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Internet Archive Compiles 3,000 Hours Of 9/11 Television Coverage

First Posted: 09/06/11 08:44 AM ET Updated: 11/06/11 05:12 AM ET

Internet 911

By DAVID BAUDER, Associated Press

NEW YORK — For many in New York and Washington, Sept. 11, 2001, was a personal experience, an attack on their cities. Most everywhere else in the world, it was a television event.

TV's commemoration as the 10th anniversary approaches on Sunday puts that day in many different contexts. There is one place, however, for people to see the Sept. 11 attacks and the week after as they unfolded, without any filters.

The Internet Archive, a California-based organization that collects audio, moving images and Web pages for historical purposes, has put together a television news archive of that day's coverage.

More than 20 channels were recorded with more than 3,000 hours of television. Besides major U.S. networks like ABC, CBS, CNN and NBC, the Internet Archive has posted online TV recordings from Moscow, Paris, London, Baghdad, Tokyo, Ottawa and elsewhere.

The site is available at . http://www.archive.org/details/911/day

The material is valuable to researchers, but the Internet Archive wanted to make it easy to use so the general public can go back and see what that day was like, said Brewster Kahle, the organization's director.

"It is one of the top four or five events that have happened on television," Kahle said. "You can think of putting a man on the moon, the Watergate hearings, the Kennedy assassination. I'm hopeful that people will come to this and make their own decisions about how they want to think about it, as opposed to politicians who have been pushing and pulling the event for years."

The archive begins at 8 a.m. ET, or 46 minutes before American Airlines Flight 11 crashed into the North Tower of the World Trade Center.

That alone is interesting for the striking contrast it provides with the last seemingly carefree moments before several tough years. On NBC's "Today" show, Katie Couric talks brightly of "a beautiful fall morning in Manhattan" and the camera pans to a cheering crowd. Charles Gibson mocks his "Good Morning America" colleague Diane Sawyer for writing notes on her hand, and ABC's Claire Shipman said the biggest news in Washington was Michael Jordan giving hints he might return to the basketball court.

Out of a commercial late in the morning shows, even cutting one commercial short on CNN, suddenly came camera shots of a burning World Trade Center, ones that would dominate screens for several hours.

Newscasters were careful before the story became clear. Matt Lauer initially called it an "accident." Morning shows effectively used phone calls from eyewitnesses adding details beyond the faraway camera shots. "It's mind-boggling and it's horrifying," one witness, Jennifer Oberstein, told Lauer.

Then came one of many unthinkable moments: a second plane darting into pictures and crashing into the second tower, exploding in a fireball and falling debris.

"We just saw another plane coming in to the other side," Gibson said. "This looks like there is some sort of concerted effort to attack the World Trade Center that is underway."

Later, when the towers collapsed, one after the other, it seemed so inconceivable that anchors initially couldn't grasp what viewers had seen on the screen. NBC's Tom Brokaw talked of structural damage so severe that the buildings would probably have to be brought down – after one of them already came down on its own.

"The whole side has collapsed," ABC's Peter Jennings said when the first tower came down.

"The whole building has collapsed," ABC's reporter on the scene, Don Dahler, corrected him.

"The whole building has collapsed?" Jennings responded.

CNN's Aaron Brown responded with the horror most viewers no doubt felt when the second tower fell. "Good lord," he said. "There are no words."

"The landscape of New York has just been changed and you have to presume that thousands of lives have been extinguished," Jennings said.

In those early hours, ABC's John Miller and NBC's Andrea Mitchell had raised the name of Osama bin Laden as possibly the man behind the attacks, even as the networks reported the false claim of a Palestinian organization taking credit.

Also interesting are the perspectives from overseas. The BBC in London, for example, showed video of people jumping or falling from the towers – images that American networks stayed away from. In Moscow, a newscaster who broke into a program to report on the towers collapsing displayed a voice halting with emotion.

The site is easy to navigate, with timelines that direct users to specific events of the morning, such as when the second plane hit the trade center and when each tower collapsed. It can be frustrating to use, however, as the video is displayed in 30- or 40-second blocks instead of continuous streams. And there are occasional gaps; large portions of CBS' coverage is missing, for example.

Kahle said he believed it was important to provide this resource. There are surprisingly few ways for people to go back and see television news reports, at least compared to print, he noted.

"It is so important yet it has been, up until now, quite ephemeral," he said.

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By DAVID BAUDER, Associated Press NEW YORK — For many in New York and Washington, Sept. 11, 2001, was a personal experience, an attack on their cities. Most everywhere else in the world, it was a...
By DAVID BAUDER, Associated Press NEW YORK — For many in New York and Washington, Sept. 11, 2001, was a personal experience, an attack on their cities. Most everywhere else in the world, it was a...
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06:03 AM on 09/10/2011
Although I was not directly effected by 9/11 my heart still goes out to each and every person who was in those buildings and planes. They did not ask to die the way they did and I doubt that any of us has any idea what was going on in their minds prior to their deaths. What really hit the hardest is watching those brave people who took their chances with fate and jumped. We all have probably tried to imagine what they thought when they made that decision to commit such a hard act. We do not know how they felt , the fear, physical pain for some, and just the idea of not being able to breath. So for one minute let us all come to one unanimous consensuses that people respond differently to 9/11. So if you can handle reading and watching these or any videos for that matter do so and for those who can't my heart goes out to you..
05:56 AM on 09/10/2011
after watching the film on how it was done on nat geo i think - learned things about the hijackers that i did not know before - and how easy it was for them to get on every plane with those knives - did the airlines ever think why someone would need a box cutter or small knife on an airplane - sure didnt make sense to me then as of now they cant have them - i guess we still have to do racial profiling at airports since all the 9/11 attackers were of arab decent - now they are looking for 3 men and say 2 are americans - sad to think more people hate america enough to kill more innocent people - i am glad they rebuilt the tower and the memorial center - it was needed for the victims and for the survivors and for the rest of us - look how pearl harbor was turned into a memorial and still gets thousands of visitors every year - we cannot ever forget those who died in those towers and the pentagon and the field in pennsylvania - they all died for their country - they are all heroes whether they were office workers or military people or firemen and policemen just doing their job - they are still heroes and all deserve to be remembered -
05:45 AM on 09/10/2011
i started taping as soon as i heard about first plane so i have everything live as it happened when 2nd plane hit the tower - and i have abc with peter jennings - best coverage - and the 3 shows i think it was, that diane sawyer did with the children from 9/11 - the best ever
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lthrnck68
Reading IS
06:56 PM on 09/09/2011
Oh goody! Now there's a single web site I can ignore. For three days all we got was 9/11 coverage on just about every channel. For three days I did not watch TV at all. I'll remember what happened without the reminders.
04:48 PM on 09/09/2011
I think that one of the reasons many people want to relive this tragedy is because it was the one time in our lives where America was truly united. We had not yet begun to play the "blame game". There were no Democrats or Republicans. No liberals or conservatives. Whether we liked him or not, we were all united behind our president. Reliving it helps bring back that feeling of oneness. This tragedy should have taught us a lesson. Unfortunately, it didn't. Read the posts on this website. Everyone calling each other names, blaming the liberals, blaming the conservatives. Rich Republicans, lazy Democrats. And I'm just as guilty as everyone else. I need to be reminded every now and then that we truly are in this together. "A house divided against itself cannot stand." Abraham Lincoln.
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Seawolf56
Truth should never be censored
02:44 PM on 09/09/2011
Ask youself one question. Why was America attacked???? THe answer was given during the 911 commision,

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J1bm2GPoFfg
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dave0mary
As the media goes, so goes America
02:10 PM on 09/09/2011
Jesus Christ died for our sins; the military dies for our freedom. Thank you both for your sacrifice.
02:48 PM on 09/09/2011
if someone else died for my sins then i got it made
01:18 PM on 09/09/2011
I have never watched the planes hit the towers, pentagon or the field in PA. In 2001 I turned off the TV until the coverage was done (which was way to long) because I believed it was giving the terriorists what they wanted--media coverage! I still to believe that by the continual coverage of these events we are again playing into the hands of the terrorists. We need to let this go. It was a horrific event that should not be replayed. IT IS TIME TO MOVE ON JUST AS IT WAS TIME TO MOVE ON 10 YEARS AGO. Nothing that is done is going to bring those killed back. Life if for the living so lets get one with it!!!!
03:03 PM on 09/09/2011
It really isn't about the terrorists or terrorism. This is for people who need to remember so that they can confront and deal with their own feelings about what happened. It is about grieving and healing. People have and do move on, but if you have ever lost someone close enough to you, you know that grief and healing take a life time, not just a day, week, month, or year. I've lost people years ago I'm still hurting over. I live happily, enjoy my life, but some days are meant for them. For remembering them and their lives and even their deaths. Turning a blind eye to it because it is too painful, isn't healthy either. I agree that going overboard with media coverage is wrong. But going the complete opposite is wrong too. Never tell a grieving person to 'move on'. It really is a life long process and sometimes they do need to cry. It's very healthy.
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Louie Rey
01:15 PM on 09/09/2011
In July of 2000 my wife and I were on vacation in Italy. We went on an excursion while there and we met people, from among other places in the world, two women from South Africa who happened to have a time share from which they schedule safaris. That's the one dream vacation that my wife and I'd like to take. We exchanged addresses and they said they'd mail us information about their place. We anxiously awaited their correspondence but it never came. About a month after 9/11 we got an airmail letter (the ones with the blue striped border) and it was from them. They said that they watched the attacks and said that the whole world was in mourning for us. The world looks to America for hope and they were truly affected by the attacks.
12:05 PM on 09/09/2011
I was on th ephone with one of my freinds which worked ofr the Airlines.. She was watching the tele when the first announcement came on .. About half an hoiur later my boss called me and told me that our offices had shut down and not to come to work. I will never forget what happen that day. I learned a lot about what happen and I cn assure you it did not come from maistram media .. I have all the einformation on file ....
05:53 PM on 09/08/2011
What is really interesting, is that everyone that questions the official story is a kid, or quak, or something, but when we ask them to just explain something simple, they get quiet. Why is that? Anyone?
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bmwracer
In the LEFT lane.
11:23 PM on 09/07/2011
Textbook example of media excess.

This is really morbid.
11:19 AM on 09/07/2011
Ten years on and any excuse to milk this attack. It was one of the pretexts for two middle-eastern wars, no doubt it will be added to the narrative of middle-eastern intervention whenever public opinion runs against the government. Seeing as Bin Laden was a major factor in John Dough's need to continue over there, they need to revert back to the images of something that happened 10 years ago for their imperialistic march. How many middle-eastern people have died as a direct result of US intervention in the last 10 years? Where is the footage for the civillian deaths? Hidden that's where.

Mark at http://www.idgconnect.com/blog
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onlythetruthcounts
Golden Rule: whoever got the gold, rule.
09:10 PM on 09/06/2011
I was sitting on my couch watching CNN as it all happened on that bright sunny day. I remember being terrified of what malice would happen next. Remember at that time no one knew how many planes and attacks there would be or where, for all I knew at the time there could have been dozens of attacks all across the nation. I started to watch the video to this story but stopped it after a few seconds. I don't want to see it again, once was enough.
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tnrc75
My micro-bio is not empty
04:51 AM on 09/08/2011
I was unemployed at the time and woke up 9 a.m Pacific so everything had already happened. I remember the shock of watching the planes flying into the buildings and seeing people jumping from the building. The whole afternoon MSNBC and CNN were interviewing people who had exited the building or who had left buildings close by, many of whom were covered in that dust. Also images that will forever stay with me: the posters that family members of people who had been working in the WTCs put up. The journalists' interviews with the family members were heartbreaking. It was horrific TV to watch but you couldn't turn away from it.
08:39 PM on 09/06/2011
To all our Military, past and present, thank you. To the living victims of 9/11 and the families of the victims, God bless you. And to the deceased victims and the heroic rescuers, thank you, God bless you, and rest in peace.