Analysis:: The perfect storm that made âChernobylâ must-see TV
âChernobylâ isnât the likeliest of hits. The five-part HBO/Sky Atlantic co-production, which concluded earlier this month, offers a detailed examination of the causes and consequences of the April 1986 explosion at the nuclear power plant in northern Ukraine â including sustained attention to the intricacies of Soviet bureaucracy, the nature of fission and the gruesome results of radiation poisoning. It lacks the bombast of âGame of Thrones,â the star power of âBig Little Lies,â the lacerating humor of âVeep.â
And yet âChernobyl,â written by Craig Mazin and directed by Johan Renck, has attracted more than 9 million cumulative viewers to date, according to HBO â plus 6.5 million downloads or views for the five episodes and trailer of its companion piece, âThe Chernobyl Podcast,â in which Mazin and co-host Peter Sagal separate fact from fiction in the seriesâ version of events. (That number includes 2.3 million downloads or views since June 5; the series finale aired June 3.)
âWhen we talk about broad audiences, weâre usually talking about art that has a fairly wide target â generally speaking, everybody can agree that this sort of thing might be exciting or fun or sad,â Mazin says in a telephone interview. â[âChernobylâ] is not a broad audience kind of show, at least in my mind, but it turns out that thereâs a much wider interest in this kind of storytelling than everybody expected.â
For networks eager to cut through the clutter of âpeak TV,â and viewers with more scripted original series to choose from than ever before, âChernobylâ highlights the perfect storm of contributing factors often required to help a TV show break through.
In addition to the traditional models for building an audience â critical acclaim, Emmy buzz, the week-to-week ratings increases that suggest positive word of mouth â the series benefited from parallels to the climate change crisis and the proliferation of misinformation, renewed interest in Russia and the Cold War, even its manageable length.
âThe Chernobyl Podcastâ taps into this organic fascination in part because it doesnât come across as a form of marketing: Mazin, whose âScriptnotesâ podcast with co-host John August launched in the summer of 2011, wanted to make a companion piece from the outset.
REVIEW: HBOâs haunting âChernobylâ focuses on the truth tellers who paid dearly Âť
âI was pretty sure that no one was going to listen to it,â Mazin explains. âI just thought this was something that I was doing because it was the right thing to do. And I donât think anybody at HBO felt like this was a huge promotional opportunity.â Instead, he remembers thinking, âTheoretically, one ad on the side of one bus in New York will do more to promote the show than this thing.â
As Vultureâs Josef Adalian noted in his post-finale report on âChernobylâsâ ratings, weekly episodic releases allowed for the series to amass an audience over time, an effect underscored by the praise heaped upon the series by âFive Came Backâ author Mark Harris, âThe Wireâ creator David Simon, and others after the series finale.
And in a crowded landscape, viewers seeking relevance to the present political moment could find it â whether in the form of Valery Legasov (Jared Harris) and composite character Ulana Khomyuk (Emily Watson), scientists who must fight tooth and nail to be heard by high-ranking officials with their heads in the sand, or Zharkov (Donald Sumpter), the apparatchik willing to sacrifice the residents of the nearby town of Pripyat in order to save face. (Mazin even had to disabuse conservative media personality Dan Bongino of the notion that the series is proof of the âfailure of socialism.â)
Along with its willingness to draw on popular genres â disaster movie, legal drama â to ensure engagement with challenging material, Ă la FXâs âAmerican Crime Story,â this range of ways into âChernobylâ allowed HBO to capitalize on existing interest in the catastrophe.
âI think in some ways, the most powerful subjects are those that are familiar enough to be understood but foreign enough to be exotic,â says Justinian Jampol, executive director and founder of the Wende Museum of the Cold War in Culver City. â[N]obody goes from nothing to a seasoned cultural historian or thoughtful, nuanced observer [overnight]. I see âChernobylâ as a gateway drug. It is a great way to understand the basics enough to get people to dive in.â
Even a modicum of controversy can help: While Forbes explained âWhy HBOâs âChernobylâ Gets Nuclear So Wrong,â the likes of CBS, Business Insider and The Week examined the seriesâ historical accuracy more broadly. Perhaps the most severe critique came from Russian American journalist Masha Gessen, who wrote in The New Yorker that âthe creators of âChernobylâ imagine confrontation where confrontation was unthinkable â and, in doing so, they cross the line from conjuring a fiction to creating a lie.â
âThis is not a TV show anymore. Itâs a symbol,â Jampol says, citing reports that Russian state television is already at work on a competing Chernobyl project, one that will claim CIA involvement in the disaster. âHistory is always instrumentalized by those who need it to be.â
That the events depicted in âChernobylâ are once again a political hot potato has only boosted the seriesâ profile, and that âThe Chernobyl Podcastâ confronts these questions about its accuracy head-on dovetails nicely with the conversation surrounding the series â the sort of synergy that most companion podcasts can only dream of. After all, though Mazin may be surprised that the series and podcast have amassed the size of following they have, he knew all along that the story told in âChernobylâ had contemporary resonance. Thatâs why he made it.
âOne of the reasons to tell any kind of historical event, to re-present it for people, is because it is relevant now,â he says. âThere are historical events that are interesting, theyâre just not that relevant. I think this one is interesting and relevant.â
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