I was working at WRAL-TV in Raleigh that morning. It was a beautiful morning, with a clear, blue sky. I was listening to Turning Point with Dr. David Jeremiah on the 30-minute ride to work on the local BBN affiliate, and there was no break-in about the events unfolding in New York and Arlington.
I first became aware of something happening when I exited the car roughly five or ten minutes before 9 a.m. My supervisor pulled up and said it was going to be a busy day, that a plane had crashed into the World Trade Center. For some reason, I had in my mind some sort of sightseeing plane veering off course, maybe in morning fog. When I entered the TV station, I took my lunch to the breakroom and got my first look on the monitor there of the hole in the North Tower.
At the assignment desk, everyone was watching the smoke pour out of the North Tower on all monitors there. I made a comment about the North Tower supporting all the TV antennae for the NYC market and how those not listening to radio or in sight of the towers may not be aware of what's happening in their city--a comment that fell on deaf ears until a web editor watching said the exact same thing and everyone heard and responded. I think there was some talk about whether this was an accident or something else, maybe even a comment about the Empire State Building being hit by that plane in 1945.
In another minute or two, in an image that will be with me for the rest of my life, a plane appeared to the left of the South Tower and, just as I thought, that's strange, it disappeared into a fireball in the tower--everyone gasped, and knew for sure this was no accident.
As the shock of what i had just seen and was seeing--people jumping from the towers, those on the ground running away, etc., I remember Bob Shieffer on CBS--life from Washington-- saying he didn't want to alarm anyone, but there appeared to be heavy smoke coming from across the river in Virginia--in the direction of the Pentagon. It wasn't long before those images appeared on TV. I recall one of our producers who was usually quite crass and profane in tears.
I don't really remember much about Flight 93, because things got confusing after that. I remember my supervisor telling me to call CBS in New York and book satellite windows--he said to just make up a bogus story name, etc., just make sure we get the windows while we still could--good thinking, because I couldn't get a call into the 212 area code an hour later when additional windows were needed. A reporter who was a NYC native was teamed with a cameraman and sat truck operator and set out for New Jersey to secure a spot across the Hudson, and another team set out for Arlington. Later that day, I would see two national landmarks collapse on live TV.
We received a lot of bizarre telephone calls at the desk, which wasn't unusual, though several from that day stand out: a woman that heard there was some sort of crash in New York but wanted to talk about a corrupt judge in Durham was the first. Someone else took an erroneous call about an explosion at the CIA Headquarters in Langley, Virginia. Later that afternoon, some woman called up the station saying she'd heard on local R&B station Foxy 107 that singer Whitney Houston had died of a drug overdose, another erroneous report out of left field. I didn't check too much into that one as we had much more pressing things to cover.
I called my family to let them know what was going on and to check on them--they were nowhere near New York, Virginia or Pennsylvania, but the emotion of the experience dictated that I do so. One of the reporters' mothers called to let her know that her dad, who worked in the Pentagon, had safely escaped, and I reached her to let her know as soon as possible.
I was there until 6 that day, and remember being mentally exausted when I got home. The events of that day would drive storylines for the next few days, weeks and months. I left there in 2002 for another job, but that day obviously still affects news coverage to this day. Shortly after 9/11, a poster of an American flag replaced one of the station's helicopter (I think) in the back of the newsroom that is framed between the two anchors..it's still there. Our station and all the cable networks adopted the ubiquitous, continuous crawl during that time.
Please forgive the dissertation, but I have a lot of vivid memories of that tragic day, and the unique setting in which I watched those events unfold.