Technically you can get beneficial mutation, see "Atomic Gardening". But most of the time you will die a horrible slow death, but hey there is a 0.00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000001% chance of getting something somewhat beneficial
@@steinandreastorgersen5635 it actually is but it is in such low amounts that it won’t harm you, but the doctors always go into a different room when doing x rays because doing x rays all day can be dangerous
Fun fact: Marie Curie's body is stored in a lead-lined sarcophagus, and you need to wear a radiation suit to read her notes, which are stored in a lead-lined box.
Let’s not forget Hisashi Ouchi, who was kept alive for an agonizing 83 days (due to his family not signing a DNR due to hope of recovery) after getting dosed with 17 sieverts of radiation after an accident while making nuclear fuel. His DNA and chromosomal makeup were all but obliterated- he completely lost the ability to make new cells and was essentially a living corpse (look up “walking ghost phase”) as his skin fell off his bones and his organs hemorrhaged. At one point his doctors + nurses had to quit using medical tape on him because every time they tried to change it his skin would come off with it.
This poor man was truly a simple living corpse, rotting inside his own body… listening to his full 87 days of agonizing death, i could only think about how much pain he was through, how hopefully painkillers would put him in less pain, as no one could know but him. I’m kind of sad that the family and staff revived him when his heart stopped the first time, this man should’ve died earlier, and it was unfortunate no one knew what was to come, especially him. I don’t even want to go through what I discovered about him and his end life, his insides, and not only, literally fell apart. Peace to his soul.
Wouldn't doubt it considering alot of societies had no clue about alot of Earth elements or radiation at all until later on. I mean for example during the spanish inquisition they dumped tons upon tons of Platinum into the ocean because they had no clue what it was or its value. All they cared for was Gold and thus saw Platinum as nothing more than junk. I mean even in the 21st century people have been pretty dumb about elements and minerals let alone radiation. Look how many incidents there was with Mercury, Lead, and Radon across the United States for example. It comes down to trial and error with society and the change of rules, laws, and beliefs.
I remember this from when I was little the teachers saying those who died from the initial blasts over Nagasaki and Hiroshima were the "lucky" ones and the horrors those who suffered radiation poisoning had to go through :(
@Asoka I'm not American though, I'm just saying that the pearl harbour attack and the fact that japan will not surrender is why the americans had to bomb
@Asoka It isn't just about the pearl harbour attack though it did destroy billions of pounds of warships and aircraft, if Japan hadn't of been nuked the war would probably still be going on today as well. Secondly, The nuke killed in total, (with both fat man and small boy bombs) 120,000. Although left uninhabited for 24000 years, from the plutonium used in the core of the bomb, (simply because the half life is 24000 years). Yes i see your points about human rights, but I'm saying it had to be done.
I have bad news for you. That one scene with the guy and his wife. Yeah they showed the rated PG version. Before they were going to show the real version but it was deemed far too graphic for audiences.
Yeah, everyone knew one nuke being launched would create a Chain-Reaction of other nukes being launched, next thing you know Humanity and all life ceases to exist, that or be horribly Mutated and Deformed.
Wouldn't an eventual nuclear war mainly target Europe, North America and Asia? Wouldn't some places in the world still be relatively fine? I don't see why Brazil would be hit by a nuke...
Are you guys alright? It seems like death, the death penalty, different ways people used to die in the past, the worst ways to die, etc is a popular subject on the channel
@@Niweera humans both fear death and find the effects on the body as well as methods to cause it fascinating. The Middle Ages and Roman times were considered the eras of creative deaths after all. It's interesting.
After watching the Chernobyl series, I no longer believe that radiation poisoning is ONE of the worst ways to die, I believe it's THE worst way to die.
Worst way to die: Being unable to physically die, starving, thirsting, unable to breath all while retaining your mind up until the moment your consciousness fades. Truly terrible a horrible death
If the author really wanted to tell about the painful death from radiation, it would be the story of Hisashi Ouchi. He was exposed to 17 sieverts of radiation during accident at the Tōkai-Mura Nuclear Power Plant in Japan. And he died for 83 days in terrible agony. The book about him is called "Slow Death: 83 Days of Radiation Sickness" Let me remind that exposure to 6 sieverets of radiation is considered fatal for humans.
Marie Curie wasn't crazy she was just one of those people that found it hard to pull herself from her work. Her family tried a few times to get her to take vacations to rest but she insisted working harder would improve her mental state. I find it to be really relatable. Yeah her work killed her but, she was a physicist and chemist, not a doctor. Even then doctors didn't know anything about what radiation did to the body so there wasn't really any help for her. In that way she sacrificed her body and health for the advancement of the sciences. She fought tooth and nail in a profession that didn't want women around. Needless to say she is one of my personal inspirations.
I remember the accident very well, i was only 5 at the time in sweden. I was at kindergarten playing outside in the rain. The problem was that that rain was very radioactive, because the clouds had formed over ukraine and blown to Scandinavia. I think By playing outside that day is the reason I have had 3 tumors over the years
Bravery? They had no idea what they were getting in to. Radiation is a silent killer, you can't smell it, you can't feel it until it's too late and you can't see it. The only thing they could ever do was taste the metal which was a sign of the reactor being open but of course they couldn't know that. I am sure, that almost none of them would have gone if they would have seen what becomes of them just weeks later.
I recently saw the video of “the most radioactive man on earth” and the experimental treatments they did to try and keep him alive. Even at the point where his eyelids had rotted away. Idk what’s better in that situation, let him go, or continue having hope
The body no longer has the instructions on how to make new skin cells so the old skin just dies and isn't replaced. the eyelids have no tissue underneath so they just shrivel up.
If you want to have nightmares then look up 'Hisashi Ouchi', he experienced the highest amount of radiation any human has been exposed to in recorded history. The pictures of his shrivelled up body, after all his skin fell off will haunt you.
Yeah he lost all of his Dna and was begging to die. They kept him alive for nearly a year to study him against his will. His heart eventually collapsed.
@@Deadsea_1993 Never did he ask to die. Multiple times he asked them to stop and let him go home, but he never asked to die. It is true, however, that he was kept alive by the wishes of his family. Eventually, the doctors had to ask them to sign the appropriate paperwork. Yes, the doctors wanted to let him go.
The "two headed" baby would be conjoined twins. It says they increased, maybe even multiple sets? Conjoined twins are identical twins that failed to split entirely. They can be connected to any body part. So by their heads, back, stomach, bottoms, or like the babies here. There's several living twins like those babies. Some can be separated, but not all. The most famous set, were billed as "Siamese twins," in a freak show. They weren't even from there, w/a made up story, as was the norm. It's considered offensive, not said in this video, just added FYI since it's related.
"Believe it or not, there was a baby born with two hearts and two heads..." pretty sure that's called Siamese twins and it would be two babies that are fused together. As rare as it is, it has happened many times throughout history, though I'm sure you're well aware.
“Died because of her ignorance” While I’m sure you didn’t mean to word it so harshly, it was not her “ignorance.” It wasn’t that she wasn’t aware of the effects of radiation on the human body - nobody was. Her contributions to radiology and chemistry are unparalleled, and her succumbing to such a tragic death actually brought to light what ionizing radiation can do to the human body.
It’s weird how we are all interested in death and yet don’t want to experience it ourselves afraid of it and the torture that comes with it varying on the way a person dies
From an evolutionary perspective, it makes sense to be fascinated by things that scare us. Who's more likely to live? A caveman who paid attention to happy, nonthreatening things or someone who paid attention to dangerous, scary things?
Oh, the "body eating itself alive" part I know. My endometrium was eating away my ovaries and intestines, my lungs malfunction because of asthma, it's worse with dust allergie and sunlight allergy, itching and skin peeling, bleeding out of holes. And the shifting bones make every joint hurt, even the spine while you get pins and needles all over your body at random or head splitting migraines with aura, hallucinations, night terrors, panic attacks, dysthymia and insomnia.
Where do you live? Is it in a polluted area because the dust allergy and the headaches could be from pollution. Ashma agervation is also caused by pollution sometimes. If you live in an area with pollution, tell me.
One of the soviet firefighters JOKED; “Ha, theirs probably so much radiation here, we’ll be lucky to make it alive till the morning.” Jesus, thats a JOKE in Russia?! Thats terrifying.
Hey man, thanks for this. I needed to do an oral presentation about whatever I wanted but I had no idea what to talk about. Now I decided to talk about ARS, you saved my life.
They had a doctor who was one of the physicians who treated victims of Chernobyl comment on the Chernobyl Series stating that when radioactive clothing is removed and the victim is throughly washed they dont pose much of a risk to others. Which makes sense or else the drs would be wearing hazmat suits. The unborn baby likely was exposed to radiation while her mother was still in Pripyat. 7:00
Come to think of it, the losing teeth and jaw and holes in skull thing might have something to do with radium displacing calcium due to their similar chemical properties. They're both alkaline earth metals after all. Strontium also do the same thing, the accumulating-in-bones thing.
You wanna know the three most terrifying words that relate to ARS? _Walking Ghost Stage_ -- you feel fine, but it's a lie -- your body is dying and you just don't know it yet.
everybody forgets about galen winsor, the nuclear scientist who never worried about radiation, who ate uranium and drank radioactive water, then died peacefully in his sleep in his late 80s of natural causes.
7:57 Saying "two-headed baby" is not a synonym for saying "conjoined twins". I believe the vocabulary concerning this fact is not accurate and actually undermines the fact that there are two human beings; not one.
I wouldn’t say Marie Curie died from her ignorance so much as her innovation. Of course there is truth to the former, but she’s a scientist who’s innovations have benefited the world.
This dude was lucky to even survive if he got anywhere over 5000 mSv but it's the most a person has ever gotten. That sad title goes to Ouchi with 17000. Note that 2.4 is our average background radiation amount annually and neulear workers get 20. 100 is enough to ensure the lowest forms of cancer to form. Radiation is scary when out of control or weaponised but this is why thorium is great. It needs plutonium to get going and has a failsafe unlike unranium. Still a lesson to heed to be sure.
I love this guy voice😍😍 he is the reason ,I listen to infographic ,,,can you show us his face one day 🥺🥺🥺please I know am not the only one who want to know him
Vasily Ignatenko. Born: 13th March 1961. Died: 13th May 1986. Fought fires on the roof of reactor 3 and the coolant stack, received lethal doses of radiation, estimated 16Gy. (4 times a lethal dose). Laid to rest in Mitinskoe cemetery.
Radiation in fiction: "cool, superpowers"
Radiation in real life: *nope nope nope*
You actually get superpowers when you get radiation.
Body rotting while youre still alive
@@sauviel6296 that’s cool, with that i can pretend to be a corpse
I wonder if in medieval times, they wrote stories about how the Black Plague gave you superpowers
Technically you can get beneficial mutation, see "Atomic Gardening". But most of the time you will die a horrible slow death, but hey there is a 0.00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000001% chance of getting something somewhat beneficial
Just American fiction
I don't think most people appreciate how Marie Curie changed the world. Everything from Xrays to cancer treatments are due to her work.
X ray is not radioactive though
@@steinandreastorgersen5635 it actually is but it is in such low amounts that it won’t harm you, but the doctors always go into a different room when doing x rays because doing x rays all day can be dangerous
Her husband appreciate it something else.
She did not descover x rays.. She worked on it yes but it was descovered by accident by a German guy I believe his name was Wilhelm Roentgen.
She worked on the machine that is
Fun fact: Marie Curie's body is stored in a lead-lined sarcophagus, and you need to wear a radiation suit to read her notes, which are stored in a lead-lined box.
Why tho?
@@thatpinkdude6850 Her body and her notes are insanely radioactive to this day.
@@aetheralmeowstic2392 What happened to her?
@@aetheralmeowstic2392 I know that she discovered Radium
@CrappyOneshots Oh, thanks for the info tho
Radation: terrible way to die
Gamma Radiation: Claim your green superhuman strength here!
Infographics: Radiation is one of the worst and most painful ways to die
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: *We missed the part where that was our problem*
The next Bruce banner
Shhhhh.
Stop giving people ideas.
That’s only in the movies
@@SPDX109 shush ur self lol
Blistered heart: bad way to die, but a banging rock band name
Tru
*MINE*
@@fxdedflxwers907 lol
Better rock _album_ name than anything.
Yea make sure that you do that for me after I croak guys
Humans: Radiation a terrible way to die.
Godzilla: just a snack
Thats not funny.
@@stefanschleps8758 its just a joke BRUH...
r/wooosh
Godzilla is no logic
True
"Excreting loose stools 25 times a day"
Gets a taco bell ad
That happened to me, only it was a bacterial infection. I'm still alive!
I'M ON THE FLOOR LAUGHING FROM THIS JOKE 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Let’s not forget Hisashi Ouchi, who was kept alive for an agonizing 83 days (due to his family not signing a DNR due to hope of recovery) after getting dosed with 17 sieverts of radiation after an accident while making nuclear fuel.
His DNA and chromosomal makeup were all but obliterated- he completely lost the ability to make new cells and was essentially a living corpse (look up “walking ghost phase”) as his skin fell off his bones and his organs hemorrhaged. At one point his doctors + nurses had to quit using medical tape on him because every time they tried to change it his skin would come off with it.
Yes truly horrible although many people have received more radiation than him, so while he received a lot of radiation, he didn’t receive the most.
Dude turned into a living corpse before dying. His family and the medical staff were trying everything they could to save him, but they couldn’t.
Prob the worst death to this day
This poor man was truly a simple living corpse, rotting inside his own body… listening to his full 87 days of agonizing death, i could only think about how much pain he was through, how hopefully painkillers would put him in less pain, as no one could know but him. I’m kind of sad that the family and staff revived him when his heart stopped the first time, this man should’ve died earlier, and it was unfortunate no one knew what was to come, especially him. I don’t even want to go through what I discovered about him and his end life, his insides, and not only, literally fell apart. Peace to his soul.
They actually kept him alive deliberately to use him as a case study.
Fun fact: its thought that items that were believed to be cursed were probably just radioactive.
Wouldn't doubt it considering alot of societies had no clue about alot of Earth elements or radiation at all until later on.
I mean for example during the spanish inquisition they dumped tons upon tons of Platinum into the ocean because they had no clue what it was or its value. All they cared for was Gold and thus saw Platinum as nothing more than junk.
I mean even in the 21st century people have been pretty dumb about elements and minerals let alone radiation. Look how many incidents there was with Mercury, Lead, and Radon across the United States for example. It comes down to trial and error with society and the change of rules, laws, and beliefs.
Doubt it, they didn't give radioactive poisoning symptoms.
T-mobile: worst ways to die
underrated
@@einsteinonblitz2345 go back to staring at 1 + 1
nah, I do not see any point to go back
Any time u need help u not gonna have any service
50th like
(Just pretend this is a funny comment)
I remember this from when I was little the teachers saying those who died from the initial blasts over Nagasaki and Hiroshima were the "lucky" ones and the horrors those who suffered radiation poisoning had to go through :(
@Asoka EVERYBODY talks about what the US did to Japan. At least they acknowledge it. Japan has straight up denies their atrocities
@Asoka was it justified though? in my opinion it is
@Asoka I'm not American though, I'm just saying that the pearl harbour attack and the fact that japan will not surrender is why the americans had to bomb
@Asoka It isn't just about the pearl harbour attack though it did destroy billions of pounds of warships and aircraft, if Japan hadn't of been nuked the war would probably still be going on today as well. Secondly, The nuke killed in total, (with both fat man and small boy bombs) 120,000. Although left uninhabited for 24000 years, from the plutonium used in the core of the bomb, (simply because the half life is 24000 years). Yes i see your points about human rights, but I'm saying it had to be done.
@@jack_m2306 I doubt the war would still be ongoing. Unless Japan or the US somehow had limitless human resources and resources in general.
"A cute radiation sickness." Doesn't sound too harmful to me.
Acute
The joke>
>Your head
@@DerpLL thou hast misseth the joke
@@DerpLLThat joke has been yeeted way over your head
@Ciara The Yes ooo wooooo
The Simpsons just left the chat...
*Sigh* Radioactive Elements, nature's way of keeping the bugs at bay.
Radio active bending, aang's antipestimint
Until it turns them into giants lol
Cept roaches
Funnily enough real bugs are too simple most of the time to be really affected by radiation.
@@bleachsanchoblastk like roaches
Man I saw the Chernobyl mini-series and it was really scary and horrifying to see what happens to you when you get radiation
Same
Same
I literally stayed up all night and turned all the lights on in the house because I was scared
Where did you watch it?
I have bad news for you. That one scene with the guy and his wife. Yeah they showed the rated PG version. Before they were going to show the real version but it was deemed far too graphic for audiences.
The lack of chernobyl references is astounding.
I expected to see at least 5 top comments with references from the show... Im disappointed now
Not great, not terrible
He’s delusional get him out of here
How do you know a person from Chernobyl is happy?
They wag their tail.
Why am I smiling
so the firefighters from chernobyl were indeed, FURRIES?!
Funni
Your joke is 3.6. Not great, not terrible.
@@vladabuba your likeability is -7.5
We could die like this at any moment. The fear was real back in the cold war.
Yeah, everyone knew one nuke being launched would create a Chain-Reaction of other nukes being launched, next thing you know Humanity and all life ceases to exist, that or be horribly Mutated and Deformed.
@@lockheedmartin2112 scary af
Wouldn't an eventual nuclear war mainly target Europe, North America and Asia?
Wouldn't some places in the world still be relatively fine? I don't see why Brazil would be hit by a nuke...
Are you guys alright? It seems like death, the death penalty, different ways people used to die in the past, the worst ways to die, etc is a popular subject on the channel
death is fascinating to people
@@tavovat it is the most fascinating thing to humans. Infact whole religions are based upon the death.
And here you are watching it. I assume they make videos they know people will watch.
@@Niweera humans both fear death and find the effects on the body as well as methods to cause it fascinating.
The Middle Ages and Roman times were considered the eras of creative deaths after all.
It's interesting.
I think part of it is a way to put things in perspective and see that our own lives are paradise compared to this
After watching the Chernobyl series, I no longer believe that radiation poisoning is ONE of the worst ways to die, I believe it's THE worst way to die.
Don't forget Mr. Ouchi (yes, really!)
Exactly 83 days of pure terrorising pain is no joke
@@suhani9748 it wasn’t the doctors that kept him alive it was his family, they didn’t understand what pain and harm ouchi was suffering
@@trooper_in_da_tank8826 I am aware of that I never mentioned it was the doctors fault mate
@@suhani9748 sorry that was my fault, I’m delusional right now so o read comments wrong or mean them a different way
@@trooper_in_da_tank8826 its alright dw bout it
Worst way to die:
Being unable to physically die, starving, thirsting, unable to breath all while retaining your mind up until the moment your consciousness fades.
Truly terrible a horrible death
i am forced to believe that you died and came back
Gives one a whole new out look on physician assisted suicide doesn't it ?
Hisashi Ouchi sufgered through thiz for almost 3 months
So immortality?
@@UnknownUser-xk5rr kinda
"...a blistered heart. let's hope you never have to hear those words for the rest of your life!"
(replays)
If the author really wanted to tell about the painful death from radiation, it would be the story of Hisashi Ouchi. He was exposed to 17 sieverts of radiation during accident at the Tōkai-Mura Nuclear Power Plant in Japan. And he died for 83 days in terrible agony. The book about him is called "Slow Death: 83 Days of Radiation Sickness"
Let me remind that exposure to 6 sieverets of radiation is considered fatal for humans.
EXACTLY
Yep. I watched Wendigoon’s video.
@@gamercop2148same.. god, poor man.
If I get exposed to that much radiation and I knew I would die, I'll be asking for a gun.
Better hope you live somewhere where guns and/or euthanasia is legal. I.e., not Australia.
its as legaslov said in the show, “ you fly over that steam and you will be begging for a bullet by tomorrow”
Worst ways to die.
Stepping on a lego piece and not getting medical attention.
Ur correct
haha
this joke isn’t funny to me anymore idk why I used to die listening to it
I survive that stuff
*you’re all weak*
Hey I remember you from the white hole video
I'm convinced Infographics is obsessed with death
Marie Curie wasn't crazy she was just one of those people that found it hard to pull herself from her work. Her family tried a few times to get her to take vacations to rest but she insisted working harder would improve her mental state. I find it to be really relatable. Yeah her work killed her but, she was a physicist and chemist, not a doctor. Even then doctors didn't know anything about what radiation did to the body so there wasn't really any help for her. In that way she sacrificed her body and health for the advancement of the sciences. She fought tooth and nail in a profession that didn't want women around. Needless to say she is one of my personal inspirations.
@@beluwuga2229 Exactly. Even in death she furthered progress.
No one called her crazy dude
I remember the accident very well, i was only 5 at the time in sweden. I was at kindergarten playing outside in the rain. The problem was that that rain was very radioactive, because the clouds had formed over ukraine and blown to Scandinavia. I think By playing outside that day is the reason I have had 3 tumors over the years
I’m glad you’re still here
That's not fun
Hey! Is your condition ok now?
Are you ok now? I'm sorry that happened to you
The collateral damage radiation can cause is insane, just a slight exposure and the aftereffects can be seen for generations to come
the Infographic Hands used to be circles, and now they are bean shaped.
Mmm beans
Donnut shaped by Russian roulette
Upgrades, people. Upgrades.
The Infographics Show: **shows power plant** april 26th, 1986
me, instantly knowing what's happening: *c h e r n o b y l*
*April 26th
@@briancooley8777 you're right, sorry I didn't catch it
Can we just take a moment to appreciate the bravery of those first responders?
No. Sorry.
Bravery? They had no idea what they were getting in to. Radiation is a silent killer, you can't smell it, you can't feel it until it's too late and you can't see it. The only thing they could ever do was taste the metal which was a sign of the reactor being open but of course they couldn't know that. I am sure, that almost none of them would have gone if they would have seen what becomes of them just weeks later.
I salute ignatenko fo trying to stop a great disaster and sacrifice his life for many others
I recently saw the video of “the most radioactive man on earth” and the experimental treatments they did to try and keep him alive. Even at the point where his eyelids had rotted away. Idk what’s better in that situation, let him go, or continue having hope
Letting him go of course
Where did you see it?
The body no longer has the instructions on how to make new skin cells so the old skin just dies and isn't replaced. the eyelids have no tissue underneath so they just shrivel up.
Clicked right when I got the Notification YAY Love the videos Keep up the great work. 👍👍🥳🙏
Video: came out 47 minutes ago
Comment: came out 48 minutes ago. What da heck is wrong with youtube
Tied down with Cardi b cd on repeat is by far the worse way to go.
😂
Yes
Yes!!
*MAD CARDI B NORMIE SOUNDS*
@@cranklabexplosion-labcentr8245 fellow Redditor.
If you want to have nightmares then look up 'Hisashi Ouchi', he experienced the highest amount of radiation any human has been exposed to in recorded history.
The pictures of his shrivelled up body, after all his skin fell off will haunt you.
His last name is Ouchi... big oof..
Yeah he lost all of his Dna and was begging to die. They kept him alive for nearly a year to study him against his will. His heart eventually collapsed.
@@Deadsea_1993 thats actually a myth, his family asked to keep him alive and the doctors just did what they asked. he didn’t even beg to die :v
@@Deadsea_1993 it was 83 days not a year
@@Deadsea_1993 Never did he ask to die. Multiple times he asked them to stop and let him go home, but he never asked to die. It is true, however, that he was kept alive by the wishes of his family. Eventually, the doctors had to ask them to sign the appropriate paperwork. Yes, the doctors wanted to let him go.
"At the Chern-"
Me: I have seen enough. I am satisfied
The "two headed" baby would be conjoined twins. It says they increased, maybe even multiple sets? Conjoined twins are identical twins that failed to split entirely. They can be connected to any body part. So by their heads, back, stomach, bottoms, or like the babies here. There's several living twins like those babies. Some can be separated, but not all. The most famous set, were billed as "Siamese twins," in a freak show. They weren't even from there, w/a made up story, as was the norm. It's considered offensive, not said in this video, just added FYI since it's related.
Moral of the story: Don't jinx things
Actually I had gut feeling about it and now I can't sleep O-O
‘Radiation is one of the worst ways to die”
Godzilla: yum
"Believe it or not, there was a baby born with two hearts and two heads..." pretty sure that's called Siamese twins and it would be two babies that are fused together. As rare as it is, it has happened many times throughout history, though I'm sure you're well aware.
In this case, the person was pregnant with one child that developed a empty head and a second heart that didn't so anything just existed.
Worst ways to die: turning on the car light when your dad is driving.
eh not funny
@@Mike-vo2rp I know
@@Mike-vo2rp its funny
@@eikoyaa its ironic but not really humorous
huge respect to the firemn that helped put the Chernobyl fire out . RIP to all the people who died by this painful way.
Marie Curie was not "ignorant" they didn't know anything about radiation back then! Thanks to her research we now know the dangerous effects.
It turned out well for the hulk so what could go wrong...
Ever heard of north korea?
@@Akunai_ hol up
@@theultimateshadowgunmercen751 why is your name so long
@@Akunai_ because the name of the game i play is so long
@@theultimateshadowgunmercen751 makes sense
“Died because of her ignorance”
While I’m sure you didn’t mean to word it so harshly, it was not her “ignorance.” It wasn’t that she wasn’t aware of the effects of radiation on the human body - nobody was. Her contributions to radiology and chemistry are unparalleled, and her succumbing to such a tragic death actually brought to light what ionizing radiation can do to the human body.
Ignorance isn’t just an insult, it has alternative meanings. In this context, it means “not knowing of”.
It’s weird how we are all interested in death and yet don’t want to experience it ourselves afraid of it and the torture that comes with it varying on the way a person dies
From an evolutionary perspective, it makes sense to be fascinated by things that scare us. Who's more likely to live? A caveman who paid attention to happy, nonthreatening things or someone who paid attention to dangerous, scary things?
It's not about death itself, but about how fragile our lives are, and how easily life can end in the most gruesome ways possible.
Well I won't be sleeping tonight thanks
Look out, there's a huntsman under your bedsheets
You should be grateful you didn’t watch the series and saw how the firefighter looked like...before he died
Watch the most radioactive man in history Hisashi Ouchi by peaked interest. No one should ever experience what he went through.
Oh, the "body eating itself alive" part I know.
My endometrium was eating away my ovaries and intestines, my lungs malfunction because of asthma, it's worse with dust allergie and sunlight allergy, itching and skin peeling, bleeding out of holes.
And the shifting bones make every joint hurt, even the spine while you get pins and needles all over your body at random or head splitting migraines with aura, hallucinations, night terrors, panic attacks, dysthymia and insomnia.
Where do you live? Is it in a polluted area because the dust allergy and the headaches could be from pollution. Ashma agervation is also caused by pollution sometimes. If you live in an area with pollution, tell me.
Extremely brutal
You are everyyyywhere dafuq
"and leaking from the rear end" HTF is that possible?!?!
Diarrhea
@@poisontribal9909 oh
I love these videos! Big fan! Thank you for making them! :)
One of the soviet firefighters JOKED;
“Ha, theirs probably so much radiation here, we’ll be lucky to make it alive till the morning.”
Jesus, thats a JOKE in Russia?!
Thats terrifying.
thats not terrifying, ur overreacting
@@swolzer yeah, i think that's dark humour
It’s uh, definitely indicative of the mood.
Turns out if you were dead by morning you were one of the luckiest ones.
@@starkster5701 gallows humor
Hey man, thanks for this. I needed to do an oral presentation about whatever I wanted but I had no idea what to talk about. Now I decided to talk about ARS, you saved my life.
It's simple just carry some radaways with you and this won't happen
You joke, but if only we really had radaways…
@@JeantheSecond I really wish we did as well. Combined with rad-x it would be effective.
Employer : why should we hire you?
Infographic : we specialize in death
Employer :
**sweats profusely**
You're hired!!!
Well at least it wasn’t Chernobyl level of radiation, was it....?
Thats where the firefighter was in the video
Marie Curie: Lol, pretty blue lights.
Answer me this...if you knew the pain you were facing and you knew you were going to die...would you have someone put you down?
They had a doctor who was one of the physicians who treated victims of Chernobyl comment on the Chernobyl Series stating that when radioactive clothing is removed and the victim is throughly washed they dont pose much of a risk to others. Which makes sense or else the drs would be wearing hazmat suits. The unborn baby likely was exposed to radiation while her mother was still in Pripyat. 7:00
Patrolling the mojave makes you almost wish for a nuclear winter..
We won't go quietly, the Legion can count on that.
I love u Infographics, ur vids are AMAYZING
Mr. Ouchi's ordeal further exemplifies the way ionizing radiation torturing its victim.
This is seriously one of the best thumbnails this channel has had, gotta give credit where it’s due
Radiation: exists
WWII: am I a joke to you
Nice vid!
When someone cuts power for your gaming pc so you cut power for reactor 4 at Chernobyl
Literally read the title while singing "dumb ways to die"
Come to think of it, the losing teeth and jaw and holes in skull thing might have something to do with radium displacing calcium due to their similar chemical properties. They're both alkaline earth metals after all. Strontium also do the same thing, the accumulating-in-bones thing.
The newspaper headline for the death of Eben Byers read thusly: "The radium water worked fine until his jaw came off." Yikes.
the HBO series on Chernobyl is definitely worth watching.
Supeŕ duper great video!!!😮😮😮😮❤❤❤❤
Those infections must have been immune to radiation then
Love ur vids man
Husband is dying by radiation
Karen : "Please, I know it's not safe, I need to see him!"
How is she a Karen just asking
She wants to see her husband even tho the doctors say not to
Lol that’s not Karen behavior but it’s definitely not the smartest thing to do.
4:47
Infographics dude: WTH???
Me: Same dude. same.
Never clicked on something by so fast
Infographics show now has a membership. Cool!
I've never seen any bad content in this channel, keep it up.
Love the vids
"One glass a day keeps the doctor away!"
Well, I'm sure no doctor would have wanted to even bother to try to heal him...
You wanna know the three most terrifying words that relate to ARS?
_Walking Ghost Stage_ -- you feel fine, but it's a lie -- your body is dying and you just don't know it yet.
everybody forgets about galen winsor, the nuclear scientist who never worried about radiation, who ate uranium and drank radioactive water, then died peacefully in his sleep in his late 80s of natural causes.
If you was able to eat 10,000,000 bananas at once. You would die from radiation poisoning.
7:57 Saying "two-headed baby" is not a synonym for saying "conjoined twins". I believe the vocabulary concerning this fact is not accurate and actually undermines the fact that there are two human beings; not one.
This will really help the opinion of the public about nuclear powerplants
I wouldn’t say Marie Curie died from her ignorance so much as her innovation. Of course there is truth to the former, but she’s a scientist who’s innovations have benefited the world.
Yikes! This is one of the rare videos I couldn't finish. Blech!☠️
The Infographics Show should a make a "worst ways to die" called
*worst ways to die: stepping on a Lego*
Lovin it!!!
2nd I hope
No one cares.
4th
No your 4th
This dude was lucky to even survive if he got anywhere over 5000 mSv but it's the most a person has ever gotten. That sad title goes to Ouchi with 17000. Note that 2.4 is our average background radiation amount annually and neulear workers get 20. 100 is enough to ensure the lowest forms of cancer to form.
Radiation is scary when out of control or weaponised but this is why thorium is great. It needs plutonium to get going and has a failsafe unlike unranium.
Still a lesson to heed to be sure.
The worst way to die stepping on a lego 😖
True.
I love this guy voice😍😍 he is the reason ,I listen to infographic ,,,can you show us his face one day 🥺🥺🥺please I know am not the only one who want to know him
If you see this i know you will have an amazing day 😇
i love the infographics show thats why im so early
These speechify adverts are annoying.
Vasily Ignatenko.
Born: 13th March 1961.
Died: 13th May 1986.
Fought fires on the roof of reactor 3 and the coolant stack, received lethal doses of radiation, estimated 16Gy. (4 times a lethal dose). Laid to rest in Mitinskoe cemetery.