honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, February 10, 2002

Never-seen-before footage from Sept. 11 will be aired

By David Bauder
Associated Press

CBS will air a two-hour special next month featuring exclusive video shot inside the World Trade Center on Sept. 11 as rescue workers charged in and occupants escaped.

The material, caught on tape by French filmmakers Gedeon and Jules Naudet, is believed to be the only such video available from inside the complex after the planes slammed into it.

It will air March 10, the night before the six-month anniversary of the terrorist attack.

"It's something that's very vivid, very moving and very heroic," said CBS President Leslie Moonves. "I thought it was very important as a broadcaster to show this footage."

The Naudets were in lower Manhattan on the morning of Sept. 11, shooting a documentary on New York City firefighters. Hearing a roar above him, Jules turned his camera toward the sky and caught pictures of the first plane striking the trade center. He later sold the images to a video service and they were widely broadcast.

Both filmmakers rushed to the scene and kept filming, Jules inside the building complex and Gedeon outside. For awhile, neither brother knew whether the other was still alive, Moonves said.

None of this other material has been broadcast. The brothers brokered the deal with CBS through friends at Vanity Fair magazine and its editor, Graydon Carter, who contacted Moonves.

The CBS executive would not say how much the network paid for the material. He said there was no bidding war with other networks.

The video is dramatic but not gruesome, said Susan Zirinsky, the executive producer of the CBS broadcast. "It is remarkable to be in the belly of the beast but it is not difficult to watch," she said.

It's unclear whether the footage will show recognizable images of people who did not survive, which may be upsetting to family members. Firefighters who were at the scene are involved in putting the CBS show together, Moonves said.

The CBS executives said they are sensitive to critics who will be watching to see if the event is exploitative.

"All of us feel humbled by the goal of presenting this in the right way, in the right tone, in the right context," Zirinsky said.