Anonymous wrote:Jared Harris' character did a good job explaining the specifics of what happened in layman's terms. The little pieces of blue and red paper were effective without being too cheesy.
Anonymous wrote:The last episode was great and I was gratified to see that they noted the three men who went into the water to open the valves all survived, and two are alive today. (Earlier, in episode two or three, the implication was they all would die, which is contrary to reality!)
I do wish they had a little more about the people on the bridge, besides basically saying it is believed they all died, but I guess the lack of records or official death toll makes that impossible.
I lived thru the aftermath of 911 in lower Manhattan, and there was a serious deep concern about air quality — not radiation but asbestos and other particles. Our apartment was inspected for dust etc., and there is still a health registry that tracks the health of tens or hundreds of thousands of people.
At the same time, firefighters were at the front lines here as in the Chernobyl disaster, and charged into danger to protect us all, and fell ill. And US officials (including the then epa chief, as I recall ) did play down the health risks in the interest of getting the city back up and running. Still, far from the secrecy and paranoia of the soviet state.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m looking forward to this series. I went to Chernobyl last summer and walked through the abandoned village of pipiyat (or whatever it’s called). It was super interesting!
Pripyat. Somehow, after watching this series, I’m surprisingly angry that you visited and don’t even know the name of the place. “whatever it’s called” seems so disrespectful.
[b]
I have travelled to over 100 countries, I apologise for not knowing the exact spelling of you city. I’m sorry you are angry.
Different PP. "Your city"??? Dude no one has lived there in 30 years. I think its because it is the site of tragedy. One should kind of have a good idea about the names of places where great human tragedies occurred.
[b]
It was a typo which was corrected immediately after the post.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m looking forward to this series. I went to Chernobyl last summer and walked through the abandoned village of pipiyat (or whatever it’s called). It was super interesting!
Pripyat. Somehow, after watching this series, I’m surprisingly angry that you visited and don’t even know the name of the place. “whatever it’s called” seems so disrespectful.
[b]
I have travelled to over 100 countries, I apologise for not knowing the exact spelling of you city. I’m sorry you are angry.
Different PP. "Your city"??? Dude no one has lived there in 30 years. I think its because it is the site of tragedy. One should kind of have a good idea about the names of places where great human tragedies occurred.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m looking forward to this series. I went to Chernobyl last summer and walked through the abandoned village of pipiyat (or whatever it’s called). It was super interesting!
Pripyat. Somehow, after watching this series, I’m surprisingly angry that you visited and don’t even know the name of the place. “whatever it’s called” seems so disrespectful.
[b]
I have travelled to over 100 countries, I apologise for not knowing the exact spelling of you city. I’m sorry you are angry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m looking forward to this series. I went to Chernobyl last summer and walked through the abandoned village of pipiyat (or whatever it’s called). It was super interesting!
Pripyat. Somehow, after watching this series, I’m surprisingly angry that you visited and don’t even know the name of the place. “whatever it’s called” seems so disrespectful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm amazed that all in all only 4000 people died.
Source? I think it's hard to pinpoint how many people died over the years.
Anonymous wrote:I’m looking forward to this series. I went to Chernobyl last summer and walked through the abandoned village of pipiyat (or whatever it’s called). It was super interesting!