Тёмный
No video :(

Chernobyl (HBO Series) TRAILER - The Boxset Bingers Reaction 

The Sawalha-Adderleys - Family, Food, Films & Fun
Подписаться 141 тыс.
Просмотров 174 тыс.
50% 1

CHERNOBYL was an horrific tragedy - but very little is truly known about how awful it was - or how it came about and the extent of the cover up. HBO's new series may answer some of these questions.
Chernobyl is an upcoming historical drama television miniseries created by Craig Mazin. The series, a co-production between American cable network HBO and British television network Sky, is set to premiere in both the United States and the United Kingdom on May 6, 2019. The series depicts the Chernobyl disaster that occurred in Ukrainian SSR in 1986.
Chernobyl dramatizes "the true story of one of the worst man-made catastrophes in history and tells of the brave men and women who sacrificed to save Europe from unimaginable disaster. The miniseries focuses on the heartbreaking scope of the nuclear plant disaster that occurred in Ukraine in April 1986, revealing how and why it happened and telling the shocking, remarkable stories of the heroes who fought and fell."
--------------------
FOLLOW US
--------------------
NADIA SAWALHA & FAMILY
/ nadiasawalhaandfamily.com
/ nadiasawalha
For more movie news follow:
POPCORN JUNKIES: / popcornjunkiesmovieclub
------------------------------------
BUSINESS ENQUIRIES
------------------------------------
For business enquiries contact: michelle@doghouse-media.co.uk

Опубликовано:

 

5 сен 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 356   
@ZaZ2823
@ZaZ2823 5 лет назад
Вечная память ликвидаторам аварии на ЧАЭС
@The_Sock_
@The_Sock_ 5 лет назад
For non-russian speakers; "Eternal memory to the liquidators of the Chernobyl accident"
@user-qg7wd6ty7j
@user-qg7wd6ty7j 5 лет назад
100 %
@wellingtonsmith4998
@wellingtonsmith4998 5 лет назад
вечная память 😥
@ErikJ05
@ErikJ05 5 лет назад
Согласовано. Мы не должны позволить этому миру забыть их.
@ErikJ05
@ErikJ05 5 лет назад
@@The_Sock_ Thank you.
@stimela1000
@stimela1000 5 лет назад
The toxic cloud from Chernobyl covered the entire northern hemisphere and travelled round the globe twice. I'm originally from South Africa and I remember even in the early 90s it was accepted there that the northern hemisphere has higher rates of cancer because of Chernobyl.
@badder9525
@badder9525 5 лет назад
It still is
@kosei_4929
@kosei_4929 3 года назад
@@badder9525 still 0,47% of rain in europe is from chernobyl
@cloverhal2284
@cloverhal2284 5 лет назад
In terms of severity Chernobyl is like 100 times worse than Fukushima where the core was damaged and leaked. In Chernobyl, it quite literally exploded, and far more devastating things could have happened if not for the sacrifice of those young Ukrainians..
@duloo97
@duloo97 5 лет назад
It was not just "those young Ukrainians" but also people, soldiers, miners, engineers from russia, and whole Soviet Union. 500.000 thousands of them!
@buxadonoff
@buxadonoff 5 лет назад
@@duloo97 It was the people, the burocrats deserves to die.
@brian2440
@brian2440 5 лет назад
The core itself did not explode. That would suggest a nuclear explosion, which if that actually happened the entire city of Kiev would be a crater, with the amount of fuel that was at the reactor. When the heat from the core reached pressurized water the rate at which temperature increased caused over pressurization resulting containment failure. In laymens terms you would call this an explosion, but in the show when they say that the core itself exploded part of the reason why the operator said that would be impossible is because core explosion suggests a nuclear reaction, which if that had occurred everyone in that room and in 10 mile radius would've been vaporized immediately.
@aleksandarsiljanovic1468
@aleksandarsiljanovic1468 5 лет назад
@@brian2440 Actually the core did explode, i dont know if the series is not right but i think that it is, there was a huge explosion(not that huge but you get the point xD) at chernobyl but reactor maybe absorbed some part of it ?
@Shunteration
@Shunteration 5 лет назад
What happened was that after the steam explosion literally blew the lid off the reactor, air began to leak into the now exposed core. A large portion of the core was made out of graphite bricks, which were used to keep the nuclear fission going in a stable, controlled way. However, these bricks were now grossly overheated, and due to the steam explosion, were exposed to air, and immediately caught fire as soon as the lid was blown off, resulting in a secondary "explosion" (or rather, a rapid inflammation). Thus, the combined steam and fire explosion blew away not only the top of the reactor, but also jettisoned a lot of internal material (mainly the graphite bricks) into the air, and spread it all around the area (which we now know as the Exclusion Zone).
@TheTerkzzz
@TheTerkzzz 5 лет назад
I was born years after. I live in Estonia. My great uncle was there after cleaning. He unfortunetly died too from cancer. There are some men left who need to get therapy still and they don't get the right support through funding. I am so intrigued though. It looks well done. 😏😔
@joannayeo9545
@joannayeo9545 5 лет назад
That's so sad x
@NostalgicMem0ries
@NostalgicMem0ries 5 лет назад
most eastern europe will have cancer in thier live because of chernobyl, 4 people in my family have thyroid cancer in low stage cause of it, im from lithuania
@2specialwow
@2specialwow 5 лет назад
@@NostalgicMem0ries У четверых один и тот же рак...и ты не думаешь о том что это наследственное заболевание которое передается по генам,а думаешь что во всем виноват Чернобыль....Ну с такой логикой можно о всем раке в мире сказать что виноват Чернобыль.Когда случилась катастрофа,моя мать была на четвертом месяце беременности в 600 км от Чернобыля и все нормально,у нас ни у кого нет рака...
@NostalgicMem0ries
@NostalgicMem0ries 5 лет назад
@@2specialwow Дело в том, что эти четверо не связаны, две мои тети из разных семей, один великий дядя и мать. Это причина Чернобыля. Мой дедушка заболел раком только в свои 80 лет, рак не начинается сразу, он приходит вовремя. Многие миллионы умрут в будущем из-за радиации, что является научным фактом
@danielk.5776
@danielk.5776 5 лет назад
My Grandfather was considered being sent there to become a Liquidator because he had already 2 daughters and was a healthy man. Thats why my Grandmother is always scared when she hears about Tschernobyl, she was scared he would be sent dying there.
@TinyLuvsBostons
@TinyLuvsBostons 5 лет назад
After watching episode 1& 2 , I've watched video of the children born with severe birth defects. So tragic and heartbreaking!
@matthewkendall9250
@matthewkendall9250 5 лет назад
Chernobyl Heart is the most awful documentary I have ever seen and it covers the children with birth defects.
@sian1000
@sian1000 5 лет назад
It’s such a good show
@matthewkendall9250
@matthewkendall9250 5 лет назад
@Beloved Truth it is a separate documentary called Chernobyl Heart. Don't watch it if you don't have a strong stomach.
@emileraikin9442
@emileraikin9442 5 лет назад
I was six at that time, Leningrad (SPb now) my father (PhD in chemistry ) knew about Chernobyl from BBC and put all family under a home arrest for a week.
@The_Sock_
@The_Sock_ 5 лет назад
Внимание, внимание.. (Attention, attention..)
@eltoncharles
@eltoncharles 5 лет назад
Atenção, atenção ☹️
@IndySidhu88
@IndySidhu88 5 лет назад
Hijiku Brynjar VNIMANIYE VNIMANIYE
@clarelc5933
@clarelc5933 5 лет назад
Chills you to the bones! I hope you are both feeling better this morning (just caught up with yesterday's vlog) xx
@samanthaferrari5948
@samanthaferrari5948 5 лет назад
I was just a kid at the time but can clearly remember being freaked out by it, to the point where I'd cry if rain went on me because I thought I'd get contaminated. Terrifying trailer but a must watch.
@joannayeo9545
@joannayeo9545 5 лет назад
I understand why you felt like that as its so frightening and the truth is so denied to the public.
@thatnorwegianguy1986
@thatnorwegianguy1986 5 лет назад
The most common form of cancer that happens because of irradiation is thyroid cancer and there was many cases popping up all over Europe after Chernobyl in a higher rate than usual.
@Dee8Bee
@Dee8Bee 5 лет назад
I’ve read that they had disasters in the 50s and 60s. “ In 1957 Mayak was the site of the Kyshtym disaster, one of the worst nuclear accidents in history. The Soviet regime kept this accident secret for about thirty years. The event was eventually rated at 6 on the seven-level INES scale, third in severity only to the disasters at Chernobyl in Ukraine and Fukushima in Japan.” Found that on Wikipedia 😔
@liameggleton174
@liameggleton174 5 лет назад
Mayak was very bad. Nobody was told about it and children played in the rivers near it where a lot of the radioactive materials had been dumped.
@regiember
@regiember 3 года назад
When the disaster happened, I was 11 years old. I live in Hungary. It is almost 700 miles from Chernobyl. According to my memories, the radioactive cloud reached Hungary 4 days later. There was news of the accident in the news, but there was a lot of secrecy at the time. Then, for a few days, my parents took out this plant from the vegetable garden and burned it. everything was replanted, and then they could only be eaten thoroughly. Then soon the whole thing was forgotten, no one talked about it.
@PYROTOAD
@PYROTOAD 5 лет назад
It’s crazy how many details it shows too! Like the divers, birds dying, firefighters being buried in zinc and lead coffins! And more!
@zipper978
@zipper978 5 лет назад
I was born in Germany in 1987 with heart problems and was not expected to live. My mom was pregnant during this
@cannjirocannado8371
@cannjirocannado8371 5 лет назад
Cool mal deutsche hier hoffe es gibt den Film bald auf deutsch.
@Kami666__
@Kami666__ 5 лет назад
Мой дед был ликвидатором, был на крыше 1 раз, пошел 2 раз из за денег, ну 2 раз уже был смертельным для него... и через некоторое время он умер...
@dont_read_my_nickname
@dont_read_my_nickname 3 года назад
Им всем должны пожизненные блага давать, а не копейки
@BarryJosephKeenan
@BarryJosephKeenan 5 лет назад
It's a hard hitting show and some of the toughest subject matter ever put to film, but you guys have to react to this if you haven't seen it yet. It's stunning , enthralling, shocking and heart breaking!
@clareriley9049
@clareriley9049 5 лет назад
My friend lived in Munich at the time and they were instructed to not sit on the grass in parks because of radiation.
@jambolynn
@jambolynn 5 лет назад
My husband was in Japan when the nuclear disaster/tsunami hit in 2011. He immediately flew over here after the radiation started reaching the Tokyo area. I spend 5 months of the year in Japan, and have been to Fukushima. It is still a bit scary. Also have been to the peace parks in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Absolutely break your heart. This series looks really interesting. Love Stellan Skarsgard. The series you are thinking of, Mark, is 'River', with co-star Nicola Walker.
@miely0847
@miely0847 4 года назад
American...love seeing reactions from around globe. Always learn something new. Thank you so much.
@supajasiu
@supajasiu 5 лет назад
I remember, I was about 7 years old, my family lived in Bialystok. My mother was probably the most kind hearted mother around, she never swore or even raised her voice, she also allowed me and my older brother a lot of levity. We were allowed to play on our own outside the house, and she always would call us gently usually for dinner or to go to bed. Now why do I say this? I vividly remember this exchange happening on the 30th April 1986, my mother stood out on the Balcony and shouted doiwn to us: " Rafal! Simon! Get in the house now it's going to rain!" "But we could use some cold rain mom-" "JUST DO WHAT I SAY YOU LITTLE SHITS!" Context is king.
@user-jn2hy9tu4f
@user-jn2hy9tu4f 3 года назад
At first, footage was shown of people on the bridge looking at the accident. this bridge was called the Bridge of Death, because no one survived from those who stood on it
@sawalhaadderleys
@sawalhaadderleys 3 года назад
wow - thats so sad :-(
@user-jn2hy9tu4f
@user-jn2hy9tu4f 3 года назад
@@sawalhaadderleys I believe that this information helps to look at this scene in a different way
@mekkur2551
@mekkur2551 5 лет назад
The biggest disaster was in the Soviet union too. It was Majak disaster, they didnt tell anything about that and 250+ thousand people were living near, and they got huge radiation they didnt know anything about it.
@maujo2009
@maujo2009 4 года назад
You're absolutely right, and the Majak disaster tells a lot on why the soviet government acted the way they acted in Chernobyl, except that Chernobyl literally spilled out into the world and they couldn't cover it up anymore.
@yrrek1983
@yrrek1983 4 года назад
Your children are right by the way, no point in getting children nowadays. The chances of them dying a horrible death is higher than most realize because the illusion of prosperity and comfort keeps us naive until it's too late.
@kimwexler9393
@kimwexler9393 5 лет назад
Jessie Buckley was amazing in War and Peace as well. Huge fan of the Skarsgårds here too.
@sarahenglish9090
@sarahenglish9090 5 лет назад
Omg this will be an incredible hard one to watch guys ... an atrocity !! So so devasting 🙁 makes my problems seem void ... x
@TheLisa-Al-Gaib
@TheLisa-Al-Gaib 5 лет назад
You guys are terrific reactors(no pun intended). I really hope you guys do reaction videos for each episode. I think you both have a great deal to add to the conversation. Also, what the hell happened in Kent? I’m American and this is absolutely the first I’ve heard about it!
@ass_rake_258
@ass_rake_258 5 лет назад
5:23 they cintained it by building a giant sarcophagus over the blown up reactor and that was set to last for 30 years. After those 30 years, they built a new one that they could slide over the sarcophagus. Feel free to ask me any questions about chernobyl and the aftermath.
@petitecoco1178
@petitecoco1178 5 лет назад
Hi, does the lava hapoen to slide down ibto the earth?. I hust want to know whether the coal miner did things for nothing or not? . Cause it will be sad imagining them being sick after weeks of exposure
@ass_rake_258
@ass_rake_258 5 лет назад
@@petitecoco1178 No, it is propably not sinking in to the ground because its not hot enough anymore. So no radiation sickness for coalminers
@petitecoco1178
@petitecoco1178 5 лет назад
Oh okay. I dont know do i have to be happy or not. Regarding the coal miners i mean
@buxadonoff
@buxadonoff 5 лет назад
@@petitecoco1178 It could have sunk into the ground, but thanks to them the risks are minimal.
@henktank17
@henktank17 5 лет назад
@@petitecoco1178 No it did not sink in the ground. The corium sand and nuclear fuel, was formed a puddle under the reactor in the basement. Look it up the mammoth foot chernobyl. The radiation was extreme high, 10,000 roentgens, a lethal dose in less then 3 minutes. even robots could not stand it.
@sgtspite
@sgtspite 5 лет назад
I remember this well, i had just left school and it felt like the world was going to end just as my life was starting.
@sagar107762
@sagar107762 5 лет назад
Great series. That will reveal the true horrific incident of Chernobyl
@skylander5116
@skylander5116 5 лет назад
And like always, the great American investigators are the ones to expose corruption. Just like the recent Russian Olympic corruption and now Chernobyl. Funny isn't it?
@RichardStrong86
@RichardStrong86 5 лет назад
@@skylander5116 This is a HBO (USA) and Sky Atlantic (UK) co-production. Regardless, the information was always available. This just publicises it.
@DavidMacDowellBlue
@DavidMacDowellBlue 4 года назад
Well, they did build a containment unit over the reactor after they got the fire out. Then they evacuated the immediate area, performing radical and pervasive cleanup procedures. In fact a new containment unit was completed just a few years ago.
@MadKlauss
@MadKlauss 5 лет назад
If anyone was curious, the production is done in Lithuania. Lithuania has one closed down Soviet made nuclear reactor and lots of soviet apartment blocks for the atmosphere.
@andrewmelnikov292
@andrewmelnikov292 5 лет назад
Some scenes were shot in Kyiv, Ukraine. Folks used antique cars and bikes from our local collectors, there are vids about it here on youtube (with car enthusiasts commenting on how license plates are not entirely historically accurate).
@eireannbullimore7763
@eireannbullimore7763 5 лет назад
There's little point in sugar coating things. Kids feel hopeless because it is largely a hopeless world we're living in. So many people want to save our world but those with the power to do it won't. You guys didn't have to worry so much, you had your children when the world was blissfully unaware of how humanity has damaged it but it simply can't be ignored any longer nor can it be hidden from kids. They see and know more than adults give them credit for.
@volcra2346
@volcra2346 5 лет назад
Good day,I want to say that about the tragedy of Chernobyl,the people of the USSR learned only after a few weeks or days,I do not remember exactly. Even rescuers and firefighters who were helping people were all orphans,they were specifically selected, because everyone knew that they will not survive because of the radiation
@joannayeo9545
@joannayeo9545 5 лет назад
OMG I didn't know that, the whole thing is horrifying.
@harrysecombegroupie
@harrysecombegroupie 5 лет назад
I'm so intrigued to see how this series turns out. On one hand it's got a gripping true story, a great cast, and some of the people behind it have worked on excellent shows like Game of Thrones, Broadchurch and Black Mirror. On the other hand the screenwriter has been responsible for some pretty bad films and doesn't inspire much confidence. So it could be excellent or awful! I just hope the show does justice to the victims of this terrible disaster and I look forward to hearing what you think of it!
@catherinerostanti1738
@catherinerostanti1738 5 лет назад
A cover up in Kent - can please you elaborate Mark as that's really scary. I always said we would pay dearly for Chernobyl but not to that extent!!
@redcardinalist
@redcardinalist 5 лет назад
There's not any cover up in Kent 🙄
@CCRhorst
@CCRhorst 5 лет назад
I’m not sure what they’re talking about either. Only nuclear power plant incident in the UK is the fire at Windscale Pile 1 in 1957 in Sellafield.
@petis1976
@petis1976 3 года назад
There is also an amazing form of fungus growing in the area that actually devours the radiation.
@karenbusby2445
@karenbusby2445 5 лет назад
Oft that looks good! Terrifying as we all lived through it and will continue to. Don’t have HBO sadly but hopefully will catch it somewhere else online
@chwilhogyn
@chwilhogyn 5 лет назад
Where I live on the Llyn Peninsula and It affected this area, I was 6 when it happened and remember red clouds and were told by our headmaster not play in the rain for a couple of days!!
@kimwexler9393
@kimwexler9393 5 лет назад
Oh my God that's horrendous...
@redcardinalist
@redcardinalist 5 лет назад
And people died like flies there. Oh not wait, they didn't....
@dastemplar9681
@dastemplar9681 4 года назад
You can tour Chernobyl now, and even get to stand a few hundred meters from the infamous Reactor 4. In terms of radiation, the level in the majority of the area is so low that exposure won’t be harmful to you if you’re only there for a few days. However, it is estimated that the interior of the reactor will be inhabitable for the next 20,000 years. Just imagine that, Chernobyl would be 100% completely free of radiation after 20,000 years...
@bialynia
@bialynia 4 года назад
I have a very vague memory of that summer. I live in Poland and I was 3 at that time, I remember we were all dying from the heat indoors because it was advised not to open any windows and go outside as little as possible. Also, all kids were forced to swallow one spoon of iodine per day and I hated it. They show pills in the show, but most people took liquid iodine.
@e36enthusiast69
@e36enthusiast69 5 лет назад
1. Build a Lada made of Barnazite 2. Wear hazmat suit (obviously) 3. Wash the car and the suit whit magnasse solution 4. Drink Activated Charcoal You are safe Or not...
@Abrams1985
@Abrams1985 5 лет назад
As disastrous as Fukushima and Chernobyl were, keep in mind that over 5000 nuclear explosions happened on Earth - all those nuclear weapons tests - which also contributed to pollution by radioactive isotopes.
@juggaloclownpreacher
@juggaloclownpreacher 5 лет назад
Yes but those two were a level seven disasters and much worst than any of those bombs.
@jackromanenko4160
@jackromanenko4160 5 лет назад
At first - cut this number in half. It was not more than 2500 nuclear tests. Second (and most important) is the thing that (who might have guessed), Chernobyl and Fukushima were not created to transform nuclear energy into blast while all of nuclear bombs were, most of them were pretty "clear", meaning that most of their materials were fused and reacted during the explosion turning into a light and blast wave. So the level of pollution even between all 2500 nuclear devices and Fukushima+Chernobyl cannot be compared as the last ones were not designed to use the nuclear material for explosion.
@Abrams1985
@Abrams1985 5 лет назад
@@jackromanenko4160 You're right about the number, my mistake. As for the results of the tests - I did not want to depreciate in any way Fukishima & Chernobyl disasters, just wanted to point out that a lot has changed in terms of radioactive pollution (in general) since discovery of nuclear fission. And there is impact from both unplanned disasters (such as Chernobyl) as well as from nuclear tests (even if they are 'cleaner' than the power plant disaster).
@lajoswinkler
@lajoswinkler 5 лет назад
Fukushima 1 was nothing compared to Chernobyl. Its significance is totally blown out of proportion. The largest problem, by far, was the tsunami damage. Topsoil of Fukushima is removed because of radiophobia, not because it is dangerous. Citizens are convinced it's dangerous and are pushing the local officials to destroy valuable topsoil our of pure fear. You can check it out, it's really happening. Fear drives it. Radiophobia is what ruined the local society. Not the accident. Chernobyl is different. The reason why they're on the same level of INES scale is because the scale is very coarse at the top levels. Logarithmic approach.
@christiannugraha1011
@christiannugraha1011 5 лет назад
You sounds like Gideon Emery. I love that tone of voice.
@danielkarlsson258
@danielkarlsson258 5 лет назад
Great reaction! Would love to see you watch this series. It is truly amazing.
@user-jy2sj6md9y
@user-jy2sj6md9y 5 лет назад
About kids whatching the series and knowing about Chernobyl... When I was in a fourth grade (or ten years old in other words) our teacher told us about Chernobyl and we watched documentaries about it (not so severe of course, but there was quite a lot info about radiation sickness and the aftermath of the accident). Several years later during the physics classes we discussed the details of the catastrophe (how it happened, the major mistakes, how they could have been prevented and etc, also what safety issues and standards they have in modern nuclear power stations), some of us also visited the first nuclear power station in Russia (Kurchatovsky institute) that year. Now I study in the Uni and behind the nearest chucrh there is a monument for liquidators of nuclear accidents (there were many of them, but on the monuments are only 6 named (all of them occered on the territory of Russia and USSR) among them two major accidents: Chernobyl and Mayak). People should learn about such things since their childhood - that lesson would be learned for the whole life, reminding the consequences of negligence and probably will prevent future accidents.
@sergiusincredible5607
@sergiusincredible5607 5 лет назад
My grandfa and grandmo lived at a distance of nearly 180 km where the disaster took place (Rogachev town). Then I spent my vacations within several years there. Its a safe zone (almost:))), but many residents took with itself individual dosimeter to the market (We did it too). As you know, BLUEBERRY absorbs radiation very well.
@marianadantas3627
@marianadantas3627 5 лет назад
I just finished to watch episodes 1 and 2... Mind blowing!!!! I think that to watch this kind of show on Tv is important to make us NEVER forget. I'm from Brazil, we don't have nuclear desastres on our history, but here the government and big companys don't care about the enviroment, and some tragedys had happend recently... but people here forget really fast... It's too sad.
@samanthaking2222
@samanthaking2222 5 лет назад
Agree don’t let kids watch it. I remember in I think it was Modern Studies in School being shown a film called Threads. This was set in Sheffield and was about it being hit with nuclear bomb and all fallout after it. Haunted me for a long time. Anxious and couldn’t sleep for worry.😳
@annettegreen6689
@annettegreen6689 5 лет назад
Oh yes! Threads freaked me out for years!
@juneseghni
@juneseghni 5 лет назад
hell yes-I was at school when Threads came out. I recently watched it again and it was just as nightmarish as I remembered it. At age 54 it still haunts me. We were really worried about nuclear war then, remember..the 4 minute warning..?
@DHFORPM
@DHFORPM 5 лет назад
Please, make a reaction video of the episodes that have aired.
@helenwilliamson7099
@helenwilliamson7099 5 лет назад
My son was born l986, wow oh my goodness you don't realise how many years it will affect the world depressing 😐
@thatnorwegianguy1986
@thatnorwegianguy1986 5 лет назад
I was born in 86 and remember my dad talking about radiation landing in Norway irradiating sheep on farms they had to be put down this happened up until the mid nineties.
@helenwilliamson7099
@helenwilliamson7099 5 лет назад
My son has mental illness he has schizophrenia, he also had asma when he was very young and was in hospital in and out till he was 2 years old, and is still in and out of hospital with his mental condition gosh you never know if it was that, had an effect on them x😊
@zipper978
@zipper978 5 лет назад
I was born in 1987 in Germany with heart problems as well I was not expected to live
@iloveyourunclebob
@iloveyourunclebob 5 лет назад
I was three months and a day old. I really appreciate this series, especially how accurate they are trying to be, because of that.
@Fomorach
@Fomorach 5 лет назад
Great trailer, it´s gonna be a really good but very depressing series. If you like Jared Harris, you should really give 'The Terror' a try, if you haven´t already, it´s fantastic, especially the acting and cinematography (cast also includes: Tobias Menzies, Ciarán Hinds, George Takei, Paul Ready, Ian Hart, Greta Scacchi, Adam Nagaitis, ...)
@johnrichtermatrix2804
@johnrichtermatrix2804 5 лет назад
Fomorach Jared Harris is a phenomenal actor.
@007sMoneyPenny
@007sMoneyPenny 5 лет назад
hey guys, I enjoyed your reaction to the trailer but where are the reaction videos to the actual episodes??? ;-)
@Cassxowary
@Cassxowary 5 лет назад
That was horrific and the repercussions of it too, even nowadays... poor them!
@jamessutton9476
@jamessutton9476 5 лет назад
While I'm glad you can appreciate the horror of the scope of the incident, cancer rates really cannot be ascribed to the incident, as modern cancer rates are around the same as they were over 100 years ago, the only difference is we're living longer. Given a long enough time scale, everyone will get cancer at some point.
@dont_read_my_nickname
@dont_read_my_nickname 3 года назад
The radiation release at Chernobyl was 400 times greater than at Hirashima
@juggaloclownpreacher
@juggaloclownpreacher 5 лет назад
I was born that year so I have never know a world without nuclear fallout.
@DreamyWoIf
@DreamyWoIf 5 лет назад
Well, hundreds of nuclear tests had happened before then.
@juggaloclownpreacher
@juggaloclownpreacher 5 лет назад
@@DreamyWoIf yeah but how many nuclear disasters, the fact is nuclear energy is way too dangerous to play with.
@DreamyWoIf
@DreamyWoIf 5 лет назад
@@juggaloclownpreacher Three nuclear disasters on a notable scale, if I'm not mistaken; besides Chernobyl and Fukushima also the Three Mile Island incident. Study after study in top scientific journals find that nuclear power plants are far and away the safest way to make reliable electricity. Occupational related deaths due to air pollution in the Coal and Petroleum industry are incomparably worse than in the Nuclear industry. What causes people to be so afraid of the latter is the government's overreaction to the disasters. In the peer-reviewed journal, Process Safety and Environmental Protection, scientists concluded that between five and ten times too many people were moved away from the Chernobyl area between 1986 and 1990. As for Fukushima, they found it difficult to justify moving anyone away from the plant on grounds of radiological protection.
@juggaloclownpreacher
@juggaloclownpreacher 5 лет назад
@@DreamyWoIf the safest form of energy creation is solar and wind turbines. Your the second person that I've heard who believes in radiation is safe. Madame Curie was the one who discovered radium and after discovering it she died from radiation sickness.
@DreamyWoIf
@DreamyWoIf 5 лет назад
Yeah I know about M. Curie and her death from a sickness, contracted because of her exposure to radiation. And I did not say that I believe radiation is safe. Don't twist my words to try to paint me as an idiot. I compared which MAINSTREAM industry is safer. Let's address if solar power really holds an absolute edge over nuclear energy, other than its main component not being a health risk: Much has changed since the last nuclear power plant was constructed in the late twentieth century. New technology is available, efficient and safer methods of nuclear energy have been discovered. The last nuclear power plant was constructed in the late twentieth century. Since then, there have been no new projects to build more. However, despite no construction of new power plants, the technological innovations of nuclear energy continued forth. In the past twenty years, smaller, efficient, and safer nuclear reactors were engineered, but never used. If implemented, these new reactors would mean less space needed to build a power plant. In the past few years, nuclear recycling has become a major method in France for efficient energy production. This process would recycle nuclear waste as fuel for the power plant, making the waste less radioactive with each reuse, and would also resolve the problem of long-term storage.There are many safe areas known throughout the globe where there would be no issues of tsunamis, tornadoes, and other natural dangers. This lessens the potential threat of fallout from a natural disaster. In addition, new fail-safe technology is available in the event that a natural disaster may happen. Solar energy requires a lot of mining to produce materials needed for power, which can lead to potential water pollution, deforestation, and habitat loss. Solar power also requires a lot of space. Conversely, space usage is becoming a lesser issue with the new nuclear technology available. Additionally, solar panels need replacement every twenty years, which can lead to more pollution. This shows that nuclear is a better solution in this particular regard. Nuclear technology has advanced rapidly through the decades. The technology available today would be more efficient and renewable in comparison to solar power. The idea that solar power is undisputably better than nuclear has become a major fallacy that needs to be addressed.
@antoni_ua
@antoni_ua 5 лет назад
Thank you for reaction and all good from Ukraine.
@VladyslavBurmaka
@VladyslavBurmaka 5 лет назад
This is one of the biggest tragedy for Ukraine and Europe 😖😭
@user-uy4vt9fx2e
@user-uy4vt9fx2e 5 лет назад
Для СССР
@VladyslavBurmaka
@VladyslavBurmaka 5 лет назад
Роман Золотилин урср
@ianloeb1672
@ianloeb1672 5 лет назад
number 2 after the Holodomor
@ErikJ05
@ErikJ05 5 лет назад
A series I can’t wait to see. I was born on the May immediately after the disaster, (fortunately a world away in western Canada) and I’ve been interested in the event since I was young. Can’t wait to see something that tells the whole story.
@jmm1233
@jmm1233 4 года назад
point in fact , asking how they contain it , its now shrouded in the biggest lead shell tomb
@Fomorach
@Fomorach 5 лет назад
You could also react to 'The Hot Zone' trailer, new series by National Geographic about an Ebola outbreak (inspired by true events) with an awesome cast: Julianna Margulies, Noah Emmerich, Liam Cunningham, James D'Arcy, Topher Grace, Paul James, Robert Sean Leonard, Grace Gummer, Nick Searcy, Robert Wisdom, ...
@alicezecevich2654
@alicezecevich2654 5 лет назад
Geezes HBO are bringing out some beauties! Can't wait to see this when it comes out in Australia! I watched a tv programme about Chernobyl & they went back there with one of those machine that can tell ya how high the radiation is well just to say after 20 years later the place is still hot as hell!!
@victoriarichardson1471
@victoriarichardson1471 5 лет назад
Basically Mother Nature is taking back what is her’s. Plants and Trees are growing everywhere again in the Chernobyl area. Animals have free rein again in this area. Humans will not be able to settle in this area again for years upon years.
@KaiMarcad
@KaiMarcad 5 лет назад
Over 30 years and the effects can still be seen over 700 miles away here in Finland. According to EU guidelines, food products offered for sale should not contain more than 600 becquerels per kilo (Bq/kg) of caesium-137. Mushrooms picked in Pälkäne south-central Finland last summer, had a reading of nearly 1,000 Bq/kg. Meanwhile those picked in Hyvinkää, some 60 km from the capital, contained 1,300 Bq/kg. That's all from the fallout, still here.
@malazansapper1085
@malazansapper1085 5 лет назад
There was one in the US, as well. Three-Mile Island, right in the middle of a major commercial river.
@all_things_history_9115
@all_things_history_9115 5 лет назад
I don't want to say anything, but i think you shouldn't get out of the theme. And that disaster you're describing is nowhere near the disaster in Chernobyl. No offense if any taken
@Cassxowary
@Cassxowary 5 лет назад
one of my best mates/neighbour as a kid, her older brother is blind because of it (they're from lithuania but moved here) and he looked slightly... different... because of it too, but no serious problems, thankfully! I mean, other than being blind, but he was born that way, so...
@FloatingOer
@FloatingOer 5 лет назад
There was actually another nuclear reactor disaster in 1957 in the Soviet Union (Kyshtym disaster), but it was mostly covered up. About 8´000 is estimated to have died within 30 years from the exposure. On a scale of 1-7 (International Nuclear Event Scale), Chernobyl and Fukushima is a 7, and Kyshtym is a 6. So it's the 3rd worst nuclear accident to date. (that we the public know off). Couple all these major disasters, and the others lower on the scale, and all the over 2´000 nuclear test detonations in the world. Yeah.. Lots of cancer.
@fritzrottmann2955
@fritzrottmann2955 5 лет назад
I get afraid of an accident like from a conjuring demon. Heavy...
@gone3394
@gone3394 5 лет назад
1 in 2 people don’t have cancer
@hiro9253
@hiro9253 5 лет назад
how do you contain it in chernobyl and stop it from airborne? just google it, it is already contained with a huge, really huge containment structure
@whoiamtheonlyone
@whoiamtheonlyone 5 лет назад
Chernobyl is a nightmare. I was born in a little town of Bryansk Region as far as 300 km away from this place. Yet our district was partly contaminated. Since then our region has an enormous rate of deaths from oncological diseases. A lot of people can't make it till their fifties. Some regions of Ukraine, Russia and Belorus which were the nearest, suffered the most. Sometimes in the summer radioactive forests in the Exclusion Zone are burning, spreading the radioactive particles by wind.
@cmSaS
@cmSaS 5 лет назад
I don't know of anything in Kent but I thought you were talking about the Windscale fire for a second there.
@CharlieFBarassi
@CharlieFBarassi 5 лет назад
imagine what it would have been like for the nearest city PRYPIAT
@HollyRocker91
@HollyRocker91 5 лет назад
Someone I know has two children come and stay with her from the place where this disaster happened for a few weeks... It literally adds years to their life expectancy
@toyobaru5264
@toyobaru5264 5 лет назад
HollyRocker91 wait adds or removes? I’m not sure if u made a mistake or ur being serious bout this
@HollyRocker91
@HollyRocker91 5 лет назад
@@toyobaru5264 completely serious. Their life expectancy is so much lower without it, it increases their life expectancy to be here for a few weeks/couple of months . Not something I'd joke about?
@ShadyLurker84
@ShadyLurker84 5 лет назад
So, when are you watching it?
@neveb5624
@neveb5624 5 лет назад
this is such an incredible series!! i hope u guys catch it
@exodo200
@exodo200 5 лет назад
Hi! Hope things are going well. I would like you to read the first story of Voices of Chernobyl by Svetlana Alexievich. Greetings from Colombia!
@annaconda78
@annaconda78 5 лет назад
Our swedish Stellan Skarsgård he is the best 🇸🇪❤️and his sons are good actors Gustav Skarsgård (the Vikings ) and Alexander Skarsgård ( Tarzan, true blod, big little lies and more)
@emileraikin9442
@emileraikin9442 5 лет назад
He is baron Vladimir in Dune now
@eugenegrewing2587
@eugenegrewing2587 5 лет назад
Where do you get one of two people having cancer? The current number is about 1 out of every 134 people.
@MsBlue68
@MsBlue68 5 лет назад
Nuclear contamination is a terrifying thought. I'd like to know more about the Kent incident. Not heard about it.
@redcardinalist
@redcardinalist 5 лет назад
>> I'd like to know more about the Kent incident. That's becuase there isn't any incident...
@all_things_history_9115
@all_things_history_9115 5 лет назад
Can we all just say what an amazing trailer HBO has put up? It's disturbing and amazing all together. Just this trailer has made me a top Chernobyl fan.
@jeanettescott2018
@jeanettescott2018 5 лет назад
Will watch this one. Thank you. I trust your critique on it. 💙
@Galdeon87
@Galdeon87 Месяц назад
your kids HAVE TO SEE THAT.
@skylander5116
@skylander5116 5 лет назад
Amazing trailer. Utterly captivating
@hahatoldyouso
@hahatoldyouso 5 лет назад
Just finished watching the series, incredibly shot & so harrowing but real.
@skyhigh7773
@skyhigh7773 5 лет назад
I m from lithuania and this film was made in my home contry cuz we HAD THE SAME PLACE LIKE "ČARNOBILIS'' and latter or sooner it would been the same fate. And the thing is that alot if good people there secrifised there lifes to save hole wrold. How strong you should by psaihologicly. Thats crazy cuz i and milions of people could be never born. This power is still working under grownd and it will by there for thousands of years until its stops or so we pray that heppendes. In fact it is still hunting my family members cuz my mother saw the clouds that had the "bullets,, in it and THANK GOD IT DIDIN'T rain. My moms sisters dother had baby and it was still afected!!! She didin't heve fully developed finger and doctors say that it could by still the power of cernobyl. And it is not foult of people it is foult of power that the uper people and russians politics had. They had and STILL heve perfecionist tendences.
@kosei_4929
@kosei_4929 3 года назад
in Chernobyl there is a fire still under the ruins of the reactor
@jonathanadnitt7704
@jonathanadnitt7704 5 лет назад
This is a show you should realy have watched and covered, it would have been great to hear your thoughts, even just the two of your good selfs. Best show all year, hands down.
@Josh86_925
@Josh86_925 5 лет назад
What's even crazy is that it was 3 trillion in each gram , and there was 3 million grams of uranium in Chernobyl
@gena4ka
@gena4ka 5 лет назад
Great video guys!
@julienewsome7471
@julienewsome7471 5 лет назад
It reached Wales in UK farmers livestock still tested to this day .children babies developed cancer increased to double the rate
@RoAF_Dev_Team
@RoAF_Dev_Team 5 лет назад
Problem is that your voice in the video is very quiet. So I had to increase the volume all the way up when you were talking and all the way down when you watched the trailer. So the problem itself is at 6:53 , where you edited that very very disturbing sound that I just listened at max volume. My ears, even now after 3 mins as of typing this, are still tickling...
@Katakllizm
@Katakllizm 5 лет назад
Я из Украины. Область, в которой я проживаю, более всего пострадала от катастрофы на чернобыльсной атомной електростанции. Прошло не мало лет. Но среди моих знакомых, нет ни одной семьи, в которой бы один из родственников, не умер от рака. Последствия этой аварии до сих пор убивают наших родных и близких.
@iverd2047
@iverd2047 5 лет назад
There were 64Kilograms of uranium in Hirosnima bomb. There were over 200 000 Kilograms of uranium in reactor core in Chernobil that night.
@ПлатонУченик
@ПлатонУченик 5 лет назад
How come you guys don't have anything mean to say about this series? Maybe you should get the kids into this, they'll come up with some mean suggestions. I have never commented on your channel but I am now. We need you folks to be mean like you do with everything else.
@7MonarC
@7MonarC 4 года назад
What was the other cover up he mentioned? Kent?
@Steveoqotsa
@Steveoqotsa 4 года назад
Tell me,do you use Timotei??
@Comrade_Horcan
@Comrade_Horcan 5 лет назад
Barkley was in Taboo and Keoghan was in Dunkirk :)
@aimeeshaylor939
@aimeeshaylor939 5 лет назад
1986 was the year I was born. Why do I have no knowledge of this 😔
@joannayeo9545
@joannayeo9545 5 лет назад
Because they have tried to cover up the damage that it is still causing.
@sergiusincredible5607
@sergiusincredible5607 5 лет назад
@@joannayeo9545 About 4 days government tried to hide the disaster or didn`t understand consequences.
@FrostedSeagull
@FrostedSeagull 5 лет назад
@@sergiusincredible5607.. the S we dish government figured it out after 5 days. Initially, the Swedes thought it was one of their reactors. They did further research and examined wind patterns and realised it was coming from the USSR. The USSR begrudgingly only admitted it after 7 days. The Soviet leader, Mikhail Gorbachev was systematically lied too. Since Stalinist times, this was the Soviet way. You lie, lie lie and keep lying. Gorbachev pulled the plug on Soviet Communism as he realised misinformation and lying at all levels was completely ingrained into its administrative culture and was endemnic. Glasnost was not going to cut it. Chernobyl financially ruined Soviet Communism. The cost of the clean up was conservatively 100 billion dollars out of a 300 billion dollar economy. Chernobyl severely affected food production for the whole of the Soviet Union.
@lajoswinkler
@lajoswinkler 5 лет назад
Let me guess, you're an American? It's because USA is a culturally insular country that doesn't give a fuck about what happens outside of it. It just exports popular culture. If you are 33 years old and you've never heard of Chernobyl, I pity you. It's like not knowing there is Antarctica or basketball.
@MultiDarren1972
@MultiDarren1972 5 лет назад
hope your both swell today after a nightmare sunday i missed it going to catch up tonite sounds good guys take care guys xxx
Далее
У ГОРДЕЯ ПОЖАР в ОФИСЕ!
01:01
Просмотров 4,2 млн
ЭТО мне КУПИЛИ ПОДПИСЧИКИ 📦
22:33
First time watching Chernobyl episode 1 reaction
42:46
Просмотров 190 тыс.
26. Chernobyl - How It Happened
54:24
Просмотров 2,8 млн
ABC News Nightline: Chernobyl Accident - 04/28/86
22:19
Chernobyl Official Trailer Reaction
6:51
Просмотров 285 тыс.
The Fallen of World War II
18:31
Просмотров 13 млн
The 5 Most Dangerous Chemicals on Earth
10:45
Просмотров 11 млн
У ГОРДЕЯ ПОЖАР в ОФИСЕ!
01:01
Просмотров 4,2 млн