Imperial Valley Press

Three men guided millions through horror of Sept. 11, 2001

-

NEW YORK (AP) — “Turn on your television.”

Those words were repeated in millions of homes on Sept. 11, 2001. Friends and relatives took to the telephone: Something awful was happening. You have to see.

Before social media and with online news in its infancy, the story of the day when suicide terrorists killed 2,996 people unfolded primarily on television. Even some people inside New York’s World Trade Center made the phone call. They felt a shudder, could smell smoke. Could someone watch the news and find out what was happening?

Most Americans were guided through the unimaginab­le by one of three men: Tom Brokaw of NBC News, Peter Jennings of ABC and Dan Rather of CBS.

“They were the closest thing that America had to national leaders on 9/11,” says Garrett Graff, author of “The Only Plane in the Sky,” an oral history of the attack. “They were the moral authority for the country on that first day, fulfilling a very historical role of basically counseling the country through this tragedy at a moment its political leadership was largely silent and largely absent from the conversati­on.”

On that day, when America faced the worst of humanity, it had three newsmen at the peak of their powers.

They were far from the only journalist­s on the air — CNN’s Aaron Brown memorably narrated the scene from a New York rooftop, Univision’s Jorge Ramos brought the story to Spanish-speaking viewers, an array of anchors sat at the desks of other outlets.

But Brokaw, Rather and Jennings were the kings of broadcast news on Sept. 11, 2001. Each had anchored his network’s evening newscasts for roughly two decades at that point. Each had extensive reporting experience before that.

“The three of us were known because we had taken the country through other catastroph­es and big events,” Brokaw recalled this summer. “The country didn’t have to, if you will, dial around to see who knew what.”

Each man was in New York that morning and rushed to their respective studios within an hour of the first plane hitting the World Trade Center at 8:46 a.m.

“It was clear that it was an attack on America,” says Marcy McGinnis, who was in charge of breaking news at CBS that day. “You want the most experience­d person in that chair because they bring so much.”

It’s hard to convey the confusion and anxiety they stepped into. The unbelievab­le was happening.

“The country needed some sort of stability, some sort of ground,” says David Westin, ABC News president at the time. “Where are we? What’s going on? How bad can this get? It needed some sense of ‘there’s some things we do know and some things we don’t know. But this is how we go forward from here.’”

Those are usually duties handled by politician­s who take to the airwaves at the first sign of a wildfire, hurricane, pandemic or some other disaster. Yet government leaders, including President George W. Bush, were kept out of sight for much of the day until it was clear the attack was over.

Each anchor exhibited particular strengths that day.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Dan Rather poses in a CBS studio in New York In 2001 (left) Peter Jennings poses on the set of ABC’s “World News Tonight” in New York In 2001 (center) and “NBC Nightly News” anchor Tom Brokaw delivers his closing remarks during his final broadcast, in New York In 2004.
AP PHOTO Dan Rather poses in a CBS studio in New York In 2001 (left) Peter Jennings poses on the set of ABC’s “World News Tonight” in New York In 2001 (center) and “NBC Nightly News” anchor Tom Brokaw delivers his closing remarks during his final broadcast, in New York In 2004.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States