ABC News Nightline: Chernobyl Accident - 04/28/86

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  • čas přidán 28. 03. 2017
  • An episode of ABC News Nightline with Ted Koppel on April 28, 1986, covering the Chernobyl nuclear accident in the Soviet Union. Discussions regarding its impact on the Soviet people and the future of nuclear energy. Interviewed in the program include Soviet experts Marshall Goldman and Dimitri Simes, along with scientist Dr. Marvin Dickerson and Nuclear Physicist Dr. James McKenzie.
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 3,8K

  • @kongfeet81
    @kongfeet81 Před 5 lety +10286

    its amazing to think that journalism was once a real thing

    • @marscarda
      @marscarda Před 5 lety +307

      They didn't have to deal with twitter then :)

    • @Jeicto24
      @Jeicto24 Před 5 lety +66

      Nick picking on technicalities much...

    • @FortoFight
      @FortoFight Před 5 lety +76

      @@fubar12345 "Seems virtually certain".

    • @RoyWiggins
      @RoyWiggins Před 5 lety +223

      @@fubar12345 meltdown isn't a technical term and can mean simply "a severe nuclear reactor accident that results in core damage from overheating." This is exactly what happened at Chernobyl and all evidence as of this broadcast pointed that way.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_meltdown

    • @nananana8846
      @nananana8846 Před 5 lety +102

      @@fubar12345 Meltdown was the worst case scenario that could happen in western style nuclear plant designs, they didn't even consider an explosion.

  • @miked9000
    @miked9000 Před 5 lety +5261

    when the american news gave us facts, not feelings.

    • @fubar12345
      @fubar12345 Před 5 lety +133

      I like your rose coloured glasses, where can I get a pair?

    • @adnand4167
      @adnand4167 Před 5 lety +50

      Because feels sell good but facts dont

    • @havanascp9602
      @havanascp9602 Před 5 lety +63

      Ain't feels. Now is all propaganda 😬😬. Basically Cra p

    • @fullm3tal90
      @fullm3tal90 Před 5 lety +61

      Funny there are a lot of “facts” conservatives never bring up

    • @happyhammer1
      @happyhammer1 Před 4 lety +49

      @@fullm3tal90 both sides do this. A couple month ago on a panrl of jpurnalists Ted Koppel himself lambasted Brian Stetler about CNN chasing sensationalism over hard news

  • @lexavaritia7596
    @lexavaritia7596 Před 4 lety +1175

    I miss old reporting like this. Id actually sit down and watch news like this

    • @matthewgabbard6415
      @matthewgabbard6415 Před rokem +17

      It’s still there at 6 and 11 o clock. Make the time

    • @LoudestHoward
      @LoudestHoward Před 11 měsíci +7

      You might, we might, but not enough people would.

    • @Novastar6
      @Novastar6 Před 11 měsíci +13

      @@LoudestHoward Everyone loves that opinion based news now

    • @qwerty6383
      @qwerty6383 Před 11 měsíci +14

      we need more nuclear meltdowns

    • @jimsilvey5432
      @jimsilvey5432 Před 11 měsíci +5

      @@qwerty6383
      Give it time.

  • @RainbowManification
    @RainbowManification Před 4 lety +495

    I love this. No talking heads. Any speculation is rooted in the facts of the issue currently available and is kept to a minimum. Interviews are with subject matter experts. Information is presented in a clear, concise, and non-sensationalized manner. It's so refreshing compared to the 24 hour cycle we have today

    • @nominalize8162
      @nominalize8162 Před 11 měsíci +35

      This wasn't the regular news, this was Nightline, a late-night news-magazine whose mission was to go in-depth and avoid speculation and sensationalism.
      If you miss it, guess what: It's still on every weeknight on ABC, in the same time slot it always aired, so you can still enjoy that style of journalism.

    • @bradjames891
      @bradjames891 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Yes. Conjecture is kept within its bounds.

  • @fhowland
    @fhowland Před 5 lety +6231

    Man, watching these old newscasts really brings to the fore how dumbed-down current day TV news has become.

    • @mynameisawesomeman
      @mynameisawesomeman Před 5 lety +132

      @@dorkmax7073 Oh bullshit. Both sides spew propaganda daily. You don't think MSNBC is biased? And even back then when Woodward and Bernstein worked for WaPo it was still politically biased. The media has always been and always will be biased.

    • @Adamz678
      @Adamz678 Před 5 lety +34

      @@dorkmax7073 The roots of your beliefs are part of the problem.

    • @linkplays95
      @linkplays95 Před 5 lety +2

      @Shufei doubt that by a lot.

    • @jakubswatowski1007
      @jakubswatowski1007 Před 5 lety +2

      @Shufei well for u maybe it is more dangerous than Chernobyl cause you live in US on the other part of the world and the radiative cloud wasn't even close

    • @robo1p
      @robo1p Před 5 lety +4

      @Horsemanray For someone who seems to care a lot about the fairness doctrine, you are really ignorant as to who it applied to. Unless you are in Minnesota (where MSNBC broadcasts terrestrially), the fairness doctrine never restrained MSNBC and similar *cable* shows.

  • @SubZeDiZeD
    @SubZeDiZeD Před 6 lety +4810

    I lived in Ukraine when this happened, and can confirm that no one knew anything.... This news spread exclusively by word of mouth, and no one knew where the radioactive cloud was headed. Still remember my parents taping up the windows in our house just in case

    • @OldAussieAds
      @OldAussieAds Před 5 lety +266

      I found this a little funny briefly and then felt really sad. I'm sorry to hear your parents would have lived through that real fear.

    • @SenorNavel
      @SenorNavel Před 5 lety +276

      When it blew up, people in Pripyat stood on a bridge to watch all the pretty colours. The radiation dust went straight over that bridge. Simply terrible.

    • @todaysbestmix
      @todaysbestmix Před 5 lety +143

      @@SenorNavel That's right, the bridge of death. It's all so sad. It scared me in 1986 as a child in the UK. I cannot begin to imagine what people near the plant were going through.

    • @SenorNavel
      @SenorNavel Před 5 lety +54

      @@todaysbestmix I was born in 87 so I missed it all. But I did a lot of research of Chernobyl and Three Mile Island. I believe the people working at Chernobyl were thinking "awww shit".

    • @NoName-ze4qn
      @NoName-ze4qn Před 5 lety +10

      The govt didn't tell you about that?

  • @willypete1897
    @willypete1897 Před 4 lety +262

    Teds hair absorbed most of the radiation. Ted is a hero.

  • @LoFiHaven693
    @LoFiHaven693 Před 5 měsíci +22

    "50,000 people used to live here. Now it's a ghost town."

  • @JamesSavik
    @JamesSavik Před 5 lety +3654

    When the Soviets admitted they had a problem, you had to know it was a horrible disaster that shooting a few thousand peasants couldn't cover up.

    • @terrypennington2519
      @terrypennington2519 Před 5 lety +100

      I laughed way too damn hard at this...

    • @daetslovactmandcarry6999
      @daetslovactmandcarry6999 Před 5 lety +37

      True. 😒

    • @Petey0707
      @Petey0707 Před 5 lety +181

      That doesn't even make sense. Ironic coming from a westerner when your history is steeped in genocide and slavery. Just remember what's happening to the whistleblowers who are exposing your corrupt politicians.

    • @daetslovactmandcarry6999
      @daetslovactmandcarry6999 Před 5 lety +183

      +Karl V Redweld
      ¿Seriously bro? ¿Seriously? ¿You're _seriously_ gonna defend a genocide three times the size of HITLER'S in the post-Auswitz era by pointing out events over a half-century earlier to counter the observation that communist countries suppress even critical but basic public safety information?
      Tell me you're joking.

    • @amanisilvester26
      @amanisilvester26 Před 5 lety +37

      @@daetslovactmandcarry6999 Mandatory Carry rich coming from a western shill such as yourself America has killed over 20 million people since ww2 more than Hitler killed Jews and Japanese killed other peoples combined you want to talk genocide talk about the inception of your country how many thousands of Indians did you wipe out before you ran out of easily obtainable land to steal?, Honestly the fact that your calling those other countries communist only shows your level of ignorance there has never been a communist country in human history only democracys, bureaucracys and dictatorships with varying degrees of socialist policys, you Americans are truly brainwashed from birth it's sad to see. smh

  • @opticalecho119
    @opticalecho119 Před 4 lety +2544

    Those computer graphics illustrating how a meltdown happens have both aged poorly and incredibly well at the same time

    • @harrysmith1700
      @harrysmith1700 Před 4 lety +253

      I love old school graphics. Their simplicity communicated their subject clearly and straightforward.

    • @johanvangelderen289
      @johanvangelderen289 Před 4 lety +101

      It was state of the art at the time. Not up to today's standards. Yet entirely sufficient to get the point across.

    • @gamestycon2239
      @gamestycon2239 Před 4 lety +5

      k user and they fail in the important thing, to make you understand clearly whatever you are seeing it.

    • @VexaS1n
      @VexaS1n Před 4 lety +41

      I have a curious affection for vintage graphics like that.

    • @XxSTAR1977WARSxX
      @XxSTAR1977WARSxX Před 3 lety +19

      One of the experts refers to it as a “cartoon” later in the broadcast

  • @miguelrivera3383
    @miguelrivera3383 Před 9 měsíci +26

    I really do miss real journalism. Ted Koppel /Nightline was one of my favorite news shows back then too

    • @user-dz3sq9bf6s
      @user-dz3sq9bf6s Před 9 měsíci

      Well it’s was different but the internet wasn’t available to the public at this time so ppl ain’t taking sides or whatever

  • @Murderdogs
    @Murderdogs Před 2 lety +402

    "The effect of the radiation *IF* it reaches the United States, would be likely to be very minor indeed."
    Wow, look back to the days when journalists tried to present facts in a calm manner and didn't wish to spread fear and panic. Another world.

    • @juliolopezguerrero9915
      @juliolopezguerrero9915 Před rokem +32

      Nowadays they would say: THE CLOUD WILL REACH AND WILL KILL FOR SURE ALL OF US

    • @ARichardP
      @ARichardP Před 11 měsíci +9

      ⁠They wouldn’t go that far. They would hype it though for the ratings.

    • @aneubeck4053
      @aneubeck4053 Před 11 měsíci

      @@ARichardP youre right the headline today would read “NUCLEAR HORROR SOVIET UNION ATTACKS AMERICA WITH NUCLEAR PARTICLES LEARN HOW YOU CAN PROTECT YOUR NUTS AND OVARIES TODAY OR YOU WILL NEVER REPRODUCE AND DIE ALONE.”

    • @Burnthealphabetpeople
      @Burnthealphabetpeople Před 11 měsíci

      They only said that cause it was true if it was dangerous do you think they would lie just to keep
      People
      Calm or warm them

    • @Mark-xh8md
      @Mark-xh8md Před 11 měsíci +5

      ​@@Burnthealphabetpeople- Would journalists lie??? 😂😂 Does a bear shit in the woods?

  • @stuartmartin3408
    @stuartmartin3408 Před 5 lety +5593

    I wish news was still like this. Admissions of not knowing and when assumptions are being made. A fair discussion of fact and what is being inferred. Treating the viewing public with intelligence and not making a serious situation into TV entertainment.

    • @Tehnicker
      @Tehnicker Před 5 lety +186

      How the west has fallen

    • @noka1979
      @noka1979 Před 5 lety +73

      The news is fucked, there was a murder during rioting here last night at around 11pm within an hour we knew what happened who it was,where she was from with a photo of her, how it happened, and by whom, the news, SKY BBC etc, had vague news at 1am and did not have details until this morning, social media is a powerful tool

    • @da4127
      @da4127 Před 5 lety +25

      Pretty damn sure that everytime something serious happens the news are still using the same format, you cant compre this to the weather forecast you saw this morning.

    • @SylkaChan
      @SylkaChan Před 5 lety +12

      TV was so kool back then

    • @I_like_big_bombs
      @I_like_big_bombs Před 5 lety +29

      DISASTER STRIKES IN RUSSIA! Is it World War III, I sure as fuck don't know I only have a degree in Black Studies and Journalism.
      Does this mean the end of the world! Find out after this Ad From Coca Cola.

  • @oskardudley3408
    @oskardudley3408 Před 5 lety +1102

    Sober, knowledgeable, competent, objective, articulate.

    • @aliexpress96
      @aliexpress96 Před 5 lety +6

      Well, not objective, but i get your point.

    • @DiddyKongsTrashCollection2001
      @DiddyKongsTrashCollection2001 Před 5 lety +6

      @@aliexpress96 what exactly wasn't objective here?

    • @Eaglefan4ever
      @Eaglefan4ever Před 5 lety +3

      Isaac Zelinski Providing an understanding of a major nuclear accident by getting nuclear scientists answers to questions is not being objective in this situation.

    • @DiddyKongsTrashCollection2001
      @DiddyKongsTrashCollection2001 Před 5 lety +13

      @@Eaglefan4ever That's exactly what objective journalism is actually. The news station is providing the facts about a situation.

    • @kid5rowck
      @kid5rowck Před 4 lety

      @@Eaglefan4ever what is your definition of objective then

  • @NullyBird
    @NullyBird Před 4 lety +207

    American Media: "Something terrible has happened"
    VIewer: "What are they going to bait me with this time?"
    Soviet Media: "An accident has occured"
    Viewer: "I'm dead"

    • @abasvee
      @abasvee Před 2 dny

      Well, is it tho?
      "Between 1951 and 1992, the U.S. government conducted a total of 928 nuclear tests here (Nevada test site). Out of these tests 100 were atmospheric, and 828 were underground. "
      How many information of this tests have you got from your government?

  • @NJbldragon
    @NJbldragon Před 4 lety +84

    After seeing Chernobyl, this news segment is haunting knowing some of the implications of the size of the disaster.

  • @donal935
    @donal935 Před 5 lety +469

    The stark difference of class between the news then and the news now is jaw dropping.

    • @nominalize8162
      @nominalize8162 Před 11 měsíci +53

      comments like these make me chuckle. This wasn't the regular news, this was Nightline, a late-night news-magazine whose mission was to go in-depth and avoid speculation and sensationalism.
      If you miss it, guess what: It's still on every weeknight on ABC, in the same time slot it always aired, so you can still enjoy that style of journalism.

    • @wesleywilliams4064
      @wesleywilliams4064 Před 10 měsíci +8

      Society changed the news went with it

    • @ShadowAngel18606
      @ShadowAngel18606 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Propaganda hits different when nostalgia is involved. The experts on this american show are laughable actors (Why do i think of the Koloffs from wrestling?) and it paints a vastly different picture compared to what we experienced here in (then West) Germany and how it was reported here

    • @shaboopie12
      @shaboopie12 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Part of the reason for this is due to something called the Fairness Doctrine that was introduced by the FCC in 1949. It was abolished in 1987.

  • @jamesdenofantiquity
    @jamesdenofantiquity Před 5 lety +1137

    No yelling, no hysterics, no monologues and no ramblings. Some men having an honest discussion of a news event. What happened to television news and how we watch it. I remember watching this program when serious news broke out like the World Series earthquake. Nobody was shouting and demanding, just reporting.

    • @crabapples1995
      @crabapples1995 Před 5 lety +25

      I think loud people have aggressively demanded that everyone’s politics must be worn as a badge of honour.

    • @Dotalol123
      @Dotalol123 Před 4 lety +19

      No mate, its the internet fault, if you are interested in facts you just need to do a ordinary google search and you can know everything that interests you anytime you want and depending on time you have you can become an expert on the topic, you dont have to wait for the news like 40 years ago, television producers are aware of that and instead of selling you facts they turned to sell you spectacles, television is just outdated thats all.

    • @TheHistoryPrincess
      @TheHistoryPrincess Před 4 lety +1

      Piers Morgan happened 😂😂

    • @paddle_my_mad_laddle
      @paddle_my_mad_laddle Před 4 lety +13

      That was back before politics became volatile. Before America experienced a political mid-life crisis following the rise of civil terror and fall of the soviet union. Without a common ideological enemy that Americans had held since the ww2, Americans would politically turn against each other. Furthermore, politics were less democratized back then, as in fewer people had an active platform to convey their opinions to thousands. Nowadays with the advent of the internet some bozo can write a politically charged twitter comment and have their opinion reach anywhere between four people to tens of millions of people. The old underground newspapers and cult-like political movements of insurgent groups in the late 19th century and early 20th century have risen to the top of media. Today the big wigs of mass media and anyone with a political opinion now fight on a leveled platform of the internet. It's only natural that this new feeling of distrust, social paranoia and contentious, volatile atmosphere of US social politics would encapsulate the modern America.

    • @jameskehoe5091
      @jameskehoe5091 Před 4 lety +7

      News became partisan. Its sad. I miss watching the news and finding out about what is going on. No opinions, just information.

  • @sweetnsour3693
    @sweetnsour3693 Před 4 lety +68

    I like how professional this all is.

  • @barleysixseventwo6665
    @barleysixseventwo6665 Před 4 lety +851

    USSR: Comrads we may have had a minor accident.
    West: There has been a major Nuclear Incident in Chernobyl!
    USSR: No I said MINOR accident.
    West: We heard you. If it was really a minor incident you wouldn’t be telling us about it.
    USSR: What if we had told you it was a major accident?
    West: We’d discuss the feasibility of continental evacuations and go from there.

    • @malikmoin7598
      @malikmoin7598 Před 4 lety +36

      You, sir, must delve in screenwriting 😉

    • @LorenzSinclair
      @LorenzSinclair Před 4 lety +6

      Just change accident with incident and incident with accident

    • @lv4u2
      @lv4u2 Před 4 lety +18

      You just illustrated the political feeling at that time

    • @LaserTractor
      @LaserTractor Před 4 lety +2

      Cpt Lorenz Sinclair as a russian who's trying to learn english
      What's the difference?

    • @LorenzSinclair
      @LorenzSinclair Před 4 lety

      @@LaserTractor uh search it up , I don't actually remember anymore

  • @seanz6586
    @seanz6586 Před 5 lety +1036

    Wow! A news broadcast that actually wants to hear from scientists and experts in the field!!!!

    • @that1guy335
      @that1guy335 Před 5 lety +25

      Where are the no-nothing hacks Im used to?!?

    • @jefflewis4
      @jefflewis4 Před 4 lety +43

      Nightline was an unusual show for the time. Rarely would you have gotten this much detail of coverage for one story back then. But Nightline would dedicate the full show (30 mins) to a single story. It was groundbreaking for its time.

    • @frankwm1988
      @frankwm1988 Před 4 lety +2

      @@jefflewis4 Now solid news is cable's job, whether it's CNN, Fox, or MSNBC.

    • @shhsodjsjwiiqjsuakkajsheje1170
      @shhsodjsjwiiqjsuakkajsheje1170 Před 4 lety

      Nature Boy In the mental asylums!

    • @basetpk
      @basetpk Před 4 lety +9

      "Lets go with Ja-Rule to get his opinion on this"

  • @IhmePinokkio
    @IhmePinokkio Před 11 měsíci +30

    My mother might have been victim of this fallout in southern Finland. We live in area where the fallout was one of the heaviest.
    She died 3 years after this "accident" to bone cancer.

    • @Opiuth
      @Opiuth Před 11 měsíci +3

      Question. Did the suicide rate spike in your area? Because in Sweden where I live it did.

    • @brucheweinberger6863
      @brucheweinberger6863 Před 8 měsíci +2

      She probably was. My friend's cousin died of cancer as he was a soldier that was sent to clean up there without adequate protection.

  • @PetersPianoShoppe
    @PetersPianoShoppe Před 11 měsíci +10

    Man, that ABC Nightline theme instantly brings back my childhood.

  • @madmanmapper
    @madmanmapper Před 5 lety +1857

    It's nice to watch REAL news for a change... even if it's really old.

    • @JoaoAlves-zz6tx
      @JoaoAlves-zz6tx Před 5 lety +72

      This is like ASMR for journalists. Feels really good to watch news without BS, even with some anti-commie moments.

    • @trulymeparker
      @trulymeparker Před 5 lety +15

      Your comment made me feel ancient because I'm from 1975

    • @linkplays95
      @linkplays95 Před 5 lety +2

      Mhm

    • @-Danny
      @-Danny Před 5 lety +26

      This video held my attention and left me satisfied. Normally I am disinterested in broadcasted news, but even though I already knew the story, this video kept my curiosity. It feels strange to enjoy old news like this.
      I’m curious to watch other news reports from this time period. Do they hold up to this example?
      At the same time, I‘m disappointed that I was not around for reports like these. Although I’m hopeful a new standard for succinct news like so arise in popularity.

    • @gsxerwhite
      @gsxerwhite Před 5 lety +1

      jmarks881 it was HER turn

  • @jcb5782
    @jcb5782 Před 5 lety +921

    You know, I kinda want to start a talkshow like this. No jokes, no humor, no political aims, no unneccesary special effects, just reviewing the most influential event of the week in an objective manner.

    • @raymond4955
      @raymond4955 Před 5 lety +5

      I want more talkshows like this:
      czcams.com/video/4Q4O5ztz92o/video.html

    • @dreamabyss5423
      @dreamabyss5423 Před 4 lety +26

      You'd have to at least talk about the Kardasians or not enough people will watch.

    • @ryanpatron6940
      @ryanpatron6940 Před 4 lety +6

      I’d watch it.

    • @CatFoodCritic
      @CatFoodCritic Před 4 lety +2

      Did you do it?

    • @kaps89
      @kaps89 Před 4 lety

      Raymond why are you geh

  • @timfenton7469
    @timfenton7469 Před 4 lety +10

    Real journalism, refreshing.

  • @ptrekboxbreaks5198
    @ptrekboxbreaks5198 Před rokem +9

    TV from the 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s is so nostalgic

  • @simokoistinen7470
    @simokoistinen7470 Před 4 lety +745

    This comment section in nutshell:
    Everyone came here when they watched HBO's Chernobyl and got satisfied by old news.

    • @karlisulmanis3810
      @karlisulmanis3810 Před 4 lety +5

      I haven't watched the HBO series yet...
      watch me edit this in a few years when I've watched it

    • @VicMcFly111
      @VicMcFly111 Před 4 lety

      Simo Koistinen täähän se ois

    • @TechnologicallyTechnical
      @TechnologicallyTechnical Před 4 lety +16

      You forgot about all the comments of boomers complaining about the news nowadays

    • @kingkold
      @kingkold Před 4 lety

      True for me lol

    • @Zappina
      @Zappina Před 4 lety

      Never watched that crap. Its more like a western type docudrama than anything else.

  • @helenaprimera516
    @helenaprimera516 Před 5 lety +418

    "worst case scenario is reactor meltdown"
    OH LITTLE DID THEY KNOW BACK THEN

    • @helenaprimera516
      @helenaprimera516 Před 4 lety +63

      ​@@PSNcharlie97 Chernobyl wasnt only explosion. It was core explosion with radioactive fallout on half of the planet, threat of the massive steam explosion with same fallout, and meltdown actually happened too, its just that bottom part was reinforced in time, before it forced through concrete to the soil. This is worst case scenario. Half of the europe got higher cancer rates, irradiated forests in north, irradiated water, Soviet republics got affected by this too. It got INES rank 7 for a reason.

    • @Zappina
      @Zappina Před 4 lety +14

      @@helenaprimera516 Chernobyl was a partial reactor wall meltdown and a steam explosion. It could have worse though, a full reactor meltdown when the steam build up pressure which then break the protective wall apart in a huge steam explosion, carrying radioactive material all around a huge area. There is no core explosion, the core melted down to the basement where it formed the thing called Elephant Foot.

    • @spankthemonkey3437
      @spankthemonkey3437 Před 4 lety +1

      ForMan Kind like in Japan

    • @Beans360
      @Beans360 Před 3 lety +5

      @@PSNcharlie97 not true. A core reactor exploding spewing high levels of radiation into the atmosphere for months is far worse than fuel leaking into the ground. If a meltdown had occurred then yes it would of potential contaminated the ground water mildly over the Ukrainian but not as much as the contamination of what the radioactive particles spewed out into the atmosphere which contaminated much more than water. And let's not forget a meltdown takes time and can be prevented which is why they had time to reinforce the protection underneath the reactor. The core exploding was instant.

    • @ucirak
      @ucirak Před rokem

      @@helenaprimera516 you are writing nonsense, I am from Czechoslovakia and there was no nuclear explosion at that time. There was a melting of the fuel cells in the reactor and the subsequent rupture of the reactor due to the accumulation of energy to a critical point, and radioactivity escaped into the air from the burning reactor.

  • @lrmbvv
    @lrmbvv Před 11 měsíci +10

    we took T. Copple for granted back then, flawless delivery, great program, News now is a mile wide and inch deep.

  • @ronaldgarrison8478
    @ronaldgarrison8478 Před 4 lety +35

    The containment buildings on US reactors were emphasized quite a bit. But this was two days after the accident, and they didn't know then the full scope of what happened. We now know that the explosion was huge, to the extent that any of our containments would have been destroyed. The explosion blew the lid off the reactor hall-I think it was 1000 tonnes, and blown a dozens of meters into the air. This was not just a meltdown, but much more extreme.

    • @Kyle-gb9dq
      @Kyle-gb9dq Před rokem +4

      Our reactors won't explode like that one did. Ours are a different design. They just melt down. But ours have a containment building, their's does not.

    • @ronaldgarrison8478
      @ronaldgarrison8478 Před rokem +2

      @@Kyle-gb9dq Por dios you don't have to explain that to me. None of that relates to my comment. Again: No containment could have contained the Chernobyl explosion, which was far too violent to contain.

    • @totalyep
      @totalyep Před 9 měsíci +2

      They failed to mention that the use reactors are water moderated making them much safer. The Soviet designs use boron for moderation making them unstable by design.

    • @ProfessorIgor
      @ProfessorIgor Před 7 dny +1

      An RBMK containment vessel would have to have been ridiculously strong and big.. Like the RBMK itself. They're GINORMOUS.

    • @ronaldgarrison8478
      @ronaldgarrison8478 Před 7 dny

      @@ProfessorIgor Exactly. In fact, if such a containment were in place, anything and anyone within it would probably have been destroyed. There might have even been serious problems with the ground supporting such a structure. It might have been even more extreme than the present New Safe Confinement.

  • @C.Dynamo
    @C.Dynamo Před 5 lety +2511

    Who else is here after watching *HBO'S CHERNOBYL*

    • @jonjonas2528
      @jonjonas2528 Před 5 lety +32

      That movie is great hbo

    • @marieantoinettescake9513
      @marieantoinettescake9513 Před 5 lety +34

      I'm here after watching Game of Thrones. 👍

    • @jonjonas2528
      @jonjonas2528 Před 5 lety +16

      I can't wait for episode two of Chernobyl that first episode was great and historic it was real cool how many episodes will there be of Chernobyl ?

    • @movienerd202
      @movienerd202 Před 5 lety +5

      @@marieantoinettescake9513
      In Chernobyl they were tickling the dragons tail and got swatted.

    • @MrGutty117
      @MrGutty117 Před 5 lety +8

      @@jonjonas2528 5 episodes total, the 2nd one is already out. They premier every monday.

  • @lilcam-qk9mp
    @lilcam-qk9mp Před 6 lety +237

    Back when news was simply news and not this modern cancer we have now

    • @u.v.s.5583
      @u.v.s.5583 Před 11 měsíci

      Back when you actually didn't need to watch the news to get cancer. In those days you could simply breathe in the iodine and get your cancer.

  • @play-doughsrepublic5121
    @play-doughsrepublic5121 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Thank you for this.
    I remember that event.
    Ted Koppel handele this in a professional manner, as he always has.

  • @Devin7Eleven
    @Devin7Eleven Před 10 měsíci +12

    No agenda, no narrative. Just straight information with what they have.

  • @TechBuRn1337
    @TechBuRn1337 Před 5 lety +370

    Could we please go back to media like this?

    • @ehex3
      @ehex3 Před 4 lety +20

      There's no profit in it

    • @Holret
      @Holret Před 4 lety

      We kind are already there - just a hint of BS you have to be able to sniff out.

    • @megsinzoa7424
      @megsinzoa7424 Před 4 lety +2

      Just stop watching the news.....

    • @paulallen8109
      @paulallen8109 Před 4 lety +3

      The ADHD generation with the 5 second attention span wouldn't watch it I'm afraid. They get all their "news" from their favorite social media "celebrity" anyhow which is why quite a high percentage of them only speak internet meme and repeat things like parrots.

    • @eloisanzara237
      @eloisanzara237 Před 4 lety

      Paul Allen I was going to fight you there, but I just remembered that my generation literally forgot the fact that Cardi B literally robbed someone. When I brought it up, they didn’t care that their favorite artist is a thief.

  • @TickleFingers
    @TickleFingers Před 5 lety +543

    I remember when news was just "news"......... I miss the 80's and 90's.

    • @northroad1
      @northroad1 Před 5 lety +7

      Plenty of spin and no one to contradict it

    • @user-ri5oc5rw5b
      @user-ri5oc5rw5b Před 5 lety +12

      Now is political political political political political and COMMUNISM

    • @novemberajax3226
      @novemberajax3226 Před 5 lety +3

      I say the same, and I from the other country.

    • @cesarcedillos1032
      @cesarcedillos1032 Před 4 lety +17

      Fox News started in 1996, that’s when the news went to the shitter.

    • @vercoda9997
      @vercoda9997 Před 4 lety +2

      Leave America then. Most of the rest of our countries just present the news without the toxic spin and personality-led segments that’s destroyed America’s limited news.

  • @smileplease_91
    @smileplease_91 Před 4 lety +2

    I'm just flabbergasted at how amazing the news anchors are in conveying their message. No gimmicks, no drama- just straight facts. We need to get back to this type of journalism.

  • @metalgearsolidsnake6978
    @metalgearsolidsnake6978 Před 3 lety +9

    Always nice to see back in history:) Thank you for this:)

  • @ylette
    @ylette Před 5 lety +419

    Living in Denmark in 1986 I got really tired of the Soviet Union once they started spewing radioactive clouds over us and not telling us what was going on.

    • @unitedwestand56
      @unitedwestand56 Před 5 lety +105

      Don't worry, I lived in Odessa, Ukraine at the time, and they didn't tell us neither

    • @radiostalker740
      @radiostalker740 Před 5 lety +15

      You said like they did it to actually hurt people. This was a catastrophy, a lot of people got sick and died. Have you read about Ukrainian and Russian casualties? Blame Gorbachev and his friends, not the country and regime.

    • @snx70
      @snx70 Před 5 lety +15

      Not being told in Denmark? I'm Danish and clearly remember the incident in 1986 - concerns over fallout was very common in Danish news. I also remember a school trip to the East getting cancelled because the school was concerned of contaminated food. Obviously nobody knew the FULL extent of the incident, we barely do now :)

    • @unitedwestand56
      @unitedwestand56 Před 5 lety +40

      @@snx70 I think he meant the Soviets who provided delayed and limited information about the event.

    • @jonjonas2528
      @jonjonas2528 Před 5 lety +5

      Think those Chernobyl workers saved millions. And millions of white people when they shut down the reactor god. Bless them white lives matter

  • @Muonium1
    @Muonium1 Před 6 lety +530

    A fascinating historical artifact.

    • @Deplorable_Nerfherder
      @Deplorable_Nerfherder Před 6 lety +1

      10mintwo it's still playing out presently, and will have significant effects for another 600 years

    • @jonjonas2528
      @jonjonas2528 Před 5 lety +1

      Chernobyl will be fine In the year 501987

    • @jonjonas2528
      @jonjonas2528 Před 5 lety +1

      Chernobyl will be fine in the year 501987

  • @stanleyqc2244
    @stanleyqc2244 Před 4 lety +4

    I'm really impressed by the quality of journalism in this 33 year old footage.
    People actually seem to be knowledgeable about the subjects they're talking about.
    6:26
    "... or is it normal human instinct to cut corners?" - Very well said!

  • @wingsley
    @wingsley Před 10 měsíci +1

    Thank you for sharing this.

  • @eFeXuy
    @eFeXuy Před 4 lety +464

    It's only 3.6 roetgens. I've been told it's the same as a chest x-ray.

    • @vikasagarwal9205
      @vikasagarwal9205 Před 4 lety +135

      Not great not terrible.

    • @convilcali
      @convilcali Před 4 lety +3

      Did you hear that on Glenn beck show?

    • @filipinowhiteboy
      @filipinowhiteboy Před 4 lety +21

      @@convilcali It's from the HBO show

    • @vercoda9997
      @vercoda9997 Před 4 lety +47

      An exposure that’s over very quickly indeed, Not sustained. You might as well waft your fingertip through the world’s smallest candle flame, and claim how harmless it is. Holding that fingertip in place for 40 minutes over that tiny flame, however...

    • @jaybeeo1530
      @jaybeeo1530 Před 4 lety +16

      Yeah 400 of them..

  • @alexmcqueen2748
    @alexmcqueen2748 Před 5 lety +516

    Then "- and to discuss the potential outcomes here is an expert in the field..."
    Now "- and to discuss these findings is our topic correspondent..."

    • @crashlogger4283
      @crashlogger4283 Před 5 lety +47

      And as a professional, we'll talk to this 7 year old we told we'd give a lollipop if he talked to us

    • @drone_video9849
      @drone_video9849 Před 5 lety +5

      ​@Ken Lompart not if you hold down the Mute :-) but yeah your right on this.

    • @Dylan-xv3hp
      @Dylan-xv3hp Před 5 lety +4

      @@crashlogger4283 If he read this script*

    • @njclondon2009
      @njclondon2009 Před 5 lety +11

      too true. ahh, the age of reasoned reporting. I think you're being kind, i think today there would be a little scrolling text saying, "BREAKING NEWS: RUSSIAN NUCLEAR MELTDOWN ENDANGERS THE LIFE OF MILLIONS"

    • @isaac_aren
      @isaac_aren Před 5 lety +9

      Now "-and to give their thoughts on these findings, here is a random celebrity"

  • @Jagstosupabowl
    @Jagstosupabowl Před 8 měsíci +5

    This nuclear disaster could of been so much worse if the liquidators, fire fighters, nurses, and many more people who sacrificed their lives. If these people didn’t do their job scientist from modern day say that it could of affected most of the world. The sad thing is that none of these people were told what happened at Chernobyl they just went in and did their job like normal people the bravery was off the charts. Major respect to them and rest in peace for all people who died this was the most tragic accident in Ukrainian history.

  • @chrismeier5553
    @chrismeier5553 Před 5 lety +216

    I feel like I actually learned something . The news was also a source of knowledge with what’s going on. Now it’s just people yelling “you’re wrong”

    • @jenniferclark9842
      @jenniferclark9842 Před 4 lety +1

      Chris Meier And people wonder why I don’t watch the news anymore. It gives me a headache. I turn on the Weather Channel in the morning, and that’s it.

    • @nubreed13
      @nubreed13 Před rokem +2

      yeah everything went sideways when the fairness doctrine was removed.

    • @nominalize8162
      @nominalize8162 Před 11 měsíci +5

      Fun fact: This wasn't the regular news, this was Nightline, a late-night news-magazine whose mission was to go in-depth and avoid speculation and sensationalism. It made Ted Koppel a household name.
      If you miss that style, guess what: Nightline is still on EVERY weeknight on ABC, in the same time slot it always aired, so you can still enjoy that style of journalism.

  • @promiscuouscrab4040
    @promiscuouscrab4040 Před 5 lety +176

    Wow I’m hearing facts....clear, concise, unadulterated, informative facts! No unyielding bias, no speculation, just information based on measurements and observations.

    • @JustinDeFouw
      @JustinDeFouw Před 5 lety +3

      The news I miss when I was a kid. And I will never forget that famous opening theme.

    • @bunqiejump
      @bunqiejump Před 5 lety +17

      the whole report is almost all speculation though, informed speculation but at the time no one knew for sure

    • @jenniferclark9842
      @jenniferclark9842 Před 5 lety +4

      bunqiejump All they could do then was make educated guesses, based on what little information they had and their expertise (nuclear science).

    • @luxborealis
      @luxborealis Před 4 lety +2

      But most of the speculation is wrong... For example the reactor didn’t have a meltdown until weeks after this, as a result of the dumping of boron sand.

    • @ConkersBFDN64
      @ConkersBFDN64 Před 4 lety +6

      Most of it is speculation, but it was made absolutely clear what was fact and what was hypothesis. Plus it was well explained how they used the few facts they had to get to their hypothesis.

  • @Danny-Germany
    @Danny-Germany Před 4 lety +1

    thanks for uploading!

  • @Keichwoud357
    @Keichwoud357 Před 4 lety +9

    Back when information was not instantly available to everyone, giving news media actual purpose and responsibility, which they did their best to cherish.

  • @PlaceStillMatters
    @PlaceStillMatters Před 5 lety +553

    I bet this clip is going to get a decent uptick in viewership due to HBO’s excellent new miniseries “Chernobyl” (admittedly based on just the first episode). And yes, television news used to be MUCH LESS entertaining and MUCH MORE informative. Oh, how I miss real journalism.

    • @gotch09
      @gotch09 Před 5 lety +4

      I saw episode 3 last night. Ending was so sad.

    • @mrbriscoe2001
      @mrbriscoe2001 Před 5 lety +4

      No more Ted Koppells, either...

    • @FallKrietr
      @FallKrietr Před 5 lety +2

      I agreed, disasters are entertaining indeed.

    • @gowersup6441
      @gowersup6441 Před 4 lety +1

      Keith Bell congrats for copying other people’s comments bro

    • @artistwithouttalent
      @artistwithouttalent Před 4 lety

      I'll be honest, this is more entertaining, too. Watching the imbeciles I see on TV news flailing about and parroting the party line of whoever their viewers support makes me long for the sweet release of death. There's something very interesting to watch about smart people being competent.

  • @vapingcat1885
    @vapingcat1885 Před 4 lety +51

    I am from Slovakia, and I can confirm that the first time the public was informed of this accident was from Austria, because the capital is almost on the borders, people were able to tune in non Soviet channels, which was almost 2 days sooner than Soviets admitted, and if that's not enought, Soviets said nothing about safety precautions, while In Vienna it was not advised to open windows and go into sand and dirt

    • @Opiuth
      @Opiuth Před 11 měsíci +2

      Heh, I was playing in the sandbox in Sweden when the rain came. Strange thing is that the suicidal rate spiked and was one if not the highest in the country. Scientists still monitor wild boars in Uppsala and Gävle.

    • @LMB222
      @LMB222 Před 5 měsíci

      We in Poland listened to Western radio and we also knew immediately.
      Commies had to admit something was wrong when the streets got completely empty - and it was an unusually sunny and warm spring.
      And then they started handing out iodine to kids and pregnant women, so any pretense of "nothing happened" was blown off.

  • @LittleWhiskey
    @LittleWhiskey Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks CZcams recommendations...can’t help but think you put this in my feed for some secret reason ;)

  • @mitchceiling1506
    @mitchceiling1506 Před 11 měsíci +5

    I miss when the news reporting was like this. This kind of reporting died in the late 90’s and was cremated after 9/11

  • @impasse0124
    @impasse0124 Před 5 lety +311

    It’s scary to watch this old footage knowing in retrospect that it wasn’t a meltdown but an explosion and that the damage was far more serious than anyone outside of the USSR could’ve known.

    • @natlek08
      @natlek08 Před 4 lety +27

      Not only outside of the USSR but people living in the Soviet Union too. Only people who were in the communist party or directly saw the site knew what happened in its entirety until after the fall of the USSR and the large majority of the people who saw it died prematurely. Most of the documents weren't declassified until the late 90's, early 2000s. Even months after the accident, citizens from the exclusion zone were never told they could never go home. More people within the USSR learned of the accident from allied forces radio broadcasts than from their own government.

    • @cromagn1n
      @cromagn1n Před 4 lety +29

      It was a meltdown resulting from an explosion.

    • @jlgunn922
      @jlgunn922 Před 4 lety +12

      To give them credit though, they do state multiple times that the fact that the Soviets are acknowledging that anything happened at all is telling that this is extremely serious and something to be very worried about

    • @pepebeezon772
      @pepebeezon772 Před 4 lety +24

      It is a meltdown... You can't have a nuclear explosion from a reactor. In a nuclear bomb they use uranium with around 50% U235(the enriched isotope). The Rbmk uses a 2% enriched uranium (only 2% of the uranium atoms are U235) while the naturally occurring uranium only contains 0.7%. And there are even reactors who uses non-enriched uranium like CANDU. A reactor can't cause a nuclear explosion. Look it up.
      A meltdown means a reactor over heating melting the concret core and releasing the radioactive isotopes into the environment. When you hear about a nuclear reactor explosion it's most likely caused by steam because a reactor is hot and that's how they make power.

    • @Zappina
      @Zappina Před 4 lety +10

      @@pepebeezon772 Nicely done. Clearly you cant have nuclear explosion from a power plant, but you can have an explosion, steam or electrical. Although the reactor melted down, it was only partial, otherwise the damage would be far worse.
      Good to know some people are still use their brains and the informations readily available to them.

  • @sidneyfrederickson3941
    @sidneyfrederickson3941 Před 5 lety +55

    I remember when this happened and the reaction at the UN. At one point the ambassador from Denmark turning to the Soviets and shouting "YOU HAVE MURDERED US!"

    • @theotherotter
      @theotherotter Před 5 lety +10

      is somewhere on internet the footage of this ? i really want to see the meeting.

    • @jenniferclark9842
      @jenniferclark9842 Před 5 lety +9

      He shouldn’t have held back. He should have been more blunt.

    • @TheRealCaptainJamesTKirk
      @TheRealCaptainJamesTKirk Před 4 lety +15

      Gorbachev made a statement about opinion of the USSR being lowered, and you have to give him credit. I mean, when global opinion of your nation is already shit, and you find a way to lower it, that's an accomplishment.

  • @corazoncubano5372
    @corazoncubano5372 Před 4 lety +31

    As a teen I remember my parents discussing this event. It horrified me then and still does now. The USSR as they were known at that time was very secretive about the event. I remember the report of the radioactive cloud that pretty much spread over a good portion of the world because of this meltdown. It still "shivers me timbers."

  • @miroslawczajka3577
    @miroslawczajka3577 Před 4 lety +9

    Excellent and interesting material! It was amazing to get the perception of the event from "the other side" of the wall. In 1986 I was child in Poland and believe me - the event was widely present in the state media and "in the streets". Poland - despite the advice from our "Big Brother" from the east - took a lot of preventive actions to protect their own citizens from the aftermath of this catastrophe.

  • @bloodranger1188
    @bloodranger1188 Před 4 lety +101

    “Damaged reactor” is an understatement 😂

    • @bernybrandon
      @bernybrandon Před rokem +6

      its triple of an understatement bro

    • @KingThrillgore
      @KingThrillgore Před rokem +4

      It blew its top off.

    • @danielcarlson800
      @danielcarlson800 Před 11 měsíci

      It melted to nothing.

    • @u.v.s.5583
      @u.v.s.5583 Před 11 měsíci

      - The reactor is damaged.
      - How do you know?
      - It is not there anymore!
      - If it is not there, how do you know it is damaged? Comrade, stop spreading disinformation or you go to jail and your family gets shot in Siberia!

    • @livethefuture2492
      @livethefuture2492 Před 11 měsíci +4

      That's what the Soviets do...

  • @mothofdoom105
    @mothofdoom105 Před 6 lety +117

    man, old school american news reporting was the shit. nowadays we're, ironically, much closer to the soviet model of "journalism."

    • @joshgellis6098
      @joshgellis6098 Před 5 lety +1

      bleh has brains. WTF!? 🤣😂

    • @Gozoman24
      @Gozoman24 Před rokem +4

      We call that "propaganda."

    • @user-ok2yb5zi2g
      @user-ok2yb5zi2g Před rokem +2

      That man WAS 👨 the shit. I love how he actually breaks it down. More information than any of the knews I see now.

    • @bmasters1981
      @bmasters1981 Před rokem

      @@user-ok2yb5zi2g Ted Koppel?

  • @ushireborn
    @ushireborn Před 11 měsíci +4

    man... i love ted koppel

  • @giraffeman326
    @giraffeman326 Před 4 lety +5

    I wish news was still this honest

  • @fratercontenduntocculta8161

    its quite interesting to read all of the comments about how happy we would all be if the media just gave up the act it's using now. I would be too. I'm glad the internet exists to let us see great old stuff like this.

    • @sillygoose635
      @sillygoose635 Před 5 lety +2

      There is no act, maybe if idiots weren't so blindly stupid, we would have a better world

    • @cadinnelson5168
      @cadinnelson5168 Před 5 lety +2

      Stevie what do you mean by “there is no act?”

  • @deadheath
    @deadheath Před 5 lety +58

    Just another incident that made the 80s a wild decade

  • @DarkSygil666
    @DarkSygil666 Před měsícem +1

    Most families watched the evening news back then. I know I did with my family, as most kids back then did as well. It definitely reminds me of how far journalism has fallen to the wayside in the recent years. Please bring type of news back.

  • @csnnav5624
    @csnnav5624 Před 8 měsíci +4

    props to the liquidators they're a hero for saving europe from radiation

  • @TheVredeHunter
    @TheVredeHunter Před 4 lety +97

    Crazy how what actually happened was 10x worse than what they thought

    • @LMB222
      @LMB222 Před 5 měsíci

      You mean ten times less bad?

  • @reaganforsythe9735
    @reaganforsythe9735 Před 6 lety +265

    One of the reactors has been "damaged"

    • @nolen1960
      @nolen1960 Před 5 lety +36

      It should have been called destroyed.

    • @baruchben-david4196
      @baruchben-david4196 Před 5 lety +45

      Yeah. You blow up the reactor, it's damaged. It's just amazing that the Soviet Union even acknowledged anything happened. They were great for just denying everything.

    • @iuliya95
      @iuliya95 Před 5 lety +1

      Baruch Ben-David bullshit. In a first day the personnel didn’t know that the reactor was blown up. They even tried to flow water there

    • @DocC993
      @DocC993 Před 5 lety +10

      Even this broadcast doesn't know the full extent of it; they talk about full meltdown, when actually the core exploded! Even worse than anyone at that time could imagine. One can see why even Soviet officials were in denial at first.

    • @jonjonas2528
      @jonjonas2528 Před 5 lety +2

      In the Chernobyl hbo movie the Chernobyl power plant looks like it was built in the year 1900

  • @judyl.761
    @judyl.761 Před 6 měsíci

    Ted Koppel is my favorite news broadcaster there has ever been. So talented. RESPECT.

  • @lukeborst2751
    @lukeborst2751 Před 4 lety +1

    Very interesting indeed, love learning about history from many perspectives and especially primary sources

  • @MichaelJW72
    @MichaelJW72 Před 5 lety +67

    The USSR couldn't keep this one covered up because Chernobyl was too close to the rest of Europe including US Allies who raised the alarm.

    • @paulallen8109
      @paulallen8109 Před 4 lety +12

      Sure thing. The first reports came from a Swedish nuclear plant (Forsmark) which discovered unusually high levels of radiation outside their own plant. Last time I checked Sweden was neutral during the Cold War and not part of any "alliance". No "US Allies" raised the alarm. Sweden did and they correctly concluded the radiation probably stemmed from the Soviet Union and openly told it to international media. THIS forced the Soviet Union to come forth and admit there had been an accident at Chernobyl. Btw, Finland (also a neutral country) had discovered high levels of radiation even before that but they chose to delay the news another day by which time Sweden had already told the world.
      You brush up on your history. A neutral nation raised the alarm. Period.

    • @LordZontar
      @LordZontar Před 2 lety +6

      "A nuclear plant in Sweden has detected radiation, and identified it as a byproduct of our fuel. The Americans took satellite photos of the reactor building, the smoke, the fire. The whole world knows. The wind has been blowing toward Germany. They're not letting children play outside, in Frankfurt."

    • @johnroscoe2406
      @johnroscoe2406 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@paulallen8109 Were you really THAT mad about his comment?

  • @ksw33n3y
    @ksw33n3y Před 5 lety +43

    The map they show at 9:02 is wrong.
    Chernobyl is 30 miles north.
    That shows you just how little information they had on the soviets.

    • @Metal_Enjoyer
      @Metal_Enjoyer Před 5 lety +10

      ksw33n3y yeah but nowadays with our more advanced mapping tech we would probably be able to figure it out even if they still didn’t release any information

    • @Indipuk
      @Indipuk Před 4 lety +12

      Soviet union never released any precious maps. It was all a military secret

  • @TheMasterofmod
    @TheMasterofmod Před 4 lety

    What a great news section. Concise, well informed, and professional. Today’s media could never compete with this.

  • @Whipped_Creamy
    @Whipped_Creamy Před 4 lety +2

    I would actually watch the news if it was still like this. you can tell that they actually took great responsibility to keep the public informed instead of persuaded.

  • @neoamaru
    @neoamaru Před 5 lety +80

    y'know, for the time, the graphics and visuals looked awesome!

    • @Pidalin
      @Pidalin Před 5 lety +3

      compared to communist TV news really yes :-D

  • @Lex5576
    @Lex5576 Před 5 lety +110

    This marked the beginning of the end for the Communists in Russia. Times really sucked for the Russians at this point. Not just Chernobyl, but also the 40th Army's performance (shellacking) in Afghanistan, food shortages, and economic stagnation. The Russian people went from loving the Regime.....to distrusting the Regime....and finally hating the Regime. I'm certain Gorbachev knew what Chernobyl meant, the very existence of Soviet society was about to die.

    • @furrball
      @furrball Před 5 lety +3

      we need another one today to stop Putin and his disgusting levels of conservatism. Anyone volunteering to blow up one of the remaining RBMKs, say in Kursk? :D

    • @watchrami
      @watchrami Před 5 lety +3

      Loving the regime? :)

    • @jonver1104
      @jonver1104 Před 5 lety

      Soviet union never really had anything good that was given to their people and to those nations they've controlled, like north korea and East Germany.

    • @_Andrew2002
      @_Andrew2002 Před 5 lety +9

      @@furrball Trust me, Conservatism is a lot better than socialism. Heck anything between moderate left and moderate right is better than socialism

    • @dreamabyss5423
      @dreamabyss5423 Před 4 lety +3

      It was the beginning of Glasnost that eventually led to the destruction of the Soviet empire.

  • @LordZontar
    @LordZontar Před 2 lety +2

    I very likely saw this very Nightline segment at the time. I was a big news junkie coming out of high school and I watched all these news programmes: Nightline, 60 Minutes, The McNeil-Lehrer Hour, Washington Week In Review, etc, along with news specials as they came out.

  • @AndrewTubbiolo
    @AndrewTubbiolo Před 3 lety +10

    It's stunning how 24 hours into the crisis, how much of the prognosticated points came out to be true when everything played out.

    • @CatroiOz
      @CatroiOz Před 11 měsíci +3

      It's because they actually do not speculate on things they don't know about. Meaning their predictions are based on the facts they have. Notice how many times they say "we do not know" and move on to what they know. You wouldn't have that nowadays unfortunately.

  • @mathgasm8484
    @mathgasm8484 Před 5 lety +76

    My parents would not let me play in the sandbox till the sand was replaced and the radioactive cloud from Chernobyl was gone.

    • @rachelslur8729
      @rachelslur8729 Před 5 lety +7

      Seems reasonable, I wouldn't want my kids possiby eating on touching a radioactive partice.

    • @thedemonhater7748
      @thedemonhater7748 Před 5 lety +10

      ุุ ุ it doesn’t make any sense. If the sand is radioactive, so is everything else.

    • @mathgasm8484
      @mathgasm8484 Před 5 lety +1

      @@thedemonhater7748 They waited till the military base replaced it. It was the 80s after all.

    • @leovikstrom8266
      @leovikstrom8266 Před 5 lety +4

      Thedemonhater That’s not how it works

    • @sigsin1
      @sigsin1 Před 5 lety

      Yeah...talk to the downwinders of the Nevada Test Site.

  • @ohiopower
    @ohiopower Před 6 lety +74

    Blew up 2 days before this broadcast.

    • @Shadow77999
      @Shadow77999 Před 4 lety +1

      So scherbina was on the helicopter with legasov then this was aired :D

    • @Shadow77999
      @Shadow77999 Před 4 lety

      So scherbina was with scherbina on its way to the reactor when this happened :D

    • @mtphill71
      @mtphill71 Před 4 lety +1

      How you still alive? 💥

  • @lucillebluth2616
    @lucillebluth2616 Před rokem +2

    I remember this on TV, I was so scared! sending prayers to all those affected 🙏

  • @retorique
    @retorique Před 3 lety +1

    Some of those graphics are amazing!

  • @jankatkaromka
    @jankatkaromka Před 5 lety +17

    I was born in Russia couple years later Chernobyl. But my father told me that even on May holidays (1, 2, 3 of May) they knew almost nothing about that. They new that SOMETHING happened, but not the real picture. And radioactive clouds went over region where we live. There was warm good weather, holidays. People went on bbq's, kamps, fishing... My grandmother told me that she sow pink cloud comming from the region, where Chernobyl is. And she thinks that my grandfather, who died 10 years afterwards, died in some ways because of Chernobyl and exposure to that radioactive cloud.

    • @user-nq7rd8lg3k
      @user-nq7rd8lg3k Před 4 lety +2

      сочуствою сам живу в украине

    • @joespitler3929
      @joespitler3929 Před 4 lety

      They had the May Day parade in Kiev I believe. The head of the Ukranian government later committed suicide.

  • @MrSpruce
    @MrSpruce Před 5 lety +14

    Two men from my Stepmother's village in Latvia went to help. They both died in the same summer as one another two years later, in their forties.

  • @ArkamasRoss
    @ArkamasRoss Před 11 měsíci +2

    One mature, professional line of simple straightforward facts after another with real journalists referencing real experts.

  • @IntrepidFraidyCat
    @IntrepidFraidyCat Před 11 měsíci

    It's so weird to see these old broadcasts. I was fresh out of high school when this happened.

  • @Tortuosit
    @Tortuosit Před 5 lety +20

    Even in Germany, which is always maybe 2-5 years behind the US, every snowstorm is now a "end of the world" disaster. Was surprised how calm the abc news were.

    • @atomsmash100
      @atomsmash100 Před 3 lety +1

      That's how it used to be on every network. Now the news in the U.S. is a disgrace, with the exception of PBS. Just the news, please. Thank you.

  • @Broncort1
    @Broncort1 Před 6 lety +848

    I kinda miss these days...now it's all republicans vs democrats...trump vs the media...conservatives vs liberals...the USA is so divided now.

    • @B3astMass
      @B3astMass Před 5 lety +78

      Broncort1 yeh I guess the threat of nuclear war was just so much more exciting-

    • @Zedek
      @Zedek Před 5 lety +88

      Back then it was USA vs Soviet Union.. . . . .

    • @slavaukraini54
      @slavaukraini54 Před 5 lety +79

      That’s the whole point , keep the people divided so you can control them .

    • @InVinoVeratas
      @InVinoVeratas Před 5 lety +70

      ^ divide and conquer the mindset of the voters. Make them believe their choices matter when in actuality there is no difference in who they vote for.

    • @44excalibur
      @44excalibur Před 5 lety +15

      This is why everyone misses the 80s, even people who aren't old enough to remember the 80s. We need to bring this era back.

  • @fdrstan
    @fdrstan Před 6 měsíci

    I was 6 years old when this was broadcasted. Ted and I go way back.

  • @WolfmanTVReal
    @WolfmanTVReal Před 8 měsíci

    The news as far as I know were kept untold for a really long time

  • @nate1988
    @nate1988 Před 5 lety +53

    HBO's 'Chernobyl' is fantastic so far and used some of this footage in their second episode. Highly recommended!

    • @jonjonas2528
      @jonjonas2528 Před 5 lety +3

      Chernobyl is great so action. Packed with adventure what a great action movie the best part no black in the movie

    • @jonjonas2528
      @jonjonas2528 Před 5 lety +1

      Chernobyl should have happened in Africa not the Soviet Union white lives matter

    • @TheRealCaptainJamesTKirk
      @TheRealCaptainJamesTKirk Před 4 lety +2

      @@jonjonas2528 it may interest you to know that Russia sent a team to South Africa to possibly help build nuclear reactors there, and the team came back stating that would be a horrible idea.

  • @j.mangum7652
    @j.mangum7652 Před 6 lety +45

    When the news was much less perceived as bullshit

  • @AkronJosh
    @AkronJosh Před rokem +3

    Man, Ted and that ABC nightly news sound 👌

  • @elmstreetsurvivor1866
    @elmstreetsurvivor1866 Před 17 dny +2

    That music brings me back to my childhood. I never minded watching the news much as a kid, but that has certainly changed. The news just isn't what it used to be.

  • @Dirtyboxer1
    @Dirtyboxer1 Před 4 lety +42

    boring, calm, informative, non-partisan news casts. i miss this.

  • @cyberbug9699
    @cyberbug9699 Před 5 lety +49

    If only news wasn't so watered down these days.

  • @1Reddd
    @1Reddd Před 4 lety +5

    It’s crazy how most of the world knew more about what was going on than the USSR’s own citizens. If citizens of a foreign country know more about a disaster that happened in your own country than you do, there’s a problem.

  • @telescopicS627
    @telescopicS627 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Excellent reporting

  • @albertowen1025
    @albertowen1025 Před 6 lety +97

    I really remember this vividly - my ex-fiancée was living in West Germany at that time and Ramstein AFB was in full panic mode because of fallout. Whatever became of her after that...never heard back from her after June 6, 1986. Also - that Marshall Goldman is in fact Food Network's Duff Goldman's father...a little trivia for you.

    • @WadcaWymiaru
      @WadcaWymiaru Před 6 lety +3

      Nothing happen and shrooms in German are MORE contaminated than apples in Czarnobyl...

    • @realspecialweek
      @realspecialweek Před 6 lety +14

      Nothing would've happened, she was well away from any severely affected area.

    • @shastealyomeal
      @shastealyomeal Před 6 lety +7

      Albert Owen What Do You Think Happened To Her

    • @deadfreightwest5956
      @deadfreightwest5956 Před 5 lety +8

      + Albert Owen - I, too, recall this. I was at work in 1986 when the story broke and I heard it on the radio. Previously, the most significant events in my life were: The downing of KAL 007, and the assassination attempt on Ronald Reagan, and Mt St Helens flipping her lid. Well, there you go again.

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 5 lety +6

      Your fiancee goes missing so you just get on with your life?

  • @mlgmounted9599
    @mlgmounted9599 Před 5 lety +198

    lol soviet TV host says one of the nuclear reactors damaged, ha, damaged, u know)

    • @Kni0002
      @Kni0002 Před 5 lety +46

      more like completely destroyed

    • @mark33545
      @mark33545 Před 5 lety +11

      Technically true lol

    • @KKKVVV-ox6sm
      @KKKVVV-ox6sm Před 5 lety +26

      fuckin exploded

    • @Pllayer064
      @Pllayer064 Před 5 lety +4

      Just, uh, some minor leakage from, uh, cafeteria's waste disposal facilities resulting in emergency evacuation. It's, uuuuh, it's just a drill.

    • @StellarYankee
      @StellarYankee Před 5 lety +5

      Encyclopedia PapaStalina:
      Damaged: Cover word for big boom boom, kill many people, none of your business, go back to pick wheat Cyka Blyat!