Very enjoyable series. I was 15 when it happened, and like most 15 year olds, just didn't realize how serious it was. I started looking around on you tube and came across this video. It really is amazing how different the news was back then.
I'm the same age and I was living in Rome during that time. I spent all day outside the day its cloud floated over Italy.
I have x-ray vision now.That’s good to hear.
Dyatlov is a motherscalitoer. I don't know what ultimately killed him, but he deserved to die of ass cancer.
A lot of people had to screw up for Chernobyl to happen, but it did happen. The Japanese do just about everything right, and Fukishima still happened.
Really just a great show all the way through. Absolute top flight stuff, even if it didn't follow the real life events 100%.
Thought this was interesting stuff:
What HBO’s “Chernobyl” Got Right, and What It Got Terribly Wrong
The show’s creators imagine confrontation where it was unthinkable—and, in doing so, they cross the line from conjuring a fiction to creating a lie.www.newyorker.com
Apparently we were at fault for the whole thing:
Russia hates HBO's Chernobyl, decides to make its own series
We were huge fans of Chernobyl, HBO’s five-part miniseries about the 1986 nuclear reactor explosion. We weren’t alone, either; the series now has the—frankly, dubious—honor of being the highest-rated show on IMDb, having presumably bumped off The Shawshank Redemption. It has its critics, though...news.avclub.com
Fire is inherently dangerous. There are 120,000 fire deaths per year according to the data center at Oxford. That number is down in recent years. To calculate the number of fire deaths during the history of the human race would be speculative but very, very high, millions and millions. But if man never "tames" (and I use the word broadly) fire, civilization never occurs.
Like all human endeavors nuclear power needs to be based risk/reward factors using reliable, real world information.
That has never been a consideration for me. Some people are afraid of their own shadows. Some are afraid to fly. I have found decisions based on fear are usually bad ones. As I said, decisions should be based risk/reward factors using reliable, real world information.Do you live next to a nuclear power plant? Why not?
C’mon, all things are equalThey put a nuclear power plant on the shoreline in a tsunami zone.
Sure, but have you grown a 5th eye yet?I have x-ray vision now.
Yeah, but it was still dumb. It was virtually inevitable.C’mon, all things are equal
Irony missed: UKR v JP, same sameYeah, but it was still dumb. It was virtually inevitable.
Won't be the first or last time.Irony missed: UKR v JP, same same