Initial footage/trailer of sorts here:I'm filming a documentary for TV about how Uranium and radioactivity have shaped the modern world. It will be broadcast in mid-2015, details to come. The filming took me to the most radioactive places on Earth (and some places, which surprisingly aren't as radioactive as you'd think). Chernobyl and Fukushima were incredible to see as they present post-apocalyptic landscapes. I also visited nuclear power plants, research reactors, Marie Curie's institute, Einstein's apartment, nuclear medicine areas of hospitals, uranium mines, nuclear bomb sites, and interviewed numerous experts.
I must say it's pretty eye opening, even if half of that isn't uncommon knowledge, and it begs the question why the hell companies running nuclear reactors or states with NPPs didn't think of doing documentary like that decades ago. Probably because national companies rarely waste money on top level bullshit massaged PR.
It makes "green" scaremongering, Baltic tsunamis, German policies and the rest of the FUD produced annually in really sad, really uninformed category for me. Maybe someone should show the above to them and ask if they are in favour of banning all the common "radioactive" things first, or just admit how dumb their proposals were.