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The Chernobyl miniseries has been widely praised for its historical accuracy and the way many different parts of the production come together to create a story that is both compelling and mindful of the people who lived these events. The show is so layered, in fact, that tucked into a short scene at the beginning of the show's 4th episode, a couple lines of dialogue contain another history lesson. In this episode we explain how a poor fictional cow was used to shed light on a very grim history. History Pop is part of Complexly's first ever pilot season! Check out the other two shows in this launch, Stories Retold & Hashed Out! / storiesretold / hashedout music via Epidemic Sound REFERENCES: “Ukraine Profile - Timeline” - BBC https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe... Patrikarakos, David - “Why Stalin Starved Ukraine” - The New Republic, 2017 https://newrepublic.com/article/14595... Motyl, Alexander J. - “Deleting the Holodomor: Ukraine Unmakes Itself” - World Affairs, 2010 Applebaum, Anne - Red Famine, Doubleday, 2017 Kis, Oksana - “Defying Death: Women’s Experience of the Holodomor, 1932-1933 - Aspasia Volume 1, 2013 Sysyn, Frank - “Thirty Years of Research on the Holodomor: A Balance Sheet” - East/West: Journal of Ukranian Studies, 2015 Bilinsky, Yaroslav - “Was the Ukranian Famine of 1932-1933 Genocide?” - Journal of Genocide Research, 1999 Nefedov, Sergey - “Consumption Level During the Period of Holodomor” - Economics & Sociology, 2015 Kas’ianov, Georgii - “The Holodomor and the Building of a Nation” - Russian Social Science Review, 2011