Exploring Chernobyl's Abandoned Zone

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  • Опубликовано: 21 май 2022
  • Pripyat was once the home to the Soviet Union's best and brightest. Then, in the space of a few hours, it was completely abandoned. What happened to this city in the shadow of Chernobyl?
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Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @kylehill
    @kylehill  2 года назад +5123

    Thanks for watching. *NOTE: All footage was shot before the war in Ukraine, so obviously some information may now be inaccurate.* At least as far as we know, Pripyat is no longer a warzone (so my comments aren't totally off). This might be the most professional thing I've ever made, so I'd appreciate the support if you find it interesting.

    • @MaxArceus
      @MaxArceus 2 года назад +58

      Didn't you upload this before? I've already seen this..

    • @ange1uk
      @ange1uk 2 года назад +46

      @@MaxArceus There was a Chapter 1, this is Chapter 2.

    • @jamesedwards7671
      @jamesedwards7671 2 года назад +43

      @@MaxArceus Same- maybe-? i felt like i've had Déjà vu

    • @RionWulfe
      @RionWulfe 2 года назад +6

      Thank you so much for this, Kyle. Your work here is amazing! I enjoy your videos very much and this is a crowning achievement. Please keep up the good work!

    • @kevinaguilar9454
      @kevinaguilar9454 2 года назад +5

      I almost started clapping at the end of this video 😅 bravo, Kyle and team!

  • @kevinaguilar9454
    @kevinaguilar9454 2 года назад +3361

    Kyle, the fact that you can effectively advocate for nuclear energy while not ignoring the very real dangers is just so inspiring. Never stop being awesome! K, back to cleaning the evil lair

    • @shinji391
      @shinji391 2 года назад +73

      Nuanced thought is really hard for humans. Nuanced thought must be celebrated with everyone and shared by everyone.

    • @azerdraco3146
      @azerdraco3146 2 года назад

      As I have told others, nuclear power is no different from fire or electricity in the ways that it can benefit humanity ... and in the ways that it must be respected.
      The problem is that many humans don't respect themselves, let alone anyone or anything else.
      And as we see throughout history, when humans like that rise to any level of authority or power, it leads to disaster.

    • @Jack-nx9hw
      @Jack-nx9hw 2 года назад

      @Necron681 and that's the fundamental flaw of utilising nuclear energy. You simply cannot bank lives and irreversible damage to the environment on the good will of people. Human error can never be totally wiped out and corporate greed even less so. Cutting corners is human nature, we cannot be trusted to safely harness such raw power

    • @GameTimeWhy
      @GameTimeWhy 2 года назад +47

      @Necron681 also using inferior designs. I wish he would talk about the CANDU reactor. Literally impossible to meltdown and doesn't use enriched uranium so it's way easier disposal.

    • @SImrobert2001
      @SImrobert2001 2 года назад +39

      @Necron681 Even THEN, the problems that have happened was because of designs that were decades old. For example, the reactors at Chernobyl were NEVER good enough for the US government. The reactors at Three Mile Island never actually released radiation, and the reactors at Japan were fine, but the tidal wall and generators were in the basement, something that likely wouldn't fly in the US. IT even took an earthquake powerful enough to move billions of tons of rock, AND trillions of gallons of water to destroy. Even then there were still management issues. And two other reactions of the same design survived the earthquake and tsunami.

  • @harrisongilbert
    @harrisongilbert 2 года назад +2182

    “Pripyat is not a war zone”
    That’s quite ominous to hear in light of recent events.

    • @ZekeTheMan623
      @ZekeTheMan623 2 года назад +39

      It isn’t anymore though

    • @RedRingOfDead
      @RedRingOfDead 2 года назад +132

      It aged like fine milk. From the moment the quote was made.
      It's not a war zone anymore. BUT radiation has spiked ik recent events because the Russian army dug out trenches around the powerplant. And that needs to be fixed first before we can go and see what's left of pripyat and the amazing history.
      Like Kyle said. Of Russia didn't rush the testing and did outrageous experiments we would all be at nuclear power right now. Maybe 70% nuclear power. 30% renewables like solar panels on roofs.
      And we mostlikely would've been 2 generations ahead of where we are now.

    • @TheTravelingCowboyHey
      @TheTravelingCowboyHey Год назад +19

      This wasn't filmed during the tragic events.

    • @Tennouseijin
      @Tennouseijin Год назад

      @@RedRingOfDead Do you think the fossil fuel industry would give up that easily? They are known for using any means possible to 'prove' that fossil fuels are better, or at least a necessary evil. Arguments like 'so you want all these coal miners to lose jobs?', etc... are still - effectively - used to keep dirty power plants running. I don't think it would be that easy to solve the problem of corrupted politicians, which would - I think - be necessary to completely replace fossil fuels.

    • @joshschneider9766
      @joshschneider9766 Год назад +44

      Its not. I volunteered in the it army of Ukraine from six hours after it was announced until day 57. Its basically totally secured now. Was a nasty dust up there but basically all it achieved was some radiated russians.

  • @CharScarX
    @CharScarX Год назад +325

    I had the pleasure of checking out Pripyat after the Russian invasion. It was even more eerie because there were no tourist or anyone other than a handful of workers and soldiers on security. It was insane to see the Russian positions dug out in the red forrest. Besides the radiation, the whole area was still mined so we observed from a safe distance. Definitely one of the coolest experiences of my life.

    • @Sniperboy5551
      @Sniperboy5551 Год назад +8

      That’s awesome, how did you get the chance to see it? I’ve been super curious about what’s going on there now, this comment made my day.

    • @CharScarX
      @CharScarX Год назад +22

      @@Sniperboy5551 my friend has some connections there that put us in touch with a tour guide. He hadn’t been back since the invasion so he was really excited to get back. We had to fill out paperwork with the military and even provide the serial numbers for all of our cameras. Hahaha

    • @neilbuckley5796
      @neilbuckley5796 Год назад +8

      I got to see it twice in 2019. Digging positions in that forest. Mental.

    • @mr.k1611
      @mr.k1611 Год назад

      I might of saw you...soldier who fled to the east.

    • @Ryan_the_dawg
      @Ryan_the_dawg Год назад +5

      ​@@mr.k1611sorry but it's pronounced might "have" not might of or could of or should of all of these things should be pronounced "could have or could've or would have or would've or should have or should've, im not trying to be a smart arse grammar nazi just trying to help my fellow man, all the best 👍

  • @olafowl5678
    @olafowl5678 2 года назад +2621

    Kyle has become the cool nuclear/radiation guy, seeing his videos on such topics is so entertaining because you can tell it fascinates him

    • @aranstuart566
      @aranstuart566 2 года назад +23

      you can tell he’s passionate about it!

    • @jaredtrainor6860
      @jaredtrainor6860 2 года назад +49

      One might even say, he is quite RAD...

    • @viciouswindstalkers
      @viciouswindstalkers 2 года назад +10

      That is exactly what passion is supposed to look like!

    • @sunla
      @sunla 2 года назад +10

      His storytelling and atmospheric ambient music choice is flawless

    • @revlouch
      @revlouch 2 года назад +5

      As someone planning on going for nuclear engineering after community I ask: how can you not? It’s the most fundamental study of life. How energy moves is how the world goes round :p

  • @SlavikOdessit
    @SlavikOdessit 2 года назад +703

    As someone, who've been to Pripyat twice:
    There's something about that place, that words can't describe: a mix of fear, sadness, peace and hope.
    An invisible threat, a promice unkept, an empty birds nest, a still image of the long gone past and, once again, a place of the silent forest and home to the wild bests.
    A place like no other.
    If you'e been to Ptipyat once, sooner or later, you'll start feeling The Call.
    P. S. Mad respect to Kyle for such a respectfull approach to a place of great pain and sadness. Huge props!

    • @lnva385
      @lnva385 2 года назад +1

      What is the call? Call of the void?

    • @shahan484
      @shahan484 2 года назад +13

      like the Game series S T A L K E R

    • @brolohalflemming7042
      @brolohalflemming7042 2 года назад +23

      @@lnva385 The call to go back. I was lucky to tag along with some biologists and totally agree about the feel of the place. I noticed Kyle was speaking quietely and respectfully, and it kind of makes you do that. It's a very haunting place as the city's slowly reabsorbed by nature. I think that was one of the spooky elements, ie seeing wildlife wandering around the city streets. It's a fascinating and sobering experience, especially if you can tag along with some scientists who can explain what you're seeing, and what they're studying.

    • @harrietharlow9929
      @harrietharlow9929 2 года назад +10

      The whole thing was so sad. Pripyat was a beautiful city--that shows through even all the deterioration. Dyatlov running that test in the face of numerous protestations from workers that it went against all their training and experience was foolhardy and criminal (he was sentenced to several years hard labour, though I believe he was released in a general amnesty) and died in 1995. An excellent programme, available on RUclips, is the "Zero Hour" episode on the Chernobyl disaster.

    • @BLF3G
      @BLF3G 2 года назад +6

      Such is life in the zone

  • @vaasnaad
    @vaasnaad Год назад +77

    The quiet tone of your voice and near poetic prose in these is absolutely perfect for the subject matter. It was indeed eerily beautiful. Fantastic filming and production!

    • @ilikethoseodds.4066
      @ilikethoseodds.4066 Год назад

      Ikr?? I went to sleep listening to these guys videos cause I like documentaries but I just couldn't miss out on this one

  • @live_neck
    @live_neck Год назад +136

    This series has really been satiating my morbid curiosity, I'm always so amazed, shocked and terrified while watching; it's impossible to pause or look away. Kyle deserves way more attention than he's got, it's almost criminal that this content is free.

  • @squiggie190
    @squiggie190 2 года назад +365

    That sarcophagus looming in the distance truly is chilling. A constant visible reminder of a devastating invisible killer.

    • @Falcrist
      @Falcrist 2 года назад +18

      "Nuclear power is a hell of a way to boil water."

    • @zherean42069
      @zherean42069 2 года назад +4

      Dangerous anomalies

    • @marleyjr00
      @marleyjr00 2 года назад +6

      I hope that that deep basement with the elephant foot never gets cracked open

    • @RoseJetExhaust
      @RoseJetExhaust 2 года назад +4

      @@marleyjr00 Well, over immense stretches of time, symbols and conventions may get lost. And what had meant life-threatening once, may later on be an adventure, a mystery to solve. Just think of Egyptian tombs.

    • @TemptationsEnd
      @TemptationsEnd 2 года назад +1

      @@marleyjr00 if it does by any seismic activity, the whole world is fucked if it leaks into the ground water. Cause boom, instant planet wide radiation.

  • @kaylariggs3987
    @kaylariggs3987 2 года назад +547

    I did not want this to end. Kyle is such a compelling storyteller, especially on a story like this. Thank you for taking us on this journey with you. Truly such a haunted, but beautiful place.

    • @yaschan99
      @yaschan99 2 года назад +1

      Me too, so beautiful work. And so respectful too. Shows the spirit of the creator.

  • @seanmullin1393
    @seanmullin1393 2 года назад +96

    Kyle, I love these nuclear power/radiation focused videos. It really brings a lot of truth about the subject. As a former Nuclear Power Plant and Health Physics technician it is nice to hear about stuff without the normal layman hype around radiation, radioactivity, and nuclear power.

    • @OllieCreates
      @OllieCreates Год назад +2

      I couldn’t agree more as an advocate of nuclear power. This channel is awesome!

  • @toastghost9145
    @toastghost9145 Год назад +291

    I cannot express the feelings this video gives me. Wanderlust, nostalgia, loss for what I have never experienced... just wow.
    Edit: KYLE YOU MADE ME CRY

    • @rickygamingproductions
      @rickygamingproductions Год назад +11

      Yeah. Something about seeing ruins of a place people used to live in, just looks nostalgic, What if the World at some point looks like this where Humans for whatever reason disappear. Everything would become like Pripyat, Empty and falling apart. It looks kinda cool. I think Kirby and The Forgotten Land does this presentation good by having the Locations be of places abandoned by the people who once lived there.

    • @Evans7274
      @Evans7274 Год назад

      Couldn’t have possibly said it better myself

    • @samwarren6008
      @samwarren6008 Год назад

      “Misery is manifold. The wretchedness of the earth is multiform. Overreaching the wide horizon as the rainbow, its hues are as various as the hues of that arch-as distinct, too, yet as intimately blended. Overreaching the wide horizon as the rainbow! How is it that from beauty I have derived a type of unloveliness?-from the covenant of peace, a simile of sorrow? But, as in ethics, evil is a consequence of good, so, in fact, out of joy is sorrow born. Either the memory of past bliss is the anguish of to-day, or the agonies which are, have their origin in the ecstasies *which might have been.”* -Edgar Allen Poe

    • @MichaelZieschang
      @MichaelZieschang 11 месяцев назад

      And when it comes that you are actually standing there you will know that your feelings are genuine and honest. Except I can realte to myself. I would add historical interest to that mixture of feelings.

    • @icomsltd
      @icomsltd 7 месяцев назад

      Anyone who lived or was born in the 80's will get a weird nostalgia from this. I've never been there, never will go there but it just hits hard for some reason.

  • @Im-Red-Faction
    @Im-Red-Faction 2 года назад +402

    I’m so glad this video is back up. When this first came out months ago I was blown away by the stunning views of the landscape and blown away by the professionalism of this video. Well done Kyle.

    • @adfaklsdjf
      @adfaklsdjf 2 года назад +47

      What happened? I came down into the comments because I know I've seen this video already so how is it new.. did he take it down because of the war in Ukraine?

    • @Im-Red-Faction
      @Im-Red-Faction 2 года назад +45

      @@adfaklsdjf no if I remember correctly I tweeted @Kyle and he said it was a copyright strike against this video from a company in Ukraine. Tho I don’t see any differences between the original video vs this one

    • @UmbraVolpes
      @UmbraVolpes 2 года назад +54

      There was a music byte that was not supposed to be freely available,on a site of copyright free content in the original video iirc

    • @Im-Red-Faction
      @Im-Red-Faction 2 года назад +16

      @@UmbraVolpes oh that makes sense. I was looking for a specific scene, not music.

    • @adfaklsdjf
      @adfaklsdjf 2 года назад +9

      @@UmbraVolpes Oh I think I liked it so much I looked for it after watching the video... I remember because it was harder to find than the song that's still in the video, which I also liked and found.

  • @grimy1495
    @grimy1495 2 года назад +376

    I find it incredible that you were able to complete this trip just shortly before the Russian invasion. We're all the better for it. Here's to hoping for a peaceful Ukraine in the near future.

    • @weirdorwhat7294
      @weirdorwhat7294 2 года назад

      Sorry buddy but not going to happen simply because what's coming upon this earth is going to wipe out most of humanity.

    • @vulpes7079
      @vulpes7079 2 года назад +2

      Here's hoping for the unity of the Russian people

  • @aquaenigma6285
    @aquaenigma6285 2 года назад +96

    This is a great video, I've wondered for a long time how Pripyat really looked these days. I've only really seen the ariel footage of the ferris wheel and the occasional image of inside abandoned homes.
    I have really enjoyed your videos over the past few months and have learnt so much. I'm no longer deadly terrified by nuclear power and have a better understanding of it. Thanks Kyle 👍I wish you'd been my science teacher (many moons ago!).

  • @yolobathsalts
    @yolobathsalts 2 года назад +26

    I've had a bit of an obsession with Chornobyl and the disaster since I was a small child and I want to thank you for treating it with the respect it deserves in this series

    • @LostAndFound033
      @LostAndFound033 2 месяца назад +1

      So have I, its weird isn’t it? I have abit of an obsession with Eastern Europe in general… I find it Erie and freaky and I don’t know why, It might be the buildings and the history of the Soviet Union, I just don’t know what it is

    • @yolobathsalts
      @yolobathsalts 2 месяца назад

      @@LostAndFound033 for me it's because my family is from that area. My great grandfather was one of the "human robots" who tried to help save the rest of the world from the disaster.
      That whole part of the world has a sort of haunting beauty. You can feel the hardship and perseverance in the air as soon as you step off the plane.

  • @teradul2480
    @teradul2480 2 года назад +150

    As someone who vaguely remembers the first version of this video, this feels somehow better? You've clearly putdone yourself, Kyle.

    • @RogerOver9000
      @RogerOver9000 2 года назад +21

      Ahhhh thats why i had the feeling i already saw this video; he remade it apparently

    • @teradul2480
      @teradul2480 2 года назад +25

      @@RogerOver9000 first one was struck down for some weird vopyright reasons. There's an episode of office hours where he finds that out live.

    • @PemboCycling
      @PemboCycling 2 года назад +1

      Ditto. Was thinking I'd gone senile

    • @Trapsarentgay133
      @Trapsarentgay133 2 года назад +2

      @@teradul2480 i thought he said he'd change it if the situation in the Ukraine changed?

    • @RogerOver9000
      @RogerOver9000 2 года назад +1

      @@teradul2480 Ahhh gotcha; thanks for the info!

  • @sephamore
    @sephamore 2 года назад +227

    I love all of Kyle's videos on Chernobyl, but especially this one, as it captured Pripyat just before another world-changing event (unfortunately) overtook it.
    Incredible storytelling and respect for the site. Glad to see another video that isn't just "OOOH DEADLY RADIATIOOOON~"
    Thank you for another wonderfully thoughtful video

  • @themockalove
    @themockalove 2 года назад +21

    This was a mesmerizing piece of work that speaks very deeply to me, as a Ukrainian. Not to mention, highly educational in the way I haven't seen Prypiat being covered yet. Looking forward to more content.

  • @asphyxia7784
    @asphyxia7784 2 года назад +11

    Kyle the videos you make handle the topics so respectfully and without sensationalization and that's why it touches our minds so much.
    Especially as a science student I aspire to be able to portray facts and events so clearly and precisely.
    Thanks for the video

  • @kantpredict
    @kantpredict 2 года назад +150

    I thought I'd seen this before, but then I remembered you saying that you'd re-upload it as circumstances in Ukraine changed. Sad to think how much devastation the rest of the country is now experiencing 💔

    • @crazyeyez1502
      @crazyeyez1502 2 года назад +9

      The original video was taken down by YT over a copyright issue.

    • @danieljensen2626
      @danieljensen2626 2 года назад +1

      Ah, I was thinking the same thing.

    • @NaomiAlicia4242564
      @NaomiAlicia4242564 2 года назад +2

      @@crazyeyez1502 what??? Like, how, why? Kyle is the most careful man in regard of his content in the atomic series... what the hell RUclips. ..

    • @Karls_Clips
      @Karls_Clips 2 года назад

      Ahh that explains it.

    • @crazyeyez1502
      @crazyeyez1502 2 года назад +5

      @@NaomiAlicia4242564 he explained it on one of his live streams. He used something that he got from what looked like a legit source. But that source stole it from the legit source. The actual legit source initiated the strike against Kyle. (Kyle, sorry if i got any of that wrong)

  • @CrazySC833
    @CrazySC833 2 года назад +417

    Kyle, seriously man, I wait on bated breath for each episode in this series. Each episode is deeply poignant. Your narration is incredible, the research that you do is on-paar with huge production companies. I'm extremely grateful for your channel, I really do mean that. Your channel is tantamount to ale cart' TV.

  • @funforall9741
    @funforall9741 2 года назад +28

    I love the work put into this, this feels (and this is meant to be the greatest of compliments) not like a RUclips video but more like a television documentary

  • @berthulf
    @berthulf 2 года назад +7

    There's a solemn beauty to these videos and their music that is quite moving. They are an experience as much as they are educational.
    Thank you, Kyle, for yet another wonderful film, and thank you too, to Meydan, for the score. I will never get tired of this series.

  • @augl2702
    @augl2702 2 года назад +58

    Your Half Life series, and basically any video you do on nuclear energy or radiation are my absolute favorite videos on RUclips. I look forward to every single of one of them.
    They're very well made, very informative. The information is delivered clearly and respectfully.

    • @adfaklsdjf
      @adfaklsdjf 2 года назад +1

      Yes all this.. and especially the word "respectfully". It's so important that these topics be treated respectfully especially when taking a pro-nuclear-energy stance.

  • @meddler-gz1ks
    @meddler-gz1ks 2 года назад +255

    Watching this and knowing that this place has been forever changed by the war is actually heartbreaking. The video is wonderful and handles everything so tactfully it's amazing

    • @MonkeyJedi99
      @MonkeyJedi99 2 года назад +16

      I kind of feel bad for the Russian lower enlisted who were likely ordered to dig defensive trenches in the contaminated soil.
      Then there are those who grabbed souvenirs... There goes much of my pity.

    • @warbrain1053
      @warbrain1053 2 года назад +10

      @@MonkeyJedi99 or more... They forgot something there. Years of their life

    • @user-pl3np8zv9c
      @user-pl3np8zv9c 2 года назад

      @@MonkeyJedi99 they wanted Ukrainian soil so bad so it gave them what they deserved

    • @infernaldaedra
      @infernaldaedra 2 года назад

      @@MonkeyJedi99 people have been grabbing souvenirs from pripyat since the 80s.

    • @MonkeyJedi99
      @MonkeyJedi99 2 года назад

      @@infernaldaedra That doesn't change how dumb a move it is.

  • @MTNDEWGANG
    @MTNDEWGANG 2 года назад +2

    I found your channel due to the elephant's foot video and the other videos in the Chernobyl videos and felt a sense of warmth from it. Seeing videos like this feels so surreal and weirdly calming at times. Thanks for the content!

  • @gabrielsalahi3656
    @gabrielsalahi3656 Год назад +12

    I love how resilient plant life is towards radiation so the place still looks relatively normal from an outside view

  • @kbar11
    @kbar11 2 года назад +45

    Cod4 all ghillied up and the mission after made me really want to know more about Chernobyl. Glad that this series is finally coming out!

    • @benmitchell1733
      @benmitchell1733 2 года назад +6

      i knew i wasn’t the only one that instantly remembered this

    • @nvr2late666
      @nvr2late666 2 года назад +8

      50,000 people used to live here....

    • @jakubrossa7794
      @jakubrossa7794 2 года назад +7

      @@nvr2late666 now its a ghost town

    • @Dkgow
      @Dkgow 2 года назад +8

      @@jakubrossa7794 So upset he stated "Warzone" as the place people would remember the pool from and not COD4

    • @tylercady3985
      @tylercady3985 Год назад

      ​@@Dkgow probably because Warzone is more recent. All Gillied Up is arguable much more iconic though

  • @mikedrop4421
    @mikedrop4421 2 года назад +191

    I'm so glad you were able to visit the facility before it was defiled by war. The poor soldiers who were instructed to dig trenches in the yellow forrest have my utmost sympathy. The plant engineers were imprisoned in the plant also. All so a Russian general could use the plant as his HQ.

    • @bazzfromthebackground3696
      @bazzfromthebackground3696 2 года назад +53

      And he HE DIDN'T.
      After all that wasted effort.
      Not even to mention transporting sandbags, and stupid soldiers taking "souvenirs" from the plant.
      This was a bad idea, wrapped in stupid, with a nonsense bow.

    • @chimerasofhafgufa
      @chimerasofhafgufa 2 года назад +20

      im very sorry for what is still happening to ukraine and what has been done

    • @XtreeM_FaiL
      @XtreeM_FaiL 2 года назад +2

      *Red forest.

    • @elvinhaak
      @elvinhaak 2 года назад

      Of course also easy entry in the country since it is mostly a wasteland and no fighting against the Russians because of the risks of fighting in the area.

  • @danozism
    @danozism Год назад +2

    Hey Kyle, new subscriber here, really appreciating your work. I have spent the past 11 years researching the Chernobyl disaster, and these videos are among the best I've seen on the subject.
    Keep up the great work, and I look forward to whatever happens next! All the best from Australia.

  • @SendNubes96
    @SendNubes96 Год назад +3

    idk why but this made me cry just a little, I absolutely love what you're trying to do with this and I am excited for more in the future. Thank you.

  • @frenchbaguetteoui
    @frenchbaguetteoui 2 года назад +14

    "Fifty thousand people used to live here. Now it's a ghost town"

  • @Kanazuchi42
    @Kanazuchi42 2 года назад +82

    This series is one of my all time favorite docuseries I've watched. The footage, the voice over and information is absolutely amazing. And the respect of everyone and everything is obvious and unrivaled

  • @SatanasExMachina
    @SatanasExMachina 2 года назад +4

    This is the exact kind of content I'm here for. Can't wait for the next installment. Keep doing your thing brother.

  • @xusername357
    @xusername357 2 года назад +1

    Great video! Can definitely tell you're passionate about this topic. I've always been fascinated by Chernobyl and pripyat, I've done several research papers on them throughout school. Cant wait for more of this!

  • @grimy1495
    @grimy1495 2 года назад +34

    Two lines from this are absolutely chilling, considering recent events: "Pripyat is not a warzone." and "a lot changes in the exclusion zone even though people are technically gone."

    • @EuanWhitehead
      @EuanWhitehead 2 года назад +1

      Yea it really is horrible, hearing about the crimes these soldiers have committed on top of that is the worse.

    • @FF2Guy
      @FF2Guy 2 года назад +1

      I was looking for this comment. I was thinking exactly the same thing. Eerily ominous foreshadowing

  • @ExUSSailor
    @ExUSSailor 2 года назад +61

    As if Pripyat hadn't been through enough, now, it's a battlefield, too.

    • @tokumo2190
      @tokumo2190 2 года назад +1

      Слава моноліту

    • @davidty2006
      @davidty2006 2 года назад +1

      Well it's been a battlefield.
      I'd assume the place has been trashed even more now.
      Along with russians digging trenches in the yellow forest.....

  • @getmedieval69
    @getmedieval69 2 года назад +3

    This was so well done. Really high production value. Great voice over, and fantastic music, set a great mood.

  • @kp8740
    @kp8740 8 месяцев назад +2

    I’ve watched quite a few Chernobyl related videos which tend to show the same scenes. Thank you for showing us different places and things. Fascinating video.

  • @Curionimbus
    @Curionimbus 2 года назад +23

    I'm so happy that I was finally able to see this, after it was removed the first time you uploaded it. It's beautiful... and sad; Melancholic and uplifting at the same time. Thanks and can't wait to see the continuation.

    • @CSpottsGaming
      @CSpottsGaming 2 года назад +1

      Do we know why it was removed? I was watching this just now and thinking it must be a reupload but I wasn't sure why.

    • @bobdobsin6216
      @bobdobsin6216 2 года назад +1

      @@CSpottsGaming Same. I was confused since I thought it was the sequel I had been waiting for.

  • @Skywatcher16
    @Skywatcher16 2 года назад +53

    just as fascinating and chilling the second time. my parents arent sold on nuclear power, and ive been wanting to use your vids to help convince them. cant wait for you to finish the series!

    • @nickthompson1812
      @nickthompson1812 2 года назад +1

      I’m not sold either, as I cannot trust future enemies of the US (and we’ll surely have them considering how the US acts on the world stage) to not target nuclear reactors to cause the most harm possible. My fears outweigh my optimism by quite some margin.

    • @warbrain1053
      @warbrain1053 2 года назад +2

      @@nickthompson1812 Nuclear reactors (at least modern ones) are a bunker inside a bunker. You could damage the rods, or something, they will be treated like nuclear waste/leak and corrected
      Most of Fukushima's deaths come from a hastmy evacuation, confirmed deaths from the nuclear radiation are in single digits

    • @warbrain1053
      @warbrain1053 2 года назад +6

      @@nickthompson1812 Plus. Look at France (yes not only the USA has nuclear power plants)
      80% nuclear energy
      No problem
      Another example :
      During the war in ukraine, a reactor was targetted and hit. Nothing. There was a fire and no big problem.. because the reactor was off.
      People learned from Chernobyl/Three Miles Island

    • @vogonp4287
      @vogonp4287 2 года назад +1

      Most incidents are caused by cost cutting and corporate negligence. The same is true of fossil fuel related accidents.

  • @theywatchme
    @theywatchme Год назад +7

    I’m so glad you were able to be fascinated with this type of stuff. I indeed am and it’s cool you’ve made like 6 episodes of this!

  • @rolfstalker2986
    @rolfstalker2986 2 года назад +2

    I loved this video so much on its first upload and I am thrilled to have it back! Outstanding work, Kyle!

  • @MrAelual
    @MrAelual 2 года назад +103

    It makes me wonder, what implications could it have for the world if this disaster was averted. I love watching this series and I look forward to seeing the next chapter.

    • @DebTheDevastator
      @DebTheDevastator 2 года назад +23

      People would be less afraid of nuclear energy, I believe anyways. This disaster is the looming threat everyone thinks about when they talk about nuclear energy and it's dangers. It happened so early in the field and with such consequences. Humans are just weird on what we think is dangerous and what's not. Our risk-reward is broken sometimes.

    • @DreddKnot.
      @DreddKnot. 2 года назад +7

      I think we needed the lesson ^ we would be looking at a very different soviet Russia

    • @EnormousPurpleGarden
      @EnormousPurpleGarden 2 года назад +10

      I've often wondered whether we would be facing a climate crisis now if the Chernobyl nuclear disaster never happened. It gave an irrational anti-nuclear inclination to the environmental movement and doomed us to continue using fossil fuels.

    • @z-beeblebrox
      @z-beeblebrox 2 года назад +9

      @@DebTheDevastator I'm inclined to agree. The 3 Mile Island disaster predates it, and came right on the heels of the "China Syndrome" movie, which effectively directed how the public was viewing nuclear power and scrutinizing it, however as a disaster it ultimately had a pretty low impact and nobody was permanently evacuated. So for anti-nuclear activists, there was only so much you could say about it. But Chernobyl had it all: full meltdown, giant explosion, permanent evacuation, worldwide coverage, a haunting abandoned city... what more could you ask for?

    • @anironfarm6056
      @anironfarm6056 2 года назад

      @@EnormousPurpleGarden what happened was the Fossil Fuel industry saw it’s chance to shoot down nuclear power and they took it.

  • @Smokescale
    @Smokescale 2 года назад +8

    The drone footage of the landscape at large is... eerily beautiful. The trees make me wish I could visit... but the abandoned buildings and the act of nature wrapping itself back around the artificial structures... there's this intense sense of "something truly terrible happened here" that chills me to the bone.

  • @whoever6458
    @whoever6458 2 года назад +4

    Breaks my heart. Thanks for going there and filming this for us. I wish I could go see it too.

  • @SomethingScotty
    @SomethingScotty 2 года назад +7

    Yet another banger from Kyle and his team. I get giddy every time I see Kyle put up a new video like this. I may not be an educated man, but learning is fun to me and Kyle makes videos about horrific disasters so engaging and compelling. To me he's like that professor in school you listen to not because you need to in order to pass the class, but because you want to, like that person who's so passionate about something that their passion rubs off onto you for that brief period of time you're listening to them. I wonder if Kyle has ever seen that old History Channel docuseries as I call it(not sure what it's actually referred to as) called something like "Life After People". They talked/showed a lot of what Kyle touched on in this video in terms of the planet flourishing in a world devoid of humanity.
    And Kyle if for some chance you read this I had a question regarding Chernobyl. If it's unsafe for humans to populate the region again for another 24,000 years, then do neighboring countries or towns ever have to worry about say like hurricane type winds coming in and blowing any of the fallout their directions, or is it not so much what's in the air as it is just everything is saturated in radiation at this point? If you've already discussed this in a podcast episode then my bad.

  • @Sbinott0
    @Sbinott0 2 года назад +20

    7:38
    “Pripyat is not a war zone”
    Well this aged like fine milk

  • @rustysenpaitherapper5038
    @rustysenpaitherapper5038 2 года назад +14

    I love your videos. Your SL-1 video got me interested in the field. I wrote a paper about the SL-1 and it helped get a job in field.
    Thank you, I appreate your videos.

  • @nhmisnomer
    @nhmisnomer Год назад +2

    Your video tour was so respectfully done, and showed me the beauty of the place. Well done!

  • @johngreen5020
    @johngreen5020 Год назад +2

    I really hope these videos don't stop. Fantastic work man, kudos!

  • @lotharbeck71
    @lotharbeck71 2 года назад +13

    Your video about the Elephant's Foot was my introduction to your work, and I've rewatched it dozens of times. Just watched the HBO miniseries again yesterday. Love all of your work, but I especially enjoy these "short film" style pieces.

  • @jackharlor1658
    @jackharlor1658 2 года назад +5

    Honestly the best channel if you want things you are interested in but don't understand that well explained so you can understand them. Love these videos.

    • @kylehill
      @kylehill  2 года назад +3

      That means the world to me, thank you

  • @AutkastKain
    @AutkastKain 2 года назад +2

    This is some of your finest work. Thank you for this amazing video. I just wanted to say that I really appreciated your hard work

  • @Krynnite
    @Krynnite 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for this series. Having lived through this disaster, I find learning more about it helps put the chaos that ensued into better context (As I was about 10 at the time)

  • @celestialpotato7392
    @celestialpotato7392 2 года назад +9

    I'm so excited this got re-uploaded since I missed it when it first dropped 💙

  • @good_mourning
    @good_mourning 2 года назад +23

    This was even better the second time. Since I already watched it when it was first released, I was able to really focus in on the professional quality of this documentary. The transitions, narration, videography etc. are very high caliber, and is easily on par with documentaries on mainstream networks. I hope that you continue to make more incredible documentaries in the future.
    *10/10*

  • @thisismichael2812
    @thisismichael2812 Год назад +4

    This is so professional done and I can see the effort you have put into this I hope that this video receives as much as it deserves

  • @francogiardino1
    @francogiardino1 Год назад +1

    I've been lucky enough to have seen the first edition of this amazing second episode. Now I'm seeing it one more time, amazed again. Thank you so much for all your efforts to bring this beautiful story back to us!

  • @TheDepressedTurtle
    @TheDepressedTurtle 2 года назад +33

    I studied biomedical science for four years in university and I must say that you are a really great science communicator :) Keep up the amazing work, I love these videos and your Half-Life Histories series

  • @mjschul
    @mjschul 2 года назад +18

    What a beautiful and important series. Your narration, and the gorgeous music, evoke a haunting sense of wonder at what was lost, what is, and what could have been.
    It's really content like this, reaching far and wide, that changes minds, and could push the world towards more respect and acceptance of nuclear fuel in the fight against climate change, perpetual and critical as it is.
    Kyle Hill, keep on keeping on, and I'm so excited to see the next part of this amazing series.

  • @Smokie1523
    @Smokie1523 2 года назад +1

    incredible work, kyle! truly one of the most interesting and amzing places on the planet in my opinion! love the effort and content man, keep up the great work!

  • @KimiF17954
    @KimiF17954 Год назад +1

    Wonderfully done, amazing work. Loved it.
    Just so amazing to see all the abandoned buildings and things.

  • @1urie1
    @1urie1 2 года назад +30

    "Pripyat is not a war zone"
    Yeah turns out digging trenches in a nuclear exclusion zone is bad.

    • @Rafael_Fuchs
      @Rafael_Fuchs 2 года назад +7

      Who woulda thunked it.
      Mocking of their stupidity aside, I really would want to know which dimwit thought that was a brilliant idea. It goes to show just how bad their command chain really is. The only even half-reasonable logic I could come up with is that they want to use it as a deterrent, but that's still far from a bright idea as they would suffer too if it got shelled.

    • @jamiehughes5573
      @jamiehughes5573 2 года назад +6

      Not sure if they are brain damaged before or after they decided to dig up trenches in a area full of contaminants

    • @1urie1
      @1urie1 2 года назад

      @@Rafael_Fuchs From what I've heard, it was a general who made a HQ there so that he'd be protected from counterattacks. However, either someone had a really bad idea, or didn't know where they were, and started digging trenches. (And again from what I've heard, most of the soldiers didn't know it was Chernobyl or what was Chernobyl even)

    • @samurphy
      @samurphy 2 года назад +2

      @@jamiehughes5573 The average age of soldiers in Russia is well below the age that they would remember the reactor explosion happening, and the Russian govt suppressed any and all information and discussion of the event. Most people who were at Pripyat recently would have not known what happened there, or that there was any sort of hazard. The people are kept in the dark regarding what the Russian govt considers an embarrassment to the former soviet union.

  • @DieselWeasel
    @DieselWeasel 2 года назад +25

    I'm legitimately curious if you've ever heard the song "Ghost Town" by Huns and Dr. Beeker, which is about the Pripyat disaster and the people affected by it. If so, I'd love to know your thoughts on it.

  • @spook8286
    @spook8286 2 года назад +1

    I love your videos I know its impossible to grasp or fully understand the scale of these things through a video but I believe you nail it and bring us into that environment the best you can...continue to spread knowledge and wisdom 🙏

  • @sharonferrazzo1208
    @sharonferrazzo1208 Год назад +1

    its so sad to see this , you did a fabulous job of showing us around on all the places we don't see, my heart is filled with much sadness, for all who passed away, and those who had to leave there homes to never return,

  • @LipAllen
    @LipAllen 2 года назад +28

    YOU DESERVE A REWARD FOR THIS MASTERPIECE OF FILM AND INFORMATION!! I LOVE THIS SERIES!!!

    • @MrTommyboy68
      @MrTommyboy68 2 года назад

      How about the "Golden Flowing Locks" award. lol

    • @Dkgow
      @Dkgow 2 года назад +1

      If all of this (once he is done) turns into a Netflix Documentary or even a Documentary movie, that would be the best recognition ever

  • @mx_nana_banana
    @mx_nana_banana 2 года назад +17

    Kyle I just want to say that your videos are a beacon of light in my life, whenever you upload a video, my day is made 10000x better, so thank you Kyle for being one of the best people on RUclips.

    • @Zreknarf
      @Zreknarf 2 года назад

      second

    • @yuppyhater
      @yuppyhater Год назад

      Stop trying to monetise your comments off this guys channel and act like a leach for starters!.......

  • @ScorpiosLifeLog
    @ScorpiosLifeLog 2 года назад +1

    Great video! You're the first one I watched who talked about how awesome Pripyat could be if it weren't for the rush. I look forward to see the next video.

  • @redrumredrum7950
    @redrumredrum7950 2 года назад

    Freakin' awesome!!! It's great seeing you somewhere that interests you so much, and thank you for sharing all the knowledge with us! You're amazing and I can't wait to see more!!! 😃

  • @ElvishMayo
    @ElvishMayo 2 года назад +5

    Thanks for the content Kyle. I can see you put your heart into this video and it's something that means a lot to you.

  • @TylerL220
    @TylerL220 2 года назад +6

    Thank you for doing this Kyle, I've always wanted to visit Chernobyl and the surrounding areas but after this war I understand it won't ever be the same. So I appreciate seeing it in a moment of time right before the invasion.

  • @estoguy
    @estoguy 2 года назад +2

    Another fantastic video, Kyle. I have explored abandoned places most of my life and Pripyat and the larger Exclusion Zone have been on the top of the bucket list for me for a very long time. Thank you for sharing your trip and insights, which as always, are incredibly thoughtful. How many more videos are coming out?

  • @bkondrk
    @bkondrk 2 года назад

    Powerful stuff, Mr. Hill. Thx for making and posting this.

  • @justinwhitsitt7072
    @justinwhitsitt7072 2 года назад +52

    Thank you for dispelling myths and advancing a more positive and accurate view on nuclear power. We need this. We need cheap and abundant energy and we need to export it to poorer regions of the world

  • @alyshamcalpine2238
    @alyshamcalpine2238 2 года назад +11

    i’ve been so excited to see chapter two, thank you for uploading it! :)

    • @ayToNic
      @ayToNic 2 года назад

      SAME! I watch his videos all the time. But I normally first check for the chapter 2 of the video he put out last year :D

    • @sparky4878
      @sparky4878 2 года назад +3

      It's a re-upload, I believe there was a copyright claim against it so it must have been sorted out.

  • @nvrndingsmmr
    @nvrndingsmmr 2 года назад +1

    Incredible work on this one Kyle! Thank you for the amazing video!

  • @WeDeserveBetterNow
    @WeDeserveBetterNow Год назад +2

    Kyle your stuff is fantastic, I am glued to each episode from start to finish. Keep it up.

  • @tactical_llamas
    @tactical_llamas 2 года назад +5

    This series has been incredible so far. I can't wait to see the next installment.

  • @MattSoup79
    @MattSoup79 Год назад +4

    I've always had a fascination with Pripyat, loved this video, thanks Kyle!

  • @TheDufanzy
    @TheDufanzy 2 года назад +2

    Beautiful work. You do great work, Kyle. Keep it up. And thank you for doing it.

  • @chickencoop1387
    @chickencoop1387 2 года назад +2

    Wow! This was truly an incredible video and amazing how it all came together so well

  • @kuparisiipi5173
    @kuparisiipi5173 2 года назад +13

    Glad to have this ep back

  • @toad1948
    @toad1948 2 года назад +3

    its always interesting to look at a familiar city from a new perspective, good job! Such a shame this place, too, was vandalised by war though. Witnessing the horror myself i cant imagine what the power plant staff had to go through :(

  • @wackadoobrewsquatch3718
    @wackadoobrewsquatch3718 2 года назад +1

    Absolutely loving the Chernobyl vids. I really do hope you have more on the way. Even if it's just rolls of b footage it would be fascinating with your narration. Thanks for being one of the champions of making educational content in a fun/interesting manner

  • @SizzleCorndog
    @SizzleCorndog Год назад +1

    I love how intimate your shots are in this video and weirdly enough the ending is making me think about my dad whose currently losing the childhood home. Like I don’t want to shift this to me but I can empathize on some level with the Soviet’s who had to just abandon their homes and who’s kids now see the ruins because I lived that in my early childhood. Literally just this big house on a hill with crumbling plaster and a total mess on the inside but on the outside it is so wonderfully overgrown that the last time I went back the patio wasn’t visible because it was buried in flowers. Your video captures that exact feeling, maybe not the wistful memories, but the eerie feeling of walking through an abandoned building and seeing all the little things that people left behind that have stories attached to them.

  • @awetistic5295
    @awetistic5295 Год назад +4

    I love how this captures the ominous serenity and beauty of the place instead of sensationalizing it. There's a documentary about the wolves living in the Chernobyl area which had a similar feel. It's not the exaggerated panic about being in a deadly radioactive zone that leaves an impact, but the fading snapshot of what could have been.

  • @savy9017
    @savy9017 2 года назад +3

    One can't help but wonder.
    What if the reactor didn't blow up?
    What if there was no accident?
    What if nuclear powers good name was never tarnished by the catastrophy?
    Would the world we are living in today be diffrent?
    Watching this video and your channel in general made me realise one thing.
    That the price we pay for disrespecting nuclear power reaches far deeper than any radiation ever could.
    We pay it in fear, that stops us from embracing a solution to our energy crisis.
    As always great video :)

  • @mikeanco
    @mikeanco 2 года назад

    I find your documentary style videos so interesting and watchable, you always talk about some interesting nuances that mainstream media doesn't cover much, for example I'd never heard of the stalkers before you mentioned them

  • @pattyc7222
    @pattyc7222 Год назад

    Thank you for making this informative, thought provoking, and poetic video. I have been impressed with each video of yours that i watched, but this one was exceptionally moving because you captured the essence of the abandoned city and its inhabitants so well. I especially liked the scene showing the stained glass artwork. I hope you keep making more videos like these.

  • @travisw.9352
    @travisw.9352 Год назад +7

    Going into the military for this kind of thing, you really deepen my ever lasting thirst for knowledge about this topic. I thank you for these videos, they help shape my future as a Nuclear engineer.

  • @lukeh2556
    @lukeh2556 2 года назад +41

    Abandoned and returned to nature for decades before the war, that almost feels like the land itself should have been a warning sign to the soldiers who entered.

    • @marleyjr00
      @marleyjr00 2 года назад +5

      Bro real talk if I was just a basic soldier and got orders to go here I'd defect.

    • @p_serdiuk
      @p_serdiuk 2 года назад +4

      @@louisdrouard9211 Yeah, try to avoid eating food in a radioactive trench if you're ordered to guard a checkpoint.

    • @p_serdiuk
      @p_serdiuk 2 года назад +2

      @@louisdrouard9211 Well, you don't really know how those Russians lived there, so eh.

    • @Neojhun
      @Neojhun 2 года назад +2

      @@louisdrouard9211 Nah screw that, lets dig up trenches there.

    • @lukeh2556
      @lukeh2556 2 года назад

      @@marleyjr00 think that's also a risky option for soldiers

  • @evanalden2117
    @evanalden2117 2 года назад

    One of the best videos i have ever seen about this. You really put in the emotion and it shows. Great job and i learned alot i did not know about this as well.

  • @DaneInTheUS
    @DaneInTheUS 2 года назад

    Thank you for the re- upload Kyle. I hope you're able to keep it up this time

  • @aqacefan
    @aqacefan 2 года назад +4

    24,000 years.
    And I thought that waiting until the 36th century for the safe handling of Maria Skłodowska's notebooks was a long time.

  • @Sally4th_
    @Sally4th_ 2 года назад +12

    Great to see this back up, Kyle and really appreciate your work. I might have downloaded it this time, "just in case".

  • @garymathias3196
    @garymathias3196 2 года назад +2

    I absolutely love these videos. I hope you continue creating this type of content.

  • @kiriel0054
    @kiriel0054 2 года назад

    This was both so thought provoking and depressing. It really makes me wish we had seen this possible future unfold. Thanks for shedding light on this Kyle. Keep up the great work!