Panique à la centrale: Three Mile Island
Original title: Meltdown: Three Mile Island
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6.8/10
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Insiders recount the events, controversies and lingering effects of the accident at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Pennsylvania.Insiders recount the events, controversies and lingering effects of the accident at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Pennsylvania.Insiders recount the events, controversies and lingering effects of the accident at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Pennsylvania.
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As usual with Netflix, sensationalism wins over facts. Why? Because otherwise this relatively boring story about the nuclear accident that never was wouldn't be able to be used to justify a 4 hour series.
As a lifelong resident of PA, everyone knows about TMI, and not to discount the experiences of those who lived nearby, it WAS scary. Lake Barrett is actually the most reputable out of all of the interviewees who primarily consisted of two housewives who took up the anti-nuclear cause, a woman who was a child at the time, and a man who's reputation is highly suspect and this is even according to his own son who went on social media to dispel the story he told.
Rick Parks was NOT on-site at the time of the incident and only showed up years later. The first two episodes focus on the immediate incident and the response. The media played on people's fears back then just as they do now. No surprise. There was a lack of clear communication between MetEd, the NRC and the PA government. There was NEVER any deaths attributable to the small amount of radiation released. The dead fish were more likely caused by a temperature difference in circulated wate, which was pumped directly from the Susquehanna River the plant was located on. The type of burns shown on the "bike riding victim" were not the type you'd observe with radiation.
The last two episodes focus on Rick Parks and his fight to keep them from using a polar crane located within the reactor building to remove the fuel. The debate was never about the actual safety of the crane, it was about the procedures used. His affidavit even confirms this. The super-criticality theory he concocts has no basis in reality as the reactor had been shut down and cooled for YEARS before the cleanup began. Post-accident reports even confirm there was no possible way for the core to go critical in the state it was in after the shutdown. Where he really goes off the rails is when he insists they tried sabotaging him by planting pot in his toolbox.
One of their so-called experts is a well-known leader of anti-nuclear groups, Eric Epstein. That name alone should cause alarm among anyone actually looking for even an even-sided debate about nuclear.
The series also fails to address the fact that no incidents have taken place since, or any of the safety changes that were implemented industry-wide due to it.
What the director wanted was to make a series about an "American Chernobyl." In terms of nuclear accidents, this may have been the worst in U. S. history but that's simply due to the fact that not many have taken place, and most of the ones that did occur were during the Manhattan Project, during nuclear infancy.
It's well-shot, emotional, but leaves out a LOT of factual information and clearly serves as more of an anti-nuclear piece of propaganda than anything.
As a lifelong resident of PA, everyone knows about TMI, and not to discount the experiences of those who lived nearby, it WAS scary. Lake Barrett is actually the most reputable out of all of the interviewees who primarily consisted of two housewives who took up the anti-nuclear cause, a woman who was a child at the time, and a man who's reputation is highly suspect and this is even according to his own son who went on social media to dispel the story he told.
Rick Parks was NOT on-site at the time of the incident and only showed up years later. The first two episodes focus on the immediate incident and the response. The media played on people's fears back then just as they do now. No surprise. There was a lack of clear communication between MetEd, the NRC and the PA government. There was NEVER any deaths attributable to the small amount of radiation released. The dead fish were more likely caused by a temperature difference in circulated wate, which was pumped directly from the Susquehanna River the plant was located on. The type of burns shown on the "bike riding victim" were not the type you'd observe with radiation.
The last two episodes focus on Rick Parks and his fight to keep them from using a polar crane located within the reactor building to remove the fuel. The debate was never about the actual safety of the crane, it was about the procedures used. His affidavit even confirms this. The super-criticality theory he concocts has no basis in reality as the reactor had been shut down and cooled for YEARS before the cleanup began. Post-accident reports even confirm there was no possible way for the core to go critical in the state it was in after the shutdown. Where he really goes off the rails is when he insists they tried sabotaging him by planting pot in his toolbox.
One of their so-called experts is a well-known leader of anti-nuclear groups, Eric Epstein. That name alone should cause alarm among anyone actually looking for even an even-sided debate about nuclear.
The series also fails to address the fact that no incidents have taken place since, or any of the safety changes that were implemented industry-wide due to it.
What the director wanted was to make a series about an "American Chernobyl." In terms of nuclear accidents, this may have been the worst in U. S. history but that's simply due to the fact that not many have taken place, and most of the ones that did occur were during the Manhattan Project, during nuclear infancy.
It's well-shot, emotional, but leaves out a LOT of factual information and clearly serves as more of an anti-nuclear piece of propaganda than anything.
I didn't feel like this was about fear in nuclear energy. This event set it back, but it's still viable and prevalent. This is about human error, regulation failure, and high level corporate and government corruption.
The story of corruption and mismanagement is not that surprising. Still kinda interesting. But in typical Netflix fashion, long winded and repetitive.
But the real lesson of this documentary is how far we've come in nuclear tech.
We see the complete lack of computer technology in the 1970's. This makes it clear that the US should continue leading the way and sell Gen IV tech to the rest of the world -where the other 95% of humans live, and where carbon emissions are growing at an extraordinary rate. My beloved France and Germany are already returning to nuclear. But the rest of the world is polluting like crazy. Enough is enough.
But the real lesson of this documentary is how far we've come in nuclear tech.
We see the complete lack of computer technology in the 1970's. This makes it clear that the US should continue leading the way and sell Gen IV tech to the rest of the world -where the other 95% of humans live, and where carbon emissions are growing at an extraordinary rate. My beloved France and Germany are already returning to nuclear. But the rest of the world is polluting like crazy. Enough is enough.
A few years after the meltdown, I was working for Air Products and Chemicals, an industrial gas company as a sales rep out of York, PA. TMI was my account and I went up there to do a cylinder count as they were paying thousands a month in rental charges for 5000 cylinders that had been on the island for 10 or more years. After my walk through I found only 200 cylinders. Big mystery until I talked to an old timer at the plant. Seems at the time of the meltdown and thereafter, employees would take full cylinders with 3000 psi, over to an embankment overlooking the Susquehanna River, lay them across two railroad ties and then knock the heads off the cylinders with a sledgehammer shooting them out over the the river a few hundred feet. These were the people running the plant.
A lot of the low scoring reviews made by many, about this documentary, have clearly come from people who failed to understand just exactly what was to be shown and told.
The reviewer, chrisxhood14 states that it is "Heavily biased and over-dramatized (he/she spelt it it as over-dramatised so I corrected it for the readers) with a clear agenda". They obviously did not check to see what it is they would be hearing about.
This had but one agenda and that was to inform the watching world of the lies and corruption from the Power Plants owners/management. It was the most dangerous time in American history and the powers that be tried to cover it up by not telling the truth about exactly what happened in the 1979 Nuclear Meltdown. It was not meant to be about Nuclear Power plant improvements in later years etc. It was not about anyone being biased or against Nuclear power stations; it was about the sheer neglect for human health, life and safety. It was not meant to be a technical in depth explanation but rather an exact explanation of a huge cover up. Lying to the state Governor and to the US President. Its about money cover ups, cutting costs and the non stop flagrant disregard for the lives of the ordinary, everyday non wealthy people of America by those in power!
The thing that stands out from everything spoken about is that we, the viewers, learn from the very beginning that the plant was being run by people who were completely clueless about Atomic energy. Seven years later the American government cried blue murder about the April 1986 Chernobyl meltdown, because the Russians told the exact same lies. But at least the Russians gave thought to their citizens and evacuated all of them; American blatantly lied about the danger to their Pennsylvania citizens and, tried to get them to stay!
Its not the best documentary to watch (I'm sure they could have made and edited this far better) but, you finally get the truth from the mouths of the 3 Mile Island citizens; both the parents and the children of the time.
The reviewer, chrisxhood14 states that it is "Heavily biased and over-dramatized (he/she spelt it it as over-dramatised so I corrected it for the readers) with a clear agenda". They obviously did not check to see what it is they would be hearing about.
This had but one agenda and that was to inform the watching world of the lies and corruption from the Power Plants owners/management. It was the most dangerous time in American history and the powers that be tried to cover it up by not telling the truth about exactly what happened in the 1979 Nuclear Meltdown. It was not meant to be about Nuclear Power plant improvements in later years etc. It was not about anyone being biased or against Nuclear power stations; it was about the sheer neglect for human health, life and safety. It was not meant to be a technical in depth explanation but rather an exact explanation of a huge cover up. Lying to the state Governor and to the US President. Its about money cover ups, cutting costs and the non stop flagrant disregard for the lives of the ordinary, everyday non wealthy people of America by those in power!
The thing that stands out from everything spoken about is that we, the viewers, learn from the very beginning that the plant was being run by people who were completely clueless about Atomic energy. Seven years later the American government cried blue murder about the April 1986 Chernobyl meltdown, because the Russians told the exact same lies. But at least the Russians gave thought to their citizens and evacuated all of them; American blatantly lied about the danger to their Pennsylvania citizens and, tried to get them to stay!
Its not the best documentary to watch (I'm sure they could have made and edited this far better) but, you finally get the truth from the mouths of the 3 Mile Island citizens; both the parents and the children of the time.
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