He was a legitimate badass. His war record was amazing.
True leader thinking of his men.
During the real events they sent two lead-shielded APCs full of radiological protection specialists to measure the radiation levels near the building 4. General Pikalov was in one of those vehicles, but he wasn't alone.
The guy survived the battles of Moscow and Kursk. Radiation would be scared of him.
He knew what he was going into and what he was going to have to send his men into,so he went in first.
"So many little heroes" That sums it up so well, the tragedy and the humanity.
Regular-ass people having to save their fellow humans from a nightmare, I'm glad they did and I'm glad that one of the main takeaways from this series is that these people, the small heroes, did borderline impossible things because it HAD to be done.
it pains me a former ussr citizen that just cause ww2 stalin era and cold war propaganda so many people dont get respect in ussr....40mil dead in ww2, who know how many in stalin purges, then chernobyl and all we see is hate... now new hate wave cause of russian war too... shame. so many achievements and heroes lived in ussr, yet they are forgotten outside former ussr countries.
We see the best and worst of humanity in this series.
@17:48 yes, an excellent observation and a good description of the many "liquidators", whom we'll see more of in the coming episodes...
So many large heroes it should be. I was a teenager in Germany the time that happened. If the Ukranian worker (seen in later episodes) and the other russians wouldn't have sacrificed themselves to stop this, I, my familly, my friends, no one would be here anymore. This would have destroyed most of Europe, made it uninhabitable for thousands of years. So I thank these people again.
And it's also why I'm so vehemently against nuclear power plants.
"You are dealing with something that has never occurred on this PLANET before." This is the line that always gets me.
It's not actually true, though. Early in our planet's history there would have been naturally occurring nuclear fission everywhere. The last natural self-sustaining nuclear reactor on Earth we have proof of ran for hundreds of thousands of years and stopped about 1.7 billion years ago in Africa. There may have been others more recently we just haven't detected. Maybe some still running. And in the core of our planet there is a massive amount of radioactive decay going on. About half the Earth's heat comes from natural fission. You could say that geothermal energy power plants are just nuclear power plants of another kind. And volcanoes are naturally-occurring nuclear disasters deep underground.
It has happened naturally long before humans were around. There's a place in Africa where they know natural nuclear fission happened 1.7 billion years ago.
When they first discovered this uranium deposit they thought someone had been stealing it and selling it on the black market because the percentage of U235 was slightly below what naturally occurs. They soon figured out it was a natural nuclear fission plant. It is the only one that has been discovered to date, but the theory of their existence has been known since the 50s.
Nobody cares mate
@@tevildo45 Well, 441 people care
@@operator0 A theory also attributes human evolution to this. Radiation improved our brains.
Please don't feel badly or stupid for crying - when I watched this a few years ago, I FULL ON ugly sobbed, from start to finish of this show.
I'm talking snot running, gasping for breath, hiccuping, the works. Because it was a true story, and most of what they showed actually happened. It's a devastating series showing a devastating disaster.
Same.
You are right. In fact, what is shown in this show in terms of the consequences of radiation poisoning is a light version of the real thing (yes, including that one dreadful episode).
Also, the locals were told they would be able to return soon, so they left with barely one suitcase worth of clothes. Imagine having to leave your home, your family home for generations, and having to start over with absolutely nothing.
Also also, in real life, the three men who had to open the valves had zero lighting at all. They operated in pitch-black darkness and on their memory of the building and touch alone.
FACTS!! 😢😢😢😢 ... And it only gets worse the further to the end your get 😅😅😅😅😭😭
couldnt agree more
This is not just any tragedy, but a tragedy that actually occurred in real life. Highly emotional reaction is completely justified.
In the scene at the bar, he wanted the other glass because it was upside down, not exposed to the dust in the air. He was trying to limit his exposure to radioactive material as much as possible
ESPECIALLY ingestion. Contamination can be washed away. A hot particle ingested or inhaled is lethal, for certain. The only variable is time.
The level of radiation in the town, it wouldn’t have made any difference. But it’s clever that they show that because even when we know something is futile we as people will still cling to our habits even if it just only for peace of mind. It’s a very subtle gesture but I’m glad they included it because it shows his state of mind and emotions and it really humanizes the story. It’s really smart that they included that 😎🍻
@@neptunusrex5195 It makes a little difference, yes your body is still absorbing rays from the contamination around you but having radioactive dust in your digestive system next to your delicate organs is even worse. The most harmful radioactive particles are very short range and most can get stopped by your skin, but cause more damage if they're being released by radioactive substances inside you.
@@G1NZOU
Very true.
Yuppp
Scary part about the 15,000 rontgen reading is I've heard that wasn't even the actual reading; it was the maximum THAT meter could read, too. 3.6, 200, 1000, and 15,000. It literally maxed out every meter they scanned it with.
The 3.6 Roentgen dosimeter was capable of measuring up to 1 milliRoentgen per second, which would be more than enough in any day to day operation of a nuclear power plant. Anything close to that value would indicate a major leak of radiation.
well the core itself is probably around 50,000. No dosimeter can actually read that i'd reckon.
@@lionhead123 Certainly not mobile ones. And there's a simple reason they aren't capable of measuring such high values. It shouldn't be necessary...ever.15000rem/h basically means you would reach your allowed annual dose rate in half a second and your chance of survival is less than 50% after just 2 minutes in this hell.
@@bloodymarvelous4790 Exactly this, people think it was a failure to have such low reading dosimeters but for "normal" operation that's the ballpark for knowing whether you have a leak or not. Any higher than that and you don't really need the exact reading to know you have a problem, and once you know you have the problem you can get a more accurate reading with the more specialised high reading dosimeters.
In my classic car I don't have a voltmeter or ammeter, but I do get a dashboard light that lets me know if the battery isn't being charged, I don't need to know the exact reading to know there's a problem and I can always check it manually with a multimeter if I'm diagnosing the problem later on.
@@shi01 No, he meant literally no meter would be able to read that, it would destroy the meter, dosimeters still rely on electronics and radiation that high would play havoc with electrons knocking them out of position and killing the device, as it did with the roof robots when it killed them in the same way. In fact the meter used by the general when he drove up to the destroyed reactor was likely a mechanical geiger counter with a disposable tube whereby the damage to the tube told the extent of the radiation.
That scene where the helicopter crashes wasn't from the radiation, the blades hit the line from a crane that was hanging next to the building. You can find the actual footage of that accident on TH-cam.
and it happed several months later during the construction of the sarcophagus not the initial response.
..And that helicopter is still inside the plant today.....
But the show did try to make you believe that it was because of radiation so in a way they were "right in their assesment" it's a smart thing for dramatization :)
I wonder if it happened because the pilot might've felt sick from being exposed to so much radiation that he couldn't control the helicopter as well as he had.
@@BasedOverflow Unfortunately we will never know for sure.
Haylee is such a mom to her sister, it’s very sweet and heartwarming. I do not know how they will get through the next 2 episodes. Episode 2 is comparatively light to 3 + 4.
3 gave me a panic attack (and Im not prone to those) and 4 had me ugly crying 💔💔😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
This is a rough show, but once theyre done with it they'll be stronger people for it 😊
All I'll say is... yep.
Indeed. The next two episodes will be a river of tears...
I can't watch ep 4, just can't ... I no longer have the stomach. I guess i can just give a like and let it play on a muted tab for the algorytm.
Its okay to cry. Also, the divers survived. 2 are still alive today. Boris Baranov died in 2005 of a heart attack.
Alexei Ananenko, Valeri Bezpalov, and Boris Baranov. These 3 man saved the world. The fact that barely anyone outside of the ex soviet union doesn't know their names is a absolute disgrace.
Knows. Not doesn't know.
Да всём пох. й. Вот в чем дело,они же Русские.И это ужасно.
FYI : general Pikalov chose to drive the truck himself not only to be heroic and protect his soldiers but also because they will believe him when he tells them how much is the radiation, because of his status and rank no one will question the number he got while he was near the reactor. He knew if it was a simple soldier they will just say he was confused and delusional and that number is impossible. RIP General and thank you for your service !
apparently his stance was that he never would let his soldiers do something he himself wouldn't do that's also reason why he went there.
And he was a WW2 veteran who fought in several major battles including Moscow and Kursk so he also had the reputation of a war hero behind him
“I love you and your big heart”. A soul like that, that genuinely cares is what we need in this world. Be Sympathetic, empathetic, etc. to those who sacrifice and put their lives on the line people to have basic necessities met than the modern world mostly goes under appreciated.
Crying means you actually understand how severe the situation actually is. It's hard for many people to even grasp the scope of everything, it just shows how emotionally smart you are. People don't watch to see a lack of emotions. We are here because you guys are able to put your true feelings out there, that is rare to find. Thank you for crying, never apologize.
A few years ago, there was a documentary on PBS about Chernobyl. They went into the room in the hospital where the firemen's clothes had been. The geiger counter went crazy and this was thirty years after the disaster.
Yep that’s how half life’s work
A very minor thing that’s crazy is how accurate the video games got the abandoned city Pripyat
Poor Carissa... I'm worried about her in the next parts 🥲
ep 4 was hardest
@@ASSASSIN19923 Ep 4 is going to be the toughest for Carissa I'm sure, but Ep 3 was the hardest for me. It's the peak of human suffering.
@@bloodymarvelous4790 ep3 had few moments very sad but ep4 almost half is hard to watch
Don't feel bad about the tears. This is a tough series. Your empathy is strong and I for one respect it. I'm right there with you. This is a tough one to watch. Just brace yourself for episode 4. It's probably the saddest and most intense.
Absolutely second this... Lots and lots of deep breaths before ep 4.
For me it is strange how many seems to consider ep4 hardest, what happened and has unfortunately happened many more radiation victim is much more bad and hard to even fathom, living hell. Most animals had fast end, that was really sad also, but ep3 was most horrifying, I could not watch. @@Gungepup
You make a great team. One to do the explaining and one to do the crying
Who ever did the casting for this show deserves praise.
The firemans wife looks exactly like my aunt did in the 80's.
To this date, the firemens clothing lay in the basement in chernobyl..
Although that hasn't stopped some foolish people from venturing down there and holding the stuff. It is still incredibly dangerous to this day.
@@bennickell8477 Not only that, one of the guides there said in some video that some pieces of equipment are missing, so someone took a souvenir
@@radioactiveassassin5218 That's incredibly selfish for someone to do. Not only does it endanger them, but anyone else who goes near it.
The thyroid absorbs iodine present in the body. Taking stable iodine via the tablet preloads the thyroid, essentially filling it with non radioactive iodine so that when the radioactive stuff shows up, it's blocked.
I am crying with you too. Thank you for sympathy and for being genuine. This is very hard to watch but also very important to know and remember about what has happened. These series are devastating but incredibly made.
If seeing a single dog running made you cry... oh boy. If you know you know. Can't wait.
I subscribed to your channel just because of this series. I've watched many others react to this series and I am extremely impressed by your ability to comprehend & perceive the many dangers that are going on. The both of you are picking up on things a lot of the other reactors missed. Do not feel bad about crying. It simply means you have a heart that cares about others.
Was going to comment something similar to this as well!
Same! I really like how they actively listen to the dialogue and don't constantly talk on top of it.
Yeah.. Most reactors are braindead, these two are a bit more aware of their surroundings.
The helicopter that fell was because it could not see the crane cable. The rotor blades struck the cable and broke. I am looking forward to crying with you for the rest too.
yeah, and it happend a few weeks after the incident, not 3 days as shown in the show. there are actual videos of it on youtube.
@@npc386 months later actually
@@proVaxxerLibertarian
Since you seem to know more than the producers of the show why don't you make your own show and give us all the facts??? Mister know-it-all.
@@bernardsalvatore1929 There's nothing wrong with sharing your knowledge of the events, as long as you don't spoil what's coming up in future episodes.
The only people I can't stand are those who want to appear smarter than they are because they already watched the show, and have the information that's yet to follow.
@@bloodymarvelous4790
Well that person made a stupid comment on someone else's comment or reply to their comment, which I thought was pretty much uncalled for and really no reason for it to be made and then for him to come on to this comment and reply with this just seems like he's always trying to prove that he knows more than everybody else, including the producers of the show, about this subject!!
If you go back out in the thread and look for the comment of someone that said that they looked up the three guys that went in and opened the valve so that she could see their faces because she thought that they deserved to be known and he comes out with a comment that "well the show made it worse than it really was!!" How does he know first of all??
And second of all what difference does it make?? This show is closer to the factual event than anything else that has ever been produced since the actual event happened!! That's all it just seemed like a condescending type of remark and reply that really had no reason to be made in the first place!!!!
It’s so refreshing to see someone have an emotional reaction this deserves.
It's beautiful that you recognize and appreciate the selflessness of the people who risked their lives to fix this tragic situation. Don't ever apologize for feeling! I hope you do continue the series after a break, it does wreck you emotionally but it's so worth it.
Great reaction! I'm impressed how perceptive you two are. You're picking up on lots of things that many other reactors (pardon the pun) miss.
I really agree with your statement. They provide some very good thoughts and comments. I have also seen many reactions, and many frankly don't even understand what radiation is.
@@supervhs123 Knowing iodine pills will prevent radiation being absorbed by the thyroid gland shows these are not your average Americans. These are intelligent people we're dealing with here.
It’s powerful. It’s a powerful story. Being told extremely powerfully. It’s okay to cry.
22:04 Ok, nobody tell her.
That episode I just had a super bad time watching it 😢😢😢
I rewatch Chernobyl about once a year...... except for the episode with the dogs. Even though I know what's coming I still can't watch it.
LOL! I'm super late to the party, but I was pity laughing to myself because I knew what they'd be in for.
@rchandler6027 me too. I fast forward through the animal bits. 😢
"We're asking for your permission to kill three men." Always a gut punch to hear that line.
Those three men hopefully became heroes! 😢😢😢
In reality all three actually survived.
Get at least a case of tissues ready the worst is yet to come... To make yourself feel better about what you're watching think of what you're watching as a memorial ,a way of honoring those who have passed To keep us all alive.. that's why we watch things like this to honor the dead ,When a tragedy happens..
Great reaction. I grew up in Central Norway and was 8 years old when this happened, and it's one of my earliest childhood memories. Remember not being allowed to eat wild berries or pick flowers, and we lived very far from Chernobyl.
I saw an interview where Stellan Skarsgard (who plays Boris Tscherbina here, the bureaucrat working with Legasov) recalled his feelings as a young man in Scandinavia when this went down, like you, not being able to pick mushrooms, being told not to hunt deer (since they’d be contaminated from eating the mushrooms), etc. One of the many great scenes in the following episodes is where he blows up in anger at the Soviet lies and bureaucracy, and he said that to build up the anger for his performance in that scene he tried to channel the anger from his childhood about this.
Not make a spoiler but its heartbreaking watching you being heartbroken: the three guys that went down to shut off the valve actually survived. Quote: "The three men would live longer than a few weeks and none would succumb to ARS. As of 2015, it was reported that two of the men were still alive and still working within the industry. The third man, Boris Baranov, passed away in 2005 of a heart attack."
Your reactions really impress me. I firmly believe the power of compassion, of empathy is the greatest single human accomplishment. Kudos to you both.
12:01 I love how Boris takes all this in, and then handles what he genuinely sees.
15:24 And there is NOTHING Boris can do at this moment to help them. He has to report to others far more powerful and ruthless than he is who will not tolerate an evacuation at this time. "I'm in charge" means "I'm the one who'll be blamed."
16:01 But he has no choice. Teh Soviet Union was like that. Notice how everyone is trying to protect themselves at all times? So much so that when someone doesn't do that others are shocked? This a real police state, one where saying the President is ugly can get you fired and your family arrested.
17:35 This level of radiation can strip away the interior of circuits, wrecking even slightly complex machines. Yet this incident (which DID happen, albeit later) was because the blades hit a dangling chain. The pilots did die of radiation poisoning, though.
17:53 "Little heroes" omg you have no idea, not yet. I have never seen any program based on true events so chock full of so many genuine heroes. Thousands and thousands and thousands before the end.
22:16 I feel you. Please brace yourself for Episode Four. You will need it.
26:40 This entire region is part of the war zone right now.
27:40 Remember their names. REMEMBER THEM.
30:06 The fact we are all still alive is pretty much proof they did succeed. Just FYI.
They are never going to be ready for Episode 4. Watching the series when it came out filled me with dread the whole time (hits close to home due to my work), but that episode broke me.
12:45 - the military commander Pikalov was in Stalingrad in WWII - one of the the fiercest close quatres battle in history. The "lead first" was in his nature.
16:17 - "what's just happened" - he preferred glasses that were up, so they did not accumulate that much radioactive dust from the air.
Remember them because they're still alive.
17:30 That wasn't the metal burning up but the helicopter hitting the steel wire of the crane. Happened in real life too.
"I'm already not calm" LMAO love it....nice reactions guys, subbed
I saw a review for this show early after it aired. It described the show as “oppressive despair” which I think to this day is the most precise and concise description possible.
The episode 4 reaction is going to be.... Interesting.
Thats gonna be a rough one for her. I can hardly watch it.
The dog one I assume? Ya sure will be.
I think the word you are looking for is RUFF.
Your first reaction made me concerned about the kids of today and your second reaction made me proud. Crying for this series is absolutely acceptable... If not you might not be a human being. This is hard to watch and it's good for people to know history. Thank you for reviewing this with a heartfelt openness. Excited for the next few episodes
I remember watching this show and having my throat clutched by the sadness. The fact that this indeed happened and so many people rose up to save the others selflessly, just gives me hope for humanity as a whole.
When things are dire, people will rise to the occasion for the greater good. We all have great strength, it just comes at unexpected times
Don't ever feel silly or apologize for being empathetic. ❤
Poor Kiss, you sweet soul! Also, Haylee, your compassion you show your sister while she cries warms my heart! Ultimately, this is definitely one of those shows that everyone should watched at least once to learn of what happened in Chernobyl. This show is just a powerhouse of emotional impact.
You have to know history or we are doomed to repeat it. Thank you for your reaction and review
17:00
Actually, the pilot was blinded by the smoke, as soon as he came out the other side, there was a crane in the way. The propellers struck the cable for the cranes hook.
Just trying to make a friendly correction.
No he wasn’t, in real life there was no smoke, he just couldn’t see the crane.
Fantastic reaction to this, I'm subscribing. Smart and emotional, my favorite kind of channel. PS: Kiss doesn't have to be embarrassed about weeping. EVERYONE weeps at this show. (Except Haylo, apparently! Which is great! I'm happy you're watching this show together!). I had to binge watch this show in two sittings and am so happy I did it that way, rather than drag it out over five separate viewings and depress myself for a month, lol
PS Forgot to add: great senses of humor too.
I was 7 when this happened. I lived in Scotland at the time. Even we were advised to not play outside. Almost 1400 miles away
If everyone felt empathy that strongly the world would be a much better place.
Can't wait till you reach episode 5...
This series is so shocking,especially when you realize that a huge part is based on true events,its really devastating.
And prepare for the epilogue,ive seen the series when it came out all episodes at once,and the ending,i still return from time to time to watch it,it reminds me that human stupidity is endless over power.
7:00 "I didn't realize how radiation works..."
It's hard to describe, but something similar is heat. It's a type of radiation. It's all about time and distance with exposure. Consider the electric heating elements in your oven. With the oven closed you can stand next to it and not really notice any heat. Open the oven and you can even reach in and safely remove a pan wearing only gloves. You could hold your hand in the oven for a few seconds before you started to get burned. Now, the guy holding the graphite - that was like grabbing hold of the heating element itself and hold it in your bare hand. So the temp of that element may be how much thermal radiation it's emitting, but depending on how far away you are or what you're wearing determines if you're safe or not. Ionizing radiation damages differently, but the time / distance / protection factors work very similar.
The clothes and equipment that the medical personnel dumped in the basement of the hospital is famously still there.
Crying is not stupid or silly... watching reactions where there's lots of crying always destroys me because I know the whole story and I understand the feelings entirely. It's quite the tragedy and there were definitely lots of smaller heroes that very likely went unrecognized for what they did and I think it's all these little actions that overall made a difference. Thanks so much for going through this series!
"Oh no the dog"
They are not ready for the next 💀
The music, by the way, is composed largely from the sounds of actual nuclear reactors operating. A remarkable decision by the composer.
I love how those two people on the bar asking Legasov about the fire are later revealed as KGB agents and were actually just testing if he'd keep the secret about the dangers present.
22:10 the moment I saw her reaction I thought: "Yeah, she won't endure the episode four."
Despite the fact that this is not a documentary, and they change things here and there for dramatic purposes (For example, the helicopter crash occurred not on day 2 but on day 40.) It's still so informative to just how serious and significant this event was.
Don't worry about the tears. They're for our morbid entertainment. We're glad you love the show so much.
This is soooo sweet. Kiss is brave to feel so strongly and keep going. Never let anyone tell you you are silly or weak for feeling compassion. Compassion is one of our greatest strengths. Just because you got a double scoop of it doesn't make you silly, it makes you amazing. I can only watch this show and reactions when I'm alone because of all the tears, my friends wouldn't understand enough. You make a great reaction together and though I'd seen you before on something I forgot how good you were. Thank you so much for sharing your reactions. Also, be very careful dabbing your eyes close to the tear duct or rim of the eyelid. It is quite easy to irritate the duct or membrane, even with the softest tissue. Tears are meant to be shared Kiss, that's what they're for!
You should look up the general depicted in this episode, and later in the mini series. He was a true hero in this situation who understood the stakes and gravity of the situation.
Don't run from the discomfort. Avoidance lead us to Chernobyl. Go through it, and let it make you care, make you active, make you realize how fragile love is and how it must be protected. Feel it and don't look away.
The helicopter crash wasn't related to radiation. The blades hit the crane cables. You can see it in the show, but there's also real footage of this.
I felt sick and ill after each episode in this series. It is sooo good! And yes, it was a reactor in Sweden who discovered it was a leak. At first they thought it was in their own reactor but it was then discovered it was on clothes and shoes from employees coming in from outside. When it was released on radio in Sweden my mom picked me up and brought me inside from the sandbox in like 30 seconds. We are to this day noticing the decay from Chernobyl in our forests in Sweden.
I've never seen a couple reactors paying so much attention to details, both to facts and what is said in mid conversations. I also love that you are showing emotions, specially the lady in orange.😊 And as your friend said, don't be sorry for showing empathy! You are both doing awesome. Keep up the good work! 👍
in 1986 I was 16 years old and even though I lived about 1700 kilometers (about 1000 miles) from Chernobyl, the fear was enormous
And rightfully so. Im fairly certain that all cancers now days is all due to testing nuclear bombs and accidents like Chernobyl. People dont understand how we are actually living in a post apocalyptic civilization. There doesnt have to be a nuclear war. Weve already detonated many. All of that material goes into the atmosphere. Every gust of wind, rain, moves micro soecks of material re administration
6:32 I don't know if anyone has mentioned it yet but the guy with the weird birthmark on his head is Mikhail Gorbachev, the last leader of the Soviet Union. He was their equivalent of the President of the US. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mikhail_Gorbachev
16:02 Radioactive 'fallout' is basically deadly dust, it lands on everything, gets in everything, that is why Lygasov wanted an up-turned glass, he wanted his drink to be in something that had not spent the past day or two having radioactive particles landing inside it.
Never feel silly for being empathetic, it is a great quality to have.
Kiss getting emotional about the abandoned dog 😢 future episodes would be tough for her
Don't apologize for crying, It does not mean you're silly, it only means you're a good person.
Adding to this: if you're hunting boar in the Swedish midlands today you still HAVE to test the meat for cesium-137 because that's the area that got the most landfall from the stuff Chernobyl launched into the winds back then
I cried through the entire series. I cry when I imagine how scared people must have felt and this show has a lot of that in it.
"electric chair is a little too far"
bro they literally played in part causing the death of thousands. that's a little too tiny of a punishment
Radiation from a nuclear disaster is actually several different kinds. You get both fragments of atoms (neutrons, protons, and electrons: the "bullets"), and electromagnetic radiation in gamma rays and x-rays (very high energy light).
The EM radiation is where you'll get essentially extremely bad sunburn as well as DNA damage.
The atomic fragment type radiation is stopped more easily by material (even the top most layer of dead skin will stop a sizeable portion of it before it can damage living cells) but is something like 10x more damaging to DNA. In some ways it's less dangerous when the source is outside of your body, but you really really don't want to inhale or ingest dust particles that emit this kind of radiation.
Don't feel sorry or silly to be emotional.. you're an empath! you should be proud! Loving both of your reactions btw. keep it up!
I just love you Haylo and Kiss for your reactions!.. You seem so lively girls 💗
In the real event the lights went off, but the workers know the place so much that they were confident enough o move in the dark. So brave.
Your reaction was genuinely touching. Empathetic soul.
Yaaas! Didn't expect to see the second episode today. :)
It's totally normal to cry while watching these miniseries as it based on real historical events. You will cry even more during episodes 3 and 4
I've been to Pripyat, spent 4 days with a guide there, we had masks, geiger counters and to this day the clothes of the firemen are still in the hospital basement, we were told not to touch anything, cause the dust is still highly radioactive, thats crazy to see, the appartments as well, those people left on such a hurry, leaving everything behind, that when you visit those appartments and houses, its like, a still life frozen in time, i remember in one of the appartments i visited, there was an armchair, with slippers in front of it, a little table next to it with a cup and newspapers laying on the table, pans still on the hotplates, that was crazy to see !
I went to Pripyat and Chernobyl just before the war in Ukraine. Not for voyeurism, but because I wanted to tell my kids what I saw, so the victims will not be forgotten. In Chernobyl there's a monument to the brave firefighters who died there. I stood there silent and prayed for them.
This series breaks me every time.
I lived in an area of Norway at the time, it was the spring before I turned 8, that due to weird weather patterns caught a lot of fallout. My father got a job in the southern parts only four years after the accident and so we moved. My family has been talking about how several of our closer outdoorsy friends up there later got cancer and died way ahead of their time.
The flashlights: batteries depend on reactions inside them made by ionized chemicals. The kind of radiation we're talking about here is ionizing radiation. It can change the charges inside the batteries so that they don't work.
I'm not sure how to find it but there's a one hour podcast episode to accompany every episode of the series, with writer Craig Mazin, that goes into some detail on the behind-the-scenes process of writing the series, including the dramatic license taken. Mazin thought this was important since the series is about truth and lies.
Forget conventional horror, this is the scariest thing I think I've ever seen on TV.
I've been in Prypjat (Chernobyl).. It's like a Resident evil feeling being there...Also seen the old reactor who is now days withheld in almost a "sarcophagus".
Well here’s something you’ll like to hear. Those 3 guys who went into the water are still alive today
I remember they withhold the information for a week about Chermobyl (I was in Minsk and I was 7 years old) , so the May 1st demonstration will take place. People are disposable in communism. My daily headaches started within months and didn't stop until we leaved USSR in 1991. "The guy with the birthmark" is Gorbachev - general secretary of communist party - head of the state in USSR.
So far I see that you don't understand a lot of aspects of the series - you should familiarize yourself with what communism is and how communist regimes look like.
People were disposable in the Soviet Union*
If anyone actually followed the tenants of the ideology this would've never happened, but humanity will be humanity no matter what system of governance we follow. The US has had its fair share of not caring about their citizens as well.
There was also a 1st May demonstration in Kyiv, just 100 km away, which is even more brutal, and all of that was a crime.
Found your channel when I was looking for Arcane reactions. I love rewatching stuff you watch for the first time. Idk if you would be willing or into it or have maybe already watched it. Andor is in my opinion one of the most competently written Star Wars shows. It has a more serious/realistic and immersive tone/environment. Unlike most of Disney Star Wars content out there now.
I feel like you'd enjoy it. (If you havent seen it already) :D
This!
I wholeheartedly agree with you. They have to watch Endor
Your big heart is what makes your videos so good to watch. I just makes me wanna give you a big ol' bear hug. 😊
its very rare thag two siblings with such different energy get along so well. Kiss is very emotional and energetic and Haylo is calm and nurturing
Tears are a sane reaction to Chernobyl. I remember, here in Canada, when the satellite photos had been released and we all began to realize just how terrible the disaster seemed to be, we were all nervous, glued to the newscasts, worried about just what might happen. It was a global nightmare.
I was growing up in southern Germany as a kid when this happened. I still viscerally remember how for many months we were told not to eat the snow, how a lot of crops had to be destroyed (not pliéed under, they were too radioactive for that, they needed to be disposed as nuclear waste). My dad worked in a university lab and used their Geiger counter outside: he said if those readings had occurred inside the lab, they would have gotten shut down immediately.
BTW: reaction videos are my go to dopamine hit, and you two are my favourites! Hope you do some others of my favourite shows, like Firefly, Game of Thrones, Good Omens, Sandman, ach there’s too many!
"Oh my throat, my thyroid" okay that caught me off guard I wasn't expecting to get a laugh there 😅
The female scientist is an amalgamated character representing a team of scientists.
Well done ladies. Don't feel dumb for being upset. Empathy is one of the best qualities a human can have and you both have it in spades. It is VERY heavy material and unfortunately the worst is still coming. But it's a story that needs to be told and 90% of what you see here was the real deal. I've read a book called Midnight in Chernobyl by Adam Higginbotham (2018) that bears out the technical detail. This series does a very good job of putting that on a television screen.
I think it's really nice to see your channel doing more content than gaming and anime. Movie reactions is also popular. I look forward to watching more of your channel. Keep up the great work.
I think kiss is going to need a holiday after this , please no need to apologize for crying 🙏 we all ugly cried for weeks & you have Haylee Big sister extraordinaire who is full of love & compassion to help 🙏a truly extraordinary show that's all the more scary because it all happened, sending much love and appreciation for all you do take care 💖🌺🤗🌻🐝
You have to remember where and when this was taking place to understand why people act the way they do in positions of power.
This. A thousand times this.
Why do they do it? Because there is a bullet for you if you decide to ignore the suggestions..
I am just finishing your reaction of Episode 2. You have been my favourite reactors to this series so far. You combine a feeling of terrified calm, and an outpouring of emotion. Thank you both so much for taking time to edit and upload your video's.
Babies and animals are the innocent, beauty and purity of life itself- it’s NEVER embarrassing or silly to cry for their suffering. Caring for them proves your strength as a human as those who don’t are soulless and weak.
🤙🏻
28:38 the "radiation thingy" is called a geiger counter.
The sad moments make you cry. The moments of sacrifice make you BAWL. I find it hard to let myself cry watching tv, but the 3 men volunteering was a powerful scene. It’s good to cry! Better out than bottled up.
Honestly, the next two episodes are considerably more emotionally exhausting than this one. So I’d recommend taking a break between episodes if you guys aren’t already.
The three guys that went in weren't volunteers it was just their shift and they did their jobs. Also despite what the show implied, they are still alive.
The general who drove the dosimeter into the exclusion zone was General Vladimir Pikalov, commander of the USSR Chemical Corps from 1968-1988. He was a World War II Veteran who fought in the Battle of Stalingrad at the age of 17. He reportedly volunteered to drive the truck himself because he felt that his testimony would carry more weight when he reported his findings. General Pikalov was a real-life hardcore badass. The stuff heroes are made of.
you're so attentive to all the details. super awesome
Ah, the calmness that allows a person to work when they've accepted they're already marked for death, but they still can fight a bit more before the curtain falls.
Omg, please don't wait so long with the next episode!