Twitter Users Recollect Their Memories of the Nuclear Catastrophe in the Netflix Documentary Series ‘Meltdown: Three Mile Island’

This article features Government Accountability Project’s whistleblower client, Rick Parks, and was originally published here.

Documentaries have been an integral part of Netflix’s library. They not only recreate the incident accurately. But Netflix has this strange ability even to recreate the emotions of that time. Netflix usually picks celebrities or high-profile criminals as topics for documentaries. However, this time they decided to go with one of the most dangerous chemical plant failures in the United States. Meltdown: Three Mile Island is a new documentary that retells the horrors of the 1979 accident in Pennsylvania.

The documentary is starting to gain popularity not among young Gen Z’s but among the people who witnessed the incident back in 1979 and now are applauding Netflix for its accuracy. Let us take a look at the documentary and people’s reactions to it.

What is the Meltdown Three Mile Island documentary about?

Meltdown: Three Mile Island narrates the story of a nuclear reactor that partially melted down in Middletown, Pennsylvania. The Three Mile Island, Unit 2 (TMI-2) reactor began leaking nuclear reactor coolant on March 28, 1979.

The employees were unprepared, and the plant administrators failed to notice the leak in time, resulting in a nuclear calamity.  But the crisis was made worse when Metropolitan Edison, the plant’s parent corporation, sought to hide and downplay what was really going on.  They claimed there was no radioactivity at the location, although this was far from the case.

Fortunately, Richard Parks, the head engineer, stood his ground. He informed the world about what had happened at the facility and how it had affected the individuals who worked there and those who lived nearby. The land was never the same after that, and it is still toxic.

The reaction of the people

The documentary started streaming on Netflix on May 4th and has started to gain immense popularity. People have, since the release, been quick to react to the film by praising it on Twitter, especially how it has made them relive the horrible moment in history.