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AP
Photo
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| People
run from the collapse of one of the twin towers. |
By DAVID BAUDER
AP Television Writer |
NEW YORK -
Television became a national gathering place on a terror-filled Tuesday,
replaying unimaginable scenes of a plane crashing into the World Trade Center
and its skyscrapers collapsing. Newspapers rushed out special editions. Many
headlines said simply: "TERROR."
When the first
plane hit the Manhattan landmark shortly before 9 a.m., it set in motion an
extraordinary effort by the media to tell the story.
Catastrophes
unfolded as fast as television could detail them: a plane plunging into the
Pentagon, a crash in Pennsylvania, buildings evacuated across the country.
Commentators tried
to keep calm. "This is the most serious attack on the United States since Pearl
Harbor," said NBC's Tom Brokaw.
Newspapers across
the country put out extras. Eight newspapers in North Carolina alone prepared
special editions - for The Morning Star of Wilmington, it was the first since
the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
Internet traffic
slowed as people sought information online. The Internet search engine Google
directed news seekers to get off the computer and turn on radio or television.
"Many online news
services are not available, because of extremely high demand," said a statement
on Google's home page.
With television
cameras trained on a smoking tower of the World Trade Center after the first
attack, viewers were able to see the chilling sight of the second plane crashing
into the building and exploding in a fireball. Television also carried, live,
the collapse of both towers into a pile of rubble.
As the morning
progressed, networks showed footage of New Yorkers running from the scene, some
bloodied or covered with ash. Streets looked white with ash and soot, a scene
Brokaw likened to "a nuclear winter."
CNN showed a
flight-path simulator that detailed how a plane headed west from Boston took a
sudden, sharp turn south near Albany and headed down the Hudson Valley toward
New York City.
Don Dahler, an ABC
News correspondent, was in his apartment four blocks from the World Trade Center
when he heard the first plane hit. He called "Good Morning America" and was
immediately put on the air.
"It sounded a lot
like a military missile," Dahler said. "There was a high, shrieking sound
followed by a roar then a huge explosion. I knew immediately something terrible
had happened."
The major
television networks suspended competition, agreeing to share all footage
gathered during the terrorist attacks and their aftermath, on suggestion of "60
Minutes" creator Don Hewitt.
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AP
Photo
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| An
emergency worker helps a women after she was injured in
the terrorist on the twin towers. |
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A shaken
Ashleigh Banfield on MSNBC described debris showering around her.
CNBC correspondent Ron Insana, his suit smeared with gray ash, told
how he ran for cover and hid in a parked car when a tower collapsed.
"I've never
seen anything like this," a breathless and sobbing Banfield said.
"This whole place looks like a war zone. When the cloud came out I
could feel the force of it."
The question of how
many people were killed and wounded in the attack hung horrifyingly in the air.
"It seems the hardest thing at the moment is to make an appraisal," said ABC's
Peter Jennings.
With so many events
happening at once, Fox News Channel ran a continous crawl of news bulletins
summarizing the series of events.
C-SPAN took phone
calls from shaken citizens. One caller from California said: "This is a sign to
America: We think we are the strongest country and they hit us; they knew where
to hit us."
Other networks
suspended normal programming. The ESPN sports networks showed ABC News reports,
VH1 showed CBS News programming, TNT and TBS showed CNN coverage. News networks
dispensed with commercials for continuous coverage.
The shopping
networks QVC and ShopNBC network went dark, saying the tragedy had forced them
to suspend programming.
"We share with our
customers and employees, our sadness as well as our thoughts and prayers,"
ShopNBC said in a message.
CNN lost its main
transmitters, stationed atop the World Trade Center. The network lost access to
backup transmitters when the Empire State Building was evacuated, and worked
with satellite trucks at Penn Station. Aaron Brown anchored the network
coverage, his back to where the World Trade Center had been.
MSNBC's Brian
Williams took note of the city's tragically altered skyline: "As it was more
than 30 years ago, the Empire State Buildlng is once again the city's tallest
structure."
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AP writers Frazier
Moore, Douglas J. Rowe and Anick Jesdanun contributed to this report.
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