Chernobyl (2019) It's not 3 roentgen its 15000

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  • Опубликовано: 6 июн 2019
  • I do not own any of the footage. All credit's go to HBO, SKY UK, the creator Craig Mazin and the cast crew.
    hbogo.mk/
    www.sky.com/
    / clmazin
    Thanks for Watching !!!
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Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @kazj1728
    @kazj1728 2 года назад +27139

    General Pikalov lived nearly 20 years after this because, in addition to lead shielding, he was protected by some big lead balls.

    • @flightofthebumblebee9529
      @flightofthebumblebee9529 2 года назад +1548

      Legasov was the bravest. He even got a death sentence from this invisible poison and decided to self terminate on the anniversary of Chernobyl just to get his work and truths out in the world. He was a great man and there should be statues of him all over Ukraine and Russia.

    • @kazj1728
      @kazj1728 2 года назад +131

      @@flightofthebumblebee9529 Absolutely.

    • @hootax8980
      @hootax8980 2 года назад

      @@flightofthebumblebee9529 Both of them have Leaden Balls.

    • @ericthiel4053
      @ericthiel4053 2 года назад +8

      The testosterone emissions from his humongous lead balls was so thick that the ionized radiation stood no chance!!

    • @bjpielbrooklyn
      @bjpielbrooklyn 2 года назад +207

      @@flightofthebumblebee9529 unfortunately Sam, I’ve a feeling any statues of Legasov would be pockmarked by bullets and replaced with some hideous likeness of the Butcher of Ukraine

  • @TetraDax
    @TetraDax 9 месяцев назад +6442

    One of the very few faults of this series is how they actually downplayed just how fucking important Pikalov was for the entire Chernobyl reponse. He was head of the Chemical Troops of the USSR and of that unit was the first to arrive on scene. He coordinated the entire immediate response to the accident, and unlike what the series shows, he didn't just drive up to the plant for a quick measurement, he actually drove circles around the plant to track precisely where the radiation was heading. Essentially he knew that he was dealing with an invisible cloud of poison and thought "Well before the experts arrive, I better figure out where that invisible cloud is heading".

    • @ADHDfuntimes
      @ADHDfuntimes 9 месяцев назад +442

      The chemical troops knew exactly what was happening. It was their job. I’m sure he’d been to the Semipalatinsk Polygon for nuclear and chemical weapons tests. I’m sure he’d seen what the signs of radiation exposure were.
      My dad was in the US analogy to that. He was involved in Vietnam with a lot of the chemical defoliants. He has neurological damage from it.

    • @magnusthered4973
      @magnusthered4973 7 месяцев назад +126

      He also crashed the truck through a thin wall to get a accurate reading

    • @HuNgerforrock
      @HuNgerforrock 6 месяцев назад +52

      But much bigger faults were how they portrayed Dyatlov, Bruchanov, Fomin or even Toptunov

    • @switters8679
      @switters8679 6 месяцев назад

      @@ADHDfuntimes I hope that one day, when you grow up, you realize the consequence of saying, 'My dad was xxxx, so I must know .' It has the opposite effect of what you think it is doing, which of course leads many people to the conclusion that you are an idiot because you don't understand the logical chain of events. Or treating training like it's the flu, and you are somehow more likely to understand by proximity. So dumb.

    • @greebothecat
      @greebothecat 5 месяцев назад +23

      Would you recommend a book that goes into details of the disaster response?

  • @MarqFJA87
    @MarqFJA87 4 года назад +14039

    It's morbidly funny how Shcherbina treats bringing 5000 tons of sand and boron on short notice as a far easier task than getting past the political hurdles in the way of evacuating the entirety of Pripyat.

    • @ErikJ05
      @ErikJ05 3 года назад +1545

      A bit of an underlying part of Shcherbina’s character is that while Legasov understood the scientific reality of the situation, Shcherbina understood the political reality of the situation. He somewhat tried to clue Legasov in on this, otherwise he would work through or around it to get or do what was needed.

    • @jaybartgis5148
      @jaybartgis5148 2 года назад +1206

      @@ErikJ05 that's what happens when you live in a country whose government is compulsively obsessed with not being humiliated

    • @ErikJ05
      @ErikJ05 2 года назад +104

      @@jaybartgis5148 Nice callback to that quote.

    • @TheAngelOfDeath01
      @TheAngelOfDeath01 2 года назад +28

      @@ErikJ05 Precisely.

    • @HW.0029
      @HW.0029 2 года назад +260

      Well he was only in charge of the cleanup, Gorbachev will give him almost anything he needs for the cleanup, materials, men etc. But evacuation and health policies are not under Boris. That will have to be decided by the central committee back in Moscow.

  • @vide0gameCaster
    @vide0gameCaster 4 года назад +8199

    "It's 15 thousands"
    "It's another faulty meter, you're wasting our times"

    • @prajwalghogare6055
      @prajwalghogare6055 4 года назад +65

      @Devastator Send him to infirmary

    • @malaysia81878
      @malaysia81878 4 года назад +707

      its disgraceful to spread disinformation at this time really

    • @andrewk.l1887
      @andrewk.l1887 4 года назад +352

      Lock down the city. No one leaves.

    • @malaysia81878
      @malaysia81878 4 года назад +251

      @@andrewk.l1887 and cut the internet lines *claps*

    • @andrewk.l1887
      @andrewk.l1887 4 года назад +272

      @@malaysia81878 Yes comrades. We will all be rewarded for what we do here tonight. This is our moment to shine.

  • @WSB1469
    @WSB1469 4 года назад +5201

    “It’s not 3.6, it’s 15,000”
    Not great, but not terrible.

  • @Bill_Oddie_Face_Mask
    @Bill_Oddie_Face_Mask 4 года назад +17452

    The lead shielding wasn't meant to protect Pikalov from the reactor, it was meant to protect the reactor from Pikalov.

    • @flightofthebumblebee9529
      @flightofthebumblebee9529 2 года назад +367

      He was a great man. Can you imagine walking into invisible yet certain death (prolonged) while having to force yourself to do so because it was the right thing and you were saving millions of lives and an entire continent.

    • @lost4356
      @lost4356 2 года назад +207

      @@flightofthebumblebee9529 is a joke because pikalov fought WW2, help with chernobyl and died of old age!

    • @imsorryyoutube6774
      @imsorryyoutube6774 2 года назад +329

      Pikalov to ionizing radiation: "I'm not stuck in here with you, you're stuck in here with me."

    • @abdulmoiz2242
      @abdulmoiz2242 Год назад +110

      @@imsorryyoutube6774 iam not in danger I AM THE DANGER

    • @pr945b
      @pr945b Год назад +94

      He had hundreds of thousands of soldiers to do this. But he did it himself. "There is only one way to Heaven on first class: self sacrifice."

  • @pUrpLEsnake325
    @pUrpLEsnake325 Год назад +7052

    The look on Legasov's face when he hears it's 15000 is incredible. He suddenly realizes that he and everyone around him are actively dying and will live shorter lives just by standing where they are.

    • @Rutherford_Inchworm_III
      @Rutherford_Inchworm_III Год назад +1

      15,000 rads per hour will kill you in about 1 minute. The air will literally taste like metal from the gamma rays hitting your tongue.

    • @sobolanul96
      @sobolanul96 Год назад +383

      Also look at the young soldier who listens to the discussion. The actor played his role very well, not being able to hide the terror when he heard about the atom bombs.

    • @Kamina.D.Fierce
      @Kamina.D.Fierce Год назад +144

      The look of "Yup, thought so... We're screwed."

    • @lionhead123
      @lionhead123 11 месяцев назад +32

      well its not 15000 where they are at that moment.

    • @Kamina.D.Fierce
      @Kamina.D.Fierce 11 месяцев назад +73

      @lionhead123 Yes, but the point is they're still in proximity to the Reactor even when it's measured by a few miles that's still enough exposure to destroy them over time. Not as fast as those who were at the plant but enough to guarantee they were screwed anyway.

  • @aussiegod4269
    @aussiegod4269 4 года назад +11619

    when he says "you are dealing with something that has never occurred on this planet " shivers run up my spine.

    • @ErikJ05
      @ErikJ05 2 года назад +370

      The sort of thing that would make most people want to start running or stay frozen in terror.

    • @taraswertelecki3786
      @taraswertelecki3786 2 года назад +398

      That was no exaggeration, because no accident of this kind has ever really happened before. There were meltdowns and fires in nuclear reactors before, some intentional. None of them however released more radiation than the explosion of hundreds of nuclear weapons at or below ground level, until Chernobyl who released far more radiation than the Fukashima accident. This was an accident involving hundreds and hundreds of tons of graphite and at least 100 tons of Uranium burning and going prompt critical, BEFORE it melted down and turned into nuclear lava, which is why much of the building is still lethally radioactive.

    • @rexringtail471
      @rexringtail471 2 года назад +58

      Except he clearly wasn't a geologist. Radionuclide decay has been occuring in the core since at least the Gaia impactor. Otherwise we would not have plate tectonics. It's just convenient that the place it occurs most frequently is quite a ways under our feet.

    • @martinhorvath4117
      @martinhorvath4117 2 года назад +212

      @@rexringtail471 You are forgetting the literal fact the the mantle and the crust is protecting the surface from those radiations.

    • @kholemcrae1100
      @kholemcrae1100 2 года назад +43

      That is terrifying but here is a weird bit of getting info, there is a site in west Africa with nuclear waste estimated to be 2 billion years old, from the little I’ve read about it it still wasn’t more than this so his statement is still true

  • @SecretGrenadeStash
    @SecretGrenadeStash 2 года назад +10924

    My favourite quote from the entire series:
    Legasov: "At least evacuate Pripyat, it's 3km away."
    Scherbina: "That's my decision to make."
    Legasov: "Then make it."
    Scherbina: "I've been told not to."

    • @KP-zd3hc
      @KP-zd3hc 2 года назад +293

      Oh wow… that is so ironic… haha… so can he decide or not? Lol

    • @daveguerrero1175
      @daveguerrero1175 2 года назад +978

      @@KP-zd3hc it’s only his decision publicly, but he’s controlled by what the party wants - a mere figurehead.

    • @Wustenfuchs109
      @Wustenfuchs109 2 года назад +225

      The reality is - as soon as they saw what happened, the evacuation was ordered, that same morning. It took a whole day to gather thousands of trucks and buses from as far as Minsk and Kiev in order to evacuate 50.000 people from the city and at least as many from the surrounding areas. The whole evacuation lasted around one hour and was done in perfect order.
      The show just decided to lie because it fitted their original narrative. There are a few scenes like that in every episode, where they try to bash you over the head how bad USSR was, using lies. Lies anyone can uncover with 2 minutes of google time, but rarely anyone wants to.

    • @euronimo34
      @euronimo34 2 года назад +734

      @@Wustenfuchs109 the evacuation took at least two days and Sowjet bureaucracy and ineptitude killed dozens of people there. so maybe when complaining about lies, don't lie.

    • @Wustenfuchs109
      @Wustenfuchs109 2 года назад +4

      @@euronimo34 The lying one here is you. Anyone can go and check - so don't be a dick. The accident happened on 26th, buses and trucks were gathered during the course of 26th and were in place by 11AM on 27th. At 2PM the evacuation started, by 3PM it was over. The entire city within 1 hour. So I have no idea what the hell are you talking about. Oh, wait, were you watching a fantasy series as a documentary?
      Just use google, it is your friend. If you can't be bothered with an actual book on the topic. It's is OK not to know, but it is not OK to be a dick about it.

  • @ShadowCammando24
    @ShadowCammando24 2 года назад +8234

    That man is Vladimir Karpovich Pikalov and a certified badass. He survived the battles of Moscow, Kursk and Stalingrad in WWII and also through the events of Chernobyl only dying of old age in 2003.

    • @theshermantanker7043
      @theshermantanker7043 2 года назад +123

      1 year after I was born, that's an honour

    • @thegrimcritic5494
      @thegrimcritic5494 2 года назад +391

      I have no love for the Soviet Union or the Red Army, but I will give my respect to men like him who were shining beacons of honor and loyalty to their homeland even in the darkest of times. Thank you for your service, General Pikalov. You have earned your rest.

    • @00Daddy
      @00Daddy Год назад +10

      pure badass and luck

    • @ajvideoz8129
      @ajvideoz8129 Год назад +1

      @@thegrimcritic5494 I was reading the comments and did not see once somone asking you about your fkn love for the red army or the soviet Union you bitchass bullied girl

    • @y.r._
      @y.r._ Год назад +4

      @@thegrimcritic5494 Men are not at fault for their regimes. Brave, courageous, talented men are to be respected, even if they fought for someone as evil as the soviet union. The same applies to men like Manstein, Rommel and other german generals of the time

  • @alexiaNBC
    @alexiaNBC 4 года назад +9652

    General Vladimir Pikalov who rammed his truck into the plant grounds to measure the real radiation levels fought in the battles of Moscow, Stalingrad and Kursk receiving several wounds in them. Nothing scared him after those terrifying battles; not even an exposed nuclear core.

    • @edvingrabar5229
      @edvingrabar5229 3 года назад +411

      That's a whole new level of 'badass'

    • @unelectedleader6494
      @unelectedleader6494 2 года назад +260

      He just asks at the end where’s the hotel lol. I need to get my irradiated rear end to sleep

    • @osamaz2780
      @osamaz2780 2 года назад +240

      @@unelectedleader6494 he didn't ask for the hotel, he's telling Valery that he can stay at a hotel in that area. Army men have their accommodations always 😂

    • @taraswertelecki3786
      @taraswertelecki3786 2 года назад +13

      If he was a real person, who really drove a truck through the debris, HE would have felt he was going to die soon anyway and had little to lose.

    • @ibiaan
      @ibiaan 2 года назад +206

      @@taraswertelecki3786 Oh but he was real, and he outlived almost everyone in the show

  • @georges617
    @georges617 2 года назад +16694

    General Pikalov didn't just drive into the facility himself to protect his own soldiers from the radiation. He did it because he understood that the situation was very serious and that the facility directors were trying to hide something. As such, he needed to make sure that everyone knew the correct radiation levels and being the reputable and highly honourable soldier that he was, no one with half a brain would be so insane as to question the reading that he got in there. If it was anyone else, the directors might try and claim another faulty meter or that his guy didn't read it right, but you'd need to be suicidal to question a legendary General's honour and honesty.
    That's the main reason he went for it and managed to expose the true nature of the beast beyond all doubts to everyone.

  • @oldschooljack3479
    @oldschooljack3479 6 месяцев назад +536

    "There's a hotel."
    Colonel General Pikalov is like, "I realize I just gave you the worst possible news... But there's a nice place downtown."
    Dude is an absolute rock. Perhaps my favorite character in the series.

  • @jessetobiason1184
    @jessetobiason1184 4 года назад +889

    “I’m going to go get you 5,000 tons of sand and boron!” Damn. Taking Shcherbina with me next time I need to cut through the bureaucracy at the DMV

    • @jetuber
      @jetuber 3 года назад +68

      It's the good and the bad of dictatorships. They're much more brutally efficient at solving catastrophes. But because of the ideological, Lysenkoist basis of their regimes, they're also likelier to create them.

    • @jamesmaysflyingwashingmach7459
      @jamesmaysflyingwashingmach7459 2 года назад +39

      That was the thing about Soviet bureaucracy, it could be amazingly efficient when it wanted to be.

    • @unelectedleader6494
      @unelectedleader6494 2 года назад +2

      He has the yellow pages

    • @EATSLEEPDRIVE2002
      @EATSLEEPDRIVE2002 2 года назад +14

      *Scherbina walks away *
      Me: “where are you going?”
      -“ I’m going to get you six points of ID”

    • @CB-xw2pl
      @CB-xw2pl 2 года назад +9

      He spent the rest of his life cutting through the bureaucracy during the last days of the Soviet Union.

  • @EATSLEEPDRIVE2002
    @EATSLEEPDRIVE2002 2 года назад +666

    “It’s not 3 röntgen; it’s 15,000.”
    Dyatlov: “15,000. Not great, not…oh shit.”

  • @akshaykk2640
    @akshaykk2640 4 года назад +1214

    “ You are dealing with something , that has never occurred on this planet, before “

    • @user-nd2zc3um8y
      @user-nd2zc3um8y 4 года назад +58

      What a scary line

    • @user-nd2zc3um8y
      @user-nd2zc3um8y 4 года назад

      @@GauravSanjeevKumarBhardwaj1220 Oh stop drama

    • @malaysia81878
      @malaysia81878 4 года назад +20

      not great not terrible, all will be fine, I have seen worse. Handover yourself to the infirmary, you are delusional

    • @MrDuckTrollson
      @MrDuckTrollson 4 года назад +5

      BECAUSE IT DIDN'T!!!!

    • @rvhill69
      @rvhill69 3 года назад +9

      Except, that one time in Africa, millions of years ago.

  • @TheRealBDouble
    @TheRealBDouble Год назад +1774

    I like how he backed up so as not to damage the dosimeter. It's little details like that that make this show awesome

    • @papa_squat
      @papa_squat Год назад +70

      Well that, and you could easily damage a radiator driving headfirst into a locked fence.

    • @ruslansmirnov9006
      @ruslansmirnov9006 Год назад +4

      i doubt the gate there was closed, in reality

    • @Nabium
      @Nabium Год назад +21

      I was thinking he backed up so to not crash his front with windows first into the gate and possibly expose himself even more..

    • @ATSaale
      @ATSaale Год назад +9

      @@Nabium this and to protect the radiator and engine in front. It's the same reason demolition derby drivers drive into each other with their rear end.

    • @Kamina.D.Fierce
      @Kamina.D.Fierce Год назад +7

      Makes the movie version Russia crapped out in 2021 look all the worse by comparison due to its LACK of attention to detail.

  • @fedepena6687
    @fedepena6687 2 года назад +637

    Did anybody notice how the eyes of the soldier standing behind Valery nearly bulge out as he explains the reality of the situation? He has a pure "I'm fucked" expression

    • @eliteofthe9136
      @eliteofthe9136 2 года назад

      Yeah and then he looks over at the 2 douchebags lol

    • @serhafiye7046
      @serhafiye7046 Год назад +60

      You are exaggerating but at 2:41 he is indeed look scared.
      Actually it's another amazing detail because he isn't reacting until the "entire continent is dead" part. Because he don't know anything about roentgen and even Hiroshima probably.

    • @MichaelLee-tt7gm
      @MichaelLee-tt7gm Месяц назад

      Another reason Pikalov drove the truck himself; his soldiers could have bolted if their commander hadn’t taken the biggest risk.

  • @ThrashMetallix
    @ThrashMetallix Год назад +1646

    1:52
    Honestly, the entire sequence of them washing off the truck and Pikalov is eerily creepy on its own. Watching the runoff dripping to the ground, knowing it's carrying lethal amounts of an invisible killer is the perfect imagery of the true horror of what happened.

    • @Rutherford_Inchworm_III
      @Rutherford_Inchworm_III Год назад +96

      I get what you mean. But the washing wasn't the real issue - at 15,000 roentgen per hour that truck would have been so damaged by a few minutes of gamma rays that they would have needed to dig a truck-sized hole and bury the thing.
      The General will be fine, radiation knows better than to mess with him.

    • @nickandres7829
      @nickandres7829 11 месяцев назад +20

      @@Rutherford_Inchworm_III IIRC gamma rays knock electrons, and occasionally protons and neutrons - off of atoms, ionizing some elements and converting others. But gamma rays are photons, they are emitted and absorbed. It's alpha and beta radiation, while far less penetrative, the particles persist, and their interactions with other atoms can lead to chain reactions and further radioactive elements.

    • @Rutherford_Inchworm_III
      @Rutherford_Inchworm_III 11 месяцев назад +15

      @@nickandres7829 You are correct. Activation is not a concern in that scenario re: direct gamma. Not sure why I said that... too much cross pollination with criticality accident research, I suppose.

    • @KittyPieVibes
      @KittyPieVibes 9 месяцев назад +1

      I always wondered what the liquid was, surely water alone isn’t enough to decontaminate

    • @Rutherford_Inchworm_III
      @Rutherford_Inchworm_III 9 месяцев назад +25

      @@KittyPieVibes This one I know for sure: they used a substance they called "bourda" which is the Russian word for molasses and also a slang word meaning basically "goop" - it was sticky brown brewery waste that they mixed with water to form a foamy liquid which captured dust like soapsuds (except far cheaper). It was already in widespread use in the USSR to keep dust down on dirt roads.

  • @yousrichaachoua9814
    @yousrichaachoua9814 4 года назад +2757

    Seeing all those abandoned fire trucks to me is one of the most Scariest scenes in the series, fire trucks that are always filled by people trying to help and you just see those fire trucks sitting there knowing that their crew Will probably never get in a fire truck ever again

    • @ErikJ05
      @ErikJ05 3 года назад +179

      Creepier still when you consider that the fire trucks and all the vehicles and helicopters used in the clean up are still there today, abandoned and too irradiated to ever use again. A vehicle graveyard inside an abandoned, decaying Soviet dream, frozen in time.

    • @tbd-1
      @tbd-1 2 года назад +10

      @@ErikJ05 They were finally shredded and buried a few years ago. The problems went from people looting parts from the radioactive vehicles to keep other vehicles operating to people just flat-out stealing steel to cash out as scrap metal and they finally decided to do away with all of it. That motor park of contaminated vehicles no longer exists.

    • @ErikJ05
      @ErikJ05 2 года назад +30

      @@tbd-1 Huh, I hadn’t heard that. Thank you. Still an eerie legacy to see in pictures.

    • @vacciniumaugustifolium1420
      @vacciniumaugustifolium1420 2 года назад +57

      Surprisingly, quite a lot of the firefighters who arrived on the site survived the initial radiation dose, most of the ones who died of ARS were the ones who climbed on the roof and were directly exposed to the highly radioactive material.

    • @blazephamous7425
      @blazephamous7425 2 года назад +10

      Theres a vehichle cemetery of all tanks, trucks, cars, choopers abandoned in a secluded area. It was planned to be decontaminated and scrapped, or just burried in the ground. As of 2017, the vehichles have been removed from that place

  • @highlander723
    @highlander723 Год назад +2628

    "Give them as much protection as you can but even with lead shielding it may not be enough."
    "Then I'll do it myself"
    a general truly worthy of the rank.

    • @texaswunderkind
      @texaswunderkind Год назад +66

      Love that line. I don't know if it is historically accurate, but it is an excellent example of true leadership. Rather than send some grunt on a suicide mission, and have the communist party apparatchik scream "fake news" yet again, the general puts his own life on the line.

    • @Kamina.D.Fierce
      @Kamina.D.Fierce Год назад +17

      I like to think Zhukov would have said the same thing if he were around for Chernobyl.

    • @SergeantExtreme
      @SergeantExtreme Год назад +90

      @@texaswunderkind It's accurate. General Pikalov figured a cover up was already in the process, and this was one event that he absolutely could not allow to be covered up. So part of why he went himself was so that none of the corrupt party members trying to cover up the situation could dispute his claim.

    • @gabrielbrown3382
      @gabrielbrown3382 10 месяцев назад +11

      My favorite line in this episode, he was told that even with all the protection someone under his command might not be safe, he willfully went in to protect his men. Truly one of the most honorable men I have heard of.

    • @mariastevens6406
      @mariastevens6406 9 месяцев назад +8

      And he said it immediately, without hesitation, and meant it.

  • @PHATB0Y20
    @PHATB0Y20 4 года назад +960

    Watched Chernobyl once** You know I’m something of a nuclear physicist myself

    • @kazj1728
      @kazj1728 2 года назад +22

      I believe one needs to also watch a TEDx about Chernobyl to consider oneself a nuclear physicist.

    • @eliteofthe9136
      @eliteofthe9136 2 года назад +7

      @@kazj1728 I thought you were saying the movie TED🤣🤣

    • @kazj1728
      @kazj1728 2 года назад +1

      @@eliteofthe9136 Well in Ted 2 Tom Brady’s bedsheets glowed brightly when Mark Wahlberg and Ted tried to steal his ‘genes’, so he was probably radioactive…which actually explains a lot.

    • @kazj1728
      @kazj1728 2 года назад

      @@eliteofthe9136 ruclips.net/video/83xaGtnlvR0/видео.html

  • @jamesfrank3213
    @jamesfrank3213 4 года назад +839

    I like how Boris hears the number and starts to look at Fomin and then keeps on going over to Legasov, knowing he will tell him what he needs to hear.

    • @Kamina.D.Fierce
      @Kamina.D.Fierce Год назад +37

      Once he understood Legasov was right he knew Legasov was one of the only men there who would be honest about the disaster and the stakes of said disaster.

    • @thegreenreaper6660
      @thegreenreaper6660 9 месяцев назад +12

      "What does that number mean"... its a rethorical question he put on the Director and Lead-Engineer of the Plant....and they couldnt give him an awnser...
      Which proved that Bryukhanov and Fomin were not only denying the truth, and lying to his face, only to save their skins... They didnt have a clue on the real size of the disaster....
      And 15.000 Roentgen gave a perfect picture on how massive a disaster it was.... still, with Pikalov himself reporting thát gruesome number... the Director and Lead-Engineer would still try and wiggle around the gruesome truth....
      Hence their only purpose left was to be escorted to a Party HQ, be detained and held accountable for their part in this... Maybe not causing the disaster, but their absolute failure in taking their responsibility in assessing the situation, realistically!
      The way that Bryukhanov and Fomin tried to hush it up, and even lie to Shcherbina about it, would be seen as a highly treasenous crime by the Communist Party!
      Hadent it been for the publicity of this disaster, even the KGB would have frowned upon this, and have reserved a véry special place in thé worst Gulag in the USSR for Bryukhaniv and Fomin for this...Lucky enough for them, Publicity exposed the disaster, meaning Bryukhaniv and Fomin were to be served a húge Tribunal, alongside Dyatlov, as the USSR had to show the WORLD how they would deal justice!! The Communist party couldnt afford to lose face on the hlobal political stage in this...
      They couldnt put this genie back in the bottle...

    • @SpyrosKoronis
      @SpyrosKoronis 5 месяцев назад

      I think Boris looks at Brukhyanov after the latter starts talking, to silence him with one glare.

  • @Discipleee
    @Discipleee 4 года назад +385

    Fifthy Thousand People used to live here... Now it's a ghost town

    • @sacredbolero
      @sacredbolero 4 года назад +11

      Most people got into chernobyl because of this series. I got into chernobyl because of this quote.

    • @testfortester7131
      @testfortester7131 4 года назад +10

      Remember...no Russian

    • @sannidhyabalkote9536
      @sannidhyabalkote9536 4 года назад +1

      @C-shift Report It was Macmillan

    • @xsailor85
      @xsailor85 4 года назад

      Disciple And will be till the end of time.

  • @Michaelthekiwi
    @Michaelthekiwi Год назад +195

    Notice how Shcherbina turns to Legasov after hearing 15,000 Roentgen, he suddenly realises that the only person not bullshitting him has been the one who he thought was bullshitting him. And even though he yells at Legasov, Shcherbina immediately does what he says and heads off to organise the Boron.

  • @gogogomes7025
    @gogogomes7025 6 месяцев назад +79

    "That's my decision to make."
    "Then make it."
    "I've been told not to."
    God, I love this line.

    • @Ama-hi5kn
      @Ama-hi5kn 6 месяцев назад +3

      The party has given the orders. You don't contest them.

  • @JH-dr4xo
    @JH-dr4xo 8 месяцев назад +304

    1:52 a very quick shot but still such a powerful moment. The general stands there as if he’s a harbinger of death. Great cinematography

    • @chris7gabriel
      @chris7gabriel 7 месяцев назад +30

      He has this look that says "get fucking ready cause you're in for a treat.."

    • @stefanodegioia1598
      @stefanodegioia1598 Месяц назад +3

      ​@@chris7gabrielExpecially here 2:03

    • @coyote16able
      @coyote16able 23 дня назад +2

      @@stefanodegioia1598 looking at when they first show him you can already tell the sheer rage and disgust he currently has. and then the end of the scene he's just staring at the reactor staring at a more assured death then war before giving the most old warrior look to Legasov.

  • @MichaelLee-tt7gm
    @MichaelLee-tt7gm 2 года назад +319

    In December 1986, Pikalov was named a Hero of the Soviet Union (the Soviet equivalent of a U.S. Medal of Honor). Can anyone say he didn't deserve it?

    • @rehan4223
      @rehan4223 Год назад

      People who deny radiation lol im sure that group also exists 💀 internet has allowed all the idiots to gather and form cults

    • @LEDtherebelight
      @LEDtherebelight Год назад +22

      He's a hero of the world as far as I'm concerned.

    • @Zedetnik
      @Zedetnik Год назад +13

      He's the savior of both Europe and Asia... So, yeah, he totally deserved it.

    • @Kamina.D.Fierce
      @Kamina.D.Fierce Год назад +4

      Hell of a man. He and all of them who were actually fixing the problem and cleaning up definitely deserve to be honored and remembered by all of humanity. Thanks to this series, I feel like they will.

  • @Corristo89
    @Corristo89 2 года назад +1021

    Props to Shcherbina for being so on-point and willing to listen to Legasov for advice after having discovered that he was completely right and that those two clowns were lying to his face in order to cover up their blunder. Get the problem under control ASAP, the consequences be damned if they're less serious than letting things just escalate further.

    • @hergie409
      @hergie409 Год назад

      World has a big problem with self serving clowns covering up their blunders currently

    • @MrStarfishPrime
      @MrStarfishPrime Год назад +14

      Scherbina is the great hero, he is the guy that solves everything. Listen to the scientists and gets what they need.

    • @brandondaniels9471
      @brandondaniels9471 Год назад +23

      _IT WAS DYATLOV!!!_

    • @MrTAggarwal
      @MrTAggarwal Год назад +8

      @@brandondaniels9471 Dyatlov was incharge

    • @fabmax41
      @fabmax41 Год назад +6

      @@MrTAggarwal No, he was at the toilets when accident happened, you have to pay more attention to the script dude :D

  • @labyrinthmind2951
    @labyrinthmind2951 2 года назад +90

    "You're dealing with something that has never occurred before on this planet... but enough about Pikalov, we should do something about this fire."

  • @KPen3750
    @KPen3750 2 года назад +136

    My personal favorite part of this scene, is how Shcherbina COMPLETELY ignores Fomin and the other guy and asks Legasov exactly what it means.

    • @Kamina.D.Fierce
      @Kamina.D.Fierce 9 месяцев назад +7

      Bonus points when you notice Legasov turned to them when he was explaining what 15000 meant. As if to say "THAT is what happens when an RBMK reactor explodes you morons".

  • @finanzasymejoracontinua
    @finanzasymejoracontinua 2 года назад +311

    The general is really intelligent. He understand and believes Legasov. He is also a veteran politician and know how to make his moves. He also performs well as a decision-marker: listens to Legasov to know what the problem is, what needs to be solved and executes the steps to do that: final line "going to get you 5000 tons of sand" just brilliantly exemplifies this.

    • @stevenhancock2822
      @stevenhancock2822 Год назад +17

      In this scene, intelligent and practical. A military leader understands logistics, and the need for food and shelter. The "There's a hotel" line shows that he sees the greater picture as well as the minor bullshit that can effect how it's handled. Get the freaking genius scientist a bed and some food, so we we can solve the problem. Love it.

    • @jfamo3552
      @jfamo3552 Год назад +3

      He's a man and a leader of them. He took his own life into his own hands. When he did not need to.

  • @MrTustri
    @MrTustri 4 года назад +340

    Nappa : His power level is only 3.6 , not great not terrible.
    Vegeta : Its over 9000!!!!!!!!
    NAPPA : IT WAS DYATLOV!!!!!!! KILL HIM NOT ME

  • @haroldgoodman2278
    @haroldgoodman2278 2 года назад +59

    Comrade Boris: I'm in charge!
    Radiation: Do you feel in charge...?

    • @SuperRavensfan101
      @SuperRavensfan101 Год назад +3

      Very good dark knight rises reference. very apt in this instance too.

  • @GingerZombie29
    @GingerZombie29 2 года назад +152

    The quick reaction shot of Legasov after the general tells them the number says it all.
    Scherbina's face and manurisms when Legasov tells him they are dealing with something that had never happened before is also great.
    His face says "That's not what I asked. I asked for a solution.".

  • @Xehemoth
    @Xehemoth 2 года назад +77

    Whats chilling most of all is 3.6 is cause for concern. At 15,000 the danger is incomprehensible

    • @AdvancedGaming4444
      @AdvancedGaming4444 Год назад +4

      Emergency situation for reals

    • @lpr5269
      @lpr5269 10 месяцев назад +5

      The meter showed a reading of 3.6. What is the maximum limit of that detector? UH 3.6. Ok that's sounds good to me. 3.6 it is.

  • @GaborGyebnar
    @GaborGyebnar 2 года назад +423

    That genius cut at 3:55, when the camera is focusing on literally nothing in the distance, completely blurring the main character. Telling a whole story about radiation in three seconds.

    • @Dutch3DMaster
      @Dutch3DMaster Год назад +6

      It could be deliberate, but it would also not be the first time that a faintly visible special effect did not show well on the consumer end of devices (though I'd say that taking that into account these days is much more of a thing than it might have been 20-25 years a go.

    • @56bturn
      @56bturn Год назад +15

      I think there's supposed to be faint smoke visible.

    • @TheThedisliker
      @TheThedisliker Год назад +4

      Dude it was focusing on the smoke that he was pointing at, didnt you see it

    • @Motoring_With_Manas
      @Motoring_With_Manas Год назад +2

      If you try and see it on a bigger screen with a higher resolution you’ll be able to see it

    • @VGJunky
      @VGJunky Год назад +4

      that's the result of being a 480p video lmao

  • @ErikJ05
    @ErikJ05 5 лет назад +1874

    I love how they took a “less is more” approach to the music. Gives a sort of creaking “metal settling down” vibe.
    On a different note, I can only imagine what was going through the mind of the Colonel as he made the approach by himself. The plant grounds evacuated, the site dark and abandoned, everything eerily still and silent and the invisible danger in the very air he was passing through. But when he came to the locked gate he just bulldozed right through it, because he had a job to do and he was going to see it through. Nerves of steel indeed. And they were going to need every person just like him that they could get.
    Viktor Bryukhanov and Nikolai Fomin were lucky that they weren't stood in front of a firing squad.

    • @FloatingOer
      @FloatingOer 4 года назад +136

      The woman who made the music said in a video that she went to a nuclear powerplant to record all the sounds and then pieced together the sounds into the soundtrack. Very atmospheric.

    • @jamesfrank3213
      @jamesfrank3213 4 года назад +73

      If you listen close during the closeup of Legasov while they are waiting in the tent, you can hear a dosimeter gradually getting louder in the background.

    • @ErikJ05
      @ErikJ05 3 года назад +15

      @FloatingOer Yeah, I heard the same thing. In fact if I remember correctly, she recorded the sounds at Ignalina, another RBMK reactor, the very same one where Chernobyl was filmed.

    • @Neo_Leo85
      @Neo_Leo85 2 года назад +11

      I was always felt like it was the groaning and roaring of the reactor as it spewed its poison. I thought it was great.

    • @ErikJ05
      @ErikJ05 2 года назад +7

      @@Neo_Leo85 Yeah I can imagine that. Chernobyl was metaphorically a terrifying monster of human creation.

  • @blackrider2241
    @blackrider2241 Год назад +46

    “You are dealing with something that has never accurred on this planet before”
    I don’t think anyone really realizes how scary those words are

    • @mariastevens6406
      @mariastevens6406 5 месяцев назад +3

      Almost as scary as "rabies went airborne"

    • @nodeberiaestaraqui93
      @nodeberiaestaraqui93 20 дней назад +2

      ​@@mariastevens6406 jesus fuck, I know that's not practically possible but the idea of it is already scary

  • @gtaclevelandcity
    @gtaclevelandcity 8 месяцев назад +29

    "You are dealing with something that has never occurred on this planet before..." That line always gives me chills.

  • @pointly
    @pointly 5 лет назад +1465

    An amazing show. You do not understand the magnitude of this situation but this show does a fantastic job of showing it. Later in the series, Boris has this look about him that speaks volumes. When he realizes that they are so far over their heads and there is nothing they have that can counter the 15000 roentgen per hour, you feel for him and the scientists involved in this cleanup. The area around Chernobyl is still incredibly toxic and life is starting to return but the reactor and the radiation in the surrounding area will not fade away for at least 100 years. At the least! Gorbachev even says in his memoirs that it was Chernobyl that brought down the Soviet Union.

    • @Paulius_Beniusis
      @Paulius_Beniusis 5 лет назад +71

      I've just came back from Chernobyl and the town of Pripyat. The guide said, that the fatal radiation MIGHT fade out in 100 years, but the radioactive particles that could be ingested and could be fatal won't fade away for at least 50000 more years. So basically, forever.

    • @wino0000006
      @wino0000006 5 лет назад +11

      They had - sand and boron.

    • @taysirchaachoua3921
      @taysirchaachoua3921 4 года назад +5

      Crimson Tiger No you can add 2 0’s behind that number, that’s the time before the place will be habitable again

    • @nfdids
      @nfdids 4 года назад +23

      That radiation will NOT fade away in 100 years, Chernobyl is lost for good.

    • @malaysia81878
      @malaysia81878 4 года назад +20

      @@Paulius_Beniusis 5k years? not great not horrifiying, all will be fine, I have seen worse

  • @TM-eg1vy
    @TM-eg1vy 4 года назад +76

    2:18 boris had his first moment of truth and knew that he is facing a catastrophe.

    • @killman369547
      @killman369547 4 года назад +2

      +thomas mayer-m. and his second "oh....... sh*t" moment came not 20 seconds later as legasov explains just how much radiation the reactor is emitting every hour.

  • @Usedw0tm8
    @Usedw0tm8 10 месяцев назад +26

    Jared Harris was PHENOMENAL as Legasov. Like he's always been a good actor, but I was blown away by this.

    • @Some_Guy_6
      @Some_Guy_6 Месяц назад +1

      His father is the true Dumbledore.

  • @josephzsoka874
    @josephzsoka874 2 года назад +108

    Pikalov had so much lead in him from the war, that it nearly extinguished the reactor.

    • @serhafiye7046
      @serhafiye7046 Год назад +1

      Underrated comment

    • @dannyarcher6370
      @dannyarcher6370 Год назад

      @@serhafiye7046 Indeed. I gave it a like. Let's hope it receives the recognition it deserves.

  • @pedobear8071
    @pedobear8071 2 года назад +37

    The original "fine, i'll do it myself" before Thanos.

  • @marrox013
    @marrox013 2 года назад +100

    the shot of Pikalov in a mask, being washed down, looking almost at the camera is amazing

    • @renatocarreon5357
      @renatocarreon5357 Год назад

      Ah you notice it also😅😅

    • @ThomasJoseph-sq9jl
      @ThomasJoseph-sq9jl 25 дней назад

      Indeed, him waiting the crew to be done with the washing while looking at the men through his mask is a prelude of the terrifying news to come...

    • @timdowney6721
      @timdowney6721 9 дней назад

      As is the first shot of the insect-like mask as he’s maneuvering the truck.

  • @jamesricker3997
    @jamesricker3997 4 года назад +174

    One of the greatest scenes in television history

  • @pineappleginseng1557
    @pineappleginseng1557 7 месяцев назад +52

    Vladimir Pikalov, the general depicted in this series, happened to live until the age of 78, dying in 2003. He served in WWII, where he participated in the Battles of Stalingrad, Moscow, and Kursk. He would also receive the title of Hero of the Soviet Union, for his work during the Chernobyl Disaster.

    • @Spudtron98
      @Spudtron98 Месяц назад +1

      After all that shit, it figures that the only thing that could kill him was old age.

    • @nodeberiaestaraqui93
      @nodeberiaestaraqui93 20 дней назад

      ​@@Spudtron98not even Chernobyl radiation could put him down

  • @nicholai40
    @nicholai40 2 года назад +42

    When we have trouble at work, I'm gonna say, "Dyatlov was in charge. It was Dyatlov!"

    • @GetRicked
      @GetRicked 11 месяцев назад +3

      Might change my signature block quote to "not great, not terrible."

  • @slimj091
    @slimj091 Год назад +31

    General: It's not 3 roentgen. It's 15,000
    Dyatlov: How do you get that number from a blown tank? He's in shock. Take him to the infirmary.

    • @thegreenreaper6660
      @thegreenreaper6660 Год назад +5

      "Another piece of faulty equipment, you're wasting our time"

    • @Kamina.D.Fierce
      @Kamina.D.Fierce 9 месяцев назад

      Scherbina: "Thank you for your service. You're excused."

  • @scottroffman2325
    @scottroffman2325 2 года назад +169

    I've seen just about every horror movie/tv show in the last 75 years. And HBO's "Chernobyl" is BY FAR, the scariest thing I have ever viewed in my life.

    • @johnathanhughes9881
      @johnathanhughes9881 Год назад +10

      It's all the scarier for the fact that over the last year we've seen that nothing in Russia has changed.

    • @stevenhancock2822
      @stevenhancock2822 11 месяцев назад +1

      Go into any bar and tell a drunk woman to calm down.

    • @eyeseer1
      @eyeseer1 10 месяцев назад +3

      It’s not scary for being fiction, it is terrifying for being a fact.

    • @severalthings7506
      @severalthings7506 8 месяцев назад

      And thing is that it was real

  • @flightofthebumblebee9529
    @flightofthebumblebee9529 2 года назад +521

    I watched this series at least 5 times now all the way through and this part and the buildup to it is almost heartbreaking. It's like even the most naive knew something was TERRIBLY wrong, even Dyaltov. They just couldn't admit the worst and wanted to believe the core was in tact and able to be cooled. When they say 15000 and ask Jared Harris what that means he casually says "it means the core is exposed" and then proceeded to tell them what they should've already known. The fire brigade never stood a chance and Dyaltov should've been indicted for that choice alone by calling them to put out a fire that was exposing them to rapid death by invisible poison.

    • @tobiaswilhelmi4819
      @tobiaswilhelmi4819 2 года назад +37

      Except that this part is completely fictional. Dyatlov claimed in later interviews that he himself visited the reactor building to evaluate the damage, he ordered the shutdown of reactor 3 and adviced the fire brigade to secure the generator hall to prevent further damage. I'm aware that he's probably not the best source and for sure he wasn't the hero in this story, but I think he wasn't the villain either. It just happens that he was the guy who the Communist party could blame, and I'm not very happy that the mini series followed this narration.

    • @eliteofthe9136
      @eliteofthe9136 2 года назад +7

      @@tobiaswilhelmi4819 but they do a good enough job of showing the corruption in the Soviet command structure that it makes you wonder automatically what actually happened. I mean you can't tell me you didn't go online and look into the incident further after watching this.

    • @rileyneufeld7001
      @rileyneufeld7001 Год назад +25

      @@tobiaswilhelmi4819 It seems the more I look into Chernobyl nobody in the control room was at fault. Dyatlov did everything right with the information he was given. And had he not tried to get the reactor running he would've lost his job if not worse. The control room operators were also severely undertrained and ill informed on what to do. Shame they're seen as villains in this series.

    • @Schaden-freude
      @Schaden-freude Год назад

      unfortunately the firefighters were required. their sacrifice was unavoidable with the tech of the day.

    • @jakeg3733
      @jakeg3733 Год назад +14

      One of the firemen who survived later said that they did in fact have a strong suspicion that the core itself had exploded, but duty compelled them to put the fire out. Because if they hadn't it would have spread to the other reactors, and Europe would be uninhabitable. They may not have been properly trained or informed, but people are smart and they figure stuff out. I think they knew, just not how bad it was going to be. They should have indicted the idiot who used flammable materials like that in the roof of a nuclear reactor, because the firefighters that died were the ones that went up there

  • @operatorchakkoty4257
    @operatorchakkoty4257 Год назад +92

    When Pikalov approached reactor number 4, out of sheer respect the core stopped emitting, came outside to give Pikalov the correct reading, then returned to continue emitting once Pikalov was gone.

  • @JoshSweetvale
    @JoshSweetvale 2 года назад +56

    General: "This is exactly how screwed we are."
    Scientist: "I told you, we're utterly screwed."
    Politician: "Well shit."

  • @MiketheratguyMultimedia
    @MiketheratguyMultimedia Год назад +262

    I loved this series SO much. It's one of the best things I've seen in any form of media. Lines like the dire delivery of "we are dealing with something that has never occurred on this PLANET before" really make it clear to the viewer how serious this disaster really was.

    • @ItCameFromTheSkyBeLo
      @ItCameFromTheSkyBeLo 10 месяцев назад

      It's wrong though. Corium was created first in the USA. At 3 mile Island.

    • @julie982
      @julie982 4 дня назад

      Nope, Three Mile Island was very different.
      When he says never occurred before on the planet, he is referring to the core being open to the air, putting off the radiation of two Hiroshima bombs per hour.
      Three mile island had a meltdown and released radiation, however the containment vessels held. So the US had to deal with a meltdown, the US did not have to deal with an open core.

  • @tehtapemonkey
    @tehtapemonkey Год назад +62

    "You are dealing with something that has never occurred on this planet before" was the line that really drove home for me how critical this event was.

    • @abominusrex3205
      @abominusrex3205 Год назад +2

      Actually it probably happened before on the planet, perhaps 4 billion years before, when the earth was forming

    • @arlukiii7116
      @arlukiii7116 20 дней назад

      @@abominusrex3205 There was a natural nuclear reactor 1.7 billion years ago in what is now Gabon. Google "natural nuclear reactor."

  • @Dovahkiin106
    @Dovahkiin106 Год назад +183

    The sad thing to think about is how the USSR refused to evacuate until the US got satellite images of the plant and showed the world what was happening, which was about 36 hours later. To put that into their words, that’s 72 Hiroshima bombs worth of radiation released before they evacuated anyone, just to try and protect their image.

    • @nubreed13
      @nubreed13 Год назад +1

      Not only that but the west detected the spikes in radiation 3000 miles away. There was no doubt something bad happened.

    • @starfleetcaptain5413
      @starfleetcaptain5413 Год назад +10

      What's sad is there are those who would do that in the United States as well, The Three Mile Island incident proved that and the way people are today just makes it doubly so.

    • @Dovahkiin106
      @Dovahkiin106 Год назад +20

      @@starfleetcaptain5413 to be fair to the US, not that it wasn’t fucked up, but three mile island was no where close to as bad as Chernobyl.

    • @starfleetcaptain5413
      @starfleetcaptain5413 Год назад +1

      @@Dovahkiin106 no but damn close to becoming that.

    • @starfleetcaptain5413
      @starfleetcaptain5413 Год назад +2

      People are all the same, doesn't matter where your from

  • @MrWade12323
    @MrWade12323 4 года назад +100

    Dyatlov was in charge....it was Dyatlov!

    • @user-dv6nh3mu3y
      @user-dv6nh3mu3y 4 года назад +15

      Wasn't viktor bryukhanov fault that he want the test? When the nuclear explode he denying the high radiation, says is not high, tried to cover up his responsible, prevent citizen to evacuate pripyat

    • @thegreatcalvinio
      @thegreatcalvinio 4 года назад +10

      He was on the toilet.

  • @1jeffr
    @1jeffr 4 года назад +37

    "You are dealing with something that has never occurred on this planet before"

  • @midnytevega2777
    @midnytevega2777 5 месяцев назад +9

    General Pikalov is the definition of "call and ambulance. But not for me"

  • @smonyboy
    @smonyboy 10 месяцев назад +13

    If enlisted men were sent instead of the general volunteering, they'd be called delusional for saying 15,000

  • @jamesfrank3213
    @jamesfrank3213 4 года назад +52

    Did anyone else hear the background sounds of a Geiger counter? That steady noise of death all around you...

  • @dodger1214
    @dodger1214 Год назад +40

    A true leader. Not only did he not want to put any of his soliders in harms way, but as the most high ranking officer at the scene, he wanted everyone to know what the correct reading was, and he knew Fomin and Bryukhanov were not telling the whole story. General Pikalov is a true hero.

    • @matthewhelton1725
      @matthewhelton1725 8 месяцев назад +7

      Pikalov knew that Legasov was probably right, right from the start. But he needed a politically-acceptable way to out Brykhanov and Fomin. By telling them all that the "high rate dosimeter had just arrived" (he probably already had a clear idea of the problem before Shcherbina arrived)... but with this fact shared at the opportune moment came, gave Shcherbina the opening to force the decision (neatly sidestepping Brykhanov and Fomin's conclusions - outright lies). This might seem machiavellian, but it's how a skilled operator works around a problem. Pikalov fought in many battles (both with guns and brains), and knew his duty was to his mission and his men (in that order)... his management of the situation was flawless and saved lives.

    • @dodger1214
      @dodger1214 8 месяцев назад

      @@matthewhelton1725 Well said.

  • @JWilliamsLangley
    @JWilliamsLangley 2 года назад +20

    At first the Colonel was going to walk to the plant with a dosimeter to save gas but they managed to convince him time was critical. Every Chuck Norris joke ever uttered should be changed to Vladimir Pikalov.

  • @ZenZill
    @ZenZill 2 года назад +15

    'I'm in charge here!' was such a desperate plea from a man whose hands are tied.

  • @Otaku155
    @Otaku155 6 месяцев назад +15

    "In the Battle between us and the reactor, there could only be one winner..."
    -- Anatoly Dyatlov, 1999

  • @thegrimcritic5494
    @thegrimcritic5494 2 года назад +353

    Our man here drove straight towards the dying heart of a false star because he knew the risk it would have on his men and wanted none of that shit. I have no love for the Soviet Union nor for the Red Army, but I do have respect for good men who rise up and do the right thing in dark situations. Thank you for your service, General Pikalov. You were, and always will be, a credit to your nation and her peoples.

    • @MinhNGUYEn-uq2nt
      @MinhNGUYEn-uq2nt Год назад +15

      Love or hate the USSR, you have to admit the sheer bravery of the Russian people. They have been through literally hell for the survival of their people.

    • @IZn0g0uDatAll
      @IZn0g0uDatAll Год назад

      It’s the USSR culture of lies, cover up, propaganda, politicization of everything and shoot the messenger culture that provoked the Chernobyl accident in the first place.

    • @kerbalairforce8802
      @kerbalairforce8802 Год назад +1

      There are more good men than bad men. In the occasion that a good man is working for bad men, they will do the best they can

    • @CodaMission
      @CodaMission Год назад +3

      @@MinhNGUYEn-uq2nt My only wish is that it were directed less by an imperialist mindset

    • @amd.0001
      @amd.0001 Год назад +11

      "dying heart of a false star" sounds poetic

  • @divinemoments5344
    @divinemoments5344 4 года назад +68

    I don't know if that was intended but the way General Pikalov is acting in this scene makes it look like he already dealt with similar event in the past...

    • @dnsvls
      @dnsvls 4 года назад +42

      Pikalov actually survived through many battles like in Kursk, Stalingrad and Moscow. Also survived WW2 after being wounded. So yeah this is almost another day in the office for him :)

    • @divinemoments5344
      @divinemoments5344 4 года назад +19

      @@dnsvls Chernobyl disaster is noting in comparison to horrors of war.
      But I'm thinking it's possible he dealt with radiation effects before Chernobyl. Maybe during nuclear bomb tests.

    • @dnsvls
      @dnsvls 4 года назад +2

      @@divinemoments5344 that's true.

    • @DrForrester87
      @DrForrester87 4 года назад +13

      @@divinemoments5344 I don't know if he had anything to do with it, but the Soviets had a nuclear waste accident in the Ural mountains at Mayak in the 50s.

    • @nanky432
      @nanky432 4 года назад +10

      He was head of the command that handled radiation and chemical spills in the Soviet Union. The Soviets had several more isolated nuclear waist accident before when they first started their nuclear program. I’m sure it wasn’t even the first time he was near lethal levels of radiation.

  • @jesseprevost392
    @jesseprevost392 4 года назад +349

    You didn't watch Chernobyl, because it never aired.

    • @ttime441
      @ttime441 4 года назад +24

      But...

    • @the_alaskan_yeti2652
      @the_alaskan_yeti2652 4 года назад +95

      @@ttime441 you're delusional. Get this man to an infirmary

    • @e-money6836
      @e-money6836 4 года назад +7

      It never aired? 🤦‍♂️

    • @tommyt1971
      @tommyt1971 4 года назад +22

      THEY DIDN'T!!!

    • @Pickles96
      @Pickles96 4 года назад +24

      Because it's NOT THERE

  • @syedrahim6199
    @syedrahim6199 28 дней назад +5

    "Im going get you 5000 tons sands and boron"
    This is the moment where Sherbina becomes the one that matters the most

  • @jordanwells9482
    @jordanwells9482 4 года назад +132

    “It’s not 3 roentgen, it’s 15,000”
    “I’m told it’s equivalent to a chest X-ray.”

    • @tejasbhandare251
      @tejasbhandare251 4 года назад +7

      It will work like a chest x-ray when the skin peels off and exposes the bones

  • @viewtiful1doubleokamihand253
    @viewtiful1doubleokamihand253 Год назад +33

    There aren't many things more terrifying for an adult person then seeing a man of science preparing themselves to tell them something.

    • @herheartbeats5727
      @herheartbeats5727 Год назад

      For double fear you have experts. I know it, I am xd.

    • @DontDefuse
      @DontDefuse Год назад

      Wait did this actually in real life???

    • @jackhammertwo1
      @jackhammertwo1 10 месяцев назад +3

      The whole reactor number four exploding? Yes,It happened.Chernobyl as a show might have been embellised a bit for drama purposes BUT, It is kinda a documentary of what happened irl.

  • @benmorgan8890
    @benmorgan8890 2 года назад +72

    This is one of the best shows I’ve ever seen, the writing, the acting, the pacing, it’s perfect.

  • @gareginasatryan6761
    @gareginasatryan6761 2 года назад +112

    if it's 15000R, then they would get a high reading even from outside the facility. Shows you how incompetent USSR was that the Swedes were able to detect the high levels before the Soviets were. Yet, they kept thinking that it's a fluke

    • @roadwarrior144
      @roadwarrior144 2 года назад +40

      Because, in those days, in the USSR, it was inconceivable that ANY disastrous event could possibly occur when everyone knew that it would be an embarrassment to the nation, and embarrassments do not happen to the USSR. It was not necessarily incompetence, but hubris and a blind devotion to what superiors tell you.

    • @superdicas7815
      @superdicas7815 2 года назад +11

      Communism

    • @jamesricker3997
      @jamesricker3997 2 года назад +17

      Back then the government of the USSR denied disasters happened
      If you contradicted the government you could find yourself in real trouble

    • @tobiaswilhelmi4819
      @tobiaswilhelmi4819 2 года назад +5

      The Soviets knew of the radiation, they didn't need the Swedes to tell them. They had to measure the radiation levels at the site to evaluate how much boron is needed.
      You shouldn't mix the content of this SHOW with reality.
      To speak of: even in the mini series it is shown like that. The measurements in the nuclear institute in Minsk is right before the alarm in Sweden.

    • @xxdomoxxkunxx
      @xxdomoxxkunxx 2 года назад

      They also didn't believe that over pressure of steam could lead to an explosion which is just laughably stupid
      Normal boilers can explode from excess vapor pressure, so why would a larger scaled one be any different?

  • @sciencoking
    @sciencoking 10 месяцев назад +12

    "I'm going to get you 5000 tons of sand and boron" is such a dense line. Shcherbina presses Legasov to make up a number on the spot and immediately trusts his judgement and gets it done, no matter the price tag. "Why did I see graphite on the roof" was the first glimpse of trust, but this is where the duo really gains traction. At the same time it's another perspective on the immense scale of the problem: Try getting a hold of 5000 tons of _anything_, let alone flying it in with helicopters in just a few hours. Whole supply chains, defense capabilities - none of it matters. And all that in one line!

    • @hagamapama
      @hagamapama 8 месяцев назад +3

      Scherbina trusted Legasov well before this. Scherbina was IIRC the reason Legasov was even in the room getting briefed on the problem. He NEEDED an expert, and Legasov suited that need. He also needed something even more important, an honest man who could look at the problem and tell him what the truth is, and Scherbina saw in the briefing that he'd chosen well.
      Boris is being manipulative, but most of his manipulations for the entire miniseries, even the early bits, was to get Legasov into a position where he could come up with a solution. He showed his trust more openly as the series developed, but it's clear that Scherbina's solution to this crisis was "make Legasov come up with a soltuion."

  • @dclark142002
    @dclark142002 6 месяцев назад +11

    Skaarsgaard plays the bureacrat fear very well.
    You can see him confidently handling the situation, and then Legasov starts going into the technical details and how bad this actually is (killing the continent, fighting a fire even the experts don't know how to fight)...and he increasingly gets short with them all. You can actively see Scherbina moving into fight or flight mode as the leader...such great acting.
    He has already decided that he has to do something, and NOW all the subject matter experts are prevaricating and panicky. "For god's sake rough estimate!" I need something to say to action what you need! Don't try to insinuate yourself into the political problem of evacuation...I already know what has to be done, and I have to fight the authority structure to get it done and you won't help that!

  • @saintricardo8746
    @saintricardo8746 Год назад +10

    God help the reactor core when Pikalov comes knocking

  • @cockmcsteel6083
    @cockmcsteel6083 Год назад +17

    3:15 "You are dealing with something that has never occured on this planet before..." That's biblical...

    • @thedarkknight9153
      @thedarkknight9153 11 месяцев назад +2

      Sounds like Richard Harris with his delivery 😂

  • @rustyduktape
    @rustyduktape Год назад +25

    I love the part when he turns the truck around to back through the gate. It's like a Tarantino level of "useless dialogue" that helps to add realism and even a bit of suspense to the scene. Really like how the people running the show put that little detail in.

  • @jamiereekie9342
    @jamiereekie9342 Год назад +11

    "You're dealing with something that has never accrued on this planet before." ....that is so utterly chilling to hear. Couldn't imagine being told that in person and not shitting a brick.

  • @JimmySteller
    @JimmySteller 2 года назад +31

    "It's not 3 roentgen, it's 1500."
    "He's in shock, get him out of here."

  • @danterik9781
    @danterik9781 8 месяцев назад +5

    A general who is willing to risk his life and get his hands dirty, even if hes just in charge and retired from action, thats a true a general, a real honest leader, every single soldier under that kind of mans command would gladly follow him into hell itself if he commanded it.

  • @clikzip
    @clikzip 6 месяцев назад +19

    This show was a masterpiece. I still come back every year or so and watch clips. The acting, the dialog, the sets and equipment they used…all perfect.

    • @LUCKO2022
      @LUCKO2022 25 дней назад

      It was overdramatized shit.
      Go watch some real documentaries on it.
      Much more informative and way better.

    • @timdowney6721
      @timdowney6721 9 дней назад

      @@LUCKO2022
      It’s difficult to overdramatize the disaster and what could have very easily followed.

  • @spectre111
    @spectre111 7 месяцев назад +11

    3:10 I love this exchange between Legasov and Shcherbina because it illustrates their roles and how they work together. Legasov understands the situation but even he is overwhelmed by the magnitude of the disaster. Shcherbina can't understand the disaster like Legasov but he can see it as a problem to be dealt with. Shcherbina works towards a solution while Legasov helps to keep from making things worse than they already are.

  • @MaddDogg-ci2zx
    @MaddDogg-ci2zx 2 года назад +73

    The fire engines still parked with the doors open and equipment lying out is an eerie feeling.

    • @Kirillissimus
      @Kirillissimus 5 месяцев назад

      Firefighting equipment from the real events are still parked there even today among multiple other pieces of heavy machinery and equipment. I hope very soon the war will be over and you will be able to come and see the relics with your own eyes and get a grasp of the scale of the operation that took place after the reactor exploded. It is quite a sight. Just don't go too close to the stuff as some parts of it can not be decontaminated and they are still mildly radioactive.

    • @darylmorning
      @darylmorning 7 дней назад

      ​@Kirillissimus Just like the FDNY rigs from 9/11, they honor their crews' sacrifice simply by being. I would question if I was worthy enough to be in their vehicle's shadow, far below walking in their footsteps. We should be honored for the fact that we know that there are people like this, and the sacrifices made were really for the true good of humanity.

  • @Vath121
    @Vath121 3 месяца назад +4

    Having no idea what roentgen meant I figured the way they talked about 3 roentgen he was gonna say it’s like 500. I wasn’t prepared for 15,000 😳

  • @h.joshi_
    @h.joshi_ 5 месяцев назад +3

    My favourite quote from this series by Legasov: "You see, a just world, is a sane world. There was nothing sane about Chernobyl."

  • @Brave_Sir_Robin
    @Brave_Sir_Robin 2 года назад +12

    Sent this to my family gc after I came down with Covid, when everyone thought I just had a cold.
    “It’s not a cold. It’s Covid-19.”

  • @CameraMystique
    @CameraMystique 4 года назад +31

    Only Chernobyl has that great truck cleaning services.

  • @Darksky1001able
    @Darksky1001able 3 года назад +19

    "Boron... Boron and Sand. That'll create problems of its own, but i-i-i dont see any other way."
    Damn man, you know your situation is fucking dire when you gotta pull some shit thatll cause another major and critical issue just to deal with the current one. Thats just not something you wanna hear.

  • @uncivilsum417
    @uncivilsum417 Год назад +10

    2:41 the accusatory tone in his voice while he is looking at the two men who so far have been actively downplaying the unfolding disaster is amazing

  • @aronb6746
    @aronb6746 Год назад +8

    "You are dealing with something that has never occured on this planet before."
    That line alone is terrifying.

  • @rickbase833
    @rickbase833 Год назад +19

    Every scene....every conversation....the writers did such a great job.....the actors were awsome.....hands down one if not the best miniseries of the last 10 years.

    • @DontDefuse
      @DontDefuse Год назад

      Right, it’s scarier than most horror movies. To think something like this could happen irl is horrifying

  • @as7river
    @as7river 9 месяцев назад +19

    Love the whole series, but the part where Legasov tells Shcherbina "You're dealing with something that has never occurred on this planet before" set the stakes for the entire plot and is my favorite part. No one on the planet, Soviet or otherwise, knows for certain what to do about this. Chernobyl was the only event in history where we threatened a substantial part of the planet's ability to sustain life and we did it overnight, literally.

  • @angelcla23
    @angelcla23 Год назад +33

    “That’s my decision to make”
    “Then make it”
    “I’ve been told not to”
    The script for this series was completely brilliant

  • @HBNplague
    @HBNplague 11 месяцев назад +8

    There is a deliberate effort on the part of the creators to avoid showing the viewer the exposed reactor core for most of the show. The characters and the audience know where it is, the characters are able to look at it directly, but the audience does not see it. We see evidence of it - the readings, the horrible burns on the victims, the eerie glow. We hear the creepy music when it's close by. It's like a character on its own, like a sentient otherworldly presence; like a monster in a horror film. It's such a simple cinematographic device: whatever you do, don't show the monster's face. But it's so terrifically suspenseful, and so masterfully done! Really adds to the sensation that these tiny humans, so full of hubris and recklessness, really fucked with a force of nature that's now out of their control.

    • @HBNplague
      @HBNplague 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@Lazaruz95Makes me think of Exodus 33:20 "But He said, 'You cannot see My face; for no man shall see Me, and live.'" A terrible, vengeful God indeed.

    • @davidcox3076
      @davidcox3076 17 дней назад +1

      It gives us more of the perspective of the regular people in the area. Pripyat was an atomgrad. So its citizens likely had an idea of the things that could go wrong with a reactor. Knowing that a monster was loose, but not being able to see it or know just how big and dangerous it is, must have been terrifying.

  • @steppahouse
    @steppahouse 6 месяцев назад +14

    I'm still in awe of how good this show was. Why is it so rare these days?

    • @mathewfinch
      @mathewfinch 6 месяцев назад +2

      Because movie and TV productions are billion dollar industries. Investors want massive returns, so every project has to be massively profitable. Every new project has to be a guaranteed success before it's even considered, so the executives want everything to be as generally bland and safe as possible.

    • @VainerCactus0
      @VainerCactus0 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@mathewfinch Meanwhile, loads of movies made by these big studios are flopping. Indy 5, The Marvels, Wish and many more in the last few years. They didn't make back their budget+marketing. Oppenheimer and Barbie made money though.

    • @Potatotenkopf
      @Potatotenkopf 3 месяца назад

      I think HBO is just touched by the ability to produce amazing stuff time and time again, kinda like Nintendo but Nintendo is way more evil.

  • @jacp5628
    @jacp5628 10 месяцев назад +7

    I love the choice to show him getting to the gate, realizing he'll destroy the dosimeter by ramming it, so he turns around and rams it backwards instead. Fantastic bit of filmmaking from Craig Mazin.

  • @Elchamuc020
    @Elchamuc020 2 года назад +42

    Can we keep in mind this guy drove as close as possible while the firefighters were closer?

    • @Kamina.D.Fierce
      @Kamina.D.Fierce 9 месяцев назад

      He wasn't scared of the radiation. The radiation was scared of him.
      Or alternatively, he was scared to send any of his men to an almost certain painful and slow death, and the radiation realized this. Lol

  • @generalirons9789
    @generalirons9789 Год назад +8

    “The essay isn’t 400 words. It’s 40,000 thousand.”