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Edited on Sat Aug-27-05 10:35 AM by HamdenRice
In other words, the windows of WNYC looked out over the WTC. They didn't need choppers or reporters -- they just needed to say what they were looking at. Instead they kept the tape on of this idiotic report about the death of the inventor of the bar code scanner.
You have to keep in mind that this was the biggest emergency in NYC's history. People needed to be told where to go, what to do. The idiotic federal government did not cut in with the emergency broadcast system (WTF is that system for if it is not to tell you how to get out of Manhattan on 9/11????), so everyone -- everyone -- was listening to radio and watching TV just to figure out how to save our sorry asses.
Tiny little left wing WBAI which has almost no street reporting, but also had a window over the WTC and just interrupted normal and started telling what was happening, that the subways had been shut down, which bridges you could walk over, whether the govt recommended leaving Manhattan, etc.
WNYC did nothing. They just kept replaying that stupid obit and other fluff pieces.
The next day Brian Lehrer, their newstalk day guy explained that they all watched the disaster in real time. They also have radio and TV from other stations. Yet the staff of WNYC never just cut into the damned tape feed from NPR in DC to say what was happening.
Also NPR never cut in from DC to say what they were seeing on real time TV. There even was I think a WNYC reporter in New Jersey trying to get on air over the NPR feed to explain what was happening, but they made the decision to ignore the biggest story except for Pearl Harbor, of the 20th century.
They never admitted it publicly, but that's why drink besotted Bob Edwards was fired. He was the editor, not just on air reporter, of Morning Edition. It was gossiped in the NY Times media pages that he was fired because of his decision not to report about the attacks on 9/11.
That was not just bad journalism; that was criminally irresponsible, and I have never forgiven them for what they did that morning.
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