2011 Tōhoku Earthquake and Tsunami [Deep Dive] - March 11th, 2026
[00:00] Frederick Moore: From Neural Newscast, this is Deep Dive, exploring the moments that shape today.
[00:10] Claire Donovan: Welcome to Deep Dive from Neural Newscast. I'm Claire Donovan.
[00:15] Frederick Moore: And I'm Frederick Moore. Today is March 11th, 2026.
[00:20] Frederick Moore: A date that marks a moment when the world truly stood still.
[00:23] Frederick Moore: and the ground beneath our feet changed forever.
[00:27] Claire Donovan: It really did, Frederick.
[00:29] Claire Donovan: We're looking back 15 years today
[00:32] Claire Donovan: to the Great East Japan earthquake of 2011.
[00:36] Claire Donovan: It wasn't just a natural disaster.
[00:38] Claire Donovan: It was an event that forced a global conversation on nuclear safety
[00:42] Claire Donovan: and our resilience against the elements.
[00:45] Frederick Moore: The sheer scale was terrifying.
[00:47] Frederick Moore: It was a magnitude 9.0 centered just off the coast of Sendai,
[00:53] Frederick Moore: It remains the fourth most powerful earthquake ever recorded by modern instruments.
[00:59] Frederick Moore: People in Tokyo, hundreds of miles away, felt the swaying for several minutes.
[01:05] Claire Donovan: Exactly.
[01:06] Claire Donovan: And the tremors were just the first chapter.
[01:08] Claire Donovan: The quake triggered a massive tsunami with waves reaching heights of over 40 meters.
[01:15] Claire Donovan: It moved with such force that it traveled up to six miles inland,
[01:19] Claire Donovan: completely erasing entire coastal communities in a matter of moments.
[01:24] Frederick Moore: The loss of life was heartbreaking, with nearly 20,000 people confirmed dead or missing.
[01:30] Frederick Moore: But the nightmare deepened when that wall of water struck the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, knocking out the cooling systems for the reactors.
[01:40] Claire Donovan: That led to the meltdown of three reactors, marking the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl.
[01:47] Claire Donovan: The resulting radiation leaks displaced hundreds of thousands of residents.
[01:52] Claire Donovan: Even now, 15 years later, the exclusion zones remind us of the long shadow cast by that day.
[01:59] Frederick Moore: Right. It changed everything.
[02:02] Frederick Moore: Governments around the world re-evaluated their energy policies and coastal defenses.
[02:07] Frederick Moore: The resilience of the Japanese people has been incredible, Claire.
[02:11] Frederick Moore: But the lessons of Fukushima remain central to global infrastructure planning today.
[02:16] Claire Donovan: It's a heavy legacy to reflect on.
[02:19] Claire Donovan: As we shift our focus, we also look at the individuals born on this day who have left their own marks on our culture and society.
[02:27] Frederick Moore: Starting with the man who has wielded immense influence over the global narrative for decades,
[02:34] Frederick Moore: Rupert Murdoch was born on this day in 1931.
[02:37] Frederick Moore: From a single afternoon paper in Adelaide, he built News Corp into an international powerhouse.
[02:44] Claire Donovan: He truly is a titan of the industry, Frederick.
[02:47] Claire Donovan: Whether it's through cable news, newspapers, or film studios,
[02:50] Claire Donovan: his reach across the UK, the US, and Australia has fundamentally shaped political and social discourse for millions of people.
[02:59] Frederick Moore: Moving from the newsroom to the silver screen, we celebrate Terrence Howard.
[03:03] Frederick Moore: born in 1969. He's known for an incredible intensity in his roles. You really saw that in his Oscar-nominated
[03:11] Frederick Moore: performance in Hustle and Flow, and of course, the ensemble hit Crash. Definitely. Most people
[03:17] Claire Donovan: today probably recognize him as Lucius Lyon from Empire.
[03:20] Claire Donovan: He has this unique ability to play characters who are both deeply flawed and incredibly magnetic at the same time.
[03:29] Frederick Moore: Then there's a birthday that represents a completely different kind of screen presence.
[03:33] Frederick Moore: Johnny Knoxville was born in 1971.
[03:37] Frederick Moore: He essentially turned the idea of the professional daredevil into a multi-million dollar franchise with jackass.
[03:44] Claire Donovan: No way is it already 25 years since that show first blew up.
[03:48] Claire Donovan: He probably neared a very specific brand of chaotic, physical comedy.
[03:52] Claire Donovan: It's strange to think about, but his work really captured a certain rebellious spirit of the early 2000s.
[03:59] Frederick Moore: Yeah, it was a mix of classic slapstick and genuine high-stakes risk that somehow became a cultural phenomenon.
[04:07] Frederick Moore: It's a testament to his charisma that people are still watching him take those hits all these years later.
[04:13] Claire Donovan: While we're discussing cultural impact and essential systems, we have to mention one more thing.
[04:20] Claire Donovan: March 11th is World Plumbing Day. It might sound a bit niche, Frederick, but it's actually a vital
[04:27] Frederick Moore: global initiative. The World Plumbing Council started this in 2010,
[04:32] Frederick Moore: to highlight the link between good plumbing and public health. We
[04:35] Frederick Moore: We often forget that access to clean water and effective waste management
[04:40] Frederick Moore: is the single biggest factor in increasing human life expectancy.
[04:45] Claire Donovan: Exactly.
[04:46] Claire Donovan: The World Health Organization points out that hundreds of thousands of people
[04:51] Claire Donovan: still die every year from preventable diseases
[04:55] Claire Donovan: simply because they lack basic sanitation.
[04:58] Claire Donovan: It's a stark reminder of the infrastructure we often take for granted.
[05:03] Frederick Moore: It really connects back to our earlier discussion about Japan, whether it's massive power grids
[05:09] Frederick Moore: or the pipes in our walls. Our modern lives depend on these intricate systems that protect us
[05:15] Frederick Moore: from the environment and disease, Claire.
[05:17] Claire Donovan: It's a day for recognizing the layers of innovation that keep us safe, from media moguls shaping our thoughts to the plumbers protecting our health.
[05:28] Claire Donovan: History is as much about these quiet, essential systems as it is about the giant shifts in the Earth.
[05:35] Frederick Moore: That brings our look at March 11th to a close. I'm Frederick Moore.
[05:38] Claire Donovan: And I'm Claire Donovan.
[05:40] Claire Donovan: Find more stories at deepdive.neuralnewscast.com.
[05:45] Claire Donovan: Deep Dive is AI-assisted, human-reviewed.
[05:49] Claire Donovan: Explore history every day on Neural Newscast.
[05:52] Frederick Moore: This has been Deep Dive on Neural Newscast.
[05:55] Frederick Moore: Exploring the moments that shape today.
