On April 26, 1986, the Chornobyl disaster occurred when a nuclear reactor caused an uncontrolled nuclear chain reaction in Soviet Ukraine’s Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. The event was catastrophic, but the immediate crisis management that could have prevented the spread of radiation, which contaminated the bodies of individuals in nearby areas and water supplies, ultimately causing cancer and death, was in its own way a smaller calamity. This fallout and the ways in which the government handled (or did not handle) the situation is the subject of HBO’s popular miniseries, Chernobyl, based on recollections from locals in Pripyat and Svetlana Alexievich’s book Voices from Chornobyl. So, it appears that the topic of Chornobyl is trending, and the influencers of the world have seized the opportunity to turn the site of a catastrophic nuclear disaster that ruined thousands of lives into an Instagram hot spot and flex. Aside from the fact that it’s disrespectful to the victims and survivors of the accident that happened at Chornobyl, it also does not appear to be the safest way to spend your time (although there are multiple radiation measurement checkpoints one must pass through on any given tour). Chernobyl creator Craig Mazin even urged influencers to cool it with the selfies at the nuclear site, which has now become a ghost town. Whether or not the HBO series had something to do with the uptick in tourism at the site is up in the air, but one thing is for sure: there’s really no reason to show up to a nuclear disaster zone wearing a bikini just so that you can get a good gram out of it.
Chornobyl
W Magazine: Tourists turn Chornobyl zone into an Instagram hotspot (PHOTOS)

A picture taken on June 7, 2019, shows the wreckage of a car in the ghost city of Pripyat in the Chornobyl exclusion zone on June 7, 2019.