Talk:List of cultural references to the September 11 attacks/Archive 1
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Archive 1 |
Trivia and unsourced
Much of the following qualifies either as trivia or lacks sources. See Wikipedia:Trivia sections and Wikipedia:Verifiability. The trivia should be turned into paragraphs which develop the central topic before being restored and everything needs to be sourced. -Classicfilms (talk) 04:00, 24 June 2009 (UTC)
Film-related videogames
- Spider-Man 2: Enter Electro was recalled, as the game's climactic final battle took place on the North Tower. The game was released with the battle taking place in a new location.
Initial reaction
Hollywood's first reaction to the September 11 attacks was to alter, delay or even cancel films that unintentionally evoked the disaster.
- Zoolander and Serendipity digitally removed images of the World Trade Center towers.
- Men in Black II had to reshoot its climax, which was originally set at the World Trade Center.
- The remake of The Time Machine removed a scene in which the damaged moon fell to earth and devastated New York City.
- A trailer for Spider-Man was pulled that featured the title character catching a getaway helicopter in a web between the two towers — a sequence that was never intended to appear in the film.
- Big Trouble, Heist, Bad Company, Sidewalks of New York, and Collateral Damage all had their release dates pushed back.
- The Jackie Chan film Nosebleed, about a window washer who foils a plot to blow up the World Trade Center, was cancelled entirely.
- The 2002 videogame Microsoft Flight Simulator removed the World Trade Center from its default scenery file.
- Most TV channels like FX, HBO, and A&E Network had to pull off some movies during the week of 9/11 due to the September 11 attack. Escape From New York was going to be play on the Thursday night on HBO but they pull it off due to the hijacked plane wreckage scene in the movie. FX also had to pull off Air Force One, Independence Day, The Siege and Die Hard with a Vengeance during the same weekend as well.
- A scene from the animated film Lilo & Stitch originally featured the main character stealing a 747 and joyriding through office and hotel towers of Honolulu; The scene was revised to show a spaceship racing through clouds and a valley. The original scene will be included on a later DVD release.
- Ocean's 11 also had to do damage control, after the cover picture showed two big 1's (11) on the floor.
- In the DVD commentary for Day After Tomorrow, director Roland Emmerich noted that he likely would not have made the 1996 disaster film Independence Day after the 9/11 attacks. The film features an alien invasion using walls of fire to destroy cities. Somewhat ironically in the film, after New York City is devastated after the alien attacks, the World Trade Center twin towers were some of the only buildings left standing.
- Director Peter Jackson considered changing the name of The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers, which was released in 2002, but ultimately decided against it, knowing fans of the books would not be supportive.
- The video game Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty was re-edited, to remove footage of Arsenal Gear smashing through Manhattan in which there was a clearly visible World Trade Center in the sequence. Other scenes taken out included a news report of the devastation, and a scene showing the Statue of Liberty knocked down.
- The television show Sex and the City edited its opening credits to remove the World Trade Center.
- The televisions series Law & Order (also Law & Order: Criminal Intent and Law & Order: Special Victims Unit) changes their opening credits to remove the World Trade Center footage.
- The television show The Sopranos edited its opening credits to remove the World Trade Center.
- A scene from the movie Home Alone 2: Lost in New York, featuring character Kevin McCallister looking out over New York from the top of the South Tower's observation deck is immediately followed with the words "Airport Security." This scene was edited out of cable TV showings of the film.
- The video game Syphon Filter 3 was delayed a month from its September, 2001 launch date in order to re-configure the game's advertising material due to part of its context involving terrorism and Afghanistan.
- The television show Evil Con Carne had to edit a scene from the episode The Smell of Vengeance, Part 1 because it showed Hector's stink ray hitting New York City and the World Trade Center.
- The animated TV series The Tick removed a scene in the episode "The Tick vs. The Proto-Clown," that showed two towers collapsing, shown on Toon Disney. The original scene was included on the DVD release of the first season of "The Tick vs. Season One."
- The Critic removed the Twin Towers from the opening sequence and the title card is close up.
- TV sitcom Friends had to reshoot a storyline which was originally meant to show the characters Chandler Bing and Monica Geller get arrested at the airport on their way to their honeymoon when Chandler Bing makes a joke about bombs.
Television
- The pilot episode of The Lone Gunmen presaged the attacks on the WTC. The plot dealt with a plane hijacked by the US government using remote control to fly it into the World Trade Center. The eerily prescient episode aired on 4 March 2001.
- The drama series The West Wing was one of the first television productions to respond to 9/11, airing a special episode, "Isaac and Ishmael", a few weeks later, ahead of its planned season three premiere. The lead characters discuss terrorism with a party of schoolchildren. It was written and filmed within two weeks of the attacks, which do not occur in the show's timeline.
- Third Watch — a drama series about New York City police officers, firefighters and paramedics — aired a special documentary episode a few weeks after the attacks in which real-life firefighters and police discussed 9/11. In the ensuing seasons, a number of episodes were devoted to the aftermath of the attacks and its effect on the characters.
- During the first two seasons of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, the opening credits featured scenes of the Manhattan skyline which included the World Trade Center. During the third season, the pictures were replaced with different ones, without the Twin Towers.
- The military-themed series JAG was forced to retool its storylines to reflect the War on Terrorism and subsequent invasion of Afghanistan; one ongoing character loses a leg as a result of this storyline.
- The spy drama Alias debuted a few weeks after 9/11. An early episode includes a reference to the Department of Homeland Security, although references to 9/11 are not directly made initially.
- The 2003-2004 season of the science fiction series Star Trek: Enterprise was a War on Terrorism-based story arc that began with a devastating attack on Earth by an alien probe, an event inspired by 9/11. The 2004 episode "Storm Front, Part II" includes an image of the burning World Trade Center as part of a tableau of history.
- In the action series 24, scenes from the first episode of the first season, in which an airliner is destroyed by a terrorist, were edited to be more palatable soon after the 9/11 attacks.
- On October 11, 2006, the Comedy Central series South Park showed its then-newest episode, "Mystery of the Urinal Deuce". In the episode, Cartman does a slideshow for show-and-tell that blames Kyle for 9/11, using rather inane numerology involving the score Kyle got on a test on the day of 9/11. Stan helps Kyle shed the blame. It deals with the 9/11 conspiracies. The character Butters is also revealed to have his birthday on September 11. Having a birthday the same date as a national time of crisis (as of 2001) is one of the many misfortunes Butters has to deal with. In another episode, when the boys try to build a ladder to Heaven to speak to the deceased Kenny (only because they think he knows the whereabouts of a lost candy raffle ticket), Alan Jackson shows up and promotes his new song based on his post-9/11 song "Where Were You (When the World Stop Turning)".
- The FX Show Rescue Me, a show about firefighters in New York, regularly references 9/11, including how the main character's cousin and several co-workers died in the attacks.
- An episode of Spider-Man: The Animated Series was edited due to a scene where a helicopter crashes into one of the Twin Towers.
- Friends episode "The One Where Rachel Tells Ross" was to contain a scene at the airport as Monica Geller and Chandler Bing go through the security checkpoint. Chandler makes light of a sign that reads, "No joking about bombs" and suggests that it should read, "No bombs." The two are then held at the airport as their baggage is being inspected. The original scene can be seen on the eighth season DVD extras.
- During episodes of Friends following the attacks, Chandler's magnetic drawing board had a rough sketch of the attacks on the towers.
- WWE SmackDown! on September 13 was dedicated to the 9-11 attacks. It started with Vince McMahon giving a very patriotic and heartfelt intro speech. Throughout the show, several superstars voiced their reactions to the attack.
- It was revealed in CSI: NY that Mac Taylor's wife Claire also died on the 9-11 attack.
- In Brothers & Sisters, the character Kitty returns home in California to live with her family after 9/11/2001.
- In the unaired pilot of Heroes, it features a subplot with a terrorist known as the engineer with radioactive powers. On September 10, 2001, he fell in love with an American girl and did not go through the 9/11 attacks with the others. Elements of this character were used in the new character, Ted Sprague.
- On several occasions, television series featuring plotlines involving time travel or loss of memory have used as a dramatic plot element characters learning about the events of 9/11 and their reactions. Two examples of this are "Hiatus Part 1", an episode of NCIS in which an amnesiac Leroy Jethro Gibbs temporarily loses more than a decade of his memories and is told of the attacks by a colleague, and "Gnothi Seauton", the second episode of Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles in which Sarah Connor, having been transported through time from 1999 to 2007, is told about the attacks and likens them to the apocalypse she's trying to prevent.
- In 2007, All My Children introduces the character Dre Woods (Sterling Sulieman), a teenage musician whose mother died when the South Tower of the WTC collapsed. In dealing with his grief, he became estranged from his father Samuel Woods (Mario Van Peebles), who is introduced in early 2008.
- The Path to 9/11
- Much of the first season of Rescue Me deals with firefighters living in post-9/11 New York. Later season make further references to it including a flashback to that day and the crew visits Ground Zero at the end of the third season.
- In the season finale of Fringe, Olivia Dunham is transported to a parallel universe in which the Twin Towers were not destroyed in the attacks. It is implied that the White House was attacked in place of the World Trade Center.
References to 9/11
- In the Korean revenge-drama Oldboy, footage from the attacks is used to mark the passage of time during the main character's imprisonment.
- In Final Destination 3 it is implied that there was a shadow of a plane on the towers in a picture, said to be a sign of the death that would take place. The picture was created digitally for the movie.
- John Cameron Mitchell's controversial film Shortbus contains several metaphorical references to the attacks.
- In the 2006 remake of the horror film The Omen the elders list a number of national disasters, among them the fall of the WTC, as well as Hurricane Katrina and the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake.
- In the 2006 James Bond film Casino Royale, the main villain Le Chiffre is mentioned as having shorted certain airline stocks with prior knowledge of the attacks for his own monetary gain after they had occurred. The previous Bond film, Die Another Day, does not reference the attacks directly, but opens with Bond being captured and held in North Korea for 14 months—spanning the time of the attacks. After he is released, his boss tells him "the world has changed while you were away."
- Steven Spielberg's War of the Worlds is set post 9/11, and makes numerous references to the event.
- Battle Royale II: Requiem is seen as a reaction to 9/11, featuring two buildings collapsing simultaneously in Tokyo, alluding to the collapse of the World Trade Center.
- The documentary Words of My Perfect Teacher, by Leslie Ann Patten, shows images of the Trade Center collapsing as well as the public's reaction to it. Later, it shows some of the turbulent violence in the Middle East.
- In the film Jersey Girl a character mentions the play Cats as being the second worst thing to happen to New York City. The World Trade Center can also be seen early in the film placed in the early 90's.
- In the 2004 film I Heart Huckabees, Mark Wahlberg plays a firefighter who is deeply troubled after the attacks (referred to as "that big September thing").
- At the start of Love Actually, the Prime Minster (played by Hugh Grant) speaks about the nature of love and refers to the fact that all of the calls from those aboard the hijacked planes contained messages of love.
- In the film Crash, a gun salesman erroneously belittles a Persian man and his daughter by calling him "Osama" and asking if he expects Americans to "Fly jet planes into their mud-huts".
- In the 2007 film The Kingdom, the opening timeline ends with a scene of a plane flying into the World Trade Center.
- Although not directly referenced, the 2008 film Cloverfield contained a scene in which a character says, "Do you think it's another terrorist attack?!". The film also contains a scene in which a skyscraper collapses, creating a wall of dust and debris that swirls towards the cameraman, in direct reference to footage taken on 9/11.
- In the 2007 satirical comedy Postal, the opening scene takes place on Flight 11, where two hijacker terrorists bicker over how many virgins they'll receive upon their martyrdom. After a phone call to Osama bin Laden reveals that the number of virgins has been significantly reduced due to the number of recent martyrs, they decide to reroute the plane to the Bahamas, only to be overpowered by airplane passengers, who, in the struggle for the controls, end up crashing into the World Trade Center. Although the film's main plot involves bin Laden and Muslim terrorists, no further references to 9/11 are made.
- In the 2007 pilot of the NBC series Chuck, General Beckman reveals that the intersect was created when the CIA and NSA were told by the government to "play nice" and share all their intel, following the events of 9/11. The intersect was a massive supercomputer that stored all the secrets of both agencies in encrypted images and was created to make tracking and identifying national threats easier, possibly even preventing a future massive terrorist attack.
- Stephen King's 2006 novel, Cell, about a deadly signal transmitted via cellular phones, makes several references to the attacks, including one character asking if an entire city could burn, with another mentioning the destruction of the World Trade Center.
- In the 2006 Bollywoodmovie Kabul Express, the two main characters are Indian journalists sent to Afghanistan following 9/11.
Music
- Thrice wrote two songs that reference the attacks on their album The Alchemy Index Volume III: Air. The first of which is "Broken Lungs" expressing their doubt of the official story. As well as "The Sky Is Falling" which is about the widespread post 9/11 attitudes of fear, hate, and jingoism.
- Country singer Toby Keith wrote several songs in response to the attacks and its aftermath: "Courtesy of the Red, White, and Blue", "The Taliban Song", and "American Soldier", dedicated to U.S. troops. The first song he wrote right after the attack is called the "Angry American", also known as "Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue".
- Missy Elliott Mentions the World Trade Center families in her intro for her "Under Construction" album. In her following album "This Is Not A Test" She once again references 9/11 by saying "And anyone we've lost in life from 9-11/ We'll be sure to see again".
- The collapse of the World Trade Center is shown in the video for Linkin Park's song "What I've Done".
- Jadakiss says "Bush knocked down the towers" in his song "Why?"
- Cam'Ron has a song mentioning the two towers in his song "Welcome to New York City" featuring Jay-Z and Juelz Santana.
- Talib Kweli's "The Proud" is a tribute to those who are affected by 9/11, among other tragic events.
- In Tupac Shakur's song "Dumpin'," guest rapper Hussein Fatal says "When they put the twin towers up, Pac, I'm knockin' em back down." (It should be noted that Tupac Shakur died in 1996.)
- The network Clear Channel Communications, first radio stations owner in United States, compiled a list of songs with questionable lyrics for a short time after the attack [1]. The list included songs previously aired who featured or suggested anything related with war, attacks, airplanes, travels, United States, fear, utopia, future, New York or tragedy. Also banned were songs such as "What a Wonderful World" and "Walk Like an Egyptian."
- In John Mayer's song "Covered in Rain" (the sequel to the song "City Love"), the couple described in "City Love" who got together in the city, experience the September 11 attacks and end their relationship. The song ends with "And now I’m standing facing west/Tracing my fingers round a silhouette/I haven’t gotten used to yet/But it’s the brightest thing I’ve got." The silhouette referred to is the gap where the World Trade Centre towers were.
- The song Tell Me Why by Will Smith featuring Mary J Blige focuses heavily on the attacks and their aftermath.
- Dream Theater wrote a song about the 9/11 attacks on their 2005 album, Octavarium, called "Sacrificed Sons".
- American composer John Coolidge Adams won the Pulitzer Prize and a Grammy Award for "On the Transmigration of Souls", a choral work written in response to the attacks.
- Bruce Springsteen's 2002 album The Rising focused almost entirely on the disaster, and was widely hailed as one of Springsteen's most profound works.
- Blue Man Group's song and video "Exhibit 13" depicts charred scraps of paper that blew into a Brooklyn neighborhood from Manhattan.
- Several songs on Bon Jovi's 2002 album Bounce were inspired by the attacks and its aftermath: "Undivided", "Everyday", "Bounce", and "Love Me Back to Life".
- Paul McCartney wrote "Freedom" in response to the attacks and the wave of patriotism following them. He first performed it at the star-studded The Concert for New York City.
- The American Heavy metal band Testament wrote a song titled, "The Evil has Landed" which is entirely about the September 11th attacks, and the devastation that occurred. The song is off their album The Formation of Damnation
- Tom Paxton wrote the song "The Bravest" about the firefighters who gave their lives while trying to save others on September 11, 2001. Tom also wrote a number of topical protest songs that were critical of the Bush administration's reaction and the wars that followed. For example, the song "Homeland Security" lampooned exaggerated terror threats, and in 2007, Tom rewrote a song of his from 1965 entitled "Lyndon Johnson Told The Nation", about the escalation of the war in Vietnam, and made it into "George W. Told The Nation", about the surge in the Iraq war.
- David Bowie's Reality album (2003) is said to be his own personal reflection of the post 9/11 world. The track "New Killer Star" makes references to "the great white scar over Battery Park" and a new superficial understanding of religion ("Jesus on Dateline")
- The Post-Hardcore band Scary Kids Scaring Kids song The City Sleeps In Flames from the album of the same name is about the 9/11 attacks, and a fictional story about someone caught in them.
- Ani DiFranco's song/poem "Self Evident" is about 9/11 and the US reaction.
- "Makeshift Patriot" by Sage Francis is a hip-hop song that cynically looks at the post-9/11 world, particularly the threats he perceives to civil rights.
- Carl Schroeder, a young Midwestern composer, wrote "Christine's Lullaby: An Elegy for Orchestra" in honor of Christine Hanson, the youngest victim of the 9/11 attacks.
- French songwriter Renaud wrote a song called "Manhattan Kaboul" that describes in parallel the deaths of a Puerto Rican immigrant in the World Trade Center and of a little Afghan girl under U.S. bombings.
- Italian band PGR wrote a song entitled "11 Settembre 2001".
- Radiohead's 2003 album Hail to the Thief reflected on a post-9/11 world.
- The band dc Talk reunited to record the song "Let's Roll", which was written to honor the heroes of Flight 93.
- The band Skillet's song "You Are My Hope" from their Alien Youth CD was re-released with sound clips of President Bush's Speech given on September 12, about the attacks, heard in between verses of the song.
- Eminem made several references to the attacks, beginning with The Eminem Show, released in Spring 2002. His songs "White America", "Square Dance", "My Dad Gone Crazy", and "Mosh" have tackled his — and America's — place in a post-9/11 world. Eminem dresses as Osama Bin Laden in the video clip for "Without Me".
- Tori Amos's 2002 album Scarlet's Walk included two songs ("I Can't See New York" and "Mrs. Jesus"), which are widely believed to explore the 9/11 attacks and the immediate aftermath, although "I can't see New York" was written before the event occurred (see below, Strange coincidences in music).
- Leonard Cohen's song about September 11, "On That Day", appears on his 2004 album Dear Heather.
- Alan Jackson's song "Where Were You (When the World Stopped Turning)" asks a series of questions about the listener's location when he or she heard the news of the attacks.
- Anti-Flag, a punk band from Pittsburgh, wrote "911 For Peace" on the day of the attacks, and have since released "Terror State" and "For Blood and Empire".
- Leftöver Crack, a NYC Ska punk band coincidentally released their debut, Mediocre Generica on the day of the attacks. They referenced this with their second album, Fuck World Trade, whose cover depicts the towers ablaze with Rudy Giuliani, Dick Cheney and George W. Bush celebrating. The first song on the album, "Clear Channel (Fuck Off!)", features a spoken word intro that introduces them as "the same bitches that brought you the tower-tumbling Mediocre Generica on 9/11/01..."
- The Beastie Boys' album To The 5 Boroughs, released in 2004, focuses on life in post-9/11 New York.
- William Basinski was playing back and digitally transferring some old ambient loop tapes that disintegrated when the planes crashed into the World Trade Center in view of his Brooklyn apartment. The altered transfers were later released as The Disintegration Loops.
- Washington band Death Cab for Cutie recorded a song called "20th Century Towers" which deals with the feeling of loss and regret suffered after the 9/11 attacks.
- The 2001 Wu-Tang Clan album Iron Flag was released less than three months after 9/11; the track "Rules" opens with a Ghostface Killah verse about the attacks.
- Neil Young's "Let's Roll" is about Flight 93, referencing the order to storm the terrorist-controlled cockpit before the plane's crash in Pennsylvania.
- Mark Scudder's 2004 album Don't Wait was inspired by the events of September 11th and dedicated to a friend he lost in the World Trade Center.
- Gerard Way wrote the song "Skylines and Turnstiles" after he saw the September 11 attacks occur and was then prompted to form his band My Chemical Romance.
- Yellowcard recorded a song on their album Ocean Avenue called Believe that features excerpts of news reports and has lines speaking of the police and fire fighters who went into the towers, as well as thanking them for their bravery in the face of danger.
- Dutch band Epica has a song on their album The Phantom Agony called Façade of Reality that is about September 11th. The song contains fragments of a speech by Tony Blair about the terrorist attacks.
- Hip-Hop artist Will Smith has a track on Lost and Found about the attacks.
- Box Car Racer's song "Elevator" off their only album was written in response to the attacks. The song describes one man jumping off a building as it collapses in an attempt to commit suicide and a man on the ground witnessing the whole event.
- D12 and Gorillaz collaborated on the track 911, which also featured Terry Hall, in response to the attacks. The song was featured on the soundtrack for the film Bad Company.
- Pop-punk band blink-182 originally started shooting the video for Stay Together for the Kids on September 10 2001. The next day when they went to finish the video, the 9-11 attacks on the World Trade Center in New York City occurred, and both the band and director Samuel Bayer opted to re-shoot the video, as they felt the images of the house coming down were too similar to the images of the attacks in New York.
- The Rakes' 2005 track Terror comments on public paranoia post-9/11, including the lyrics "Every plane is a missile, every suitcase a bomb."
- Jimmy Eat World renamed their album from Bleed American to "Jimmy Eat World" after the attacks. The album's title track was renamed "Salt Sweat Sugar".
- The song If This Is Goodbye, from the 2006 album All the Roadrunning by Mark Knopfler and Emmylou Harris, was inspired by the telephone calls from United Airlines Flight 93.
- Bands like Good Charlotte, Mest and Goldfinger collaborated on a song called "The Innocent" which they wrote about the attacks.
- Metal band Iced Earth released a single from their album "The Glorious Burden" called "When the Eagle Cries", which is about the aftermath of 9/11. Part of the video was shot in Ground Zero. An "unplugged" version is on the special edition.
- Country music singer Darryl Worley recorded "Have You Forgotten?", a response to anti-war sentiment in the U.S.
- Rap artist P. Diddy says, "We still here!!! And we buildin four more new towers!!!!" in the "Welcome to New York" portion of "Welcome To Atlanta (Remix)" by Jermaine Dupri.
- Country music singer-songwriter Dusty Drake recorded "One Last Time", a song inspired by the last phone calls from Flight 93.
- "New New York" by The Cranberries is a reaction to the events of 9/11.
- "The Hands That Built America" by U2 contains a reference to 9/11. "It's early fall, there's a cloud on the New York skyline/Innocence, dragged across a yellow line." The music video contains a shot of the pre-9/11 skyline.
- The title track to Worlds Apart by …And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead refers to the attacks and their effect on foreign policy: "How they laugh as we shovel the ashes / Of the twin towers. / Blood and death, we will pay back the debt / Of this candy store of ours."
- Autopilot Off, a rock band from Orange County, New York, released Make a Sound in April 2004. The album covers multiple views of the events of 9/11, most notably in the songs "The 12th Day" and "Voice in the Dark." "The 12th Day" in particular, offers an optimistic view of America recovering stronger and more unified as a result of the attacks.
- The 2004 single Empty Souls by Manic Street Preachers contains a lyrical reference to the twin towers.
- UFK's song "On This Day" from their 2005 CD State of the Union looks back on the day of 9/11 and the aftermath of the attacks.
- After the attacks, The Strokes 2001 album Is This It was released later in America than the UK partially due to replacing the track New York City Cops due to the line New York City Cops, they ain't too smart.
- The song "I Promise" by Jin contains a reference to 9/11. "We promise to never forget the innocent lives / The victims of 9/11 / The children, husbands, and wives / The soldiers that died / That should of survived / To all the mothers that lost one we hear your cries / The government lies / That's written in the skies / I know it all you got to do is look into their eyes / Call the gardener and tell them its lights out / And promise to never have no bushes by the Whitehouse"
- Backstreet Boy, Brian Littrell performs the song "Gone without Goodbye" in which he expresses his sympathy for the families of the victims of the 9/11 attacks. It was released on his first solo album Welcome Home in May 2006.
- Peroxwhy?gen's "September Day" is based on the attacks.
- In 2002 Canadian musician FOWL wrote Plan For A New American Century, outlining a small part of the motive behind President Bush's involvement in 9/11.
- Slayer's song Jihad is a song about the 9/11 attacks from the terrorists' point of view. Towards the end of the song Mohammed Atta's message before his death is read out. It is one of the singles off their ninth studio album Christ Illusion, which itself is loosely based on the War on Terror.
- The music video for Empty Walls from Serj Tankian's album Elect the Dead depicts the collapse of the World Trade Center with a boy throwing a toy airplane into two towers made of blocks.
- Amy Lee from Evanescence said in an interview that the band's song "My Last Breath" from their debut album Fallen was inspired by the 9/11 attacks. Also, the song The Only One from the second CD The Open Door was rumoured to be about the conspiracy and propaganda of 9/11, but was declared not true after release of the album.
- Gackt's song 12gatsu no Love Song was written in memory of the lives lost on 9/11. Its music video is also filmed in New York, depicting the New Yorkers love for their city, memorials, and inhabitants holding drawing and signs promoting peace, love, and unity in different languages. It also follows the fictional story of a man who lost his wife in the attacks.
- Melissa Etheridge, a noted lesbian singer/songwriter, wrote the song "Tuesday Morning" in response to 9/11. The song is about a gay male on Flight 93 who decides to fight back, and the debate that his homosexuality makes him no less of a hero than the other passengers that resisted.
- The Band Apollo Sunshine wrote a song on their album Katonah about 9/11 called "Happening"
- US punk-pop band Green Day released a 2004 album which contained the song Wake Me Up When September Ends, which was purportedly inspired by the death of a family member. This despite liner note connections between the song and the attacks, and the song's music video setting taking place during the Iraq War.
Coincidences
This article possibly contains original research. (June 2009) |
Several coincidences in music seem to predict the September 11 attacks. Numerous musicians and bands had released albums that seem to foreshadow or allude to the events before they occurred. Such musicians and bands are listed below.
- Don Henley: the frontman of The Eagles had written "New York Minute" (originally for his album The End of the Innocence) in 1989, yet it contains lyrics that are eerily prescient of the attacks of September 11 that many people mistakenly believe that the song was written after they occurred, with such lyrics as "They found his clothing/Scattered somewhere down the track/And he won't be down on Wall Street/in the morning" and "One day they're here/Next day they're gone". The song was re-recorded for the Eagles' reunion album Hell Freezes Over in 1994.
- Explosions In The Sky: They garnered a small amount of media attention with their second album, Those Who Tell the Truth Shall Die, Those Who Tell the Truth Shall Live Forever, due to rumors linking it to the September 11, 2001 attacks. The band denied any connection in interviews. The album art shows an airplane with the caption "This plane will crash tomorrow." There were false reports that the last track was called "This Plane Will Crash Tomorrow" and that the album was released on September 10, 2001;[1][2] the concept had actually originated in 2000, and the album was released on August 27, 2001. Bassist Michael James was detained in an airport as a threat to security, and had to explain why his guitar contained the words "this plane will crash tomorrow".[3]
- I Am the World Trade Center: After the September 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center, I Am the World Trade Center faced some media attention by critics who assumed that the band was capitalizing on the attacks. (The 11th track on their first album is called "September.") They toured briefly under the shortened name "I Am the World...", but soon resumed playing under their original name.
- Squad Five-O: Their 2000 album Bombs Over Broadway was produced by Duane Baron. The original cover art of Bombs Over Broadway showed warplanes flying through downtown New York.[2] The album's title track described an attack on New York City and warned that other cities would also be attacked. Bombs Over Broadway also contained a card explaining the lyrics to the songs; Tooth & Nail did the same with The Deadlines' first album, The Death & Life Of..., which used death-related metaphors in most of its songs. After the September 11, 2001, attacks, occurred the following year, Tooth & Nail decided to change the album's cover to show a picture of the band members. The new release of the album still had the same songs as the original album had. Some lyrical content also seemed to be bizarrely foreshadowing, especially the title track "Bombs over Broadway" [3]
- The Dingees: The Dingees were a southern California ska-punk outfit known for the high production quality and aggressive punk attitude, not normal the Christian music scene. Their album The Crucial Conspiracy had a few seemingly prophetic references to 9/11. The image is a 747 being shot out of the sky [4] and destruction coming out of the sky [5].
- Dream Theater released a three-disc live album titled Live Scenes from New York on September 11 2001, which originally featured artwork depicting the New York City skyline and the World Trade Center in flames. The album was immediately recalled and reissued with new artwork a short time later.
- Slayer's album God Hates Us All was coincidentally released on the day of the attacks.
- The Coup's album, Party Music originally had a cover showing the two members in front of the World Trade Center "detonating" the towers. This cover was created in June 2001 and the CD was supposed to be released in September. After the attacks, they delayed the album to November for time to create another CD cover.
- The Moldy Peaches' released their self-titled album on September 11th, 2001, and it features the song "NYC's Like a Graveyard."
- Tori Amos' album Scarlet's Walk is a concept album about a woman named Scarlet taking a journey across the USA. In the song "I Can't See New York" (track 12 of 18) Scarlet sees a terrorist attack involving the hijacking of a plane which is then crashed in New York City. Although that song was written in the spring of 2001, it is widely believed to be about 9/11.
- System of a Down released their sophomore album Toxicity one week before the attacks which featured a song titled "Jet Pilot" which makes reference to kamikaze attacks.
- The lyrics to "4th of July" by Soundgarden are eerily similar to the events of September 11 and some of the events that transpired after the attacks.
Miscellaneous information
This article contains a list of miscellaneous information. (June 2009) |
In the computer game Deus Ex (first released in June 2000), the first game mission, set in Liberty Island, shows the New York City skyline missing the two World Trade Center buildings. This design decision (due to texture memory limitations) was explained by the developers during development as being the result of a terrorist attack that took place earlier in the game's storyline.
Starbucks took down a promotional poster due to its resemblance to the Twin Towers and portrayal of a dragonfly swooping into the drinks.
Microsoft removed renderings of the Twin Towers from their popular Microsoft Flight Simulator software after rumors arose that the hijackers had used copies of the program for training purposes.
The video game Urban Strike, released in 1994, has a cut scene where the villain shoots a laser beam at the World Trade Center. The game's setting takes place in the year 2001.
In the Digimon Drama CD track "Video Mail", Mimi was in New York City when the buildings were destroyed while searching for the American Chosen Children. She and the children helped to find survivors, but had to leave to keep the Digimon from being discovered.
Tourist Guy consisted of a widely spread faked photograph of a tourist who happened to be posing for a picture on the top of one tower while an incoming plane is seen in the background.
- ^ David Frazier (2002-11-15). "Post-rock explodes in Taipei". Taipei Times. p. 17. Retrieved 2007-06-28.
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(help) - ^ Adam Mayle (2005-01-26). "The day the music died an accidental death". The Black Table. Retrieved 2007-06-27.
And the creepiest detail of all is that the record had a track that was titled, unbelievably, "This Plane Will Crash Tomorrow," which was subsequently removed from the album.
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(help) - ^ Michael Chamy (2003-10-24). "Born on the Fourth of July". The Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 2007-06-28.
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