Sellafield: Britain’s Nuclear Power Secrets | Inside Sellafield | Timeline

  Рет қаралды 247,406

Timeline - World History Documentaries

Timeline - World History Documentaries

4 жыл бұрын

Lying on the remote north west coast of England is one of the most secret places in the country - Sellafield, the most controversial nuclear facility in Britain. Now, Sellafield are letting nuclear physicist Professor Jim Al-Khalili and the television cameras in to discover the real story. Inside, Jim encounters some of the most dangerous substances on earth, reveals the nature of radiation and even attempts to split the atom. He sees inside a nuclear reactor, glimpses one of the rarest elements in the world - radioactive plutonium - and even subjects living tissue to deadly radiation. Ultimately, the film reveals Britain's attempts - past, present and future - to harness the almost limitless power of the atom.
It's like Netflix for history... Sign up to History Hit, the world's best history documentary service, at a huge discount using the code 'TIMELINE' ---ᐳ bit.ly/3a7ambu
You can find more from us on:
/ timelinewh
/ timelinewh
This channel is part of the History Hit Network. Any queries, please contact owned-enquiries@littledotstudios.com

Пікірлер: 440
@Xclub40X
@Xclub40X 2 жыл бұрын
There is a lovely restaurant there at Sellafield, right next to the nuclear facility. I really recommend the lamb wings
@seansands424
@seansands424 Жыл бұрын
And the three-eyed fish with legs
@jaywalker3087
@jaywalker3087 Жыл бұрын
It has glowing reports.
@chadderschadwick5575
@chadderschadwick5575 7 ай бұрын
The leg of salmon was to die for!
@user-bg4lm4hn9c
@user-bg4lm4hn9c Ай бұрын
Bet the food is always hot 🥵
@me124
@me124 Ай бұрын
Friends of the Earth what is it gonna alien?
@dellawrence4323
@dellawrence4323 3 жыл бұрын
Ah yes, I remember it well, "electricity will be so cheap we won't even bother to meter it".
@tommorris3688
@tommorris3688 3 жыл бұрын
I will have to make this suggestion to E.ON. E.ON seems to be cheating its customers; my E.ON smart meter runs up huge bills even when all my appliances are switched off. E.ON therefore, on the basis of my observations, is doing blatant theft.
@ColinMill1
@ColinMill1 3 жыл бұрын
@@tommorris3688 I friend of mine works in smart meter R&D and won't let them fit one to his house. That told me all I needed to know about them.
@KlausBahnhof
@KlausBahnhof 3 жыл бұрын
All these decades later and the lies continue. How anyone can trust this industry is a mystery to me.
@fatherof3husbandto1
@fatherof3husbandto1 3 жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Beware when humans cheer for the excitement of that which has been promised for free..............know they have been lied to.
@robertdarby6553
@robertdarby6553 2 жыл бұрын
I believe that comment was made in the 1950's about fusion, not fission. However, it was mistakenly applied to fission. On the other hand, ever since it has been thought about, fusion has always been 30 years away. So, if nothing else, it has the ability to make time stand still.
@MrBendybruce
@MrBendybruce 4 жыл бұрын
So this is what documentaries used to be like eh?!? No spooky, theatrical and emotive musical score; no advanced CGI imagery; no professional voice actor who sounds like they are about to offer up the reveal of the century; just a clean; chronological accounting of the facts and lots of interviews, with smart but boring individuals who knew what they were talking about. I mean, I'll watch it, but *are you not entertained?!?*
@ericstromberg9608
@ericstromberg9608 4 жыл бұрын
The British are good at this.
@krashd
@krashd 4 жыл бұрын
This is what documentaries have always been like in my opinion.
@steven65714
@steven65714 4 жыл бұрын
@@krashd I am very entertained by documentaries
@sianfarrell2624
@sianfarrell2624 4 жыл бұрын
For some people, "facts" are all that matter. If titillation is what you want, get a box set from Netflix.
@keithflowers9217
@keithflowers9217 3 жыл бұрын
This is a very serous subject mater and as such deserves to reported in a factually accurate way. This is not a subject to be taken lightly.
@el-rufio2464
@el-rufio2464 2 жыл бұрын
nothing like a nice documentary like this to wind down my evenings on holiday in the village of gosforth!
@cymbala6208
@cymbala6208 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this documentary!
@oak_meadow9533
@oak_meadow9533 3 жыл бұрын
Having worked in the special subfield of chemistry, extraction and purification of a material in fact an element whose true properties or unknown at the time. These gentlemen in this arm of chemistry, slowly began to understand the incredible abilities of plutonium to slither, sneak, dematerialize, and otherwise just disappear from any container in which It is put.
@thomasvandevelde8157
@thomasvandevelde8157 3 жыл бұрын
Oh yeah, it´s a nasty bugger. There´s a man who works for the US government, assessing nuclear proliferation, did the whole Nunn-Lugar thing with the Soviets etc... But his speciality, his ´profession´, and I did not know it existed, was Plutonium Research (forgot the specific name, I was pretty baffled yet not surprised it had a whole branch of it´s own research, being such an oddball). He could wander away from 20.000 Soviet nukes into how plutonium behaves, and it´s one of the most fascinating substances there is indeed, if dangerous. Even I was shocked when I started taking a little bit deeper look at ´just another element´... It appears there´s nothing like it that we know of, no element on the table it fits with. It can take on half a dozen forms, and it´s crystal structure is highly unstable too (due to it´s very high thermal activity caused by high decay rate). The latter is now becoming a big problem in older nuclear weapons stockpiled, much of those used plutonium, and it´s the reason most weapons are currently being retrofitted with highly enriched uranium cores. Not to mention it burns when left into contact with open air for too long, I recall? If I remember the name of that guy/find the KZfaq films, I´ll post the link here.
@maozedong981
@maozedong981 3 жыл бұрын
@@thomasvandevelde8157 You cant refit a Plutonium Bomb with Uran235. There is a complety different design between this two types of bombs.
@thomasvandevelde8157
@thomasvandevelde8157 3 жыл бұрын
@@maozedong981 Enlighten me?
@factorylad5071
@factorylad5071 3 жыл бұрын
@@thomasvandevelde8157 the hydrogen bomb uses a U235 detonation to fuse the plutonium.
@davelowets
@davelowets 2 жыл бұрын
@@factorylad5071 Umm, NO. It does not..
@justinmoore8581
@justinmoore8581 4 жыл бұрын
This is a 1996 Border Television documentary about Sellafield; not the 2015 Jim Al-Khalili documentary it is advertised as.
@dennism745
@dennism745 3 жыл бұрын
Its very kind of all of you sharing all and everything on KZfaq - but cant you also please ,be kind to ,make sure sound channels output peeks higher - output is related to your input !
@McIntyreBible
@McIntyreBible 4 жыл бұрын
39:34, one of the arguments used against the concept of reprocessing.
@antoniosarmaou6177
@antoniosarmaou6177 3 жыл бұрын
Interesting: "...If the sea weren't so calm we would not know..." such a great dangerous pollutant mitigation strategy: Sweep under the rug and hope the rug doesn't stain
@davidsmith6355
@davidsmith6355 2 жыл бұрын
I noticed that comment - was he seriously suggesting that? I though I must be misunderstanding him but then I remembered the "what if" scenario he referred to
@RobBCactive
@RobBCactive Жыл бұрын
He was saying the solvent slick would have dispersed in rough water, been diluted. Instead it ended up on the beach. It wasn't a pollution mitigation strategy, the solvent should not have been released. They made errors as was stated before that.
@neilwilson5871
@neilwilson5871 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah great documentary great subject...who mixed the sound/volume lol...... Falls right into that expectation versus reality box lol
@paulwarry6287
@paulwarry6287 4 жыл бұрын
This isn't the documentary with Jim Alkalinity in it originally on BBC.
@HappyBear376
@HappyBear376 3 ай бұрын
Worth watching then.
@yourstruely9896
@yourstruely9896 2 жыл бұрын
Interesting the minister knows exactly when he did not know. They had disasters all the time with every plant. In a row. And thats only what became public.
@stopthenames
@stopthenames 4 жыл бұрын
1:06 and I can see my old house, well a little bit. :0)
@stopthenames
@stopthenames 3 жыл бұрын
@Silently Sceptical Haha I'm not from Egremont! But it is true I do love a bit of jam, but now with peanut butter. Had me some up in the fells this week :)
@camf7522
@camf7522 2 жыл бұрын
I’m surprised this wasn’t made into a ‘Yes Minister’ episode! Talk about tragic comedy.
@WineScrounger
@WineScrounger 2 жыл бұрын
There was probably a lot that was still classified when Yes, Minister was filmed. They would have eaten it up.
@Jim54_
@Jim54_ 2 жыл бұрын
Our rejection of Nuclear power was a massive mistake, and the environment has payed dearly for it as we continue to rely on fossil fuels for our electricity
@narmale
@narmale 2 жыл бұрын
and as fukashima continues to leak hundreds of thousands of tones of water into the ocean every day, the soviet lakes contaminated beyond repair... the US dome in the philipeans that is sinking underwater and pouring radioactive material into the ocean... finland being filled to the brim with nuclear waste that has thousands of years in halflife... contamination of scrapyards and buildings that cant even be demolished because of cesium poisoning... oh yeah... we should have used MORE of this stuff...
@matthewburns7989
@matthewburns7989 4 ай бұрын
Where do you put the waste? How can you be sure that a plant won’t meltdown over decades?
@mikestollov
@mikestollov 4 жыл бұрын
38:04 Tony Benn saying what so many thought for so long "Nuclear power was supposed to be cheap....in fact it's 3 1/2 times as expensive as coal".....except no one includes the clean up cost of coal, the worst of which is CO2. That bill has yet to be paid, while nuclear has to include decommissioning costs right from the start. It's not a level playing field.
@salparadise1220
@salparadise1220 3 жыл бұрын
0.004% of the atmosphere is made up of C02. Of that, 97% is produced by natural processes over which we have no control. We know that C02 has been at least 10 times higher in the past and life flourished during those times. (That is not a high enough quantity to act as a greenhouse gas, even if the Laws of Thermodynamics allowed for such an effect in the way described by the anthropogenic global warming brigade, which they don't.) Burning coal is not clean by any means, but C02 is really not the problem it's been sold as.
@669karlos
@669karlos 3 жыл бұрын
This channel has some great content on the cost benefit analysis of different energy costs/benefits: kzfaq.info/get/bejne/mciVfayoq5fUho0.html That is a presentation on the cost of nuclear energy. Well worth a watch.
@keithflowers9217
@keithflowers9217 3 жыл бұрын
I believe the issue of CO2 in our atmosphere is a not too much of a problem because the planet can naturally absorb it as it has done so many times in the. Past. Where as man made Nuclear waste is much more of a concern as the planet has no natural means of removing it.
@michazajac5881
@michazajac5881 3 жыл бұрын
@@keithflowers9217 " Where as man made Nuclear waste is much more of a concern as the planet has no natural means of removing it." you would be surprised. Google "natural nuclear reactor" - humankind thought it was us who first managed to split the uranium atoms. Wrong. Nature has done that, billions of years ago. Also - nature has developed heck of a lot of rock formations where stuff enclosed within stay isolated for VEEEEEEEEERY long time. Because that's exactly how oil and natural gas were created. which means every single drained oil well is a potential repository for nuclear waste, should we wish to just throw it away.
@keithflowers9217
@keithflowers9217 3 жыл бұрын
@@michazajac5881 I have visited the Uranium mine in Australia. This is could be a good place to return your spent waste. Plutonium and all the rest of the heavy metals. Unfortunately this land had been killing the aboriginal people for thousands of years, they knew this place the bad lands. I think its probably best to leave the uranium where it is. Let's spend 25 billion pounds on solar and wind solutions and pump water into the mines to generate power at night. Much safer than having to look after the waste for the next million years!
@mosslomas591
@mosslomas591 4 ай бұрын
All that spare plutonium could also be used to start thermal breeder reactors that use thorium such as LFTR. Copenhagen atomics, who are developing this kind of technology says Britain's excess plutonium could power the current UK grid load for 60 years using their technology
@colinstewart1432
@colinstewart1432 16 күн бұрын
We'd rather get overcharged buying American energy products, having got involved in the stupid Anti-Russia hysteria.
@CrackleCat
@CrackleCat Жыл бұрын
Indeed.
@Sylacs
@Sylacs Жыл бұрын
On its closure in 2018 Thorp reprocessed only 9300 tons lol
@Prairielander
@Prairielander Жыл бұрын
It also may have broke even in terms of costs, but most likely was a loss. Also it had accidents.
@rooneye
@rooneye 3 жыл бұрын
My dad used to work at Sellafield in the mid 90's
@User0000000000000004
@User0000000000000004 3 жыл бұрын
So do you think you're better than me because your dad was a janitor at Sellafield?
@rooneye
@rooneye 3 жыл бұрын
@@User0000000000000004 Yes.
@ahunter9503
@ahunter9503 3 жыл бұрын
@@User0000000000000004 Oh dear, tut tut...your comment is that of an unitellectual-peasant.
@tommorris3688
@tommorris3688 3 жыл бұрын
Sellafield is a commercial white elephant and should be closed down immediately to save further damage to the environment. There will be a lot of work created, presumably at the public expense, to try to clean up the site, at least partially. Fully cleaning up the site will not be possible; the damage is permanent just for a few years of short-term profit.
@thomasvandevelde8157
@thomasvandevelde8157 3 жыл бұрын
´Highly Radioactive Liquor´ so they gotta pay an alcohol-tax on that too? Sounds like quite the party-place, Sellafield...
@gratefulforabundance9043
@gratefulforabundance9043 Ай бұрын
When I was a little girl, I woke up at 2am and saw sparkling golden clouds out of the window, and I woke my mum and said “ Look at all those sparkling golden clouds ! “ and my mum said “ Oh. Those are seen all the time, it is the nuclear power plant venting during the night, “. All the residents in that road, including my mum and dad , died of cancers. This was in Preston Lancashire. Closer to the actual nuclear power plant , babies were born with big tumors on their faces. The power plant was renamed a few times, to “ forget the past, and to change the name to fake a new future. Terrible . That plant should never have been built ! So many cover ups and lies .
@grahamfisher5436
@grahamfisher5436 3 жыл бұрын
please read the *flowers* report and Google... Fulbeck celebrates 30years nuclear waste celebrations. they were going to dump 50 train carriages per week down an old RAF AIRFIELDS AMMUNITIONS SHAFT... in Lincolnshire.. until we found out .. and the community stopped it .... storing was banned *flowers report* that's why they started reprocessing.. I was at Fulbeck.. I was 13
@grahamfisher5436
@grahamfisher5436 3 жыл бұрын
one day .. DESTROYER of planets
@andrewcullum8437
@andrewcullum8437 4 ай бұрын
Just a complete nightmare place.. and the clean up will continue for years to come...and the storage facility will be a continuous problem, for thousands of years...
@AJPMUSIC_OFFICIAL
@AJPMUSIC_OFFICIAL 2 жыл бұрын
More evidence of what happens when people are put into positions of power based on class and nepotism and when people care more about reputations than safety.
@Teddy_Bass
@Teddy_Bass Жыл бұрын
Big pool of nuclear liquor all forgotten about and found by chance 😳
@andrewpetersen6116
@andrewpetersen6116 4 жыл бұрын
4.10 there is Homer Simpson
@tommorris3688
@tommorris3688 3 жыл бұрын
Thorp is a financial white elephant, just like Concorde was a financial white elephant and never made a profit (when development costs are taken into consideration).
@JustaMuteCat
@JustaMuteCat Жыл бұрын
Anyone got a link for the right documentary?
@berkan5578
@berkan5578 4 жыл бұрын
I didn’t know that windscale did continue after the Fire.
@blastproces
@blastproces 3 жыл бұрын
wasnt disclosed even till 70s
@ColinMill1
@ColinMill1 3 жыл бұрын
The two air-cooled piles (the one that caught fire and its twin) ceased operation in 1957. it will take until at least 2040 for them to be dismantled.
@elvenkind6072
@elvenkind6072 3 жыл бұрын
@@ColinMill1 I just watched another documentary about Windscale, and there they talked about 2080-2090 until they can even start to dismantle it.
@ColinMill1
@ColinMill1 3 жыл бұрын
@@elvenkind6072 They have apparently knocked the filters (Cockroft's Follies) off the chimneys and have taken some height off the chimneys themselves but the government only seems to say work will continue beyond 2040 so those dates for the hottest parts sounds likely.
@AJPMUSIC_OFFICIAL
@AJPMUSIC_OFFICIAL 2 жыл бұрын
@@elvenkind6072 and when we get there they'll add 30 years
@existingwoman3753
@existingwoman3753 4 жыл бұрын
Any docramentry about nuclear power/weapons. Always makes me think of the Tony Stark quote in the movie Iron man,,, ''Peace means having a bigger stick than the other guy". I think that qoute has a lot of truth in it, as in a lot of countries have them and its a way of making people think twice about starting war. But just even making and testing them has proved to be very dangerous indeed. So using them for war could cause the end of the world! ✌️
@iron60bitch62
@iron60bitch62 3 жыл бұрын
Nuclear country has never ever been attacked by another nuclear country think about it
@AlastairWalker
@AlastairWalker 3 жыл бұрын
My dad worked at Sellafield in the 50s and was there on the day the reactor caught fire. He said that staff were shouting at him to `run for his life' as he arrived at 6am, and that his foreman told him they were `messing about with the reactor, testing it overnight, when it caught fire.' A small band of scientists took a look down the chimney and made the decision to flood the reactor, even though others thought this would cause a fracture of the vessel, and subsequent meltdown - the China syndrome. After the immediate emergency, the MOD who ran things there arranged for a whole load of radioactive items to be buried in a large pit within the site; vans, building materials, tools, clothing - all kinds of stuff that was heaviliy contaminated was dumped. The bits of buildings, clothing, bulldozers etc that weren't emitting high level radiation were allegedly stored at Drigg down the road, where the MOD had a gun range in the 60s - the waste is probably still there. For a few days after the '57 fire milk was thrown down the drains locally, but at my Grandparents farm which was just one mile away at Gosforth village, they held some back and drank it anyway. Gran lived to be 91, and after two years at Seascale school I've still got my hair, so I guess the radiated milk/crops we all ate back in the 50s/60s was no big deal.
@fivenine5905
@fivenine5905 3 жыл бұрын
eskmeale gun range is still there and in operation mate.
@Wallflower905
@Wallflower905 Жыл бұрын
I remember my nana telling me about this, my granda did the same they live in gosforth now
@rapman5791
@rapman5791 10 ай бұрын
I used to chew Uranium pellets as a kid and I still have my hair 🤷‍♂️ I’ve also grown an extra testicle and have 4 thumbs. So I’m still doing fine m8
@berryberrykixx
@berryberrykixx 3 жыл бұрын
Windscale is on FIRE!!! "Let's put it out with GIANT FANS!" 🤦
@iron60bitch62
@iron60bitch62 3 жыл бұрын
Is that not an amazing statement to hear let’s put the fire out with friends to this day it boggles the mind
@User0000000000000004
@User0000000000000004 3 жыл бұрын
as opposed to what? You moron.
@thomasvandevelde8157
@thomasvandevelde8157 3 жыл бұрын
How do you think they put oil well fires out? They fire artillery into it... I kid you not. The Soviets even used an A-bomb to stop a gas-head leak that kept burned after being shelled with heavy guns too. They dug a second shaft, 1300m deep, planted the 50 kiloton bomb, get the f*ck out with everybody and BOOM!
@tommorris3688
@tommorris3688 3 жыл бұрын
We need a fanclub !
@KlausBahnhof
@KlausBahnhof 3 жыл бұрын
@@User0000000000000004 Shut up Marty.
@tommorris3688
@tommorris3688 3 жыл бұрын
Frank video that gives a true impression of operations at Sellafield.
@LisaBeergutHolst
@LisaBeergutHolst 2 жыл бұрын
How do you know it's true lol
@LisaBeergutHolst
@LisaBeergutHolst 2 жыл бұрын
@Tim Norris So it's "true" because it confirms your opinions. Got it.
@annechester770
@annechester770 4 жыл бұрын
Thorp must be the Thorn of the Omen
@indigohammer5732
@indigohammer5732 4 жыл бұрын
Only if you are gullible and mentally ill
@toainsully
@toainsully 4 жыл бұрын
Architects: How much futuristic looking buildings / industries do you need? UK in the 1950s / 60s: Yes
@janesejohnsen6750
@janesejohnsen6750 4 жыл бұрын
Do remember bfnl fallout
@techeric2005
@techeric2005 Жыл бұрын
Check on thee EBR 2 at the idaho national labs. They solved them problems and made fast breeder reac5tor technology safe.
@crankychris2
@crankychris2 Жыл бұрын
EBR 2 was shut down 30 years ago. All funds to it's successor the IFR were cancelled by a GOP led Congress in 1994. Newt Grinrich called it "a huge boondoggle" saying that he worked countless hours to stop funding. There is talk--but little else--of building a new test reactor in Idaho as of Dec 2022. I hope it happens, but we are decades away from commercial thorium reactors, even further away is thermonuclear fusion powerplants.
@hectorkeezy1499
@hectorkeezy1499 2 жыл бұрын
I seems that Britains handling, of nuclear material, is just like in the Soviet Union.
@serhafiye7046
@serhafiye7046 Жыл бұрын
Ofc Soviets knew more things than British about the nuclear power back in the day, what we are seeing today is classic Western propaganda. So, handling like Soviets is OK, important thing is, are we talking about 1990 or 1950? 😆
@Chironex_Fleckeri
@Chironex_Fleckeri 3 жыл бұрын
The 2019 audit opinion issued in the annual financial statements was unqualified. It's clean. That said, it's not like they have much to report beyond reimbursement from the NDA and about a dozen pages worth of pension disclosures... What they do is important, but it's important for the wrong reasons. This is fundamentally a legacy operation that exists to bill taxpayers. It's a business model that requires subsidization, enormously expensive fixed assets, and operations that pose persistent and pervasive risk for all manner of contingent liabilities. It's stated clearly in the video that there is little commercial basis in MOx fuels. In my opinion, which has little basis in ISA (I'm not British), THORP creates a significant political, security and economic dependence on the company operating such a facility. Ball and chain.
@leescott1775
@leescott1775 2 жыл бұрын
you do realize this film is nearly 30 years old
@Chironex_Fleckeri
@Chironex_Fleckeri 2 жыл бұрын
@@leescott1775 2019 audit opinion. 2019. You realize this project will take 100 years to complete?
@leescott1775
@leescott1775 2 жыл бұрын
@@Chironex_Fleckeri you mentioned mox and thorpe from the film was my point, thorpe has been and gone, its used now for storage and mox never worked properly. as for the clean up it has to be done sellafield was always an experiment in new technologies, some worked some didnt. but even the clean up is a opportunity to learn new techniques, BTW i work ar nearby LLWR ,110 year bussiness plan how many workplaces can offer that
@the_retag
@the_retag 2 ай бұрын
Thorp is being decommissioned proved not economically viable​@@Chironex_Fleckeri
@paulgraystone4919
@paulgraystone4919 4 жыл бұрын
only a few miles down the coast u now have Heysham A an B. . an sellafield when the winds blew in from the west, the lake district got covered, not to mention over the years the lakes is where places as far away as manchester get/ got thier drinking water. . an a few miles up the coast was the site to build nuclear war heads. . all this above on 100 miles of coast line, dustbin!?
@anhedonianepiphany5588
@anhedonianepiphany5588 4 жыл бұрын
When it was Windscale, extremely 'hot' (spent) fuel particles routinely escaped the cooling stacks, despite the filters. Most of these hot particles fell in the immediate vicinity, but others were carried away to who-knows-where. Some of the radionuclides in these particles would still be hazardous today.
@Johnnycdrums
@Johnnycdrums 2 жыл бұрын
Didn’t General Electric come up with the first breeder reactor?
@MICKEYISLOWD
@MICKEYISLOWD Жыл бұрын
It was Alibaba.
@Johnnycdrums
@Johnnycdrums Жыл бұрын
@@MICKEYISLOWD ; Were they around in the Sixties?
@gc8196
@gc8196 4 жыл бұрын
Too many ads.
@sputumtube
@sputumtube 4 жыл бұрын
Install Ad-Block for free. Works a treat. I've been watching this for 20 minutes and already 21 ads have been blocked. :)
@christycullen2355
@christycullen2355 4 жыл бұрын
When you first load the documentary, skip past all the adverts and start it again. Adverts disappear then
@User0000000000000004
@User0000000000000004 3 жыл бұрын
What are you? 6 years old?
@retard4582
@retard4582 3 жыл бұрын
@@User0000000000000004 Dont be edgy for no reason.
@stopgotdamndeletingmycomme8642
@stopgotdamndeletingmycomme8642 3 жыл бұрын
@@sputumtube 21 ads in 20 mins!googles really doing well!
@rtrThanos
@rtrThanos 3 жыл бұрын
Apparently the sound technician is a potato.
@1autocadman
@1autocadman 11 ай бұрын
totally unacceptable calling sellafield a nuclear dustbin lets be mellow dramtic shall we
@goprodog4304
@goprodog4304 Жыл бұрын
Isn't the world interesting? Since 1986, you hear about the tragedy of Chernobyl on a weekly basis.
@paulanderson7796
@paulanderson7796 Жыл бұрын
Chernobyl was outrageously exaggerated.
@goprodog4304
@goprodog4304 Жыл бұрын
@@paulanderson7796 Now it is on top of the International Nuclear Event Scale. Shockingly, at the time when it happened, the International Nuclear Comission (or whatever it is called) said it was a trifle matter, they would build back better in a few months(!!!).
@paul.alarner6410
@paul.alarner6410 Жыл бұрын
saftey affects if things wrong,what about the ones when things go rite? !!
@wyliesdiesels4169
@wyliesdiesels4169 Жыл бұрын
@39:48 the narattor says plutonium has a half life of a quarter of a million years. this is incorrect. its 24,100years, not 250,000 years
@chikkiprecio
@chikkiprecio 3 жыл бұрын
Would be great a chnnel in Spanish, or voice translated videos. I love these content.
@paulgush
@paulgush 3 жыл бұрын
The sound quality is so bad, I had to stop watching half way through. The volume is too low, especially when compared to the abundant obnoxiously loud ads. And half of the interviewees weren't mic'd, so they were quiet _and_ muffled...
@davelowets
@davelowets 2 жыл бұрын
Was fine on my end...
@paulgush
@paulgush 2 жыл бұрын
@@davelowets You didn't find the ads twice as loud as the narrator, and the narrator twice as loud as the interviewees? I found it unwatchable...
@davelowets
@davelowets 2 жыл бұрын
@@paulgush No, I didn't.
@adarbs6384
@adarbs6384 2 жыл бұрын
@@paulgush I did. And way too many ads....just think of the money they've made on this upload. greed!
@johnkelly1083
@johnkelly1083 Жыл бұрын
I think the problem is your end.
@euclidumbra2757
@euclidumbra2757 3 жыл бұрын
What year was this documentary originally created/aired??
@MajorT0m
@MajorT0m 3 жыл бұрын
Judging by the computers and vehicles, mid to late 90s.
@DoubleMonoLR
@DoubleMonoLR Жыл бұрын
1996
@rwalker9644
@rwalker9644 3 жыл бұрын
I though Tony Benn waa the guy who closed Radio Caroline down - He didnt get that right either. Lol Rob
@rjds1800
@rjds1800 8 ай бұрын
Every one has red lights around their homes and offices
@davewilliams6172
@davewilliams6172 3 жыл бұрын
Program Unavailable as of 2020...nice
@davelowets
@davelowets 2 жыл бұрын
Huh?? 🤔
@buy.to.let.britain
@buy.to.let.britain 3 ай бұрын
it made local house prices go up.
@robinwells8879
@robinwells8879 3 жыл бұрын
The Russians have been working to corner the market for reprocessing recently. They have the already catastrophically polluted Chelyabinsk area were they can do what they like without much interference. They will be the nuclear dustbin but without any meaningful oversight. That is progress then. Hurrah! I still love the idea of Tony Benn the ultimate unilateral disarmament poacher being made into the gamekeeper. Hysterical.
@marianmarkovic5881
@marianmarkovic5881 3 жыл бұрын
Reprocesing is needet if one want to close fuel circle and minimalize amount of nuclear waste. it is actualy simple idea,.. only put into Nuclear Waste storage fission products, while Uranium and transurans return into fuel. only problem is it is not economical att since uranium prices are so low. Actualy only country that have reprocesing plants whitout nuclear weapon program is Japan.
@alanjones4622
@alanjones4622 4 ай бұрын
Terrible dialogue. You can hardly here some of speakers then the adverts blast your ears out when they come on.
@operatorjeffdeathstar7759
@operatorjeffdeathstar7759 3 жыл бұрын
This is 1996...
@krashd
@krashd 4 жыл бұрын
1:55 People don't look at places like that with suspicion due to their links with the military, they look at them with suspicion because the entire site could disappear into a crater and all the management will tell people is that there has been a slight hiccup. If people were transparent about dangerous things they would not generate nearly enough fear as they do when people are all hush-hush.
@WineScrounger
@WineScrounger 2 жыл бұрын
Nonsense
@krashd
@krashd 2 жыл бұрын
@@WineScrounger No, it is actually true. The proof being that the anti-nuclear movement in the US only really took off in 1979. Now what happened in 1979? The China Syndrome was released in theatres and then the Three Mile Island accident happened. People do not look at places like Sellafield in the UK or Oak Ridge in the US with suspicion because they have military links, they do so because they have an irrational fear for anything nuclear. Even today you have people who are dead against fusion because they hear the word nuclear and panic.
@WineScrounger
@WineScrounger 2 жыл бұрын
This comment section is not a place of honour. No great deed is commemorated here.
@kingofaesthetics9407
@kingofaesthetics9407 Жыл бұрын
Probably the smartest comment on this video.
@CrackleCat
@CrackleCat Жыл бұрын
_offering._
@bingeltube
@bingeltube 4 жыл бұрын
This is at least a 20-30 year old video! Sound volume is way too low! Video is very narrowly focused!
@anhedonianepiphany5588
@anhedonianepiphany5588 4 жыл бұрын
The sound levels could have easily been addressed, but there are no issues with the video. If you're too young to remember the (then) standard 4:3 aspect ratio, analog TV, and home video tape recording, then attempt to educate yourself about the development of the broadcasting technology you now enjoy (and clearly take for granted).
@bingeltube
@bingeltube 4 жыл бұрын
@@anhedonianepiphany5588 you totally missed the point. The potential viewer was left with the impression this is a new, contemporary video, which it obviously is not
@davelowets
@davelowets 2 жыл бұрын
@@bingeltube That was your mistake.
@bingeltube
@bingeltube 2 жыл бұрын
@@davelowets what a fool are you?
@theseventhgeneration6910
@theseventhgeneration6910 3 жыл бұрын
Volume is too low
@78bollox
@78bollox 2 жыл бұрын
What?
@WineScrounger
@WineScrounger 2 жыл бұрын
Turn it up then eh
@Yutappy99
@Yutappy99 4 жыл бұрын
Only 3.6 Roentgen Not Great, Not Terrible.
@paulanderson7796
@paulanderson7796 3 жыл бұрын
Give it a rest please.
@davelowets
@davelowets 2 жыл бұрын
@@paulanderson7796 Agreed... Thank you. 🍻
@johnlaband770
@johnlaband770 2 жыл бұрын
The Irish sea is apparently the most tritium polluted waterway in the world. According to Greenpeace.
@atlas2296
@atlas2296 2 жыл бұрын
Not like that is a big deal, so far there have only been 7.3 Kilograms of Tritium ever found
@barbarafogle3541
@barbarafogle3541 2 жыл бұрын
In the ground naturally.
@MICKEYISLOWD
@MICKEYISLOWD Жыл бұрын
Greenpeace is a laughing stock. They sometimes get things right but they basically are a bunch of tree huggers who delve into very complex issues without the knowledge of what is going on. I used to support them but they are now off the mark.
@KeithIsGay
@KeithIsGay Жыл бұрын
Pov you live next to sellafield
@ladygabes5558
@ladygabes5558 2 жыл бұрын
the audio is too low
@78bollox
@78bollox 2 жыл бұрын
What?
@richardstevens3478
@richardstevens3478 2 жыл бұрын
Good subject but half the narrative I miss because of the English English.
@davelowets
@davelowets 2 жыл бұрын
Turn on your captions...
@WineScrounger
@WineScrounger 2 жыл бұрын
Suck it up. The rest of the world has to deal with American dialogue on everything.
@NoahsMissus
@NoahsMissus 4 жыл бұрын
Don’t think it’s in operation now?
@annechester770
@annechester770 4 жыл бұрын
IT IS ! Still shipping heavy water for WMD
@NoahsMissus
@NoahsMissus 4 жыл бұрын
Anne Chester oh right we were on the beach there last year someone told us it was no longer been used ?
@krashd
@krashd 4 жыл бұрын
Sellafield won't close, it's a sprawling city of old and new nuclear projects, but there are parts of the site that require heavy cleanup though including old reactors such as the Windscale piles, two large (incredibly damaged) cooling pools and over a dozen processing buildings.
@davelowets
@davelowets 2 жыл бұрын
@@annechester770 Heavy water isn't needed for WMD.
@tommorris3688
@tommorris3688 3 жыл бұрын
Fast breeder reactors - a colossal mistake - like ITER is a white elephant for fusion power.
@martinbitter4162
@martinbitter4162 3 жыл бұрын
Really very kind on the nuclear industry. Very kind.
@user-bg4lm4hn9c
@user-bg4lm4hn9c Ай бұрын
Yes we need your money to make Uk the forerunners in Nuclear technology. No one in Uk will have energy bills in a few years. What has cost time & money is the one big negative with us British, that is lies & coverups.
@mrrolandlawrence
@mrrolandlawrence 4 жыл бұрын
designing a reprocessing facility & reactors without thinking about how to dismantle them ... classic british short thinking. of course could have joined the french who were building massive amounts of reactors & who still have 90% of grid electricity produced carbon free.
@anhedonianepiphany5588
@anhedonianepiphany5588 4 жыл бұрын
*_LMFAO!_* Your initial, uh, "paragraph" could easily apply to American _or_ French facilities as well. I'm not anti-nuclear, although I'm certainly anti-conventional-nuclear. If we ever adopt a nuclear power program in Australia, at least the Americans, the British, and the French have shown us how _not_ to do it. You've all made a _huge mess_ of it! Also, conventional nuclear has always been _far_ short of "carbon free".
@christycullen2355
@christycullen2355 4 жыл бұрын
There's nothing carbon free about nuclear power.
@numbersstationsarchive194
@numbersstationsarchive194 3 жыл бұрын
@@christycullen2355 Except there is, because the miniscule amount of waste it produces can be tightly controlled and safely stored.
@KlausBahnhof
@KlausBahnhof 3 жыл бұрын
@@numbersstationsarchive194 How is the waste safely stored? Seems that most plants just keep it on site while they wait for taxpayers to finance a theoretical long-term storage solution.
@numbersstationsarchive194
@numbersstationsarchive194 3 жыл бұрын
@@KlausBahnhof And how exactly is that unsafe?
@Ed-ty1kr
@Ed-ty1kr 11 ай бұрын
At 37:49 nuclear death cult is summed up for you plain as day, and at 38:58 you are given the reason why. If only some new global threat could give the nuclear death cult a new purpose, a "renaissance".. hmmm
@xuser48
@xuser48 Жыл бұрын
CANDU works with plutonium.
@MoparAdventure
@MoparAdventure 3 жыл бұрын
They forgot to mention the wind scale meltdown.
@paul-sr8qk
@paul-sr8qk 3 жыл бұрын
That just proves that the government have never really cared, they was letting parents with their kids walk right past it when it was spewing high levels of radiation.
@davelowets
@davelowets 2 жыл бұрын
I'm guessing they figured if you watched this, you already knew about it.
@oddjob7821
@oddjob7821 2 жыл бұрын
@@paul-sr8qk Of course, you are expendable if the government needs something done. Anyone who trusts a government is deluded.
@Samhalta
@Samhalta 2 жыл бұрын
It was a fire, not a meltdown.
@davelowets
@davelowets 2 жыл бұрын
@@Samhalta No, it wasn't a "meltdown" created by excessive fission heat, but fuel DID melt, and was released into the surroundings just the same as a typical core meltdown.
@samuelhudson2620
@samuelhudson2620 8 ай бұрын
Ya'll need to hire a new sound engineer.
@deedoor30
@deedoor30 4 жыл бұрын
? What about the fire. Did i miss that bit
@anhedonianepiphany5588
@anhedonianepiphany5588 4 жыл бұрын
Uh, right location, just the wrong name for it and over 40 years too late! Search "Windscale fire" to find that which you seek.
@deedoor30
@deedoor30 4 жыл бұрын
@@anhedonianepiphany5588 I was being Sarcastic. Since they were talking about mistakes I thought they may of touch upon it as well as the leaks. I only live a few miles away and been around the plant visitors tour. Change site name and company name all go's away.
@WineScrounger
@WineScrounger 2 жыл бұрын
There’s a very good documentary on this that you can find on YT.
@olwynskye417
@olwynskye417 Жыл бұрын
Nuclear is still much safer and better for the environment than coal. You just need to build the plants in safe locations, build them with care and invest in long term storage of spent fuel.
@MICKEYISLOWD
@MICKEYISLOWD Жыл бұрын
They are not safe. If only they built Liquid Salt reactors which was a working technology in the 60s. They are safe and cheap. You could also build them to fit on the back of a truck for field work. They can't go critical because you have to put energy in for them to work instead of the other way round. When they cool off the salts freeze and nothing happens.
@olwynskye417
@olwynskye417 Жыл бұрын
@@MICKEYISLOWD Didn't hundreds of people just die in a coal mining accident in China? Also lung disease and emissions from coal kill tons of people. There have been less than 10 memorable nuclear incidents, but coal mines kill people all the time. Sure nuclear plants have their faults when idiots operate them and it can cause major damage, but nothing similar to what coal, water and The Sun cause.
@matthewburns9409
@matthewburns9409 Жыл бұрын
Nuclear is only safer when conditions are right in terms of management, in terms of the actual events of the world. What happens in war for example? Look at Ukraine now and the fear of a plant getting hit by missiles. What happens during a natural disaster? Remember Fukushima? Nuclear is very vulnerable and the reality is they are POTENTIALLY VERY DANGEROUS. What I think about is this... mankind is always fighting some war or another. And I don't think for one minute we should discount the possibility of a WW3.. the Nuclear power stations themselves could end up being the even worse side effects of a global war. Hundreds and hundreds of Chenobyls leaking endless radiation and absolutely no ability to contain it. Chernobyl itself required a lot of effort to seal the open roof and stop radiation from flooding the out into the atmosphere. That can only happen when you have a functioning state and people with technology and know-how to fix it. Think.. nuclear war would lead to a complete breakdown in civilisations and infrastructure would be utterly decimated. Mankind would be placed back into the middle ages only this time even worse, in a poisoned and black land where sunlight is reduced, where crops won't grow, where deformities and cancers rocket beyond all imagination, where pestilence grows rampant. Mankind will be thrown back into stone age in short time and probably wouldn't survive. All life would struggle in this hellish reality.
@F17THY
@F17THY 11 ай бұрын
@@MICKEYISLOWD Molten Salt Reactors (MSR's) are known for being very unsafe and this is due to them being new technology that is okay, but dev. time is money and the UK economy in 2023 or the last 20 years for say is not in a position for such technological development. I think a further push on providing decom plans are required for the current reactors and new GEN 3+ and GEN 4 reactors... given a good lifetime or a NPP active is 50 years and decom more like 150 years.
@McIntyreBible
@McIntyreBible 4 жыл бұрын
46:52, The historical problem at Sellafield.
@tommorris3688
@tommorris3688 3 жыл бұрын
Sellafield Plutonium in MOX fuel used at reactor 3 at Fukushima Dai'ichi that blew up in year 2011.
@tommorris3688
@tommorris3688 3 жыл бұрын
Tony Ben - wise man !
@paulcarolan2475
@paulcarolan2475 4 жыл бұрын
it leaks like a siive😈😯
@mdcs1992
@mdcs1992 2 жыл бұрын
Judging by your spelling, so does your brain.
@flooringguy4190
@flooringguy4190 4 жыл бұрын
Work on the audio volume. Some of us hearing loss from tooling and automatic rifle use. God bless America and all my British brothers
@itsmesoitis4059
@itsmesoitis4059 4 жыл бұрын
mercury fulminate = tinnitus
@adamlee3772
@adamlee3772 2 жыл бұрын
Very interesting to watch. And tbh damning on the attitude of the U.K. at the time and probably now. There was a careless regard for safety in the U.K. for decades. It resulted in some horrendous disasters which could have easily not happened. And the leaks they talk of were basically down to lack of inspection, to save a few quid. And it was so prevalent in the U.K. at the time. It will not get any better due to bloody Brexit either. But yeah, total lack of proper management, completely broken culture. The quid comes first. Proven time and again. Herald of Free Enterprise Piper Alpha Hillsborough Kings Cross Fire Bradford City Fire Leaks at Sellafield They all happened due to a breakdown in procedures and a failure to adjust the culture.
@davidsmith6355
@davidsmith6355 2 жыл бұрын
I totally agree with you Adam - I think the freedom to perform this kind of neglect was one of the main motivations for Br... sorry, I cant even say that word!
@WineScrounger
@WineScrounger 2 жыл бұрын
@@davidsmith6355 that and Nigel the Ordinary Beer Drinker painting lies on the side of a bus. I wonder how much money he made from it? As a banker he would have all sorts of inside knowledge on what would happen. But hey, at least we get blue passports now. So worth it, right?
@davidsmith6355
@davidsmith6355 2 жыл бұрын
@@WineScrounger haha, quite, passports - to here as noone else likes us! 😂
@jamjardj1974
@jamjardj1974 Жыл бұрын
You forgot Grenfell, perhaps. Potters Bar and countless other rail incidents too.
@joseph-mariopelerin7028
@joseph-mariopelerin7028 2 жыл бұрын
just like saying that Gorbachev didn't know Chernobyl plant exploded...
@tommorris3688
@tommorris3688 3 жыл бұрын
Dumping nuclear waste at sea? - ask the British - they have lots of experience dumping such barrels in the Atlantic Ocean and Irish Sea !
@tommorris3688
@tommorris3688 2 жыл бұрын
@Floyd1504 You are correct. Both Sellafield and Le Hague spew out lots of radioactive contamination.
@charlesburgoyne-probyn6044
@charlesburgoyne-probyn6044 4 ай бұрын
A place that we would laugh at if in the Soviet Union
@tommorris3688
@tommorris3688 3 жыл бұрын
Sellafield nuclear waste now to be stuffed down the new coal mine complex being planned for Whitehaven, Cumbria.
@PimpinBassie2
@PimpinBassie2 3 ай бұрын
Why is Britain's nuclear industry owned by a French company? 🤔
@johnnorris1983
@johnnorris1983 Жыл бұрын
Boogie man.. bring back nuclear power.. the fuel of the future… Just stop putting the idiots in charge…
@frigginsane
@frigginsane Жыл бұрын
If dinos made nuclear waste, we'd still be dealing with their waste now? That's an intense mental image of time.
@paulanderson7796
@paulanderson7796 Жыл бұрын
The longest lived fission byproducts are those that present the least amount of danger.
@janesejohnsen6750
@janesejohnsen6750 4 жыл бұрын
Japan's facilities continues to leak. Chernobyl
@annechester770
@annechester770 4 жыл бұрын
Chernobyl is Ukraine for Wormwood..(Beast) Uranium comes from impact craters.. which are fallen stars
@danielgyllenbreider
@danielgyllenbreider 4 жыл бұрын
Fukushima is way worse than Chernobyl when it comes to impact and the size of the area it is impacting. In a century, people will look back on our time and ask why on earth we were willing to risk so much for so little.
@janesejohnsen6750
@janesejohnsen6750 4 жыл бұрын
@Incurable Romanticist no but God already knows...there will no more seas....
@krashd
@krashd 4 жыл бұрын
Fukushima isn't even remotely as bad as Chernobyl, it's fear mongers like you that make inocuous things so scary to people, educate yourself, and by that I mean proper science papers and not just reading an activist website. *"This spider has 10" fangs and one bite can sever your hand!"* - That's what you donuts sound like.
@janesejohnsen6750
@janesejohnsen6750 4 жыл бұрын
@Incurable Romanticist Don't lose hope the Light yet shines in the Darkness for those who been awake and chosen shall continue the fight for truth... It is the dead men and women walking in darkness that succumbed to the flood, ot was the pharaoh and his army who capsized by the Red Sea.... No man knows the day or hour of HIS return...and many dead trying to chase it or manipulate the times... Science in the hands of man has prospered more nothingness even when it comes to cures, space, ecology. God made everything and science dispelled or unanswered... Just trips to the moon were fabricated and 1 shuttles and two missiles shreddedcattempting to leave the atmosphere evidence science has a way of shedding the light on truth....not darkness... Many see and cannot hear and many hear but cannot see.... The flesh rebels w the spirit and unless you can hear what you can'not see and see what you cannot hear far from Him remain... Every reason Jesus warned us to be reconciled unto Him by His Holy Spirit. Keaning adopting his ways not man's....
@MichealPorreka
@MichealPorreka 2 жыл бұрын
At 34:05 these are the types of people that need taken out back and dealt with. Completely incompetent people handling materials that have an effect on EVERYBODY and to then have the absolute audacity at 36:00 to say safety is a number one concern is worth getting a swift high five to your face. Completely appalling. It's been proven your NOT safe nor honest!
@narmale
@narmale 2 жыл бұрын
and 12 min mark... we have a leak of radioactive water... oh... well, its probably not bad, it'll be ok
@naiunited7393
@naiunited7393 2 жыл бұрын
Look into the excuse police force of Cumbria and who decides who get a p4 pass😭😂☺️😂😭😂😭😂. You really couldn’t make it up. Bent police what were kicked out of force in charge of who gets a pass. Its a mass fiddle. It’s poisoned the water supply the air. Not it’s getting fresh water from ennefdale while the rest of north west Cumbria water supply poisoned.. what a great country England is 😭😂😭😂
@petercricket
@petercricket 4 жыл бұрын
yes ...it's at least 40 years old.
@anhedonianepiphany5588
@anhedonianepiphany5588 4 жыл бұрын
The video was produced in 1996. You should acquaint yourself with Roman Numerals! This means it's roughly 23 years old - essentially half of your ignorant exaggeration.
@petercricket
@petercricket 4 жыл бұрын
@@anhedonianepiphany5588 Sorry, and do apologise for half my ignorant exaggeration. Missed the Roman Numerals. Please forgive me.
@tommorris3688
@tommorris3688 3 жыл бұрын
The truth is timeless !
@kalif404
@kalif404 3 жыл бұрын
If Politicians were kept out of this and let the scientists do what they believed to be safe this probably wouldn't have happened. But Nooooo Let the politicians in and they dictate policy to enhance their power. Until we get rid of politicians and have real honest people heading governments we are doomed.
@railwaymechanicalengineer4587
@railwaymechanicalengineer4587 Жыл бұрын
Indeed, but Sellafield also has the ability to reprocess Nuclear Power Station rods, which reduces the amount of highly dangerous radio active waste that has to be buried and stored safely deep underground. This factor means Britain does not suffer from the illegal dumping of highly dangerous Radio Active waste as found in dozens of locations across the USA !!!!
@keithhodgson8618
@keithhodgson8618 3 жыл бұрын
What waste of money
Sellafield: Europe's most radioactively contaminated site
8:02
Channel 4 News
Рет қаралды 356 М.
О, сосисочки! (Или корейская уличная еда?)
00:32
Кушать Хочу
Рет қаралды 7 МЛН
Кәріс тіріма өзі ?  | Synyptas 3 | 8 серия
24:47
kak budto
Рет қаралды 1,7 МЛН
Как быстро замутить ЭлектроСамокат
00:59
ЖЕЛЕЗНЫЙ КОРОЛЬ
Рет қаралды 3,9 МЛН
ELE QUEBROU A TAÇA DE FUTEBOL
00:45
Matheus Kriwat
Рет қаралды 13 МЛН
Britain's Chernobyl: The Truth Behind Britain's Worst Nuclear Disaster | Windscale 1957 | Progress
49:52
Progress - Technology History Documentaries
Рет қаралды 32 М.
H Bomb: The Cold War Weapon That Could Wipe Out All Life | M.A.D World | Timeline
51:52
Timeline - World History Documentaries
Рет қаралды 1,2 МЛН
Why British Nuclear Energy Failed
27:47
Asianometry
Рет қаралды 300 М.
Candy Carson - Women of Distinction
3:04
Palm Beach Atlantic University
Рет қаралды 2,7 М.
Inside a Nuclear Reactor
24:15
Periodic Videos
Рет қаралды 2,2 МЛН
London Bridge
3:00
Les Wilson
Рет қаралды 43 М.
Yucca Mountain: The USA's Nuclear Dump
15:49
Megaprojects
Рет қаралды 857 М.
How Did Sellafield Become The Most Hazardous Place In Western Europe? | Inside Sellafield | Progress
50:15
Progress - Technology History Documentaries
Рет қаралды 60 М.
SL-1 The Accident
40:23
Nuclear Vault
Рет қаралды 252 М.
How to turn Nuclear Waste into Nuclear Fuel
13:41
But Why?
Рет қаралды 101 М.
О, сосисочки! (Или корейская уличная еда?)
00:32
Кушать Хочу
Рет қаралды 7 МЛН