American Experience (1988) s27e08 Episode Script
Blackout
1
KEVIN ZRALY:
Imagine yourself on top
of One World Trade Center,
on the 107th floor.
Windows On The World restaurant
was one of the most magical
places on earth,
not just in New York City.
On a clear day
you could see 90 miles,
planes flying below you.
And 9:30, anybody
in the restaurant business
will tell you, is crunch time.
I was walking the floor
and all of a sudden
I look to my right,
and Brooklyn
is not there anymore.
Okay, it's just,
where did Brooklyn go?
And then I quickly glance over,
Queens is gone.
It's blackout, there's no
no lights whatsoever.
And as soon as I get up
to the window
and we're overlooking Manhattan,
downtown Manhattan (woosh)
lights go out for us.
JACK FEINSTEIN:
New York City is
a vertical city.
There are people
in apartment houses
that are ten stories high.
They don't have any water,
they have no lights.
(sirens wailing)
And there is a sense of urgency.
PATRICK MARSHALL:
I stopped the car.
And there was about 400
or 500 people in that park.
And I told my partner, I says,
"We're not going down there.
Let's get out of here."
(sirens wailing)
CHRISTOPHER VANAGER:
It wasn't just nighttime.
It was total darkness.
Everybody was kind
of moving in groups.
I'm sure they were scared,
too, you know,
because you don't know
who's coming at you.
ERNESTO QUIÑONEZ:
It was like things had
reached this boiling point.
Once the lights went out,
then all hell broke loose.
(alarm bells and shouting)
JONATHAN MAHLER:
It's like an orgy of violence,
arson, and insanity.
How do you explain
that social phenomenon?
RADIO ANNOUNCERS:
Hazy, hot and humid.
High in the daytimes
up near 100,
overnight lows down
to around 80.
A lot of fingers crossed with
the continued heat wave.
MARSHALL:
July 13, 1977.
I was working my last
4:00-to-12:00 in a set of five.
It was a beastly hot day.
I distinctly remember
it was horrifically hot.
MAHLER:
The city's in the midst
of a heat wave.
Temperatures were routinely
hitting 100, above 100.
CHARLIE DURKIN:
Around 6:00 I headed home.
I got home early enough that I
got in the pool with the kids.
Somewhere around 8:00
it was clear that thunderstorms
were going to move in,
so we all got out.
RADIO ANNOUNCER:
Severe thunderstorm warning
in effect
for all of Westchester County
in New York.
These storms can produce wind
gusts 50 miles an hour and more,
lightning, so be advised,
whatever precautions
seem advisable.
(thunder)
DURKIN:
My daughter was
brushing her teeth
and looked out the bathroom
window and said,
"What's wrong with the sky, Dad?
It looks strange."
I said, "Yeah, it's
because of all the lightning.
There's so much of it,
it just stays lit."
That evening there was
a lightning strike
on a power line
in Westchester County.
The line went out and the demand
starts to increase
on some of the surrounding
lines.
This sort of essentially sets
off a kind of chain reaction,
a sort of a domino effect
where another line
suddenly has too much power,
and it has to be shut down.
(alarms and phones ringing)
And then another line
is overextended
and it has to be shut down.
Everyone's using a lot of power
because they're all running
air conditioners.
And before you know it,
the city is struggling
to get enough power
into the five boroughs.
DURKIN:
I got a call maybe
a little bit after 9:00
asking me to call
the system operator.
I called in and finally said,
there's no other choice,
the only alternative was
to disconnect customers.
MAN ON PHONE:
You know, you're gonna lose
the whole thing.
Tell him this is
a dire emergency,
if he can give us any more
to give it to us.
OPERATOR:
Right.
MAHLER:
It is one man who is in charge
of bringing all
of this power in.
You have people telling him,
yelling at him,
"You have to shut down
some of these lines.
You have to do it
or the city's gonna lose power."
MAN ON PHONE:
Bill, I hate to bother you,
but you'd better shed
about 400 megawatts of load
or you're going to lose
everything down there
OPERATOR:
Yeah, I I'm trying to.
MAHLER:
Anyone who's ever flown
into New York City at night,
who's ever been in
New York City at night,
there are lights everywhere.
It's a beautiful image,
really, in a way.
It's the city that never sleeps,
the city where the lights
are always on.
QUIÑONEZ:
I was playing handball
with my friends.
And you can still play at night
because there was a lot
of lampposts
around Jefferson Park.
But then all of a sudden
they started going out,
one by one, like pop, pop, pop,
and, uh, we're like,
"Wow, what's happening?"
CARL ST. MARTIN:
That night I'm on the third
floor, windows open.
It was very hot.
So people were outside.
And suddenly the TV went off.
The light went off.
All of a sudden, the
noise outside in the street
quickly stopped for a second,
and suddenly you heard a (gasps)
because everybody
at the same time realized
something had happened.
VINCENT DUNN:
I was up in the office.
I was catching up
on some paperwork
and having a cup of coffee
and the lights dimmed.
The emergency generator
roared on
and somebody shouted,
"Blackout!" you know?
ZRALY:
One of the things
about Windows on the World
right from the very beginning
was its dress code.
You had to have
a jacket and tie.
The general manager said to me,
"You can tell people they can
take their jackets off."
Take their jackets off,
you know,
"Okay, you can take
your jackets off."
Next thing the ties
are coming off.
Next thing, you know,
people loosening their shirts.
The general manager got up
and immediately spoke,
"Ladies and gentlemen,
everybody's getting champagne."
(CBS News theme music playing)
RADIO ANNOUNCER:
Now, direct from CBS News.
This special radio net alert
news report.
ANNOUNCER:
A major power blackout
has hit New York City
and surrounding communities.
RADIO HOST:
Chuck, if you could,
what can you tell us
about the feel
for Midtown Manhattan?
REPORTER:
Well, George, there are people
directing traffic
at the intersections.
I assume many of them
are policemen.
Some of them, obviously,
are just volunteers,
people who wanted to pitch in.
But in general, people
are taking it in good spirit,
and almost a little
conviviality going on.
REPORTER:
Where were you
when the lights went out?
MAN:
Radio City Music Hall.
REPORTER:
What happened
in the music hall?
All of sudden
the lights went out.
No picture, no sound, nothing.
And a man made
an announcement about, uh,
the power is off
in the whole city.
And you're waiting
for the subway now?
No, there's no subway running.
So what are you doing here?
I'm on TV.
(people laughing)
FEMALE REPORTER:
All I can tell you is
there were severe electrical
storms to the north.
Lights totally went out
about 15 minutes ago.
MALE REPORTER:
All five boroughs
are affected so that's the word.
Seven million people
are now without power.
JOYCE PURNICK:
My beat at the Post
was covering politics.
I went running over to City Hall
and I spent the night
in the command center
where we got
regular briefings on what they
said was going on in the city.
The blackout was not
the city's fault, but, um,
it was an opportunity
for the mayor, Abe Beame,
to show the people of New York
that he was in control.
What are you doing
now that this is happening?
We are trying to keep on top
through every agency in the city
to do everything possible
to keep things moving,
and keep people alerted
and have people
who are with city agencies
at their stations
in case they are needed.
PURNICK:
I'm not sure to this day if he,
or even the police commissioner,
actually knew what was going on,
because if they did,
they didn't tell us.
VINCENT DUNN:
I'm trying to scramble to find
out what the big issues are.
I called up the fire battalions,
seeing how things are
in their districts.
The phones were
evidently working.
And I told them, "Hey, we gotta
go down to the subways,
"make sure those people stuck
in those hot trains
don't bail out
on those third-rail tracks."
And then we have these portable
generators that are useful.
You know, hospitals,
that's our first priority.
RADIO REPORTER:
At Bellevue, the city's
largest hospital,
emergency generator service
has been halted
by an electrical fire.
Steps are being taken
to protect the lives
of patients on respirators
and other necessary
electrical equipment.
Dr. Stephen Schwartz
at New York's Lenox Hospital
says emergency equipment
is working there,
but they are bracing for
a possible flood of patients.
DUNN:
Then, you know, I got called
to go respond to a fire.
And I never returned
to the firehouse.
I knew this was going
to be a very difficult
and challenging task to put
the power system back together.
It's really not made
to shut down and restart.
It's made to stay in service.
FEINSTEIN:
We knew this was gonna be
a long, drawn-out affair.
The restoration plan
was out of date
because it hadn't been updated
since 1965,
so between Charlie and I,
we made up the plan.
DURKIN:
Well, there's only two ways
to restore the power.
One is to bootstrap the system
up on its own,
or to bring power in
from the outside.
We both knew that
the quickest, fastest way
was get power in
from the outside.
I said, "I'll take a part
from the north.
"Jack, you take the part
from Long Island Lighting,
and at some point we're gonna
meet in the middle."
RADIO REPORTER:
Insofar as police
are concerned,
all off-duty police officers
are being ordered
to their nearest precinct
Not the precinct
where they work,
but the precinct of residence.
MARSHALL:
We didn't know
it was a big blackout.
The lights went out,
but who knew
if the lights
were gonna stay out?
There was no AM/FM radios
in the patrol cars at the time.
So you had no radio
communication with the outside.
Our portable radio had died
because of the repeaters
being out.
Well, we go back
into the station house,
and when we went
into the station house,
that's when we really knew
that the pot was cooking.
The station house was
in darkness,
complete and utter darkness.
Everybody's walking around
with flashlights, some candles.
And it looked like a cross
between a Boris Karloff movie
and Car 54.
The sergeant said,
"Go out, do the best you can,
"come back in a little while.
"We're gonna have
a better plan in place.
But go out and do
what you can do."
JOSHUA FREEMAN:
12 years earlier, November 1965,
New York City lost its power
and it was a very
startling event.
But all in all, the city
handled it remarkably well.
You know, the urban legend was
that nine months later,
births spiked in the city.
I don't know
if that's actually true
but I think that captivated
the sense that most people had
of almost a kind of moment
out of the ordinary
but not a scary
or threatening experience.
PURNICK:
I remember the blackout
of '65 as almost being fun.
There was a certain
festive atmosphere.
People pulled together.
There were little get-togethers
on the streets.
ELZORA WILLIAMSON:
Had a bright moon.
Everything was peaceful.
We were directing traffic,
and then we had everybody else
start directing traffic with us.
People became helpful
to each other,
and it went very, very smoothly.
BRUCE PORTER:
The blackout in 1965
happened at 5:30.
So the store owners were still
in their stores locking up.
The temperature was
between 43 and 48 degrees,
right, so people were not
out on the street.
FREEMAN:
A lot of people simply stayed
in their houses.
There was no real sense
of panic.
There was no increase in crime.
In the end, really no big deal.
MAHLER:
New York had been this great
kind of working-class city.
You could come to New York,
immigrants, obviously,
from around the world,
you could find a job,
you could make a better life.
FREEMAN:
Through the mid-1960s,
New York was doing pretty well
economically.
It was both a financial center,
it was a huge
manufacturing center.
You'd see blue-collar workers
all over the place.
You would see factories
making garments,
making electronic goods,
you'd see people working
unloading ships on the docks.
MAHLER:
New York was historically a city
that did take care of people,
where the subways
were heavily subsidized,
where you had great
public schools,
where you had this fantastic
network of universities
that were free.
And by 1977, I mean, all of this
was just such a distant memory.
The ambitions of the city had
diminished so greatly,
and this notion that the city
could take care of the people
who lived in it was gone.
NEWSCASTER:
Treasury Secretary Simon
said today
that the country is
in a recession.
NEWSCASTER:
For the first time since 1941,
the nation's unemployment rate
has gone above nine percent.
NEWSCASTER:
In New York City, the rate
of unemployment is much higher
than it is nationally,
higher than at any time
since the Great Depression.
FREEMAN:
The 1970s was an economically
troubled period
for the whole United States
and New York was
particularly hard hit
by this general turn downward.
New York hits a 12%
unemployment rate in 1975.
That's just a huge
unemployment rate,
and you can feel it all over,
every place.
It's visceral.
People hanging out
on the streets,
increase in petty crime.
A sense of despair
in a lot of areas,
you know, of giving up.
MAHLER:
There was this sense that
there were no jobs in New York.
People were fleeing the city,
moving to the suburbs
if they could.
Some of the middle-class
white families move out,
what became known
as white flight.
There was just sort
of a sense of desperation
about New York at the time.
REPORTER:
The city will need more
than God's help
to get out of this mess.
New York needs $500 million
a month
to keep its head above water.
MAHLER:
In 1975, New York City was
on the brink of bankruptcy,
and it needed a loan
from Washington.
And President Ford
gave it some thought
and came back to New York
and said,
"You're not gonna get a loan."
FREEMAN:
After very dramatically
turning down a city request,
there was a retreat in
Washington from that hard line.
But they would only give New
York City the money it needed
to avoid bankruptcy if New York
City adopted austerity measures.
That meant cutting public
services, laying off
tens of thousands of workers,
and other kinds of measures
that assured them that they
would get that money back.
DUNN:
When those layoffs of police
and firefighters came, you know,
we were shocked.
And that was sort of like a
little unwritten social contract
that was broken by the city.
The police went on strike.
The fire went on strike.
Sanitation went on strike.
FREEMAN:
This big cut in public services
at a time
when the private economy
is in very bad shape,
it means hardship.
It had immediate impact
on New Yorkers and particularly
on poor New Yorkers.
People can't send the kids off
the streets into the library.
It's not there anymore.
They can't send them to the
after-school athletic program
to keep them safe.
It's not there anymore.
So there's a lot of anger
and also, I think, a sense
of abandonment.
DUNN:
Graffiti, crime, drugs, homeless
people, squeegee people.
People would put
in their car windows
"No radio," so people wouldn't
break their windows.
So it was, the city
was going down.
ERNESTO QUIÑONEZ:
When a population is neglected
for so long,
and then they keep cutting
your social services,
your education, your hospitals,
your fire departments,
it's going to boil
and sooner or later
something is going
to come out of that.
And it wasn't going
to be pretty.
BILL MOYERS:
This is the Bronx in New York.
One and a half million people
live in this borough.
It's the home
of the New York Yankees.
It has also become the arson
capital of the world.
Once that smoke on the horizon
signified industry,
progress, jobs.
Now it means someone
is burning down a building.
DUNN:
We call those years
the fire years
when the city was burning down.
When I came in the fire service,
a busy fire company did 1,700
to 2,000 runs a year.
In the 1970s we were all doing
5,000 alarms a year.
Smoking carelessness,
falling asleep with a cigarette,
cooking fires
and electrical fires.
They were the three top causes.
We've got a fire on the fifth
floor, apartment 5I.
Occupants are
DUNN:
But then there was arson
arson for profit,
arson for revenge, you wanted
to get even to a neighbor.
You had arson for fun.
A couple of kids
with a can of gasoline
could light a vacant building
and have a ball watching
firefighters come
with big aerial ladders
on a night, hot night
and would watch us throw water
into this building.
You had fires for boredom.
CARL ST. MARTIN:
The block below me,
of the 60 houses,
maybe only five of them
hadn't had a fire.
You knew that there's a chance
that your house
could catch on fire.
So it caused that next person
next door to move.
Now that landlord
didn't get his rent.
This led to the temptation
for some people
to consider burning the building
and collecting the insurance.
And it became a domino effect.
MAHLER:
On top of all that
There was a serial killer
on the loose in New York.
REPORTERS:
In New York, the search
continues for the Son of Sam,
the object of one of the biggest
manhunts in this city's history.
The killer has taunted
authorities
by writing two letters,
signed Son of Sam.
PURNICK:
The NYPD was then and still is
the preeminent police department
in the country,
and he was eluding the NYPD.
Everybody was very tense.
And it contributed to the sense
of nobody was in control.
It was becoming embarrassing
to say you were a New Yorker
after having been so many years
when you were proud
to be a New Yorker.
The city was falling apart.
CHRIS "DOC" VANAGER:
By 10:00, that's when
I started to hear the noises.
And first my mother goes,
"What is that?"
You heard these bumping noises.
Just bump-bump-bump-bump
outside.
And so my mother opens the door
and she looks.
And I stick my head out
and the staircase door was open
a little bit
and you see a washing machine
going up the stairs.
Then after that a refrigerator
comes upstairs.
Then those giant furniture TVs,
you know, the old Zeniths
with the sound system in
and the record player,
those started going up.
And it was just box after box
after box after box.
ST. MARTIN:
It just happened.
Like a tinderbox.
It went from being lights
to being looting.
(sirens wailing)
VANAGER:
All I remember was people
with stuff
Coats, clothes
Like people just have this stuff
draped over their arms like,
"Yo, you wanna buy this?
You wanna buy that?"
They stole clothes, electronics,
just everything
you could think of.
MAHLER:
It happened within minutes
in all of these neighborhoods.
Every single borough in New York
was affected by the looting.
And it happens,
I mean, just instantaneously.
Ace Pontiac stored 50 brand new
Pontiacs in its garage
and the fire department had
a rule that if you stored cars
inside a building, you had
to leave the key in the ignition
and you had to put two dollars
worth of gas in the tank.
Well, all 50
of these cars vanished
in the first hour and a half.
MARSHALL:
There was people everywhere.
Hundreds.
Hundreds per block.
(sirens pulsing)
We responded to a call
for assistance
from Wyckoff Heights Hospital.
And the staff in the emergency
room was being hard pressed
to keep up with the injuries
because the looters
were suffering such vicious cuts
from the glass.
There was blood everywhere.
There was people
with some hellacious injuries
and it really was
starting to slide.
ST. MARTIN:
I was in medical school,
so, you know,
I figured might as well just go
and work at the hospital.
It was packed.
Full-blown, people outside
in the street waiting to get in.
I went in and there
were some doctors there.
And I explained
that I was a medical student
and he asked me
had I sutured before.
And I said, "Well, I'd done
a little bit but not really."
He says, "Okay, come,
come, I'll show you.
We need your help,
we need your help."
All night long I was in a corner
just closing up wounds.
WILLIAMSON:
We had our store, which was
entitled Trophies By Syl.
It was a sporting goods
and trophy shop.
We thought of it
as more than a store.
We taught the young people
how to open a bank account,
how to fill out the forms.
My husband would go with them,
show them how to do that.
That evening the lights went out
as we were eating.
And my husband said, "Oh maybe
we better get back over there."
And I said to him, "Oh, let me
do the dishes first."
I probably lost about an hour.
When we got to maybe five,
six blocks away from our store,
we started seeing
our merchandise in the street.
I just drove up on the sidewalk
and I parked the car
directly where the doorway was.
The people who were inside,
when they saw my husband,
they said, "Here's Mr. Syl,
Mr. Syl is here,"
and they started running.
It was sad in some ways
because some people that you saw
would be people you
would not have expected
to see in that capacity.
And, and yet they were there.
ALAN RUBIN:
I figured, "Okay, I'll walk
over to the store."
And I saw a crowd
on the side of the store.
They were pushing and shoving
to get into the store
and people were coming out
carrying things.
They got out hi-fi.
They got out TVs.
The store next to me, the owner
came over to me and he says,
"I'm shooting in the air
to scare them away."
He said, "Do you need a gun?"
And I said, "No way."
I said, "I'll get hurt
if I have a gun."
I couldn't do anything about it
so I just was watching.
And my knees started to shake.
WILLIAMSON:
We had to stay there all night
because if we left, they were
gonna come in and take the rest.
There was no police
to stop them.
Who would stop them from taking
whatever else was there?
PORTER:
One problem with the police
is they were told to report
to the nearest precinct to them.
Almost none of them live
in the affected precincts
in the poor neighborhoods.
The major looting occurred
when there were almost
no policemen on the street.
MAHLER:
It took hours to get cops
to the neighborhoods
that needed them most.
By the time they get there,
this thing is on.
Bring them out, bring them out!
PORTER:
There were a lot of merchants
and people who wanted police
to come to their stores,
stand there with their rifles
in their hands
and keep the people out.
Well, the police didn't have
anywhere near the manpower
or police power to do that.
MAN:
The whole Bronx
is going, man.
The whole Bronx is going.
We'd like to sit here
and watch it, but we can't.
No, that's all right.
MARSHALL:
Our instructions were,
"Do the best you can."
And we did the best we could.
We had sticks.
We had our hands.
You'd grab people
and just toss them out.
We were so outnumbered,
we'd push them back
as far as we could.
The people would only
respond so far.
And then they would start
hurling rocks and bottles at us.
And then there was
a pitched battle in the street.
After a while there was
what can you do?
It was insanity.
GEORGE MICHAEL:
It's 12:02 on WABC in New York.
We switch now to Steve O'Brien.
O'BRIEN:
Thank you, George.
Walking into one of the
neighborhood establishments,
we found still an atmosphere
of extreme levity
considering the situation.
Anyway, people are feeling
no pain
in most of the establishments
around the area.
PORTER:
The lights went out
and the beer came out,
and we had candles
and we had a block party.
I didn't find out until the next
day that there was any looting.
Right, I mean, if you didn't
live on a commercial street,
you didn't know the looting
had happened.
KEVIN ZRALY:
We were on an island in the sky,
isolated from whatever else
was happening
in all of New York City.
We had these emergency lights,
but it wasn't enough
I mean, so we started
bringing candles in.
In hindsight, I don't think
that was a good idea
because the candles
also gave off heat.
Air conditioning now has been
out for since 9:30.
But still people some people
we had to ask to leave.
It was that kind of thing,
you know.
They liked the champagne part.
It sort of sounds
like the Titanic
when we talk about, "Did the
band play on?" you know?
We had a three-piece combo
of piano, bass, and guitar.
The piano continued on.
MAHLER:
It's the city of rich
and the city of the poor.
And if you weren't in one
of those neighborhoods,
you know, if you were
on the Upper East Side
enjoying a candlelit dinner
on your roof
You had no idea what
was going on all around you.
We tripped the lights
fantastic ♪
On the sidewalks
of New York. ♪
(applause)
GUS ENGELMAN:
George, I just had a Con Ed
spokesman on the phone
to see if we can get a better
idea of when Con Ed
will be restoring that power.
Here's Ed Livingston right now.
LIVINGSTON:
We can't we really
can't estimate, Gus.
We're working as hard as we can
and as fast as we can,
but I don't want to build up
any hopes and pick
a number of hours
because we just can't
be sure right now.
JACK FEINSTEIN:
We were moving in
a step-by-step, very methodic,
logical way of picking
up the load.
The generation
was coming on slowly.
I'm busy concentrating
and I turn around
and there's the chairman
of the board
and the president
of the company.
CHARLIE DURKIN:
They just wanted me to proceed
with a sense of urgency,
which we were.
Each time we came to a point
where we could pick up
another network, it took
about 15 minutes.
That doesn't seem
like a lot of time
when you're talking one network.
But when you have 50 networks,
it's a lot of time.
Electricity is a kind
of a keystone for civility
and if we can get
the streetlights back on,
the traffic lights working
and all that kind of thing,
there was a much better
likelihood that the police
and so forth
can maintain control.
PORTER:
The first group,
who went into the stores
ten minutes
after the blackout occurred,
these were a criminal element.
Then the stores were open.
And then another class
of looters came in,
people who did not have
a criminal background,
whom it would not occur to
to go and smash the window
of a store and go in
and grab something.
But they sat
in their hot apartments
seeing people run in
and grab stuff and they said,
"You know, I could really
use some Pampers."
QUIÑONEZ:
I remember the rattling.
It's a very distinct rattling.
A whole bunch of housewives
had looted the supermarket
at the corner where I used
to live, and what they had done
is they had taken pantyhose
and they had tied
shopping carts together so they
could make a shopping cart train
and then they had loaded
all the stuff,
all this merchandise
Pampers, toilet paper, food
On these carts
and were pushing them home.
PORTER:
These were the people
who tended to get arrested.
They had never been
arrested before.
And here they were arrested and
charged with stealing a couch
or some clothes.
There were not a package
of Pampers survived the looting.
MARSHALL:
Anybody and everybody,
children, women, men,
people with jobs,
people without jobs.
They all got caught up
in the moment.
They didn't feel like they were
committing a crime
because the whole
general atmosphere,
the whole feeling of it was,
"Everybody's doing it,
why not me?"
OFFICER:
Hide your faces,
smile, smile.
They're hiding their faces.
REPORTER:
Is this for looting?
Looting, looting.
FREEMAN:
Looting is a complicated thing.
People do it because they're
greedy, because they need stuff.
It's also sometimes fun.
It's the people on the bottom
being on the top for a moment,
and they know it's only
for a moment,
but who's going to stop you?
Who's going to stop you?
No one can stop you.
That can be a thrill.
QUIÑONEZ:
It was the neighborhoods that
had been neglected that rioted,
and it was basically people
who were poor and hungry.
The media paints it as "Look
at these criminals, it's race!"
But it's not so much race
as it is class.
Black people didn't
go after white people.
Latinos did not go
after the Italians.
It was more about class.
We didn't have, so we went,
not even after those who had.
We went after their stuff.
It's an expression of anger,
it's an expression of neglect,
and it's an expression of need.
DUNN:
If you don't control
the crime problem
and the people
causing the disorder,
it becomes a fire problem.
The dispatcher ordered us
to go from fire to fire.
You were driving in the streets.
People were waving to you
for help, you couldn't stop.
Buildings were burning.
Cars in the street were burning.
Garbage in lots were burning.
You know, you'd hear
the dispatcher,
"No companies available,
no companies available."
They would only send us
to big store fires.
You know, we would go
to these big supermarket fires,
appliance store fires,
which were being broken into,
looted, and burned.
WILLIAMSON:
Not only did they loot
the stores, they burned them.
And to me, that was
the ultimate violation.
You took everything,
now why are you going
to burn the store down as well?
DUNN:
Fire is a special effect.
You light a car, you've got
a spectacular event.
Fire, you know, it's got noise.
It's got smoke.
It's got flame.
It's got sound.
It was a crazy scene,
you know, it was something
out of like a world war.
(fire crackling, sirens blaring)
REPORTER:
New York City
in the early morning,
after a night of no
electric power and so no lights,
elevators, subway trains
or any trains, airports,
air conditioning,
traffic signals, television.
What it did have
in the dark streets
was a wild outburst
of crime arson, looting,
mugging and 1,000
false fire alarms.
MAHLER:
After the blackout, everyone
is trying to make sense
of what has happened
to New York.
There was this sense
that New York is not just
in financial trouble,
not just struggling.
But there's something
really existentially,
foundationally wrong
with New York,
and New York is
in real, real trouble.
VANAGER:
When we got up that next day,
I got on my bike
and rode around
the neighborhood,
and you just saw
everything was gone.
And that's when it kind
of sunk in
that nothing's
gonna be the same.
You know, nothing's
ever gonna be the same.
And you just go,
"What are people supposed
to do now?"
You know?
QUIÑONEZ:
It sort of felt like some bomb
had gone off
but instead of destroying
the buildings,
all you had was a whole bunch
of confetti and paper.
And it was a very quiet city.
I think that one of the reasons
for this quietness
was because a lot of frustration
had been released
and even if you yourself
had not gone out there
to loot, others had.
And somehow, I think,
that brings you some
sort of catharsis.
ST. MARTIN:
Once the sun was up,
the storeowners were now there.
Many of them had roots
in the neighborhood
and were actually connected
to the neighborhood.
So they were hurt,
and we were hurt.
STORE OWNER:
They got everything.
I lost all my money.
I work about ten years for this.
I lost everything.
I don't have no insurance,
nothing.
I have three kids, a wife.
I lost everything.
MAN:
You've got these people now,
they are worried
about their business
as to whether they can start
again in a community like this.
As to whether they
are gonna trust these people
around here, I doubt it.
The merchants,
they're not gonna trust
these people after this.
I wouldn't trust them.
REPORTER:
So, yourself,
what are you going to do now?
STORE OWNER:
Well, I tell you, I'm going
to leave this great Big Apple
to those that want to stay here.
I can't fight this anymore.
ALAN RUBIN:
Early the next morning,
I walk into the store
and the lights were still out,
but there's enough light for me
to see where I'm going.
It was horrendous.
It was a lot of work.
There was gonna be no guarantee
that we could make it.
More to cut out
all the questions,
not any major statement,
I just put a sign
on the window that said,
"We're staying."
ELZORA WILLIAMSON:
They had taken so much.
We lost, I think it was
something like $350,000
worth of merchandise.
My whole thought was, "How am I
gonna stay in business?"
My husband, he just sat down
with people who looted
the store,
talked to them, told them
he was disappointed.
But he never reacted
in such a way
that would have been
a negative on his part.
You know, now that
was something I could not do.
I could not sit down and look
a person in the eye
and say, "It's okay."
It was not okay.
No matter how long we stayed,
the store never really was
what it had been
all those years ago.
VANAGER:
My neighborhood stayed that way
for probably 15 years.
That whole strip never opened
back up ever again.
Everybody that lived there,
those mom-and-pop stores,
they just shut down
and they left.
MARSHALL:
We got finished at about 8:00
in the morning.
I just I sat
on the hood of the car
and looked down Broadway.
I said, "I think the
neighborhood's done.
I think the back
has finally been broken."
And it was.
I truly believe that
that night took the carpet
out from under the people.
REPORTER:
What triggered the blackout?
A federal report
places the primary blame
on Consolidated Edison,
saying it was unprepared
to deal with the crisis touched
off by a severe thunderstorm.
JACK FEINSTEIN:
A blackout is almost similar
to an airplane crash.
It's never just one item.
From the first lightning strike
to the complete system shutdown,
it's a series of events that
if any one of them didn't occur
or was responded to differently,
would've prevented the blackout.
REPORTER:
It was a night of terror
that lasted for 25 hours.
What happened
to this blinded city?
3,176 people arrested.
132 policemen injured.
1,576 businesses looted
or set on fire.
MAHLER:
The blackout produced
the largest mass arrest
in the city's history.
We're talking
about thousands of people.
And we're talking about hundreds
of millions of dollars
of damage and stolen property.
DUNN:
There were 1,000 major fires
that night, 1,000 major fires.
I mean that's mind-boggling.
There's a social order
that's necessary to live
in these dense urban areas
that broke down that night.
REPORTER:
In the worst slums of the city,
the light of mindless violence
lit up the sky,
as the blackout divided the town
into two societies,
separate and unequal.
FREEMAN:
The blackout gave you
an appreciation of the fragility
of urban life.
You flip the switch
and darkness turns to light
and you just totally take
all this stuff for granted.
And an event like that makes
you realize how contingent,
how fragile all that is.
You can't hit your mom
because she's your mom,
so you hit your little brother.
Something like that
is what was happening.
You couldn't go after
these politicians
that were killing
your neighborhood.
So, you went after
your little brother.
You went after each other.
DUNN:
If you wanted to say,
"When was the bottom
of the decaying,
declining New York City?"
you would have to say 1977,
the blackout.
We've had some very good,
prosperous times
in New York City since then.
But this is always there as
an example of what could happen.
KEVIN ZRALY:
Imagine yourself on top
of One World Trade Center,
on the 107th floor.
Windows On The World restaurant
was one of the most magical
places on earth,
not just in New York City.
On a clear day
you could see 90 miles,
planes flying below you.
And 9:30, anybody
in the restaurant business
will tell you, is crunch time.
I was walking the floor
and all of a sudden
I look to my right,
and Brooklyn
is not there anymore.
Okay, it's just,
where did Brooklyn go?
And then I quickly glance over,
Queens is gone.
It's blackout, there's no
no lights whatsoever.
And as soon as I get up
to the window
and we're overlooking Manhattan,
downtown Manhattan (woosh)
lights go out for us.
JACK FEINSTEIN:
New York City is
a vertical city.
There are people
in apartment houses
that are ten stories high.
They don't have any water,
they have no lights.
(sirens wailing)
And there is a sense of urgency.
PATRICK MARSHALL:
I stopped the car.
And there was about 400
or 500 people in that park.
And I told my partner, I says,
"We're not going down there.
Let's get out of here."
(sirens wailing)
CHRISTOPHER VANAGER:
It wasn't just nighttime.
It was total darkness.
Everybody was kind
of moving in groups.
I'm sure they were scared,
too, you know,
because you don't know
who's coming at you.
ERNESTO QUIÑONEZ:
It was like things had
reached this boiling point.
Once the lights went out,
then all hell broke loose.
(alarm bells and shouting)
JONATHAN MAHLER:
It's like an orgy of violence,
arson, and insanity.
How do you explain
that social phenomenon?
RADIO ANNOUNCERS:
Hazy, hot and humid.
High in the daytimes
up near 100,
overnight lows down
to around 80.
A lot of fingers crossed with
the continued heat wave.
MARSHALL:
July 13, 1977.
I was working my last
4:00-to-12:00 in a set of five.
It was a beastly hot day.
I distinctly remember
it was horrifically hot.
MAHLER:
The city's in the midst
of a heat wave.
Temperatures were routinely
hitting 100, above 100.
CHARLIE DURKIN:
Around 6:00 I headed home.
I got home early enough that I
got in the pool with the kids.
Somewhere around 8:00
it was clear that thunderstorms
were going to move in,
so we all got out.
RADIO ANNOUNCER:
Severe thunderstorm warning
in effect
for all of Westchester County
in New York.
These storms can produce wind
gusts 50 miles an hour and more,
lightning, so be advised,
whatever precautions
seem advisable.
(thunder)
DURKIN:
My daughter was
brushing her teeth
and looked out the bathroom
window and said,
"What's wrong with the sky, Dad?
It looks strange."
I said, "Yeah, it's
because of all the lightning.
There's so much of it,
it just stays lit."
That evening there was
a lightning strike
on a power line
in Westchester County.
The line went out and the demand
starts to increase
on some of the surrounding
lines.
This sort of essentially sets
off a kind of chain reaction,
a sort of a domino effect
where another line
suddenly has too much power,
and it has to be shut down.
(alarms and phones ringing)
And then another line
is overextended
and it has to be shut down.
Everyone's using a lot of power
because they're all running
air conditioners.
And before you know it,
the city is struggling
to get enough power
into the five boroughs.
DURKIN:
I got a call maybe
a little bit after 9:00
asking me to call
the system operator.
I called in and finally said,
there's no other choice,
the only alternative was
to disconnect customers.
MAN ON PHONE:
You know, you're gonna lose
the whole thing.
Tell him this is
a dire emergency,
if he can give us any more
to give it to us.
OPERATOR:
Right.
MAHLER:
It is one man who is in charge
of bringing all
of this power in.
You have people telling him,
yelling at him,
"You have to shut down
some of these lines.
You have to do it
or the city's gonna lose power."
MAN ON PHONE:
Bill, I hate to bother you,
but you'd better shed
about 400 megawatts of load
or you're going to lose
everything down there
OPERATOR:
Yeah, I I'm trying to.
MAHLER:
Anyone who's ever flown
into New York City at night,
who's ever been in
New York City at night,
there are lights everywhere.
It's a beautiful image,
really, in a way.
It's the city that never sleeps,
the city where the lights
are always on.
QUIÑONEZ:
I was playing handball
with my friends.
And you can still play at night
because there was a lot
of lampposts
around Jefferson Park.
But then all of a sudden
they started going out,
one by one, like pop, pop, pop,
and, uh, we're like,
"Wow, what's happening?"
CARL ST. MARTIN:
That night I'm on the third
floor, windows open.
It was very hot.
So people were outside.
And suddenly the TV went off.
The light went off.
All of a sudden, the
noise outside in the street
quickly stopped for a second,
and suddenly you heard a (gasps)
because everybody
at the same time realized
something had happened.
VINCENT DUNN:
I was up in the office.
I was catching up
on some paperwork
and having a cup of coffee
and the lights dimmed.
The emergency generator
roared on
and somebody shouted,
"Blackout!" you know?
ZRALY:
One of the things
about Windows on the World
right from the very beginning
was its dress code.
You had to have
a jacket and tie.
The general manager said to me,
"You can tell people they can
take their jackets off."
Take their jackets off,
you know,
"Okay, you can take
your jackets off."
Next thing the ties
are coming off.
Next thing, you know,
people loosening their shirts.
The general manager got up
and immediately spoke,
"Ladies and gentlemen,
everybody's getting champagne."
(CBS News theme music playing)
RADIO ANNOUNCER:
Now, direct from CBS News.
This special radio net alert
news report.
ANNOUNCER:
A major power blackout
has hit New York City
and surrounding communities.
RADIO HOST:
Chuck, if you could,
what can you tell us
about the feel
for Midtown Manhattan?
REPORTER:
Well, George, there are people
directing traffic
at the intersections.
I assume many of them
are policemen.
Some of them, obviously,
are just volunteers,
people who wanted to pitch in.
But in general, people
are taking it in good spirit,
and almost a little
conviviality going on.
REPORTER:
Where were you
when the lights went out?
MAN:
Radio City Music Hall.
REPORTER:
What happened
in the music hall?
All of sudden
the lights went out.
No picture, no sound, nothing.
And a man made
an announcement about, uh,
the power is off
in the whole city.
And you're waiting
for the subway now?
No, there's no subway running.
So what are you doing here?
I'm on TV.
(people laughing)
FEMALE REPORTER:
All I can tell you is
there were severe electrical
storms to the north.
Lights totally went out
about 15 minutes ago.
MALE REPORTER:
All five boroughs
are affected so that's the word.
Seven million people
are now without power.
JOYCE PURNICK:
My beat at the Post
was covering politics.
I went running over to City Hall
and I spent the night
in the command center
where we got
regular briefings on what they
said was going on in the city.
The blackout was not
the city's fault, but, um,
it was an opportunity
for the mayor, Abe Beame,
to show the people of New York
that he was in control.
What are you doing
now that this is happening?
We are trying to keep on top
through every agency in the city
to do everything possible
to keep things moving,
and keep people alerted
and have people
who are with city agencies
at their stations
in case they are needed.
PURNICK:
I'm not sure to this day if he,
or even the police commissioner,
actually knew what was going on,
because if they did,
they didn't tell us.
VINCENT DUNN:
I'm trying to scramble to find
out what the big issues are.
I called up the fire battalions,
seeing how things are
in their districts.
The phones were
evidently working.
And I told them, "Hey, we gotta
go down to the subways,
"make sure those people stuck
in those hot trains
don't bail out
on those third-rail tracks."
And then we have these portable
generators that are useful.
You know, hospitals,
that's our first priority.
RADIO REPORTER:
At Bellevue, the city's
largest hospital,
emergency generator service
has been halted
by an electrical fire.
Steps are being taken
to protect the lives
of patients on respirators
and other necessary
electrical equipment.
Dr. Stephen Schwartz
at New York's Lenox Hospital
says emergency equipment
is working there,
but they are bracing for
a possible flood of patients.
DUNN:
Then, you know, I got called
to go respond to a fire.
And I never returned
to the firehouse.
I knew this was going
to be a very difficult
and challenging task to put
the power system back together.
It's really not made
to shut down and restart.
It's made to stay in service.
FEINSTEIN:
We knew this was gonna be
a long, drawn-out affair.
The restoration plan
was out of date
because it hadn't been updated
since 1965,
so between Charlie and I,
we made up the plan.
DURKIN:
Well, there's only two ways
to restore the power.
One is to bootstrap the system
up on its own,
or to bring power in
from the outside.
We both knew that
the quickest, fastest way
was get power in
from the outside.
I said, "I'll take a part
from the north.
"Jack, you take the part
from Long Island Lighting,
and at some point we're gonna
meet in the middle."
RADIO REPORTER:
Insofar as police
are concerned,
all off-duty police officers
are being ordered
to their nearest precinct
Not the precinct
where they work,
but the precinct of residence.
MARSHALL:
We didn't know
it was a big blackout.
The lights went out,
but who knew
if the lights
were gonna stay out?
There was no AM/FM radios
in the patrol cars at the time.
So you had no radio
communication with the outside.
Our portable radio had died
because of the repeaters
being out.
Well, we go back
into the station house,
and when we went
into the station house,
that's when we really knew
that the pot was cooking.
The station house was
in darkness,
complete and utter darkness.
Everybody's walking around
with flashlights, some candles.
And it looked like a cross
between a Boris Karloff movie
and Car 54.
The sergeant said,
"Go out, do the best you can,
"come back in a little while.
"We're gonna have
a better plan in place.
But go out and do
what you can do."
JOSHUA FREEMAN:
12 years earlier, November 1965,
New York City lost its power
and it was a very
startling event.
But all in all, the city
handled it remarkably well.
You know, the urban legend was
that nine months later,
births spiked in the city.
I don't know
if that's actually true
but I think that captivated
the sense that most people had
of almost a kind of moment
out of the ordinary
but not a scary
or threatening experience.
PURNICK:
I remember the blackout
of '65 as almost being fun.
There was a certain
festive atmosphere.
People pulled together.
There were little get-togethers
on the streets.
ELZORA WILLIAMSON:
Had a bright moon.
Everything was peaceful.
We were directing traffic,
and then we had everybody else
start directing traffic with us.
People became helpful
to each other,
and it went very, very smoothly.
BRUCE PORTER:
The blackout in 1965
happened at 5:30.
So the store owners were still
in their stores locking up.
The temperature was
between 43 and 48 degrees,
right, so people were not
out on the street.
FREEMAN:
A lot of people simply stayed
in their houses.
There was no real sense
of panic.
There was no increase in crime.
In the end, really no big deal.
MAHLER:
New York had been this great
kind of working-class city.
You could come to New York,
immigrants, obviously,
from around the world,
you could find a job,
you could make a better life.
FREEMAN:
Through the mid-1960s,
New York was doing pretty well
economically.
It was both a financial center,
it was a huge
manufacturing center.
You'd see blue-collar workers
all over the place.
You would see factories
making garments,
making electronic goods,
you'd see people working
unloading ships on the docks.
MAHLER:
New York was historically a city
that did take care of people,
where the subways
were heavily subsidized,
where you had great
public schools,
where you had this fantastic
network of universities
that were free.
And by 1977, I mean, all of this
was just such a distant memory.
The ambitions of the city had
diminished so greatly,
and this notion that the city
could take care of the people
who lived in it was gone.
NEWSCASTER:
Treasury Secretary Simon
said today
that the country is
in a recession.
NEWSCASTER:
For the first time since 1941,
the nation's unemployment rate
has gone above nine percent.
NEWSCASTER:
In New York City, the rate
of unemployment is much higher
than it is nationally,
higher than at any time
since the Great Depression.
FREEMAN:
The 1970s was an economically
troubled period
for the whole United States
and New York was
particularly hard hit
by this general turn downward.
New York hits a 12%
unemployment rate in 1975.
That's just a huge
unemployment rate,
and you can feel it all over,
every place.
It's visceral.
People hanging out
on the streets,
increase in petty crime.
A sense of despair
in a lot of areas,
you know, of giving up.
MAHLER:
There was this sense that
there were no jobs in New York.
People were fleeing the city,
moving to the suburbs
if they could.
Some of the middle-class
white families move out,
what became known
as white flight.
There was just sort
of a sense of desperation
about New York at the time.
REPORTER:
The city will need more
than God's help
to get out of this mess.
New York needs $500 million
a month
to keep its head above water.
MAHLER:
In 1975, New York City was
on the brink of bankruptcy,
and it needed a loan
from Washington.
And President Ford
gave it some thought
and came back to New York
and said,
"You're not gonna get a loan."
FREEMAN:
After very dramatically
turning down a city request,
there was a retreat in
Washington from that hard line.
But they would only give New
York City the money it needed
to avoid bankruptcy if New York
City adopted austerity measures.
That meant cutting public
services, laying off
tens of thousands of workers,
and other kinds of measures
that assured them that they
would get that money back.
DUNN:
When those layoffs of police
and firefighters came, you know,
we were shocked.
And that was sort of like a
little unwritten social contract
that was broken by the city.
The police went on strike.
The fire went on strike.
Sanitation went on strike.
FREEMAN:
This big cut in public services
at a time
when the private economy
is in very bad shape,
it means hardship.
It had immediate impact
on New Yorkers and particularly
on poor New Yorkers.
People can't send the kids off
the streets into the library.
It's not there anymore.
They can't send them to the
after-school athletic program
to keep them safe.
It's not there anymore.
So there's a lot of anger
and also, I think, a sense
of abandonment.
DUNN:
Graffiti, crime, drugs, homeless
people, squeegee people.
People would put
in their car windows
"No radio," so people wouldn't
break their windows.
So it was, the city
was going down.
ERNESTO QUIÑONEZ:
When a population is neglected
for so long,
and then they keep cutting
your social services,
your education, your hospitals,
your fire departments,
it's going to boil
and sooner or later
something is going
to come out of that.
And it wasn't going
to be pretty.
BILL MOYERS:
This is the Bronx in New York.
One and a half million people
live in this borough.
It's the home
of the New York Yankees.
It has also become the arson
capital of the world.
Once that smoke on the horizon
signified industry,
progress, jobs.
Now it means someone
is burning down a building.
DUNN:
We call those years
the fire years
when the city was burning down.
When I came in the fire service,
a busy fire company did 1,700
to 2,000 runs a year.
In the 1970s we were all doing
5,000 alarms a year.
Smoking carelessness,
falling asleep with a cigarette,
cooking fires
and electrical fires.
They were the three top causes.
We've got a fire on the fifth
floor, apartment 5I.
Occupants are
DUNN:
But then there was arson
arson for profit,
arson for revenge, you wanted
to get even to a neighbor.
You had arson for fun.
A couple of kids
with a can of gasoline
could light a vacant building
and have a ball watching
firefighters come
with big aerial ladders
on a night, hot night
and would watch us throw water
into this building.
You had fires for boredom.
CARL ST. MARTIN:
The block below me,
of the 60 houses,
maybe only five of them
hadn't had a fire.
You knew that there's a chance
that your house
could catch on fire.
So it caused that next person
next door to move.
Now that landlord
didn't get his rent.
This led to the temptation
for some people
to consider burning the building
and collecting the insurance.
And it became a domino effect.
MAHLER:
On top of all that
There was a serial killer
on the loose in New York.
REPORTERS:
In New York, the search
continues for the Son of Sam,
the object of one of the biggest
manhunts in this city's history.
The killer has taunted
authorities
by writing two letters,
signed Son of Sam.
PURNICK:
The NYPD was then and still is
the preeminent police department
in the country,
and he was eluding the NYPD.
Everybody was very tense.
And it contributed to the sense
of nobody was in control.
It was becoming embarrassing
to say you were a New Yorker
after having been so many years
when you were proud
to be a New Yorker.
The city was falling apart.
CHRIS "DOC" VANAGER:
By 10:00, that's when
I started to hear the noises.
And first my mother goes,
"What is that?"
You heard these bumping noises.
Just bump-bump-bump-bump
outside.
And so my mother opens the door
and she looks.
And I stick my head out
and the staircase door was open
a little bit
and you see a washing machine
going up the stairs.
Then after that a refrigerator
comes upstairs.
Then those giant furniture TVs,
you know, the old Zeniths
with the sound system in
and the record player,
those started going up.
And it was just box after box
after box after box.
ST. MARTIN:
It just happened.
Like a tinderbox.
It went from being lights
to being looting.
(sirens wailing)
VANAGER:
All I remember was people
with stuff
Coats, clothes
Like people just have this stuff
draped over their arms like,
"Yo, you wanna buy this?
You wanna buy that?"
They stole clothes, electronics,
just everything
you could think of.
MAHLER:
It happened within minutes
in all of these neighborhoods.
Every single borough in New York
was affected by the looting.
And it happens,
I mean, just instantaneously.
Ace Pontiac stored 50 brand new
Pontiacs in its garage
and the fire department had
a rule that if you stored cars
inside a building, you had
to leave the key in the ignition
and you had to put two dollars
worth of gas in the tank.
Well, all 50
of these cars vanished
in the first hour and a half.
MARSHALL:
There was people everywhere.
Hundreds.
Hundreds per block.
(sirens pulsing)
We responded to a call
for assistance
from Wyckoff Heights Hospital.
And the staff in the emergency
room was being hard pressed
to keep up with the injuries
because the looters
were suffering such vicious cuts
from the glass.
There was blood everywhere.
There was people
with some hellacious injuries
and it really was
starting to slide.
ST. MARTIN:
I was in medical school,
so, you know,
I figured might as well just go
and work at the hospital.
It was packed.
Full-blown, people outside
in the street waiting to get in.
I went in and there
were some doctors there.
And I explained
that I was a medical student
and he asked me
had I sutured before.
And I said, "Well, I'd done
a little bit but not really."
He says, "Okay, come,
come, I'll show you.
We need your help,
we need your help."
All night long I was in a corner
just closing up wounds.
WILLIAMSON:
We had our store, which was
entitled Trophies By Syl.
It was a sporting goods
and trophy shop.
We thought of it
as more than a store.
We taught the young people
how to open a bank account,
how to fill out the forms.
My husband would go with them,
show them how to do that.
That evening the lights went out
as we were eating.
And my husband said, "Oh maybe
we better get back over there."
And I said to him, "Oh, let me
do the dishes first."
I probably lost about an hour.
When we got to maybe five,
six blocks away from our store,
we started seeing
our merchandise in the street.
I just drove up on the sidewalk
and I parked the car
directly where the doorway was.
The people who were inside,
when they saw my husband,
they said, "Here's Mr. Syl,
Mr. Syl is here,"
and they started running.
It was sad in some ways
because some people that you saw
would be people you
would not have expected
to see in that capacity.
And, and yet they were there.
ALAN RUBIN:
I figured, "Okay, I'll walk
over to the store."
And I saw a crowd
on the side of the store.
They were pushing and shoving
to get into the store
and people were coming out
carrying things.
They got out hi-fi.
They got out TVs.
The store next to me, the owner
came over to me and he says,
"I'm shooting in the air
to scare them away."
He said, "Do you need a gun?"
And I said, "No way."
I said, "I'll get hurt
if I have a gun."
I couldn't do anything about it
so I just was watching.
And my knees started to shake.
WILLIAMSON:
We had to stay there all night
because if we left, they were
gonna come in and take the rest.
There was no police
to stop them.
Who would stop them from taking
whatever else was there?
PORTER:
One problem with the police
is they were told to report
to the nearest precinct to them.
Almost none of them live
in the affected precincts
in the poor neighborhoods.
The major looting occurred
when there were almost
no policemen on the street.
MAHLER:
It took hours to get cops
to the neighborhoods
that needed them most.
By the time they get there,
this thing is on.
Bring them out, bring them out!
PORTER:
There were a lot of merchants
and people who wanted police
to come to their stores,
stand there with their rifles
in their hands
and keep the people out.
Well, the police didn't have
anywhere near the manpower
or police power to do that.
MAN:
The whole Bronx
is going, man.
The whole Bronx is going.
We'd like to sit here
and watch it, but we can't.
No, that's all right.
MARSHALL:
Our instructions were,
"Do the best you can."
And we did the best we could.
We had sticks.
We had our hands.
You'd grab people
and just toss them out.
We were so outnumbered,
we'd push them back
as far as we could.
The people would only
respond so far.
And then they would start
hurling rocks and bottles at us.
And then there was
a pitched battle in the street.
After a while there was
what can you do?
It was insanity.
GEORGE MICHAEL:
It's 12:02 on WABC in New York.
We switch now to Steve O'Brien.
O'BRIEN:
Thank you, George.
Walking into one of the
neighborhood establishments,
we found still an atmosphere
of extreme levity
considering the situation.
Anyway, people are feeling
no pain
in most of the establishments
around the area.
PORTER:
The lights went out
and the beer came out,
and we had candles
and we had a block party.
I didn't find out until the next
day that there was any looting.
Right, I mean, if you didn't
live on a commercial street,
you didn't know the looting
had happened.
KEVIN ZRALY:
We were on an island in the sky,
isolated from whatever else
was happening
in all of New York City.
We had these emergency lights,
but it wasn't enough
I mean, so we started
bringing candles in.
In hindsight, I don't think
that was a good idea
because the candles
also gave off heat.
Air conditioning now has been
out for since 9:30.
But still people some people
we had to ask to leave.
It was that kind of thing,
you know.
They liked the champagne part.
It sort of sounds
like the Titanic
when we talk about, "Did the
band play on?" you know?
We had a three-piece combo
of piano, bass, and guitar.
The piano continued on.
MAHLER:
It's the city of rich
and the city of the poor.
And if you weren't in one
of those neighborhoods,
you know, if you were
on the Upper East Side
enjoying a candlelit dinner
on your roof
You had no idea what
was going on all around you.
We tripped the lights
fantastic ♪
On the sidewalks
of New York. ♪
(applause)
GUS ENGELMAN:
George, I just had a Con Ed
spokesman on the phone
to see if we can get a better
idea of when Con Ed
will be restoring that power.
Here's Ed Livingston right now.
LIVINGSTON:
We can't we really
can't estimate, Gus.
We're working as hard as we can
and as fast as we can,
but I don't want to build up
any hopes and pick
a number of hours
because we just can't
be sure right now.
JACK FEINSTEIN:
We were moving in
a step-by-step, very methodic,
logical way of picking
up the load.
The generation
was coming on slowly.
I'm busy concentrating
and I turn around
and there's the chairman
of the board
and the president
of the company.
CHARLIE DURKIN:
They just wanted me to proceed
with a sense of urgency,
which we were.
Each time we came to a point
where we could pick up
another network, it took
about 15 minutes.
That doesn't seem
like a lot of time
when you're talking one network.
But when you have 50 networks,
it's a lot of time.
Electricity is a kind
of a keystone for civility
and if we can get
the streetlights back on,
the traffic lights working
and all that kind of thing,
there was a much better
likelihood that the police
and so forth
can maintain control.
PORTER:
The first group,
who went into the stores
ten minutes
after the blackout occurred,
these were a criminal element.
Then the stores were open.
And then another class
of looters came in,
people who did not have
a criminal background,
whom it would not occur to
to go and smash the window
of a store and go in
and grab something.
But they sat
in their hot apartments
seeing people run in
and grab stuff and they said,
"You know, I could really
use some Pampers."
QUIÑONEZ:
I remember the rattling.
It's a very distinct rattling.
A whole bunch of housewives
had looted the supermarket
at the corner where I used
to live, and what they had done
is they had taken pantyhose
and they had tied
shopping carts together so they
could make a shopping cart train
and then they had loaded
all the stuff,
all this merchandise
Pampers, toilet paper, food
On these carts
and were pushing them home.
PORTER:
These were the people
who tended to get arrested.
They had never been
arrested before.
And here they were arrested and
charged with stealing a couch
or some clothes.
There were not a package
of Pampers survived the looting.
MARSHALL:
Anybody and everybody,
children, women, men,
people with jobs,
people without jobs.
They all got caught up
in the moment.
They didn't feel like they were
committing a crime
because the whole
general atmosphere,
the whole feeling of it was,
"Everybody's doing it,
why not me?"
OFFICER:
Hide your faces,
smile, smile.
They're hiding their faces.
REPORTER:
Is this for looting?
Looting, looting.
FREEMAN:
Looting is a complicated thing.
People do it because they're
greedy, because they need stuff.
It's also sometimes fun.
It's the people on the bottom
being on the top for a moment,
and they know it's only
for a moment,
but who's going to stop you?
Who's going to stop you?
No one can stop you.
That can be a thrill.
QUIÑONEZ:
It was the neighborhoods that
had been neglected that rioted,
and it was basically people
who were poor and hungry.
The media paints it as "Look
at these criminals, it's race!"
But it's not so much race
as it is class.
Black people didn't
go after white people.
Latinos did not go
after the Italians.
It was more about class.
We didn't have, so we went,
not even after those who had.
We went after their stuff.
It's an expression of anger,
it's an expression of neglect,
and it's an expression of need.
DUNN:
If you don't control
the crime problem
and the people
causing the disorder,
it becomes a fire problem.
The dispatcher ordered us
to go from fire to fire.
You were driving in the streets.
People were waving to you
for help, you couldn't stop.
Buildings were burning.
Cars in the street were burning.
Garbage in lots were burning.
You know, you'd hear
the dispatcher,
"No companies available,
no companies available."
They would only send us
to big store fires.
You know, we would go
to these big supermarket fires,
appliance store fires,
which were being broken into,
looted, and burned.
WILLIAMSON:
Not only did they loot
the stores, they burned them.
And to me, that was
the ultimate violation.
You took everything,
now why are you going
to burn the store down as well?
DUNN:
Fire is a special effect.
You light a car, you've got
a spectacular event.
Fire, you know, it's got noise.
It's got smoke.
It's got flame.
It's got sound.
It was a crazy scene,
you know, it was something
out of like a world war.
(fire crackling, sirens blaring)
REPORTER:
New York City
in the early morning,
after a night of no
electric power and so no lights,
elevators, subway trains
or any trains, airports,
air conditioning,
traffic signals, television.
What it did have
in the dark streets
was a wild outburst
of crime arson, looting,
mugging and 1,000
false fire alarms.
MAHLER:
After the blackout, everyone
is trying to make sense
of what has happened
to New York.
There was this sense
that New York is not just
in financial trouble,
not just struggling.
But there's something
really existentially,
foundationally wrong
with New York,
and New York is
in real, real trouble.
VANAGER:
When we got up that next day,
I got on my bike
and rode around
the neighborhood,
and you just saw
everything was gone.
And that's when it kind
of sunk in
that nothing's
gonna be the same.
You know, nothing's
ever gonna be the same.
And you just go,
"What are people supposed
to do now?"
You know?
QUIÑONEZ:
It sort of felt like some bomb
had gone off
but instead of destroying
the buildings,
all you had was a whole bunch
of confetti and paper.
And it was a very quiet city.
I think that one of the reasons
for this quietness
was because a lot of frustration
had been released
and even if you yourself
had not gone out there
to loot, others had.
And somehow, I think,
that brings you some
sort of catharsis.
ST. MARTIN:
Once the sun was up,
the storeowners were now there.
Many of them had roots
in the neighborhood
and were actually connected
to the neighborhood.
So they were hurt,
and we were hurt.
STORE OWNER:
They got everything.
I lost all my money.
I work about ten years for this.
I lost everything.
I don't have no insurance,
nothing.
I have three kids, a wife.
I lost everything.
MAN:
You've got these people now,
they are worried
about their business
as to whether they can start
again in a community like this.
As to whether they
are gonna trust these people
around here, I doubt it.
The merchants,
they're not gonna trust
these people after this.
I wouldn't trust them.
REPORTER:
So, yourself,
what are you going to do now?
STORE OWNER:
Well, I tell you, I'm going
to leave this great Big Apple
to those that want to stay here.
I can't fight this anymore.
ALAN RUBIN:
Early the next morning,
I walk into the store
and the lights were still out,
but there's enough light for me
to see where I'm going.
It was horrendous.
It was a lot of work.
There was gonna be no guarantee
that we could make it.
More to cut out
all the questions,
not any major statement,
I just put a sign
on the window that said,
"We're staying."
ELZORA WILLIAMSON:
They had taken so much.
We lost, I think it was
something like $350,000
worth of merchandise.
My whole thought was, "How am I
gonna stay in business?"
My husband, he just sat down
with people who looted
the store,
talked to them, told them
he was disappointed.
But he never reacted
in such a way
that would have been
a negative on his part.
You know, now that
was something I could not do.
I could not sit down and look
a person in the eye
and say, "It's okay."
It was not okay.
No matter how long we stayed,
the store never really was
what it had been
all those years ago.
VANAGER:
My neighborhood stayed that way
for probably 15 years.
That whole strip never opened
back up ever again.
Everybody that lived there,
those mom-and-pop stores,
they just shut down
and they left.
MARSHALL:
We got finished at about 8:00
in the morning.
I just I sat
on the hood of the car
and looked down Broadway.
I said, "I think the
neighborhood's done.
I think the back
has finally been broken."
And it was.
I truly believe that
that night took the carpet
out from under the people.
REPORTER:
What triggered the blackout?
A federal report
places the primary blame
on Consolidated Edison,
saying it was unprepared
to deal with the crisis touched
off by a severe thunderstorm.
JACK FEINSTEIN:
A blackout is almost similar
to an airplane crash.
It's never just one item.
From the first lightning strike
to the complete system shutdown,
it's a series of events that
if any one of them didn't occur
or was responded to differently,
would've prevented the blackout.
REPORTER:
It was a night of terror
that lasted for 25 hours.
What happened
to this blinded city?
3,176 people arrested.
132 policemen injured.
1,576 businesses looted
or set on fire.
MAHLER:
The blackout produced
the largest mass arrest
in the city's history.
We're talking
about thousands of people.
And we're talking about hundreds
of millions of dollars
of damage and stolen property.
DUNN:
There were 1,000 major fires
that night, 1,000 major fires.
I mean that's mind-boggling.
There's a social order
that's necessary to live
in these dense urban areas
that broke down that night.
REPORTER:
In the worst slums of the city,
the light of mindless violence
lit up the sky,
as the blackout divided the town
into two societies,
separate and unequal.
FREEMAN:
The blackout gave you
an appreciation of the fragility
of urban life.
You flip the switch
and darkness turns to light
and you just totally take
all this stuff for granted.
And an event like that makes
you realize how contingent,
how fragile all that is.
You can't hit your mom
because she's your mom,
so you hit your little brother.
Something like that
is what was happening.
You couldn't go after
these politicians
that were killing
your neighborhood.
So, you went after
your little brother.
You went after each other.
DUNN:
If you wanted to say,
"When was the bottom
of the decaying,
declining New York City?"
you would have to say 1977,
the blackout.
We've had some very good,
prosperous times
in New York City since then.
But this is always there as
an example of what could happen.