Chernobyl (2019) People realize somethings wrong at Chernobyl

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  • čas přidán 11. 06. 2019
  • I do not own any of the footage. All credits go to HBO, SKY UK, the creator of the Chernobyl Miniseries Craig Mazin and the cast crew.
    You can watch the whole series here: hbogo.mk/series/chernobyl/sea...
    hbogo.mk/
    www.sky.com/
    / clmazin
    Thanks for Watching !!!
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 669

  • @scotts148
    @scotts148 Před 4 lety +4203

    "That's too far for 8 milliroentgen, they'd have to be split open."
    Well about that...

  • @GarlicPudding
    @GarlicPudding Před 4 lety +2729

    "No one's answering the phone"
    Yeah...not something you should EVER say about a nuclear plant.

    • @visnjamusa9395
      @visnjamusa9395 Před 2 lety +60

      Weird... "Ulana" didn't call someone at block 4, but someone from administration common to the whole plant. The secretary or a telephone operator were supposed to be at work and answering the phone. The other three reactors were operating at the time with all personell working on them (reactor 3 was in shutdown phase initiated after the explosion by its chief's own decision).

    • @hootax8980
      @hootax8980 Před 2 lety +162

      @@visnjamusa9395 you're absolutely right. A receptionist for the plant *should* have picked up, especially if Ulana didn't directly call Reactor 4. The fact that no one answered implied that nobody was in a building that should be manned at all times. I suspect the area had to be evacuated or administration gathered in one place (an all-hands-on-deck deal) to assess the situation. Also I remember one of the senior officials directing communication lines to be shut down to the outside world to "prevent the spread of misinformation."
      Whatever the explanation, the fact that nobody answered means that something is very wrong.

    • @Juventinos
      @Juventinos Před rokem

      @@visnjamusa9395 people don't realize how flawed this whole series is. Entertaining sure, very well made, but it's full of shit.

    • @Kamina.D.Fierce
      @Kamina.D.Fierce Před rokem +52

      Can't help but notice the phone is ringing instead of "The number you have dialed is disconnected/unavailable". Not in an answering machine, but literally a "no service" type of way... Meaning somewhere in that flaming building... a phone was ringing.

    • @jimdavis2436
      @jimdavis2436 Před rokem +51

      "How's it going there?"
      "Not great, not terrible."

  • @hardc00re10
    @hardc00re10 Před 3 lety +4563

    The first sign of catastrophe in the west was at a power plant in Sweden. All workers have to go through a machine that checks for leaks on the way in and out. One morning a guy started beeping, they managed to isolate the radiation to his boots. But inside everything was clear. The reactor shut down and emergency was called. They checked everything, even the insides of every chimney. When there was no sign of any radiation they knew what must had happened. Using the same logic as in this clip. My grandpa a physicist and a professor at the royal institute of technology here in Stockholm got a call from a colleague that worked at the plant. He directly came home to us with a weeks worth of food, told us all to get inside and close every window and door. This was before any media even mentioned it, I thought it was the apocalypse.

    • @ricksaburai
      @ricksaburai Před 2 lety +210

      Forsmark, yeah? I'd be terrified if something like this happened, terrible enough that you're tripping alarms a thousand kilometers away, not knowing how or when or what.

    • @davyt0247
      @davyt0247 Před 2 lety +33

      @@ricksaburai indeed Forsmark NPP.

    • @randbarrett8706
      @randbarrett8706 Před rokem +198

      and unfortunately this scared people off nuclear energy for a generation

    • @teddybetts3254
      @teddybetts3254 Před rokem +63

      Smart man, understood what was going on, said "I have to get them and isolated them, make sure nothing happens to them."
      P.S. Yes I heard the story about workers in nuclear facilities having their footware go off in the radiation detectors and then realizing that it must mean that it's coming from outside, not inside.

    • @Jeroscope
      @Jeroscope Před rokem +4

      It very well could have been.

  • @kursk_kuku141
    @kursk_kuku141 Před 4 lety +1492

    “The Americans?!”
    When the worst nuclear accident takes place during the Cold War.

    • @edrickang2338
      @edrickang2338 Před 4 lety +8

      Lol

    • @dynamicworlds1
      @dynamicworlds1 Před 4 lety +50

      The sad thing is, if not for the cold war, the accident likely wouldn't have happened in the first place.

    • @Halo47143
      @Halo47143 Před 4 lety +80

      @@dynamicworlds1 nah, the russians didnt have the same standards as other countries with there reactors. Besides nuclear technology is extremely safe and clean.

    • @dynamicworlds1
      @dynamicworlds1 Před 4 lety +82

      @@Halo47143 but _why_ didn't they have the same standards?
      Because they were Russian, or because they were trying to modernize a country that was largely agrarian less than a century before as fast as possible while dumping huge amounts of resources into the Cold War?
      Even with a lot more resources, the US did a lot of things that were at least crazy and reckless durring the Cold War, so a poorer nation trying desperately to keep up is a recepie for disaster.

    • @Halo47143
      @Halo47143 Před 4 lety +7

      DynamicWorlds they didn’t have lobbyist and critics where silenced. Public opinion is very powerful

  • @SamaritanPrime
    @SamaritanPrime Před 4 lety +1682

    That moment when you've just discovered the worst nuclear disaster in history...

    • @bluechair9172
      @bluechair9172 Před 4 lety +21

      @Rafael Acosta *To better represent scientist diversity in the Soviet Union

    • @Lessinath
      @Lessinath Před 3 lety +51

      @Rafael Acosta The soviet union actually did have a nearly 50/50 split between men and women in scientific fields... actually, in almost all fields. So if anything, men are still over represented in the show.

    • @primkup
      @primkup Před 2 lety +3

      ...yet.

    • @carkawalakhatulistiwa
      @carkawalakhatulistiwa Před 2 lety +7

      @Rafael Acosta 75 % soviet docter is women

    • @FamiliarAnomaly
      @FamiliarAnomaly Před 21 dnem +2

      @@Lessinath complete utter lie

  • @lexus8018
    @lexus8018 Před 2 lety +757

    I love the acting, you can see the blank stare at the phone as she realises that yes, Chernobyl is in fact split open.

    • @SaraMorgan-ym6ue
      @SaraMorgan-ym6ue Před 18 dny +1

      he opens the window and the radiation alarm goes off indicating bad things are happening🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣💀💀

    • @badgercdlyons
      @badgercdlyons Před 12 dny +4

      The blank stare wasn't because of realizing that they were split open. The blank stare was because the first question in her mind once she had that fact was, "What do we do now?" and she had absolutely no answers.

    • @SaraMorgan-ym6ue
      @SaraMorgan-ym6ue Před 11 dny

      @@badgercdlyons well her first thought was they were split open
      and then the second was what do we do now?

    • @hermatred572
      @hermatred572 Před 8 dny

      It's a chilling beep to confirm your worst fears

  • @robustusmaximus9295
    @robustusmaximus9295 Před 4 lety +3000

    I love that scene. The eerie feeling when you know something big is happening, but you have no clue yet what it is, and when every moment seems significant, so it gets engraved in your memory just in case. Also, the character of Ulana. Something about her, she's instantly trustworthy.

    • @Dubbadizzo86
      @Dubbadizzo86 Před 4 lety +118

      Hard working people tend to be trustworthy. They're so into their work and becoming experts in it that they tend not to have time to bullshit.

    • @orderofthenightwalkers4174
      @orderofthenightwalkers4174 Před 4 lety +87

      @Rafael Acosta not wrong but she is supposed to be a representation of the large amount of scientists that helped during this and they were probably to first ones to know shit hit the fan and are trying to fix it

    • @Whiterabbit124
      @Whiterabbit124 Před 4 lety +90

      She is a conglomeration of several people, a sort of a symbol of peaceful, hard-working, trustworthy, salt-of-science people who genuinely wanted to help the world.

    • @ladymercy5275
      @ladymercy5275 Před 3 lety +39

      The speed at which she puts that sample together speaks volumes about her experience. As a an actress, I'm sure she must have practiced until she could do it without looking.

    • @zachmatthews2796
      @zachmatthews2796 Před 3 lety

      @@Whiterabbit124 But we have to make it a woman so they won't cry. CHANGE HISTORY SO WOMEN DON'T FEEL BAD BIGOT

  • @John_oR.
    @John_oR. Před 4 lety +502

    Something bad happened during Cold War
    US: "Is it the Russians?"
    Soviet: "Is is the Americans?"

    • @ilikewindows3455
      @ilikewindows3455 Před 2 lety +59

      Funnily enough, right after JFK's assassination, a similar situation went like this:
      US: "Was it the Soviets?"
      Soviet: "Was it the KGB?"
      KGB: "Was it a rogue agent?"

    • @ironcito1101
      @ironcito1101 Před 2 lety +32

      @@ilikewindows3455 Rogue agent: "Was it you, Ivan?"

    • @CharlietheWarlock
      @CharlietheWarlock Před 3 měsíci +5

      Ivan; was it you Lee

    • @devintariel3769
      @devintariel3769 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Khruschev in between moments of sadness was scared shitless that they did it. He really likes the guy too.

    • @SergeantExtreme
      @SergeantExtreme Před 25 dny

      @@ilikewindows3455 Turns out it was the CIA the entire time.

  • @YamatoTre
    @YamatoTre Před rokem +662

    The way she rushes, as if every second is absolutely crucial, because it is, adds so much weight and tension. It's not overdone, either. Masterclass in physical acting

    • @popcorn8153
      @popcorn8153 Před 11 měsíci +9

      its the smell of smoke before the inferno

    • @Dracalis
      @Dracalis Před 5 měsíci +13

      The editing is excellent too. Her haste is emphasized by the subtle jump cuts. Notice how each of her actions are slightly cut off so she appears to move from task to task very quickly?

  • @fuzkforyou
    @fuzkforyou Před rokem +425

    My grandma was a dentist and a surgeon (not enough doctors with experience in SSSR So She had two Jobs in the same time), She was one who treated radiated soldiers who were Young conscripts back in the day. She made me wear a cap or a hat even in the summer. And She never let me out to play with friends during any rain. There was radiation found in rain in Ukraine even in the 90s.
    She became an alcoholic in her old age because of all the trauma She suffered during second world war, chernobyl And communism.
    She died a peaceful death.
    RIP. Alexandra Ivanova Repnikova. She was a Hero of Soviet Union.

    • @terraincognita3749
      @terraincognita3749 Před 11 měsíci +12

      Thank you for sharing the story of your grandmother.

    • @ohnomyhandleistaken
      @ohnomyhandleistaken Před 10 měsíci +18

      It is insane what Ukraine has gone through the last 80-odd years.

    • @paullentz1972
      @paullentz1972 Před měsícem

      Is Putin a 'hero' of Russia now days?

  • @brandonhamilton833
    @brandonhamilton833 Před měsícem +82

    The way he slammed the window closed. They both knew.

    • @enzov9772
      @enzov9772 Před 23 dny +3

      I thought that small pause to look at each other for validation all the while the window, the barrier to the source of the radiation, is wide open. I thought that was great subtle acting. Very human behavior.

  • @rgodase
    @rgodase Před 4 lety +557

    This is cheapest scene to make it to the list of greatest scenes of all time.

    • @CaptainTrips560
      @CaptainTrips560 Před měsícem +8

      Close, but I have to go with the coin toss scene from No Country for Old Men

    • @Waywind420
      @Waywind420 Před 29 dny

      @@CaptainTrips560
      How about The Last of Us when they talk about the Fungus Pandemic

    • @CaptainTrips560
      @CaptainTrips560 Před 29 dny

      @@Waywind420 never saw it

    • @doktarr
      @doktarr Před 28 dny +10

      Even in action movies, the best scenes are often just two people talking.

    • @Waywind420
      @Waywind420 Před 28 dny +4

      @@doktarr Many of Game of Thrones best scenes were just two characters talking.
      Robert and Ned chatting about assassinating daenerys, Ned and Jaime talking about the mad king, Varys and Baelish, Tyrion telling lies to the members of the small council to reveal the mole.

  • @ledichang9708
    @ledichang9708 Před 4 lety +395

    The scary moment when phone beeping turns into ambulance siren.

  • @joergmaass
    @joergmaass Před 11 měsíci +215

    When the news about Chernobyl broke, I was a student in Gießen, Germany. I stayed home for three days until the rain stopped. Then, I went to the Geiger counter in our physics lab. It was a system that measured your radioactivity over your whole body. It wouldn't let me out again, because the soles of my shoes had 30.000 Becquerel. I climbed over the barrier and told my friends. After the lecture, the whole semester checked themselves. The highest count I saw was at a playground in Marburg, in the sandbox: 300.000 Becquerel. I didn't use milk products for months and tried to only buy food that had been produced before the catastrophe. Scary times...

    • @adrianghandtchi1562
      @adrianghandtchi1562 Před 9 měsíci +10

      I never considered that, especially as the radiation spread upward twords other countries

    • @hollylucianta6711
      @hollylucianta6711 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@adrianghandtchi1562 It's a testament to the strength of Soviet censorship at the time. People on the other side of the planet knew there had been a nuclear disaster before citizens living in the nearby towns.

    • @predetor911
      @predetor911 Před 4 měsíci +7

      That’s scary. You were basically living like it was the apocalypse 😮

    • @MichaelSeibert
      @MichaelSeibert Před 3 měsíci +4

      I live in Gießen today and am very interested in your story. Can you elaborate a little bit? ☺️

    • @SlaughterhouseDb
      @SlaughterhouseDb Před měsícem +7

      I was east of you in Bamberg, perhaps same rainstorm. Saw the NBC teams sweeping the roads, beeping away. We were told it was like the steam release at Three Mile, justa coupla flashing lights and sirens, so we just ignored it for the most part. Probably better we didn't know, now that I think about it.

  • @jeremyc6238
    @jeremyc6238 Před rokem +759

    You can see in his reaction at 2:49 that he’s weighing the idea that Chernobyl could indeed be split open. The body language alone in this scene speaks volumes. The concerned glances after the alarm sounds and her quickened pace with every movement after learning of the radiation.

    • @Troyy22
      @Troyy22 Před 11 měsíci +39

      I don’t think he was weighing the idea that Chernobyl could be split open, I think he was weighing the pros and cons of what would happen if he were to ask her to show him her feet while he awkwardly played with himself

    • @AradSP
      @AradSP Před 10 měsíci +5

      ​@@Troyy22
      I laughed out loud at your comment hahahahaha

    • @MDE_never_dies
      @MDE_never_dies Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@Troyy22You win.....you win all of it 😁

  • @othello_red
    @othello_red Před 24 dny +17

    Coming back to this and
    “That’s impossible, they’d have to be split open.”
    Followed by
    “No ones answering the phone.”
    The show did its terror well.

  • @theelephantintheroom69
    @theelephantintheroom69 Před 2 lety +189

    The phone's beeping at the end is so terrifying because you know what horrors are on the other end.

    • @terraincognita3749
      @terraincognita3749 Před 11 měsíci +10

      The best horror is the one where we actually see nothing, and we are invited to imagine what is going on. That is what makes the beeping phone so horrific.

  • @yorktown99
    @yorktown99 Před 2 lety +874

    It's one of the better written scenes in the series. Very little is actually said. Most of what we learn is from seeing the whole thing simply unfold for two scientists knowing something is wrong and going down the list of what might be the cause. And then the phone just keeps ringing.

    • @toddalexander5015
      @toddalexander5015 Před 7 měsíci +14

      The sound design in this show. The deeply unsettling sound of a ringing phone. Horror on a level I've not felt in a show before or since

    • @SL4PSH0CK
      @SL4PSH0CK Před 6 měsíci +2

      Great Visual storytelling 🙆

    • @jasonx1174
      @jasonx1174 Před 6 měsíci +3

      The cinematography, sound design, and pacing definitely help elevate this scene.

    • @Nighthawke70
      @Nighthawke70 Před 6 měsíci +7

      Those two actors were the condensation of the entire scientific community of the Soviet Union. They KNEW something went horribly wrong, but could not go public without being arrested for crimes against the people. They had to be quiet, quiet about the whole incident.

  • @thatsoundslikeblue
    @thatsoundslikeblue Před 4 lety +1345

    A colleague of my sister's who worked in the same lab lived in SSRB in 1986 when she was a teenager. She remembers the first hint the morning after the explosion that something incredibly strange had happened was when her mother went out into the back yard to collect the bed linen she'd left out to dry the day before. She noticed that the sheets which should have been clean were stained in places with a light yellow substance.

    • @fakename2926
      @fakename2926 Před 4 lety +108

      thatsoundslikeblue that’s insane. Interesting to note that the color of death, as it turns out, happens to be.... yellow. How unexpectedly quaint.

    • @Nayushe0
      @Nayushe0 Před 3 lety +36

      @@fakename2926 yeah, and usually radiation shows green for unknown reason

    • @theunraveler
      @theunraveler Před 3 lety +26

      Your sister's colleague is delusional! Someone take her to the infirmary!!

    • @tylisirn
      @tylisirn Před 3 lety +113

      @@Nayushe0 Because it's the colour of the phosphor from old glowing radium paint, so it became the symbol of radiation.

    • @pho3nix-
      @pho3nix- Před 2 lety +64

      Yellow as a color is very ominous actually. I've never liked it. From mustard gas to radiation.

  • @meganfaith4052
    @meganfaith4052 Před 3 lety +1142

    Ulana was one of favorite characters despite not being a real person. She went straight into action, not even hesitating, doing her best to get people to safety.

    • @brandonxing9546
      @brandonxing9546 Před rokem +37

      I absolutely loved her character. Absolutely competent, completely professional. A true expert amongst experts and the kind of person you’d feel most comfortable with in a disaster situation. No panic, no fears, just eyes on the situation and full concentration on the problem.

    • @piotrd.4850
      @piotrd.4850 Před rokem +45

      @@brandonxing9546 Not to mention, imaginary. Typical trope now: imaginary flawless female character, showing clueless boys around. Ignoring REAL women to begin with.

    • @willkettle3959
      @willkettle3959 Před rokem +29

      @@piotrd.4850 what?

    • @wouterdevlieger1002
      @wouterdevlieger1002 Před rokem +115

      @@piotrd.4850 she's just a combination of real men and women because you can't show all of their stories in a few episodes

    • @batkat0
      @batkat0 Před rokem +47

      @@willkettle3959 He needs to feel victimized.

  • @ImNotCreativeEnoughToMakeUser

    For the Soviet people, the first sign something was horribly wrong was that all TV and Radio stations played nothing but classical music/ Balléts. This was the standard operating procedure for whenever something happened, and the government was deciding what to tell the people.

    • @crimony3054
      @crimony3054 Před rokem +30

      Yes, there's a guy online who was a Soviet school kid at the time and was puzzled because Gorbachev was young and they were not expecting more time off from school like with Brezhnev, Andropov, and Chernenko. Still, the classical music played. My friends nearby said it was Soviet musical chairs. You keep struggling to improve your position and when the music stops you grab the seat you're nearest.

    • @JACKAL747
      @JACKAL747 Před rokem

      That's the russian government for you.

    • @ImNotCreativeEnoughToMakeUser
      @ImNotCreativeEnoughToMakeUser Před rokem +4

      @@crimony3054 Yep, I'm pretty sure that was Sergei Sputinikov

  • @Violent2aShadow
    @Violent2aShadow Před 4 lety +583

    I wish they had a scene where the Soviet people learn that something is horribly wrong when they hear the Western radio stations warning people not to go outside, tape windows and doors shut, and not eat fresh fruits or vegetables.

    • @RobertMorgan
      @RobertMorgan Před 4 lety +109

      @@proshark9966 You think millions of Soviet citizens in East Berlin *DIDN'T* listen to Us radio and watch US tv from West Germany? Radio waves can't be stopped by even the strongest, well patrolled wall, or Iron Curtain.

    • @proshark9966
      @proshark9966 Před 4 lety +11

      @@RobertMorgan my mom was born in the soviet union, she claims that nobody listen to american radios. Probably the goverment or something like that did.
      Plus i was born in moscow anyways.

    • @proshark9966
      @proshark9966 Před 4 lety +3

      @@RobertMorgan My mom was born in the soviet union (Moscow) and she claims that nobody was listening to western radios/tv channels. Probably the government did or the KGB or something. Plus I was born in Moscow myself. My family is Russian.

    • @dimaignatiev6370
      @dimaignatiev6370 Před 4 lety +19

      @@RobertMorgan Yes,from east Berlin,not from the USSR itself...They just didn't have access,and nobody would risk their life for listening to foreign radio...

    • @Violent2aShadow
      @Violent2aShadow Před 4 lety +29

      @@proshark9966 The Ukrainian who has the Usunka Show channel on CZcams says that some people had illegal radios and that's how they found out the magnitude of the disaster.

  • @FlorentPlacide
    @FlorentPlacide Před 10 měsíci +241

    Even though Ulana's character is a blend of several real-life persons she is really well written and it's easy to instantly get on board with her and share her struggles.

    • @Uryendel
      @Uryendel Před 10 měsíci +5

      They should have called her Mary Sue

    • @kylemayer8486
      @kylemayer8486 Před 9 měsíci +5

      ​@@UryendelI'm just surprised she didn't knock out a whole group of highly trained kgb agents at some point.

    • @erikjohnson9075
      @erikjohnson9075 Před 6 měsíci +22

      @@kylemayer8486 she's a scientist not a commando. Are you just threatened by competent females or insecure about your own incompetence?

    • @kylemayer8486
      @kylemayer8486 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @erikjohnson9075 no, I'm threatened by lazy writing by progressives that mary Sue a group of scientists.

    • @user-zq4ke
      @user-zq4ke Před 4 měsíci

      @@erikjohnson9075 Classic feminist gaslighting: telling men that they are threatened by "empowered" *(fictional!)* females when pointing out the lazy writing, yet women *need* the whole industry shoving Mary Sues in the media just to be "inspired" to become functional citizens... but sure, men are the ones threatened by the opposite sex. LMAO!

  • @kid111775
    @kid111775 Před 2 lety +74

    "They'd have to be split open" most chilling line in the whole serie

  • @mtheory85
    @mtheory85 Před 6 měsíci +26

    "They'd have to be split open."

  • @davyt0247
    @davyt0247 Před 3 lety +120

    I still get chills when the busy signal turns to ambulance sirens

    • @stargazer7644
      @stargazer7644 Před rokem +2

      What busy signal? The phone was ringing.

  • @Jake-vz6cf
    @Jake-vz6cf Před 2 lety +103

    This scene and the “trust but verify” scene are my favorite, I’d say. They’re very eerie in their own ways

  • @HarrisonHollers
    @HarrisonHollers Před 5 měsíci +16

    “They’d have to be split open.”
    Superb foreshadowing!

    • @RonPaul42069
      @RonPaul42069 Před 2 dny

      I mean, we kind of already knew at that point.

  • @ryansark93
    @ryansark93 Před 4 lety +69

    Ahhh the days when a machine took up a whole table to print out a reading

    • @Justanotherconsumer
      @Justanotherconsumer Před 3 lety +15

      20 liters of fuel an hour.
      That said, it was supposed to cut an apple into four parts and didn’t work, glad they found a use for it.

    • @thecentralintelligenceagen9963
      @thecentralintelligenceagen9963 Před 3 lety +5

      @@Justanotherconsumer only cut apple into 3 pieces

  • @dieseltechie
    @dieseltechie Před 4 lety +112

    When my family reported suspicious movement on property I think little of it. When they won't answer when I call them back, I race over. When there should definitely be someone available at the phones when you call and nobody answers you know something is happening.

  • @grizzfan08
    @grizzfan08 Před 2 lety +90

    If you get the feeling that something has happened to someone or somewhere and you call, yet no-one picks up the phone, chances are that people know and are not going to pick up the phone.

    • @lunalgaleo1991
      @lunalgaleo1991 Před 2 lety +3

      Or they're dead. *shudders*

    • @Kamina.D.Fierce
      @Kamina.D.Fierce Před rokem +2

      Or they see you on caller ID and ignore you because they think you're annoying. (At least that's what happens these days)

    • @dleightthedum
      @dleightthedum Před rokem +1

      @@Kamina.D.Fierce when something dangerous happens, noone ignores because of annoyance

    • @nocalsteve
      @nocalsteve Před rokem +1

      No one answered the phone because the government cut the phone lines to isolate the town.

  • @BradenENelson
    @BradenENelson Před rokem +17

    Opens the window, 2 seconds later radiation alarm goes off. That's China Syndrome-frightening.

  • @wolfbyte3171
    @wolfbyte3171 Před 9 měsíci +168

    Late to the party, but you can find the script for the show online. For this episode, the telephone conversation at 2:15 reads like this:
    Ignalina: (Rushed, loud) Hello??
    Khomyuk: Yes, this is Ulana Khomyuk with the Institute of Nuclear-
    I: You don't think we already know?! We're looking for it!
    K: Looking for-
    I: We've got 4 milliroentgen here, I've got men crawling over the whole plant, no steam leak, no water, leak, nothing! We can't-
    K: All right, stay calm.
    I: Don't tell me to stay calm, I want to evacuate, Moscow tells us we can't, and now you call?? Who the hell are you anyway-
    *Clang* (K hangs up on him; no time for this) They're at 4. It's not them

    • @dennishenderson3483
      @dennishenderson3483 Před 6 měsíci +8

      NOT, ALL heroes wear caps! You're da man, Wolf..!!

    • @MBOmnis
      @MBOmnis Před 6 měsíci +2

      What about the radio at the start of this scene?

    • @wolfbyte3171
      @wolfbyte3171 Před 5 měsíci +9

      @@MBOmnis Sorry, I thought I replied to this but I guess CZcams ate it. The radio is reciting the poem "to Alexei Surkov"

    • @Hunpecked
      @Hunpecked Před 21 dnem +2

      Hey, thanks for the transcript!

  • @hanswurstmaxdurst4039
    @hanswurstmaxdurst4039 Před 6 měsíci +14

    I love how they portray Soviet science. Clearly underfunded, yet effective and smart.

  • @rohithsai3531
    @rohithsai3531 Před rokem +89

    Take a moment to understand the dread that these guys must have felt in the few moments between calling Chernobyl and hearing the beeps. It might have been just a thought but not a confirmed reality yet for them that the reactor has indeed been split open. But that nagging sense that you and your government may just have destroyed the continent must have been so paralysing.

  • @georgedanilov8898
    @georgedanilov8898 Před rokem +64

    The urgency and speed with which she collected and analyzed the sample, immediately made a calculation and concluded - if it's Chernobyl, it must be split open for this levels of radiation to reach where she was - she's a scientist equivalent of a NAVY seal

  • @arcturuslwowski3056
    @arcturuslwowski3056 Před 2 lety +80

    The most funny thing in this scene, but no one noticed: Ignalino in Lithuanian Socialist Soviet Republic, located at the borders of Latvia and Belarus was built as a twin of Chernobyl. Those reactors present at that power plant were RBMK - the same ones constructed at Chernobyl and where TV Show's NPP was made.
    Btw. I still remember what my dad told. We, in Poland, at that day lived normal. No signs of catastrophe, but at morning some students and institutes of nuclear physics checked some unexpected changes in the air. Of course later government took their equipment, but they said what happened. To say that they were in shock it's to say that they were just surprised.

    • @baddoer
      @baddoer Před rokem +6

      Ignalin plant was used to film some scenes

    • @ThorsteinKlingenberg
      @ThorsteinKlingenberg Před rokem

      Someone in Poland on a government or scientist level might have known. But a Swedish nuclear power plant discovered it early in the morning only a few hours after the explosion. They checked the winds and concluded it was Chernobyl. Shortly thereafter it was global news. 99,99% of the Poles got the information thanks to the Swedes.

  • @anirudharun6546
    @anirudharun6546 Před 2 lety +40

    I cannot get over how brilliant the editing is.

  • @Pucukax
    @Pucukax Před 9 měsíci +26

    They made the soviet setting so believable. My grandmother had the same dirty walls, the same sad half dead indoor plants, the same communist looking souvenirs hanging from all kinds of furniture. This show is top notch.

  • @alfa1134
    @alfa1134 Před 2 lety +99

    Although we can make out part of the conversation Ulana made with the first power plant, I kinda wish that we could get a clearer idea of what they were saying. Based on what we did hear, they were probably just as panicked and horrified as these two are.

    • @Kamina.D.Fierce
      @Kamina.D.Fierce Před rokem +17

      Of course. Anyone working in a nuclear field and knows how dangerous radiation truly is is going to be the first to flip the hell out when they detect radiation but are unsure of its source. For all they knew it could have been from their own plants or if they figured out it wasn't that then that still begs the question: where was it coming from? Then they find out about Chernobyl and... Ruh Roh!

    • @nocalsteve
      @nocalsteve Před 9 měsíci +1

      The main point of the conversation with the first power plant was that they were panicking at 4 milliroentgen, when they were at twice that level.

    • @jackhartford521
      @jackhartford521 Před měsícem +1

      Someone made a comment above yours that shows what the script actually read from the show, showing what the people on the phone were actually saying.

    • @jayswee
      @jayswee Před měsícem +9

      IGNALINA OPERATOR (PHONE) rushed, loud ) Hello?
      KHOMYUK Yes, this is Ulana Khomyuk with the Institute of Nuclear-
      IGNALINA OPERATOR (PHONE) You don't think we already know? We're looking for it!
      KHOMYUK Looking for-
      IGNALINA OPERATOR (PHONE) We've got 4 milliroentgen here, I've got men crawling over the whole plant... no steam leak, no water leak, nothing! We can't-
      KHOMYUK All right, stay calm.
      IGNALINA OPERATOR (PHONE) Don't tell me to stay calm, I want to evacuate, Moscow tells us we can't, and now you call? Who the hell are you anyway-
      Khomyuk hangs up on him. No time for this.

    • @csxfan_
      @csxfan_ Před 26 dny +2

      ​@jayswee Fascinating exchange. They seem much more professional than the management at Chernobyl. Even at 4 miliroentgen they're trying everything to find the leak and even want to evacuate.
      Meanwhile at Chernobyl they're at a believed 3.6 Roentgen and they're like "ehh no biggie"

  • @BadhopRUS
    @BadhopRUS Před rokem +9

    "No one's answering the phone" - it`s frightening, because may be everybody already dead.

  • @tomscott4438
    @tomscott4438 Před 10 měsíci +30

    Every detail. The way people dressed, colors, lighting, the condition of buildings, the starkness of everything... so drab and lifeless. Brilliant.

    • @EATSLEEPDRIVE2002
      @EATSLEEPDRIVE2002 Před 25 dny

      That was the Soviet union in the 80s.

    • @jimmyh5038
      @jimmyh5038 Před 4 dny

      I thought they just randomly started eating gum but I think that was iodine ... Amazing!

  • @ninjaoffcialyt4845
    @ninjaoffcialyt4845 Před rokem +17

    The absolute horror which she would have felt when she said "nobody is answering the phone"

    • @jackobora3193
      @jackobora3193 Před 26 dny

      The subtle change in his face from surprised concern to horror when she says that

  • @meginmd
    @meginmd Před rokem +14

    I love at 1:13 you can see in the movement of her eyes as she goes through her mental checklist of "what could have happened?"

  • @jeffrowisdabest
    @jeffrowisdabest Před měsícem +11

    I love how he quickly slams the window shut, not to protect the inside from the outside, but to protect the outside from the inside. It's a subtle detail that gets overlooked.

  • @voldlifilm
    @voldlifilm Před 23 dny +4

    That's such a good dialogue. The scene establishes that these are very smart people. They dismiss that it can be Chernobyl because that would mean that the crisis is enormous before moving on to other things. Finally at the end they realize at the same time that it IS an enormous crisis. And the audience, even knowing nothing about roentgens and whatnot, are along for the ride because they are told this in a way anyone can understand. "It can't be X, that would be bad" "Turns it's X." and we all go "oh no". Brilliant.

  • @RepellentJeff
    @RepellentJeff Před 2 lety +32

    (Opens window)
    (Seconds later, radiation alarm goes off)
    *Shudders*

  • @garyK.45ACP
    @garyK.45ACP Před rokem +51

    My wife was a college student in Kharkiv, Ukraine in 1986. I think this was probably the most influential incident leading to the collapse of the Soviet Union.

    • @SamaritanPrime
      @SamaritanPrime Před 5 měsíci +1

      Mikhail Gorbachev would agree. He cites Chernobyl as a factor in the collapse of the USSR.

    • @garyK.45ACP
      @garyK.45ACP Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@SamaritanPrime I can assure you, he was right about that.
      While the general population never _really_ believed all the propaganda from Moscow, it was this incident and the blatant lies that came after, that made them finally realize the government would sacrifice THEIR lives for its image.
      It was THE incident that made people understand the USSR could not continue.
      It took another 5 years, but the truck caught fire and started rolling down the hill on April 26, 1986.

  • @ankushshetty
    @ankushshetty Před 6 měsíci +5

    I just love those vintage analogue equipments.

  • @EvilAmy_
    @EvilAmy_ Před 2 lety +32

    Don't worry guys, Steiner's attack will fix the radiation.

  • @brianhawkins
    @brianhawkins Před 4 lety +178

    Fun fact - the relative values of these numbers are realistic given the distances between Chernobyl, Minsk, and Ignalina. Shows someone actually worked the numbers instead of guessing. I would have expected the characters to immediately understand the grave implication of these values and know almost with certainty that it had to be coming from Chernobyl, even before they tried calling.

    • @grizzfan08
      @grizzfan08 Před rokem +11

      It's called "ruling things out".

    • @brianhawkins
      @brianhawkins Před rokem +2

      @@grizzfan08 More like "exposition"

    • @ThorsteinKlingenberg
      @ThorsteinKlingenberg Před rokem +8

      Keep in mind that the USSR actively spread the message of how amazing russian nuclear technology was. RMBK reactors were so mind-blowingly amazing that they didn't even need containment buildings. When everyone says the reactor simply can't melt down, why even think it? USSR propaganda plays a big part here.

    • @michalsoukup1021
      @michalsoukup1021 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Yeah, they were amazing, they were cheap and made plutonium.
      That being said RBMK IS safe when operated properly.

    • @ThorsteinKlingenberg
      @ThorsteinKlingenberg Před 11 měsíci +6

      @@michalsoukup1021 No.
      "According to KGB documents, declassified in Ukraine on 26 April 2021,[21] serious incidents occurred in the third and fourth reactors in 1984. According to the same documents, the central government in Moscow knew as early as 1983 that the powerplant was "one of the most dangerous nuclear powerplants in the USSR"."
      Even Moscow knew the RBMK reactors are shit, as with most things from the USSR.

  • @oanamgo
    @oanamgo Před 4 lety +60

    one of my favorite scenes

  • @saturnv2419
    @saturnv2419 Před 10 měsíci +11

    Imagine how scary the Swedish nuclear power plant operators are when their alarm went off.....

  • @petercoderch589
    @petercoderch589 Před 3 lety +45

    You get radiation poisoning from just making a phone call to Chernobyl in 1986. That beep coming from the phone is the sound of death.

  • @sectorseven1143
    @sectorseven1143 Před 9 měsíci +12

    My dad had his school friend Arsenije, a neighbor, from our city in Serbia. He was the best student, young doctor in VMA (Military medical academy - its top tier here), my dad remembers that time when Chernobyl happened, that friend of his was on excursion in SSSR (Ukraine i think, it was popular back than) and as young doctors from SFR Yugoslavia they went to help out. He never came back home. Nor i found any story about him and that group that went there, written in Yugoslavia from that period. Like they never existed.
    Also from stories from what my remembered that the sky over Yugoslavia back than, was illuminated in orange color. You can see by face expressions, its something they never seen like it before.

  • @Radiointeractive
    @Radiointeractive Před 10 měsíci +15

    "The Americans?"
    Reference to the Three Mile Island accident, which took place seven years before Chernobyl - which Soviet officials mocked the public's reaction to. Little did they know they'd have it much worse.

    • @TLGDful
      @TLGDful Před 9 měsíci +6

      No, the question was if the Americans had launched nukes. That's why she checked the isotopes, and concluded it was non military.

  • @EmperorBeef
    @EmperorBeef Před 9 měsíci +17

    Khomyuk's first three lines are questions. Delivered almost like an interrogator. This immediately establishes her role as an investigator, a scientist, and a seeker of answers and truth.
    I adore this scene. This is how you depict "scientists doing cool things" in film. A rapid fire series of questions, and hypotheses, and observations, and conclusions. That they're able to piece together the situation based on limited information is so cool. Like a superpower.

  • @kencf0618
    @kencf0618 Před 3 lety +18

    Best composite character of all time.

  • @zinussan50
    @zinussan50 Před 8 měsíci +4

    There always be a hard pill to swallow when nobody answer the phone.

  • @crixxxxxxxxx
    @crixxxxxxxxx Před 27 dny +2

    Everything about this series has a sick, nauseating, soulless tone to it. It’s brilliant.

  • @GEETKOSHTI
    @GEETKOSHTI Před 7 měsíci +6

    The amount of efforts she took are incredible....like waking up , collecting the dust , opening the closet , containing the sample and walking to another building in instant moment to check it on machine.... imagjne if there was a lazy person there ..... see how small things affects our life

  • @andiscott8470
    @andiscott8470 Před 9 měsíci +11

    One of the best TV series of recent times. I am old enough to remember the incident, as a small child. I didn't know much about it, just that we detected radiation from it in the UK and it was from a power station. But, in recent years since this series, reading about it and learning about it, absolutely terrifying how close the world was, to it being massively worse than it was. Brilliant acting and production of this series.

  • @lunalgaleo1991
    @lunalgaleo1991 Před 2 lety +9

    2:39 Oh, the irony... 😅😓

  • @user-mn3ez2kl3v
    @user-mn3ez2kl3v Před 4 lety +70

    With those nom-core glasses, I can’t tell if she’s a female scientist from 1985 or a Brooklyn hipstar from 2020.

  • @thecuriousone9342
    @thecuriousone9342 Před 4 lety +30

    I frigging love this scene

  • @WeWuzKangzNsheeet
    @WeWuzKangzNsheeet Před rokem +28

    3:14 The terrified look in her eyes.

  • @attila840702
    @attila840702 Před 3 lety +12

    I love the subtitles 0:10
    "Literally she borrows guru bahu bahu Noguchi"
    "a spoiler stir boil vacations"

  • @user-ue2cv4sr1d
    @user-ue2cv4sr1d Před 3 lety +177

    It's scary thinking that the only fictional thing about this is seeing people this smart, working something like this out, this quickly, all without wanting to kill each other.

    • @zombieregime
      @zombieregime Před rokem

      The scary thing here is people that think like you. If everything looks shitty, its time to clean your glasses. Dont project your hated and cold hearted murderous ways on others. Else, I may have to kill you

    • @michalsoukup1021
      @michalsoukup1021 Před 11 měsíci +5

      I dont' thionk this is fictional, scientists USUALY work like this, situation like this, you work the problem, until you either solved it or it solved you.

    • @zombieregime
      @zombieregime Před 11 měsíci

      @@michalsoukup1021 no, no, no. That doesn't fit his edgelord hardcore kill all the things narrative! Because obviously, being an intelligent and apparently bloodthirsty person, if others were smart like him they too would be equally as bloodthirsty, duh! The only reason why people aren't constantly trying to kill each other is because they are dumber than them.
      (Because in this day and age it actually needs to be said thanks to the "if you don't believe exactly what I do for exactly the same reasons you are my enemy" pop-culture) #obvioussarcasm
      The fact that there are people that view the world this way, and don't see the inherent issues with that are a very functional part of the larger problem. Unfortunately, those among us who have bothered to look outside our narrow world views, and question their origins, validity, inevitabilities, avenues for abuse not just by the ideals but from the anti-ideals as well, they have come to a deeper understanding of existence than Mr alpha douche bro there could ever hope to achieve if they could even conceptualize it in the first place. And this unfortunate understanding affords them at the very least the privilege to continue breathing, which they abuse by spreading their tired old clandestinely spoon fed memetic viral willful ignorance, and hilariously thinking themselves tall for it! Junior there doesn't even realize this 'im 14 and this is deep' ride he's spouting is classic disillusionment to keep us distracted from what The Man™ is doing behind the scenes. Which, spoiler alert, isn't as much as ones media rattled mind would assume (again if ones mind can even wrap itself around the concept most of the experiences they pull their outrage from is from popular media.....ha yeah, right....). Nevermind the left hand not knowing what the right is doing, the index 1st knuckle doesn't know the 3rd knuckle even exists, and assuming the pinky knuckles are aware enough to be in a hierarchical organization, its in cahoots with the left ankle. Unless the returns next quarter don't come through, of course.
      The simple truth is on the whole no one really knows what anyone else is doing, and anyone could be working a con with anyone else whether either party realizes it or not.
      But this idea that 'smart people to the death thing' is absolute hilarious lunacy and smacks of 'oh you sweet summer child' 😂

  • @Kwaj
    @Kwaj Před rokem +39

    *Khomyuk:* That's too far for 8 milliroentgen, they'd have to be split open.
    *Graphite:* 🎵 Sunshine, on my shoulders makes me happy. 🎵

    • @Kamina.D.Fierce
      @Kamina.D.Fierce Před rokem

      More like:
      The core: Ura~nium fever has done n got me down!
      Uranium fe~ver is speadin all around!

    • @nodeberiaestaraqui93
      @nodeberiaestaraqui93 Před 27 dny

      Reactor 4's core, split open: * *incomprehensible screeching* *

  • @emman10101
    @emman10101 Před 5 měsíci +5

    The nobody is answering the phone..... That absolute terrror.
    One of the largest nuclear power plants in that part of the world, with radiation floating around all over Europe.... and there people there are too busy to answer the phone.
    Too Busy To Answer The Phone... that's why she's like..... 😳😳😳😳😳

    • @dclark142002
      @dclark142002 Před 26 dny

      Worse.
      In a situation like that, someone is always ready to answer the phone because the politicians are involved.
      No one is answering the phone because it is too dangerous at the phone location to be answering it...

  • @NickJohnCoop
    @NickJohnCoop Před 23 dny +2

    The Soviets panicked when they realised that because of scientists like this there was no way they would be able to keep a lid on it. Can 9you imagine the terror all these people felt when they realised that the only way of getting such high readings was something that they thought was impossible had happened, a nuclear reactor had burst and was spreading its poison unendingly. I think a few would have thought it would be the end of the world. Chernobyl is something that we will have to remember for the rest of human existence.

  • @AleisterCrowleyMagus
    @AleisterCrowleyMagus Před dnem +1

    Both actors, especially the dazzling Emily Watson, are so perfect in this scene. I am American and hearing “the Americans?” still gives me chills. Bravo on such a wonderfully done series!

  • @higherquality
    @higherquality Před rokem +15

    Side note: Perfect editing right at the end. The ambulance siren is syncing with the dead line.

  • @katiebonser9712
    @katiebonser9712 Před měsícem +2

    Ulana wasn't a real person, but she does in fact represent the scientists who helped with the clean up.

    • @perryallan3524
      @perryallan3524 Před 12 dny +2

      Ulana is a combination of dozens of very real people who all did their part. A Soviet researcher at the radiological institute in the city the scene occurs in did in fact discover that there was a major problem - and likely very close to how this scene played out. A radiation alarm was set off. They did a swab test and tested it and identified I131, and they knew that it had to come from a nuclear reactor core... and which were the likely ones given the wind direction.
      I have no doubt that they quickly identified that it was Chernobyl.

  • @HamburgerTime209
    @HamburgerTime209 Před 21 dnem +1

    For reference, 8 milliroentgen is about 80 microsieverts. The hourly dose a person gets on average is about 0.2 microsieverts (or 0.02 milliroentgen). 80 microsieverts (8 milliroentgen) is roughly about the dose one would get normally in about 2 or 3 weeks. In one hour.
    (For further reference 3.6 roentgen is 3,600 milliroentgen, or about a decade or two of average background radiation, all in one hour. And that was the number they were saying “not terrible” about.)

  • @Richie8a8y
    @Richie8a8y Před 27 dny +2

    I went nearby in 91 - I was all over the Union, right before the end of it… - anyway, I met some nice
    people. I was there from USofA to dance. Much love and many thanks to everyone I met. I’m sorry I didn’t get back.

  • @NealX_Gaming
    @NealX_Gaming Před 5 měsíci +9

    One of the underrated things about this scene is what does NOT happen -- neither one of them even thinks to turn on the TV to see if there's any news reporting, oh I don't know, NUCLEAR HOLOCAUST, even though they're thinking it immediately. They know they won't get the truth no matter what the situation is.

    • @jackobora3193
      @jackobora3193 Před 26 dny +2

      The radio was playing when the guy walks in. They know the news isn't talking about it.

  • @stephengamber7000
    @stephengamber7000 Před 4 dny +1

    The music at the end of the last episode is epic.

  • @saggyshaggy5681
    @saggyshaggy5681 Před rokem +8

    One question for all. How many times has humanity come close to hell on earth.

    • @Kamina.D.Fierce
      @Kamina.D.Fierce Před rokem +1

      Many times. History is brimming with them. Chernobyl is simply one of the top closest times we've actually almost lost it all.
      Here's something to really think about:
      We as a species have permanently bound the survival of all life on this entire planet with the survival of our species. All thanks to nuclear power, because if humanity were to suddenly vanish or go extinct tomorrow, all that would do is begin the countdown timer to each and every single nuclear reactor on earth inevitably failing without humans to oversee, operate, ans maintain them, and thus would begin having meltdowns akin to Chernobyl. At which point each one would begin leaking radiation all over the planet until all life everywhere would eventually die off. Chernobyl Reactor 4 by itself almost made the entire continent of Europe uninhabitable for 20,000 to over 50,000 years by itself... How many other plants/reactors are there around the world? A Nuclear Reactor core doesn't turn off by simply flipping a switch or pressing a button.

  • @stdjunior
    @stdjunior Před 10 měsíci +3

    02:45 "that's too far for 8 millirad they would have to be split open" D:

  • @primalfury2011
    @primalfury2011 Před 9 měsíci +5

    great show.. goes into great detail!! and shows the lengths they had to go thru !!! Many heroes !!!!

  • @geronimo9595
    @geronimo9595 Před 29 dny +1

    the auto captions are great. "a spoiler stir boil vacations echoic we see a monkey reduce"

  • @sirevanbolo4258
    @sirevanbolo4258 Před 4 lety +16

    This one of my favorite scenes... We will suddenly realize the radiation that covers the entire scene...

  • @SittingBull99
    @SittingBull99 Před 2 lety +9

    I admit I myself am perfectly capable of this, but human beings sometimes have an amazing capacity to bury their heads in the sand and pretend nothing's wrong.

    • @Kamina.D.Fierce
      @Kamina.D.Fierce Před rokem

      Meanwhile the radiation fries their arse, but at least their head is fine... for a minute longer.

  • @poorlycookedchile
    @poorlycookedchile Před rokem +9

    The urge to own all the equipment in this video is massive...only problem is that I don't know what they are.

  • @vpdmusic
    @vpdmusic Před 5 dny +1

    Ulana's colleague has been outside, so I guess the radiation alarm should start beeping moments after he enter the room. Anyway! I love this scene!

  • @cdmcrst1292
    @cdmcrst1292 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Bought a Geiger counter with a dosimeter feature recently just for curiosity sake and have been letting it run constantly for 720ish hours (about a month) now and it's only recorded 71μSv over the course of that month. A Milliroentgen to Microsievert Converter says that is 7.61 Milliroentgen, less than what that alarm picked up in a few seconds. That's kinda neat and freaky.

  • @usotsuki5
    @usotsuki5 Před 4 dny

    I have worked in several laboratories, and love the way the scientists conduct themselves in this scene: They don't waste time with exposition; they don't have sudden, inexplicable knowledge of things, but they _do_ have relevant expertise, tools and procedures ready to go, direct access to other experts, and a willingness to follow the evidence even when it is surprising or scary. They take the time to toss out hypotheses, possible explanations, and to discuss & test them. This is how science is done, and I like that it's being shown correctly.

  • @caiobortoletto4363
    @caiobortoletto4363 Před 9 měsíci +3

    This series is literally some of the best television ive ever seen

  • @kennethpurscell
    @kennethpurscell Před 2 lety +7

    Everyone needs a mass spectrometer lying around! 😃

    • @stargazer7644
      @stargazer7644 Před rokem

      That's a scintillation detector, not a mass spectrometer. It analyzes the characteristic energy spectrum of the radioactive emissions to allow you to identify the isotopes involved.

  • @Nananki
    @Nananki Před 8 měsíci +2

    This really captures the scale and terror of this disaster. A masterpiece of writing and acting.

  • @e_eyster
    @e_eyster Před 7 dny

    I like this type of scene in shows where the expert is essentially brought in for the "There is no way this worst case scenario thing can be happening" shot that essentially just ends with the "We all are doomed" look

  • @user-jg1wg1vh2d
    @user-jg1wg1vh2d Před 10 měsíci +2

    Radiation traveled 248 miles in 7 hours..she was split open indeed all the way open

  • @valedan1075
    @valedan1075 Před 3 lety +5

    This is my favorite scene in the whole series.

  • @anniluvtorres4359
    @anniluvtorres4359 Před 4 lety +8

    When time of 1:23 and 50 sec. And time of 1:30 when the Military Fire Comming many of the firefighters were suffered and get some of the radioactive they transferred immediately to MOSCOW for some threat ment
    I remember when i was in Russia 1986 I see many military trucks at hospital

  • @cjsrescues
    @cjsrescues Před rokem +7

    I was stationed in Germany when this happened. A year later, I miscarried my twins.

  • @zikaudeles9249
    @zikaudeles9249 Před 5 měsíci +2

    i just realized that dude is Larys Strong in HOTD

  • @raylast3873
    @raylast3873 Před 4 lety +5

    3:20, when you‘re trying bae and no one answers and you‘re getting all antsy.

  • @andrewarato696
    @andrewarato696 Před 4 lety +15

    One of the best scenes.

  • @user-ut9ui5us3v
    @user-ut9ui5us3v Před 23 dny

    1:07 a clean set-up....plywood mounted to the wall allows easy swap out of components.