1:20:00
I think I still have him.
1:20:01
Oh, that's why.
They're coming this way.
1:20:05
Tell them to take a visual on us
and see if we have Elwood.
1:20:08
- Look at that.
- Do you see Elwood?
1:20:11
Oh, my God.
He got it!
1:20:13
It looks great.
It's beautiful.
1:20:15
Do you see Elwood?
Do you see Elwood?
1:20:18
Yes, we do.
1:20:19
We got him.
1:20:32
We pulled it off, Daddy-O.
1:20:35
Yeah.
1:20:36
Whoo.
1:20:37
Great job.
1:20:38
Everybody did a great job.
1:20:40
Elwood is safe and sound.
1:20:43
And the time is 6: 16,
September 11, 2001.
1:20:51
See you later.
1:20:58
What's this thing
that's going on?
1:20:59
The worst terrorist attack
in history, Jim.
1:21:02
We all were wrapped up
in what we were doing
1:21:05
and thought it was important.
1:21:07
Hit by two separate
hijacked commercial jets...
1:21:10
And then this horrible event
happened
1:21:12
and slammed us
into this perspective.
1:21:14
God.
1:21:21
The morning after
the attack on September 11th,
1:21:24
I kept thinking how trivial
this expedition suddenly became.
1:21:28
It just wasn't a big deal
anymore.
1:21:38
The emotional
parallels came first.
1:21:42
We now understood
what it felt like
1:21:44
to be a witness to tragedy.
1:21:46
The sense of shock and numbness
1:21:49
and the disbelief that
the unthinkable has happened.
1:21:53
It does happen.
1:21:54
Occasionally,
life sits on your head.