Headlines

Tulsa World reporters will be doing stories through Sept. 11 and those stories will appear below.

Headlines from the archives

Headlines from the archives

Headlines from the archives

Headlines from the archives

Headlines from the archives

Headlines from the archives

The following 9/11 TV specials have been confirmed. All programming is subject to change by the originating channel or network.

Aug. 28 and Sept. 4

"Rising: Rebuilding Ground Zero," an encore of the six-hour documentary series from filmmaker Steven Spielberg and DreamWorks Television, which looks at the reconstruction of the site and the rebirth of lower Manhattan from the viewpoint of those who survived 9/11. 7-9 p.m. Science Channel, cable 101 and HD channel 738. The series encores at 4-10 p.m. Sept. 11, also on Science.

Aug. 28

"Inside 911: Zero Hour" captures the horror and the heroism of Sept. 11, 2001 and follows the terrorists as they formulated their plans and executed their suicide missions. Encore 6 p.m. National Geographic, cable 72

"George W. Bush: The 9/11 Interview" is an account of the horrific day from the former president, marking the first time he has spoken in detail on the subject. 8 p.m. National Geographic, cable 72

Aug. 29

"Giuliani's 9/11" reveals how New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani took on challenges he never dreamt he would encounter on Sept. 11, 2001. Encore 7 p.m., National Geographic, cable 72

"Witness: DC 911" - Nat Geo reconstructs the attack on the nation's capital moment by moment through home video: fire, rescue and police footage and news coverage. 8 p.m., National Geographic, cable 72

"CIA Confidential: 9/11 Mastermind" - The bombing of the World Trade Center in 1993 sets off one of the biggest manhunts the world has ever known. 9 p.m., National Geographic, cable 72

Aug. 30

"How It Was: Voices of 9/11" lets viewers hear the frantic calls to New York City's 9-1-1 operators and dispatchers on Sept. 11, 2001 and see how these men and women handled their jobs that fateful day. 6 p.m., National Geographic, cable 72

"Frontline: The Man Who Knew" encores with a look at the saga of FBI special agent John O'Neill joined by then-national security counterterrorism co-coordinator Richard Clarke in believing the U.S. should kill Osama bin Laden before Al Qaeda launched an attack on America. Forced out of his job, he became head of security at the World Trade Center where he was killed on Sept. 11, 2001. 8 p.m., PBS, channel 11.

"9/11: Where Were You?" captures the life and death decisions people made amidst the chaos of the 9/11 attacks and their aftermath. 9 p.m., National Geographic, cable 72

Aug. 31

"Inside 9/11: War on America" opens with the 1993 World Trade Center bombing and tracks terrorist activities aimed at U.S. targets throughout the 1990s leading up to the morning of Sept. 11, 2001. 7-9 p.m., National Geographic, cable 72

Sept. 1

"Day of Destruction - Decade of War" explores how America responded to the attacks of 9/11 and how the country has changed with Rachel Maaddow and correspondent Richard Engel. It will re-air Sept. 9, 10 and 11. 8 p.m. MSNBC, cable 50

"What Happened? The Story of September 11, 2001" - According to research, most kids ages 8-11 know about 9/11 but have varied ideas of what actually happened."Nick News With Linda Ellerbee" gets their questions answered by the experts. 8 p.m., Nickelodeon, cable 33.

Sept. 4

"9/11 Crime Scene Investigators" follows NYPD's elite Crime Scene Unit and its search for evidence and survivors in the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. 8 p.m. Investigation Discovery, cable 103

"9/11: Heroes of the 88th Floor" features first-hand testimonials from survivors recounting the 102 minutes before the North Tower collapsed. 8-10 p.m., TLC, cable 56

"When Pop Culture Saved America" is a documentary taking a comprehensive look at how, in the days following the attacks, the non-news media pitched in to bring the nation together. Features interviews with Broken Arrow native Kristin Chenoweth and more. 7 p.m. Bio Channel, cable 246

Sept. 5

"9/11: Day That Changed the World" features interviews with former Bush administration figures Dick Cheney, Laura Bush and Donald Rumsfeld. 7 p.m. Smithsonian Channel, DirecTV satellite, HD 565

"Children of 9/11" follows a year in the lives of some of the 3,000 children who lost a father or a mother on Sept. 11, 2001. 9 p.m., NBC, channel 2, cable 9

Sept. 6

I Survived ... 9/11" profiles 12 firefighters, ambulance workers, defense officials and ordinary officer workers from that day. 7 p.m., Bio Channel, cable 246

"Frontline: Top Secret America" investigates the dramatic changes that have reshaped this country since 9/11. 8 p.m. PBS, channel 11.

"Footnotes of 9/11" who went to work as ticket agents, maintenance technicians, airline dispatchers and an Air National Guardsman on Sept. 11, 2001 and unwittingly became a party of American history. Repeats 7 p.m. Sept. 11. 10 p.m., CNN, cable 41

Sept. 7

"Rescue Me," Denis Leary's series about firefighters dealing with the aftermath of the World Trade Center collapse, ends its series run tonight. 9 p.m., FX, cable 35

"Nova: Engineering Ground Zero" chronicles the story of American technology, innovation, perserverance and daring in one of the most complex construction projects which includes four skyscapers, a transportation hub and a memorial to the victims of the attack. 8 p.m., PBS, channel 11

"American Greed: 9/11 Fraud" looks at illegal lengths people will go to steal money in times of a national tragedy. 8 p.m., CNBC, cable 49

"Frontline: Faith and Doubt at Ground Zero" explores how the spiritual lives of believers - and nonbelievers - have been challenged in the wake of September 11. Encore 9 p.m., PBS, channel 11.

"Saved" is a sneak peak at Animal Planet's new fall series which pays tribute to animals that have the power to transform lives - starting with two New York City families who experienced 9/11 trauma first hand and whose pets helped them deal with the loss and cope with the pain. 8 p.m. Animal Planet, cable 57

"Dr. Sanjay Gupta Reports: Terror in the Dust" looks at how responders to Ground Zero are coping with the health affects from breathing toxic dust and fumes on site. Repeats 8 p.m. Sept. 10. 10 p.m. CNN, cable 41

Sept. 8

"Beyond Bravery: The Women of 911" profiles female rescue workers who raced to the Twin Towers after the Sept. 11 attack. Repeats 8 p.m. Sept. 11. 10 p.m., CNN, cable 41.

Sept. 9

"9/11: Ten Years Later" looks at how 9/11 affected the world of movies, entertainment and pop culture plus a retrospective on that day. Encores Sept. 10 and 11. 3 p.m., Reelz Channel, DirectTV 238, Dish Network 289

"Dateline" with special correspondent Tom Brokaw takes viewers back to stories of that Sept. 11, 2001 and re-intervews some of those people affected. 8-10 p.m., NBC, channel 2, cable 9

"9/11: The Days After" looks at what happened to the city, the country and the world in the aftermath of Sept. 11, 2001. 8 p.m., History, cable 55.

"Beyond 9/11: Portraits of Resilience" features stories of men and women who led and sacrificed for America in the aftermath of 9/11. Repeats 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. Sept. 10. 10 p.m., CNN, cable 41

Sept. 10

"On Native Soil" examines the content of the 9/11 Commission's report, narrated by Kevin Costner and Hilary Swank. Repeats at 8 p.m. Sept. 11. 2 p.m. MSNBC, cable 50

"The Suze Orman Show" discusses the money lessons of 9/11. 8 & 11 p.m., CNBC, cable 49

"Voices From Inside the Towers" documents the love and loss - some stories never heard before - on 9/11. 8 p.m., History, cable 55

In"The Love You Make," Paul McCartney, who was sitting on the tarmac in New York City waiting to take off on Sept. 11, 2001, shares his reflections of 9/11. Albert Maysles shot the film with a 16mm camera in black and white. 8 p.m., Showtime, cable 350

"Portraits From Ground Zero" highlights the work of photojournalist Andrea Booher who was one of two photographers given unlimited access to Ground Zero in the days after Sept. 11. 9 p.m., A&E, cable 28

"Beyond: Messages From 9/11" has families of 9/11 victims sharing their stories of messages they received from beyond and hope that lives on. Bio Channel, cable 246

Sept. 11

"America Remembers" covers the nation's 10th anniversary observance of the 9/11 attacks and a revisit of the original 2001 broadcast. 7-10 a.m., NBC, channel 2, cable 9, and MSNBC, cable 50

"9/11: America Remembers" has Scott Pelley anchoring this news special live from Ground Zero. Starting at 7 a.m., CBS, channel 6.

"102 Minutes That Changed the World" is an encore airing on all A&E networks starting at 7:46 a.m. A&E, cable 28, and History, cable 55

Jose Diaz Balart broadcasts a live show from Ground Zero. 7 a.m.-Noon, Telemundo, cable 450

"The Concert for New York City: Ten Years Later" is an encore performance of the six-hour benefit concert held Oct. 21, 2001. The event honored and supported the victims and heroes of 9/11. 3-9 p.m., VH1, cable 54.

"9 /11: 10 Years Later" provides an update of the award-winning film from French filmmakers Jules and Gedeon Naudet and firefighter James Hanlon with host Robert De Niro has been updated with new interviews with firefighters featured in the original documentary. 7-9 p.m., CBS, channel 6

"9/11: In Our Own Words" has NBC News anchors and correspondents recalling their own memories of reporting live on Sept. 11 interwoven with footage from that day and present-day interviews. 7 p.m., NBC, channel 2, cable 9

"America Remembers - 9/11" from"PBS Newshour" presents an examination of the significance of the day in several communities, the three major memorial observances and interviews with American muslims, the generation since 9/11 and those who have made extraordinary contributions in terms of young lives lost in Iraq and Afghanistan. 7 p.m., PBS, channel 11.

"Making the 9/11 Memorial" is an insider's view from conception to installation at Ground Zero. 7 p.m., History, cable 55

"Pentagon Under Fire" tracks the path of the plane that hit the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001, and interviews witnesses from the moment of impact. Repeats at 10 p.m. 7 p.m., Military, cable 104

"20/20: Remembrance and Renewal: 10 Years" will revisit some of the most moving stories of Americans who lived through one of the biggest historical events in our journey as a nation. 8 p.m., ABC, channel 8

"Great Performances: The New York Philharmonic 10th Anniversary Concert for 911" features a concert in remembrance and renewal. 8 p.m., PBS, channel 11

"The Space Between" is a new film following a world-weary flight attendant and a prematurely wise 10-year-old Pakastani-American boy who connect with one another amidst the chaos of Sept. 11, 2001. Followed by the Academy Award-winning short"Twin Towers." 8 p.m., USA, cable 34

"After the Towers Fell" tells the stories of those who raced to rescue survivors after the collapse of the Twin Towers on 9/11. Repeats at 11 p.m. 8 p.m., Military, cable 104

"Twins of the Twin Towers" tells the personal stories of some of the 40 twins worldwide who were left twinless on Sept. 11, 2001. 8 p.m., OWN, cable 106

"Rebirth" -is a documentary about the lives of five people forever changed by 9/11 simultaneously tracked with time-lapse photography the installation of the memorial in lower Manhattan. 8 p.m., Showtime cable 350

"The Towers and the Pentagon" studies the structural consequences of the 9/11 attacks and explains why the results were so different. Repeats at Midnight. 9 p.m., Military, cable 104

"From the Ground Up" follows the stories of widows of five firefighters killed on Sept. 11, 2011. 9:15-10 p.m., OWN, cable 106

Sept. 13

"Frontline: The Man Behind the Mosque" tells the story of Sharif El-Gamal, a real estate developer, and the victims' relatives who helped turn his project into a continuing battle over faith, values and the meaning of being American. 8 p.m., PBS, channel 11.