I think had folk been killed by the bomb - as in the MEN Arena bombing - then it would have been more in people's memories.I'm so surprised no one has mentioned the dramatic event much closer to our homes that changed our local landscape. The bombing of the Mcr Arndale centre. I recall placing my ITV 7 on that Saturday morning and being in a local bookies when that bomb went off. Though I was about a couple of miles away the sound of the blast always remained with me.
I was well fucked off the night it started.First Gulf war in 1990 was the most memorable event for me. I think it was the first time they covered a war in depth with actual boots on the ground film crews etc. It was riveting late night Tv coming in from the pub…
Wait! what? When?Elvis dying
It really was , when the penny dropped for the news chanels it was a stunned silence for a min , couldnt take my eyes off the telly for that day and the following few days . I watched all the progs on the aniversary every year till a couple of years ago when i spent the day watching them and just found i couldnt watch them anymore , still cried every year9/11. Watching it in real time was horrific.
9/11. Watching it in real time was horrific.
Yup. I had just got to work and was feeling a bit sorry for myself after having my vasectomy the weekend before so I was a little uncomfortable. Well there was an ice-pack down my pants...9/11. Watching it in real time was horrific.
I was in work and a young fella came up to me and said a plane has flown into the World Trade Centre, at that time no one knew what sort of plane it was,he was listening to the news on his headphones. Things kept coming on over the news, so we put a telly on in work. For days after, I have no idea what the productivity in work was, probably not much.It really was , when the penny dropped for the news chanels it was a stunned silence for a min , couldnt take my eyes off the telly for that day and the following few days . I watched all the progs on the aniversary every year till a couple of years ago when i spent the day watching them and just found i couldnt watch them anymore , still cried every year
This...9/11. The world changed forever that day. Just very surreal watching it live for 9 hours. Remember all TV feeds switching to New York after the first plane hit and pretty much everyone thinking it was a terrible accident but then watching the second plane slam into the second tower I knew it was much more serious than that. Then the reports came in about the pentagon and fiight 93 it was just unreal. Really couldn't process it.
It really was , when the penny dropped for the news chanels it was a stunned silence for a min , couldnt take my eyes off the telly for that day and the following few days . I watched all the progs on the aniversary every year till a couple of years ago when i spent the day watching them and just found i couldnt watch them anymore , still cried every year
Ballykelly really struck home as the Cheshire’s were our local regiment, also one of the reasons I joined up. Sorry about your friend.1 - Coleraine bombing 1973 which murdered 6 pensioners - 1st time being aware of terrorism. Aged 11 watching both bombs explode out school window.
2 - Soldier's caught up in the IRA funeral
3 - Ballykelly bombing - my friend Valerie got murdered
4 - 9/11
5 - Covid