I know how it ends
not interested.
shareI think you would be surprised. I also thought I knew and listened it nonetheless since it's not a prerequisite imo. Didn't end like I thouht at all and the ending was actually very good though a little bit ideological.
shareI held off on watching it as well, because I knew the story. It was really well done and I would suggest giving it a try.
shareHow? It hasn't ended yet...
shareI agree -
I tried watching the first episode and then.... err... nah
Besides, US network doing a hit piece against Russia? Typical shit.
The cold war never ended - and I ain't gonna be pulled into this propaganda crap.
Enjoy your little infowars, creeps.
So the Soviet Union lying about the meltdown allowing radiation to flow throughout Belarus, Ukraine, Scandinavia, and most of the Northern Hemisphere is a 'hit piece'? This isn't propaganda. It's fact. The show was riveting for anyone who has studied Russia like I have. This is standard operating procedure for Russia and her political heads. To say this is some sort of 'InfoWars' shows your ignorance. The program showed the total collapse of the "Soviet" system in its inability to deal with these issues. Yes, the United States had Three Mile Island and Love Canal, but at least things were changed as a result of those disasters. Thing is here Chernobyl could have been avoided had they not covered up another "Chernobyl" from 1957 in the Mayak disaster that produced the most polluted region on the planet. Lake Karachay is if not ground zero for radiation. So no, this series is NOT propaganda. It's factual in terms of what it brought about the disaster. We're still seeing radiation in the core samples taken from as far south as Antarctica that dates from 1986.
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