This is on topic/but off subject, but on 9/11 I remember waking up in my dorm room, turning on the TV, and seeing one of the Towers had been hit. Thinking that is was a plane that lost control, I made my way to the campus cafe to grab a quick breakfast before class. While there the lunch lady was trying to tell me that the WTC was in Worcester Ma (Keep in mind I am in college in Fitchburg MA, roughly 40min away from Worcester MA, and about 3.5hrs away from NY. You would think the lady would know her surroundings.) So I got to my class (Communication Law and Ethics if I remember correctly) and about 20min into class a janitor comes in and says that the 2nd tower has just been hit, and that school is closed. Also, per order all state buildings were to be evacuated, especially tall buildings(like my dorm at the time). So here is an entire campus with all classes canceled, and the kids that lived on campus (such as myself) were not allowed back in the dorms. They opened the rec center for people to spend the night at incase they could not get home for any reason. At that point, about 4 or 5 of my buddies and I went to a friend's house, and were glued to the TV til we got a phone call saying that we could go back to our dorm rooms. I wish I could remember what I was playing on Boston radio at the time, or even my campus station, but I cannot. I think @ that point I was a little pre-occupied with the situation.
Funny side note: my mom called me that day and said that she wanted me to move to my uncle's home in Canada. She told me she knew ways that she could get me across the border. I love my Canadian-born mother. Very protective of her son, but also a tad over-re active at times. She was very adamant about this for a little while after 9/11 to.
> I was the first one on to go back live on the air after the
> attacks.
>
> Keep in mind, at the time FM99 WNOR in Norfolk/VA Beach was
> the big dog in a town that housed the largest naval base in
> the world.
>
> To say I was a bit intimadated is not saying enough.
>
> I opened up the phone lines and just let the listeners vent.
>
>
> I remember this was a very uncomfortable experience for me
> considering back then my show was even more juvenile than it
> is now.
>
> To make a long story short I threw away the tape.
>
> That was flippin stupid.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > > This might be a dup post. I had trouble earlier.
> > September
> > > 11 has been back in the news lately, because of dispatch
>
> > > tapes being made public. This got me to thinking. I
> know
> >
> > > the horror started early that morning and most stations
> > went
> > > to national news. I was curious if anyone had local
> > aircheck
> > > tapes of that day. Also, if anyone had any stories of
> > being
> > > on air or at the station that sad day.
> > >
> >
> > Forgive me if this goes into semi-rant.
> >
> > Here's the thing I remember most about September
> 11th...the
> > day before, I wrote an email to Mike & Mike on ESPN Radio
> > saying how I didn't want Barry Bonds to take the single
> > season homerun record and it was read on the air on my way
>
> > to work. How little that mattered 24 hours later...
> >
> > Anyway, I was PD/Morning Guy at KSUD at the time. This is
>
> > where it goes into semi-rant, because my fair GM didn't
> see
> > the need to have a working television on the premises.
> Any
> > news I got at any time came from the internet or from
> > talking with the traffic person (Heather).
> >
> > 7:45am (I think), Heather tells me that one of the Trade
> > Center Buildings was hit. Honestly, my reaction was to
> > shrug it off at the time. I didn't see it, so I thought
> it
> > may have been an overreaction. By 8:15, that was changed
> as
> > I tried to find out what was going on. The problem was
> that
> > we went into paid programming at 8:30. And my GM didn't
> > want to have to pay back anyone, so we didn't pre-empt
> > ANYTHING.
> >
> > My morning consisted of getting news from Foxnews.com,
> > cnn.com and listening to WREC...laughable, obviously. And
>
> > between every program, I would try to update people on
> what
> > was happening. I remember distinctly telling people to
> turn
> > us off and to turn on their TVs or to go to WREC. Our
> > programming was going to still be there when they came
> back.
> > But everyone needed to be informed in a way that I
> couldn't
> > provide that day.
> >
> > Overall, looking back, I am disappointed in our coverage.
> I
> > don't know what I could have done differently, but the GM
> > really killed any chance of us doing anything significant.
>
> >
>
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Your Mom Goes To College</P>