Remembering September 11, 2001. My Experience In New York That Week, From Howard Stern’s Studio To Meeting Bill Clinton…  

Twenty-Two Years On…

I was in New York on September 11, 2001 – until last year, I’d never posted about that day…but, on this anniversary twenty two years later, I wanted to share once again what I experienced on that horrific day – and gave credit to some of the people who were there with me.

On that tragic day, I was Senior Vice President of Programming for E! Entertainment Television, as well as the Executive Producer of Howard Stern’s E! TV show.

In 1994, I worked with a great team that launched the show – capturing everything that happened on his radio show and airing it as a TV show: we installed 7 robotic cameras in his radio studio – a studio that, at that time was shared with the other DJ’s at the station.

That radio studio at the time was so small that, whenever Howard had a band in, the drummer had to set up in the hallway!

We built a small production studio in a closet – thanks to the technical wizardry and leadership of Bob Baskerville to make that happen..

As the show, and E! both grew, we built Howard a brand new radio studio that also outfitted with TV cameras as well.

Howard was a consummate professional to work with, as was his Producer Gary Dell-Abate, Robin Quivers and Fred Norris as well.

This is a picture of me from the air check I have of that entire day. On the morning of September 11 2001, Howard brought me into the studio at around 8:15a ET – he gave me a chance to promote my wife’s new syndicated dating show, “elimiDATE.”

I walked out of the studio around 8:35a, excited to call my wife a few hours later so she could hear it – she was in Seattle for “elimiDATE” filming.

Moments later, Scott The Engineer came into our control room on the way to Howard’s studio with this comment:

“A small plane hit the World Trade Center.”

Moments later Howard interrupted his show to report the same thing on the air – and for the next 6+ hours, Howard stayed on the radio live as the horrific events of that day unfolded.

Since Manhattan was locked down, for the rest of that week, the E! team worked with Gary and his available team to put Howard’s radio show on the air every day. Bravo to Gary for showing his true leadership skills in handling such a difficult time.

Howard’s listeners needed him to talk about the unfolding events in the city.

On that first night, as the city was struggling to comprehend the horrific events of that day, I stood on 5th avenue and looked south: it was obscured with dust, sitting stagnant in the air. The city was in shock.

E’s sister station was the style network. There were many style employees in town to cover Fashion Week, and E!’s head of Marketing, Stephen Croncota was there overseeing it.

Stephen showed incredible leadership as he organized a plan to find a way to get buses to the hotel to begin taking the employees cross country back to Los Angeles.

There were others there in “leadership” roles as well – but they didn’t show any of it. Stephen did – a consummate professional under the most trying of times – and I wanted to thank him again for his role over those next few days.

By that Friday, we had gotten all E! and style employees out of the city. I was the last one in town, and after we finished with Howard’s radio show, the New York based staff all went home.

These Are My Photos From That Day…

I left the studio in mid-town and began walking south, a brown haze still in the air. Suddenly a mass of people were running toward me, and one person shouted: “There’s a bomb!” as he raced by.

It wasn’t true, but that was the level of anxiety and confusion that was still pervasive in the city.

I kept heading south, ultimately walking down to Union Square on E. 14th street. These are my photos from that day, which I have never shared before. This is what I experienced in the next hour:

Butcher block paper was laid out everywhere on the ground, being signed by countless people, messages paying homage to those who lost their lives, and mourning those still missing…

It was there the police had blocked off streets south toward the site of the attack. I walked along 14th, going west when I saw one street open.

A mass of people were slowly moving through the street, clearly following a single person in the middle of the crowd.

Cheers were coming from the crowd, as well as people looking down from the many apartment buildings that lined the narrow street.

I couldn’t tell who it was at first, but the ongoing cheers around a single figure was mesmerizing. I called my wife, now back in Los Angeles after her own harrowing post-9/11 staff bus trip from Seattle, and held the phone up so she could hear the crowd.

As they cheered again, I looked to my left, and standing just a few feet away from was Chelsea Clinton.

She was watching her father, the former President of the United States, walking with the crowd…he was there to offer solace.

I watched for several minutes as we slowly moved south along this street, which had been blocked off to all traffic. Suddenly I heard a police siren blare loudly.

A screaming police car sped toward us on the street, and everyone quickly backed up to clear the street. I found myself pressed against a parked car, tightly wedged in among the crowd.

Suddenly, pressed up against me, surrounded by two Secret Service agents, was Bill Clinton.

After the car passed, he stepped back, shook my hand, said a few words and moved on to others in the crowd.

I kept watching as he spoke to hundreds of people, offering solace…I will never forget that moment, and how healing his appearance had been.

As I said, I’d never shared these photos or these memories of that day, and I still will never look at any of the footage of the attack, the destruction, or the pain caused to all of those impacted…the horror of what happened – and the loss of innocent life – was something I didn’t want to re-experience…but after twenty+ years, I have thought about the events at that time, and those who stepped up at a crucial time, and that’s what I wanted to share….

The following year, Bruce Springsteen released his brilliant album called “The Rising”, which looked at 9/11 and the impact it had on our country and the world. 

If you haven’t heard it, it’s powerful, difficult at times, and also inspiring in a healing way.

You can hear the title track and more about the album here:

I know that many experienced this tragedy up close, and lost loved ones as well.

It changed the course of our country’s history forever…now 22 years later, sad to reflect on the day in 2021 when some of our own fellow citizens tried to overthrow our government with a terrorist attack of their own – Americans against Americans, and many of us shockingly think it was justified…



Categories: Memoirs, New York, Travel Memoir, TV Show

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

25 replies

  1. Do you have any say when will the full camera recording of the September 11, 2001 show will be released in any other way, despite the data being under Sirius XM? There’s a legion of Stern fans and those in the lost media community clamoring see this particular broadcast…

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Thank you for sharing these photos. It’s so brave of you to look back the tragedy especially you’re in close to the place.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Thank you for sharing this unbelievably horrific experience.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. I remember you sharing this moving post from last year. Thanks for doing so again.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. this is so very moving and brought me to tears. I remember Springsteen singing that live on tv not long after. thank you for sharing your personal story of that day. it is truly a day I will never, ever forget. I think we all remember so many things from that day when our world changed forever. it’s always interesting to me how some rise up, and others fall by the wayside when there is a crisis.

    Liked by 1 person

  6. That day is imprinted on your memory.

    Like

  7. Thanks for sharing your experience of that terrible day in a sober, dignified way. We will never forget.

    Liked by 1 person

  8. Thanks for sharing. What a sobering account of a horrible time in our history. I remember it well although I was just a college student riding the bus…everyone was talking about it and my first thought was “How has everyone on this bus somehow seen the same movie?” yipes.

    Liked by 1 person

  9. Thanks immensely, John, for sharing that personal experience of that event.

    Liked by 1 person

  10. A lovely post, John, filled with heartfelt personal memories.

    The Rising was an amazing tribute to what that day meant to so many. Less well known is this one by Mary Chapin Carpenter, which I think fits your words well:

    Liked by 1 person

  11. John, this is such a deeply moving post. Thank you for sharing your personal story and photos. I was struck by the one photo that depicted a small American flag rising and waving above the crowd. Thank goodness for heroes.

    Liked by 1 person

  12. John, I’m in tears. Thank you, after all these years, for sharing this piece of history with us. Your pictures and experiences help me honor the feelings and emotions, shared across the country, for that day. I can’t imagine being there when it happened. It made my heart happy to hear that the leader with you handled it so beautifully. I can imagine the opposite. That day is seared in the hearts and minds of all of us. Or it should. I have this feeling that you were there for a reason in helping Howard, and others. And your wife, from her distance and experience, will forever remember what you shared with her. It’s humbling to read this, John. Thank you. I honor those who lost their lives, and the victims remaining today. 🙏🏻❤️

    Like

  13. Oh my. This post made me cry. Watching things unfold on TV, from a distance, was one thing, but to be in the city at that time would be something else. Bill Clinton is a class act and you were fortunate to have been in his presence. Thanks for sharing this, John.

    Liked by 1 person

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