Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was in b-school, in my apartment getting ready to go to class. Was watching the today show and have a distinct memory of Matt Lauer saying as they went to commercial, "When we come back, we have breaking news about a plane crashing into the world trade center." I always felt like that was the last time things were normal. They thought it was an accident and were talking to witnesses to try to figure out if it was a small plane or a big plane or what. Then of course they showed the second one hitting live. I actually think one of the witnesses thought that was ALSO an accident and maybe the pilot had gotten disoriented by the smoke... but the first replay showed that wasn't the case.
I drove into school and everyone was hanging out in the cafeteria watching on TV. Eventually they announced classes were cancelled so I drove to my parents house and hung out with them for the rest of the day.
The first 2 hours of Today Show coverage is on Youtube
Anonymous wrote:I was in b-school, in my apartment getting ready to go to class. Was watching the today show and have a distinct memory of Matt Lauer saying as they went to commercial, "When we come back, we have breaking news about a plane crashing into the world trade center." I always felt like that was the last time things were normal. They thought it was an accident and were talking to witnesses to try to figure out if it was a small plane or a big plane or what. Then of course they showed the second one hitting live. I actually think one of the witnesses thought that was ALSO an accident and maybe the pilot had gotten disoriented by the smoke... but the first replay showed that wasn't the case.
I drove into school and everyone was hanging out in the cafeteria watching on TV. Eventually they announced classes were cancelled so I drove to my parents house and hung out with them for the rest of the day.
Anonymous wrote:Remembering those who died and sacrificed today. I'm always interested to hear people's stories about where they were when 9/11 happened. Feel free to share.
I'll start. It was my first week as a freshman in college in Hartford CT. I had just walked into my morning Psych 101 class and was mindlessly chatting up a friend about a party the night before. The room was eerily quiet, the professor came to the podium and asked us to return to our dorms. We got home, and turned the TV on just in time to see the second plane hit the World Trade Center in real time. It was the most surreal experience of my life. A floor up, someone started blasting "Bombs Over Baghdad" over their stereo.
We then spent the rest of the day lying on the quad (the weather was perfect) wondering if the smoke from Manhattan would drift east over our heads.
Anonymous wrote:Was in the US Capitol watching the second plane hit. The “evacuation” was a total mess. Spent the next three days in secured briefings.
The last plane was coming for the Hill. My entire family owes a debt beyond measure to the people on Flight 93.
The weather today feels a lot like it did that morning (it’s a bit warmer).
20 years. Wow.
Anonymous wrote:In Chicago, having left DC the afternoon before after doing document review for the law firm I was work for, after a week. But it was weird. We were scheduled to leave Sept. 11, for a 9 am flight. But when we finished early, one of the attorney went online and said, "tons of seats on the 5:30 flights, let's get out of here." We scrambled, got to the airport, and changed our flight from the 11th to the 10th. But here's the weird part. No one asked for my I.D. So I said to the ticket agent, "wow, you can change tickets and you don't even ask to see my I.D.?" He just sort of laughed, still didn't ask for my I.D., I got on the plane and went home to Chicago. I met my sister for dinner that night and went on a weird rant about lax airport security is anymore....