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30 Years Later, a New Look at the Oklahoma City Bombing

A National Geographic docuseries recounts the experiences of those who went through the 1995 attack on the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building.

David Glover holds up what looks like a pair of gray bricks. They were once part of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, which was bombed by Timothy McVeigh on April 19, 1995, killing 168 people. It remains the deadliest domestic terror attack in U.S. history.

Glover, an executive producer of the new three-part docuseries “Oklahoma City Bombing: One Day in America,” explained in a video interview that he had received the rubble from Mike Shannon, a firefighter featured in the film. Shannon wanted the filmmaker to feel the weight of the project in his hands.

“It was almost like he was saying, ‘Don’t forget this is real,’” Glover said. “‘Don’t forget you’ve got a responsibility here.’ It is a physical artifact that has a lot of heft to it.”

Shannon needn’t have worried. The series, now streaming on Hulu and Disney+, follows a pattern set by the first two “One Day in America” installments, which covered the Sept. 11 attacks and the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. The stories are less interested in granules of policy and the sweep of history than in the experiences of individuals who were present for events that shook the country. (Glover is an executive producer on all of the “One Day in America” series, which were produced by 72 Films, the company he founded with Mark Raphael.)

This approach means that McVeigh, the violent anti-government extremist who bombed the Murrah building (and was executed in 2001), takes a back seat to the Oklahomans whose lives were shattered that day, many of whom appear here to give their accounts of the shock and its aftermath. This includes emergency medical workers, victims, family members, law enforcement officers and even McVeigh’s court-appointed attorney, who admits to fearing for his life when he learned the identity of his new client.

Even the more famous and consequential interview subjects approach the day’s events from a personal perspective. Bill Clinton, who was in the first term of his presidency when the attack occurred (and was in the middle of a White House news conference on terrorism when he was notified about it), lost one of his favorite Secret Service agents in the bombing.

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Source: Television - nytimes.com


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