The song is "Duvet" by Boa. Yes, this is real. No, it is not a Japanese broadcast - the use of English in both the scrolling announcement and the credits should have been a huge tip-off. KTEH, a San Jose-based PBS station, started airing Serial Experiments Lain in 2001. This broadcast was from September 16, 2001.
The frozen dove's shadow and Lain's stare (who, of all characters, should be able to read a prompt in the TV thanks to her digital omnipresence) give this video a really nice touch
I noticed that too! Usually when you add text to a photo or video the contrast between the two is obvious. You can tell the text is not originally part of either the photo or video. But the text present in this broadcast looks like it's actually part of the episode itself!
The quality of it all is consistent because of the medium this recording was made on. Most likely some crummy VHS recorder and a crummy heavily used tape. Likely also stored improperly and deteriorated slightly over time.
imagine it’s 2001. some grandma is tuning in to KTEH in hopes of watching The Travel Auction to take her mind off the news, but there's another show airing instead. she'll decide she'll watch it anyway, absolutely unprepared for what was about to ensue
My OT teacher said that her children love anime and after reading my Serial Experiments Lain review, she would tell them to watch it I can imagine them shaking in their own skin during episode 11
Most likely it was chosen quickly, based on something like fitting cleanly in the time slot and cost to air. Either that or the employee who had to find a replacement was a fan of Lain.
Back then the general public didn't really know what anime was. It's not like today. Back then I was made fun of for liking anime. Who ever chose this likely just saw some cartoon vhs and thought it would be a fun show.
@@WeavileShiny I wonder if it has to mostly do with the transition to another century that feels so 'liminal', or the fact some parts of the our lives are influenced of tech that were predecessors to what we know today.
@@pieflingerpt2 tbf during that time, anime wasn't as mainstream as it is today, plus it was also revolutionary for a pbs channel to broadcast anime considering the importation of rights, as well as acquiring them, on top of that, being very expensive to do, so that's why kteh was only funding these animes to air by donations at the time.
@@isuck6049 I didn't know that. I also didn't know PBS was playing anime since I was still young and watching PBS Kids at the time. Although my first anime experience watching PBS would be a great way to shape me as a child especially Lain.
@@zobiya17 lmao why try to defend 4chan? The whole point of the website is to be the toilet of the internet, the people who use it revel in being hateful rejects of society. If a normal well-adjusted person browsed 4chan for a day they'd lose several IQ points and get a migrane from cringing at the unfiltered tripe that people type out. Even if you avoid the really obnoxious containment boards, they leak into the others so easily. It was probably a pretty decent image board a decade or more ago before the extremism was ramped up, but nowadays it really is just a big pit full of shit.
I hate to break it to you, terrorist attacks happens a lot more than you can imagine at least globally, not sure about number of terrorist attacks on America. So the coincidence of this happening alongside the depressing show like this isn't very low.
I’ve always found 9/11 era stuff like this interesting since i was born only 5 months after it happened, the culture and media like this around the time is cool to look back at
I came back from the beach and all the electricity didnt work so I just slept and went to do my thing and I missed the event only to be told after the fact
This is such an unreal artifact of such a specific moment in world history. This really encapsulates the turning point of american culture that was 911. That feeling of a melancholic early internet, when things were just beginning to turn into what they are today. Imagine the night after 911 happened, sitting down after the emotional whirlwind of the day and watching, out of all things, Lain. Slowly coming to the realization that the world you knew is gone, and the world is going to be crazy for the next decade and a half.
@@chunkymilk Don't be that guy. You don't have to find every genuine expression cringe, and you don't have to be sarcastic, cynical and emotionally detached about everything. It's just sad and makes you look childish.
The imagery, outside of the show's context, of Lain looking to the skyline in a typical city morning, then continuing to walk on as the world seems to stop is rather poignant within the historical context of 9/11. She's obviously not seeing the tragedy unfold right there, but it becomes an accidental reflection of reactions during the time: having to keep moving when the world comes to a halt. In other words, not something you play in deference to 9/11!
@@jemoah yeah I know, I'm just observing from an impressionistic view. I also can't count how many times where I was seeing a bird fly away to then see how nice the sky was or random smoke emissions, or the bird and my hat stop mid-air, then I walk away casually. This actually happened to my buddy Frankie last week, what an odd day
I was 13 when 9/11 happened-almost every channel was like this for the rest of the day. Some of them completely suspended programming because of it. Seeing stuff like this unlocks a lot of memories.
Life before 9/11 was amazing. The soviets were defeated. America won. The race riots of the early 90s were a distant memory. There was never going to be a war again.
Where I was the only 2 channels on our cable that didn't switch over to news coverage were Comedy Central and Nickelodeon. I've always wondered how many people watched comedy central all day and didn't know anything was going on until The Daily Show came on at 11.
@@owllymannstein7113 I was a daily show viewer at the time (16/yo) the show was cancelled for the next 3 days. It happened at 8-9am so everyone had time to figure out what was going on by the afternoon. Everyone was watching CNN all week anyway
Yep. I remember QVC being one of those channels. I heard cartoon Network suspended programming as well. But I did not have that channel at the time so I cannot confirm.
KTEH got a lot of money from Silicon Valley guys. Hence why they aired anime and British sci-fi you couldn't see anywhere else (they were the first channel in this country to pick up Red Dwarf IIIRC), and co-produced shows like Computer Chronicles.
I wish we had more archived videos like this. Tapings from the days after 9/11, showing how channels like this, MTV, CN, Disney, Nick, AS (which if I remember correctly was only a few days old at the time), and more handeled the tragedy and how the culture of the US and the world change because of that day. Especially in cartoons and media meant for young adults and kids like this. Sadly, most of this is lost media. And not the kind easy to find....
I haven't seen this anime, but after reading it about it on Wikipedia it definitely doesn't seem like something for kids or young adults. In Japan, there's animation for people of all ages, not just kids.
@@timelymirror7826Wish I had some but my Mom and Dad were in Europe at the time and ik 100% they didnt tape anything because they just got off the nigh shift
I was in 2nd grade during this time. All I remember is my teacher turning the TV on and gasping when the 2nd plane hit. I didn't really notice what was happening, so I just kept coloring. Apparently, my mom also picked me up early, too. I wonder if anyone else's parents have done that.
when USSR was collapsing all of the TV channels changed their schedule to Swan Lake to distract people from this situation. since then if they show Swan Lake on TV you know that something is fucked up
I was in 10th grade when it happened and I remember wanting to watch something that wasnt covering it and the only channel that wasnt rebroadcasting other news was disney channel
9/11 was a fart in the wind compared to the violence that America was inflicting on the globe and still does to this day. The US is the most genocidal organization in human history.
@@desertchannel7 It did, schools were dismissing early in NYC. I was in first grade when it occurred and had no idea why I was getting picked up early.
This is both fascinating, creepy, eerie and sad all at the same time. I’m not sure what this show or channel is but seeing this and the thing they cancelled just goes even further to show the major impact 9/11 had on everyone
@@kamimatsuyama I've watched it so long ago I vaguely remember the themes, loss of individuality and digitization of the soul being some of them. Since it was released in 1998 it was heavily influenced by the various huge social changes technology was going to have in the new century, I find this anime fascinating since I haven't really experienced that time myself, the change from analog to digital, the impact Internet had on society at the very start when it became worldwide and so on.
One of the lost artifacts of the days after 9/11 is that there was essentially no regular television for at least 2 days in the US after the attack occured, everything transitioned to 24 hour news broadcasts.
@@matiasfpm call me a braindead American all you want, but what happened in Argentina? I would say the falklands but that shit literally happened in the 80s
@@parmesancheez6087 no offense given... In 2001 the economy was on the verge of collapse, and in regular hours , the state channel was airing Superman (the very old seasons, but at least was in color). Or, anything recorded that it had no copyright trouble. But on 9-11 , every news media was on THAT event, nothing else, non-stop. So, for us, it was the end of a "relatively" good decade, and started the "socialist decay" that is reaching to this year, or the next one...
@@matiasfpm ah I see, yeah I can understand why they would be similar, but in any case, I know my words aint gonna do shit, but im sorry you guys are going through that, sounds like a pain in the ass to me
It was licensed in North America in 1999. I remember watching it on Adult Swim/Toonami alongside other classics like Cowboy Bebop, Trigun, FLCL, and GITS.
I think it's more weird that a local PBS news channel of all things had a regular anime block for like 7 years. They're also apparently the first to air NGE in America
When I was young maybe age 11 in the early 90s I got into anime only because a channel I believe to be TBS? at the time showed an anime block in the middle of the night on weekends. I watched Robot Carnival, Vampire Hunter D and others I cant recall right now. Then theyd show a commericial during the breaks for some VHS subscription service where they send you a VHS anime once per month for some outrageous price. It truly was the wild west of anime back then in America lol
People need to understand, EVERYTHING made some kind of reference to the tragedy after it happened For a couple months, _the Disney Channel_ ran a series of shorts of their teen celebrities talking about how they were processing 9/11 Looking back, it was a bizarre time
It's actually crazy because the first line to that show goes like "just between you and me. Let me tell you something, something that's going on in our society without you being even vaguely conscious of it." It's absolutely one of the most chilling things to hear while reading the words. "We can help" followed by a hotline number while hearing her say those lines. It's like she's speaking to the viewer at that point. It's crazy to think I was alive in that time. I remember every detail of it though, I remember my mom walking through the living room into the kitchen, turning on the radio and then just shrieking and crying. Riddled in panic from head to toe. We were alone in the house at the time so she picked me up and went to a neighbors house and we ended up having a really somber dinner with them while we waited for my dad to get home from work. The whole street was in an uproar. People shouting outside, crying. Some getting weapons ready in case we were attacked. Some just speeding away from home in their cars. It was actual panic. Stuff straight out if a disaster movie scene. After that day, nobody seemed the same. That shiney yellow tint to the world was gone. Replaced with the fear that said "it could happen again, any day" 9/11 the day that ended the world as we knew it and ushered in a new era of fear, control, restriction, obedience, and apathy. Rest in peace, to an era... I know I commented the other day by saying "the world we grew up in was gone" but I was really busy at the time and wanted to use that as a mental bookmark to come back here and type this out whenever I got the chance. Sorry for the double comment.
Don't say sorry! You described this feeling with such incredible emotion that me as a foreigner got emotional for this. Actually, thank you for commenting. (๑`✪̤◡✪̤)◞ღԵհɑղƘՏღ
Okay now, imagine the same panic and anguish multiplied thousand-fold, and spread across populations ten-fold that of the USA across all the countries the US has terrorized and bombed. I'm not saying that 9/11 was justified or that the people of USA deserved to witness it, but it's ridiculous to me how all of what went down on the other side of the world goes unnoticed.
@Talha Siddiqui it isn't, there's people that notice the other side of the world everyday. the world sucks. People are allowed and are going to have traumatic moments bro.
It makes sense "I am falling, I am fading, I am drowning // people fell from skyscrapers Help me to breathe // After the destruction, a large amount of dust rose I am hurting, I have lost it all I am losing Help me to breathe"
Non english guy here, until now i did not paid atention to the lyrics. Tho i watched the original videoclip, seems it was more "happy". [DISSONANCE INTENSIFIES]
@@lucy4660I know the comment is 11 months old, but this story is interesting, as it was practically a Mandela effect on a large scale, I can't put links here, but there are many Brazilian sites They talk about this, but the short story is: a lot of people think that the news interrupted Dargon Ball Z, but that never happened, and the news interrupted a cartoon called "garrafinha" And the worst thing is that to this day we don't know the moment before the interruption because that day's programming from globo (the largest TV channel in the country) is lost media. But recently the TV channel Globo itself confirmed this on its website
this is strangely nostalgic; despite being born way after 9/11 and never experiencing it, watching stuff from around that time period can give me a view into a world i never even knew
This is a PBS television station in the bay area. Apparently they were at the forefront of airing never before seen anime in America. This also would have been on the night after 9/11, since that's when they aired anime.
Growing up in the Silicon Valley, this kinda unlocked a memory for me. My grandma frequently tuned into KTEH/KQEH, sometimes leaving it on long enough for anime to play. Yet I was too young at the time to really recognize how devastating 9/11 really was. It makes me wonder how life pre-9/11 was.
@@LostSoulSilver Nahhh there was a whole car brand that was jump started into popularity because of the gulf war. The late 80s and early 90s were probably just as if not more militarized as they are today.
I always found 911 era (being within the next following weeks of the incident) to be so interesting. Some of the exclusive merch made in support of first responders. an example is the final fantasy first responders tshirt.
This reminds me of that one hxh episode where they jus had sept 11 as date in on a board and they had to put “this was made before the events of September 11th” in the subtitle lol
my mom often talks about 9/11 and the impact it had on america at the time. even though i wasn’t alive when the events happened, coming across this video reminds me of old tv commercials that would run while i stayed up late watching tv. so eerily nostalgic.
As someone who witnessed 9/11 and lived through the changes of the country, the world changed literally overnight. The fact that the country is so divided now was set in motion by 9/11. It's not as though the USA didn't have it's problems in the 90s but things were night and day compared to now. 9/11 launched an economic recession and what has essentially been a 20+ year war overnight. It's been twenty years and our country still hasn't recovered from the effects and it's wild to see.
Life before 9/11 was amazing. The soviets were defeated. America won. The race riots of the early 90s were a distant memory. There was never going to be a war again.
... was in middleschool at the time. Saw the second impact on tv in real-time. I remember most of the kids thinking it was just an accident at the time. I remember watching the unedited news broadcast that night. It was horrifying and watching it provoked an automatic sadness without thinking about it. It was unreal.
The VHS quality nowadays give a sensation of old, but not-so old days, given the circunstances on that airing and the song gives to some people a dissonance or melancholic effect.
“Given recent tragic events we’ve choosen to not bore the living shit out of you with our regular scheduled auction show and instead air something interesting”
@@DaWhiteHowhard not enough time to reschedule something other than a re-run, which this probably was, and there's also airing rights to consider: Probably the contract they had with the series allowed them to just use it right away, or the people in charge gave the okay really fast. Also they were evading the topic of "travelling" because just after 9/11 talking about anything related to planes would be seen as tactless. Or maybe the channel director felt it was fitting to air Lain in a day like that idk. Which would be based.
the music, the quality image, the moment, it really feels nostalgic. Makes you wish to live those times again, before the tragedy i mean, and feel the calmness of a quite world
It’s fascinating that so many countries felt the need to express any condolences over 9/11, it really was that important and impactful but it’s also appreciated that they felt so sorry for us
Jeez the turn of the millenium feels like an entirely different world, there was so much more optimism even after a tragedy like 9/11. I know it wasn't as simple as it seemed when I was a kid but that doesn't stop me from missing it.
for me i felt comforted, disturbed and almost nostalgic, despite the fact that i was only born only 9 months after this and with no way of knowing that this happened.
Horrors don't bother me anymore. I've played countless horror games, watched movies, and although I am usually scared, I don't get the chills. This hits different. Just.. the fact that it's real, makes it so much more terrifying than all the tapes you can find. It really gives you chills.
@matiasfpm yeah, that's actually right - I am a gen z, hehe. the explanation actually makes a lot of sense, I didn't think about it from such perspective, thanks!
Don't worry, you'll get used to this, if you look at more real-life tragedies because usually fiction is inspired by real-life experiences or trying to capture the same feeling.
I’m now remembering that this is how I first experienced lain. I would later get into the series thanks to “I am balling I am fading”,but I thought THAT was my first experience …also looking back,this recording feels very surreal. Just something chilling about duvet being paired with the message in memory of the attack. I cant really say it dosent fit because well,it does.
@@captsorghum you’re right,though there’s a meme where the lyrics to duvet are interpreted as “balling and faded” instead. That’s how I rediscovered lain.
I grew up on the anime they showed on KTEH. First channel outside of Japan to air Evangelion. I was only 12 and saw some of the most psychological anime I have ever seen at that time. It truly shaped my tastes for anime and movies moving forward.
I'm from Bolivia and even down here 9/11 hit like a truck! Those were some very strange days, weeks, and months, to say the least. Remember them like they were yesterday because of how clear they are in my memory. All media and the internet of younger days were places of both escapism, and self flagellation related to the events on going.
The muffled music paired with this VHS kind of filter in like a little dark setting made this video nostalgic. I've never watched Lain but I have heard of Duvet by Boa. I wasn't born in the 1990's but the feeling-the vibe that it gives is somewhat fresh but old. Maybe because a lot has changed. From tapes to smart TV's, I wanna go back to the simpler times.
The muffled sound it is caused because VHS is cheap crap. And in video resolution too 😂. And DONT get me started when the tape got distortion and plays at twisted speeds 😂😂😂😂
True, the resolution might be worse but you just can’t get that tactile feeling with digital. From putting on a vinyl, to inserting a vhs tape, to recording your voice/music on a tape recorder.. idk, it just feels more intentional and real. Any opportunity to do something that isn’t in “The Wired” these days is immensely valuable
Holy crap, I cannot stop rewatching this video for how... well, I got no idea how to phrase it. Now the theme song is stuck in my head, and so is Lain losing her hat and freezing time in this VHS quality... Guess I'm watching Lain next...
I wonder how it felt to watch TV at the same moment as this airing. I mean, the typical programming being interrupted because of the most horrifying attack in the country's history. Must've been real surreal.
Every single time I watch this, I always get goosebumps. Tears come to my eyes. It just goes to show how emotionally powerful this piece of media really is.
I wonder if there's a name for an aesthetic of this time period. The sort of low-quality yet kinda futuristic look with heavy use of dark blue, another place i remember seeing this was the briefings in AC4.
Every time i look back at my childhood, i'm surprised how technology, media and society as a whole has changed. You don't notice change as it is passing by.
I don’t know anything about this show, but just the song, the animation, the scrolling text… Something makes me come back to this video every once in a while, and just feel.
@@walp8408 Does it have anything that could be potentially scary or creepy? I wanna check it out but get easily scared, especially by blood or stuff like that.
Weirdly looking at the condolences up on the screen as watching this is kind of unnerving in a kind of way. Idk why but it just feels really weird and uncanny
I have a strange false memory of early 2000's, living in a city full of skyscrapers, that was filled with a gloomy atmosphere that felt "warming" and watching this on a CRT TV. Human brain is really capable of doing things.
The song is "Duvet" by Boa. Yes, this is real. No, it is not a Japanese broadcast - the use of English in both the scrolling announcement and the credits should have been a huge tip-off. KTEH, a San Jose-based PBS station, started airing Serial Experiments Lain in 2001. This broadcast was from September 16, 2001.
2nd reply zomg
3rd reply omfg
4th reply
5th reply no way
Omfg 6th reply
0:19 looks like Lain started to read it
@Sneed Not being able to watch The Travel Auction because of 9/11 was her own personal 9/11. It's her favorite show
readed it all in 2 seconds
The frozen dove's shadow and Lain's stare (who, of all characters, should be able to read a prompt in the TV thanks to her digital omnipresence) give this video a really nice touch
she is god like inside wired so its canon that she can read the news
"damn ... They hit the second tower"
Showing traumatized people Lain to make them feel better is like showing a depressed person "Grave of the Fireflies" to cheer them up.
i watched that movie at a really fucked up point in my life and it did not help lmao
Might as well, show them Perfect Blue and to make it worse.
If I brought over a girl who told me "Im into anime" I'd always ask if they wanted to watch grave of the fireflies. I never got many call backs.
Lord of the Flies?
@@TheKing60210 Is that a depressing story? Like all the stories, we mentioned here?
Its so uncanny how the quality of the anime fits perfectly with the 9/11 text
I noticed that too! Usually when you add text to a photo or video the contrast between the two is obvious. You can tell the text is not originally part of either the photo or video. But the text present in this broadcast looks like it's actually part of the episode itself!
It looked like they mistranslated "Present day, present time."
Mr incredible super gaming house gassy incredible canny
The quality of it all is consistent because of the medium this recording was made on. Most likely some crummy VHS recorder and a crummy heavily used tape. Likely also stored improperly and deteriorated slightly over time.
9/11 was 3 years after lain so the tech was basically the same.
This lost media is gold man. The closest thing I watched here in Argentina was the Locomotion channel and I watched Lain when I was kinda 12.
No tenia idea de que habian pasado lain en argentina
Que loco
@@lir489 Si y encima el doblaje de Latinoamérica lo hicieron acá en argentina
@@blur4504 epicoooooo
ITS LOST MEDIA TOO??? WTF???
@@blur4504 lain tiene la actriz de voz de zamba dato real
imagine it’s 2001. some grandma is tuning in to KTEH in hopes of watching The Travel Auction to take her mind off the news, but there's another show airing instead. she'll decide she'll watch it anyway, absolutely unprepared for what was about to ensue
Thaiboy digital pfp is awesome
@@chromagyro839 dee jay billy bool
My OT teacher said that her children love anime and after reading my Serial Experiments Lain review, she would tell them to watch it
I can imagine them shaking in their own skin during episode 11
Picturing a grandma tuning in and seeing
PRESENT DAY....
PRESENT TIME....
is sending me
@@benijager1372 edgy
"I am falling, I am fading, I am drowning
Help me to breathe
I am hurting, I have lost it all."
Depressingly, this is kind of fitting from the perspective of a jumper.
Yeesh.
Good lord...
i really appreciate, and am equally confounded by, the fact that the network thought this was a lighter program to air during that time
Most likely it was chosen quickly, based on something like fitting cleanly in the time slot and cost to air. Either that or the employee who had to find a replacement was a fan of Lain.
@@Wohlfedude just happened to have a lain vhs in his car
Back then the general public didn't really know what anime was. It's not like today. Back then I was made fun of for liking anime. Who ever chose this likely just saw some cartoon vhs and thought it would be a fun show.
@@BeardFaceSuper or some chad intern worked for the station lol
@@Wohlfe Obviously they were a member of the Knights.
LET’S ALL LOVE LAIN
Really catches the mood. So melancholic and sooo…early 2000s.
I miss the early 2000s so much man...
Frfr, videogames, music, hardware... Nothing's been at that level of taste since
I find kinda interesting of the aesthetic of the 2000s anime, feels so liminal and out of this world
@@WeavileShiny I wonder if it has to mostly do with the transition to another century that feels so 'liminal', or the fact some parts of the our lives are influenced of tech that were predecessors to what we know today.
@@SparkyCas not just a century a whole millennium
This somehow the worst timing yet the best timing at the same time.
for real.
the chorus of Duvet really resonated in that moment of grief and sorrow
that aside, that's some wild footage ya got.
Took the words out of my mouth.
This is weirdly nostalgic even though i have no memory of this, its sweet that they gave their condolences to the victims of 9/11
But no later condolences to the victims of the war in Afghanistan whose deaths were justified by the President as punishment for 9/11
@@chuchu9649 remove kebab ☝️
@@chuchu9649 Yeah yeah, don't shit on them for not apologizing to every possible victim ever.
Would be pretty neat watching Lain in the early 2000s.
@@fourpvrk And then seeing the internet slowly turn into a shitty version of the wired.
*we here at KTEH have our deepest condolences for the tragedy of 9/11. So here’s a depressing Japanese cartoon to soothe your troubles!*
They are adding existential problems on top of another existential problems.
Them calling an anime a cartoon is accurate. 😂
@@pieflingerpt2 tbf during that time, anime wasn't as mainstream as it is today, plus it was also revolutionary for a pbs channel to broadcast anime considering the importation of rights, as well as acquiring them, on top of that, being very expensive to do, so that's why kteh was only funding these animes to air by donations at the time.
@@isuck6049 I didn't know that. I also didn't know PBS was playing anime since I was still young and watching PBS Kids at the time. Although my first anime experience watching PBS would be a great way to shape me as a child especially Lain.
This is hilarious, they choose one of the most depressing animes to air instead of whatever travel show they had. Lmao.
And it would be funnier if Lain san is actually a 4Chan user because... Y'know
@@Mr_Schizo pls elaborate
@@santiagoarias2401Because 4Chan were fulled with radical people, religious one for example.
@@Mr_Schizo you really actually should browse it for a day before you post about it.
@@zobiya17 lmao why try to defend 4chan? The whole point of the website is to be the toilet of the internet, the people who use it revel in being hateful rejects of society. If a normal well-adjusted person browsed 4chan for a day they'd lose several IQ points and get a migrane from cringing at the unfiltered tripe that people type out. Even if you avoid the really obnoxious containment boards, they leak into the others so easily. It was probably a pretty decent image board a decade or more ago before the extremism was ramped up, but nowadays it really is just a big pit full of shit.
Duvet fits the situation so well. The fact that they chose to show Lain, with this message, at this turning point in history...it just fits.
lmao ur name
BLOOD NIGHTMARE NIGHTMARE OLD BLOOD NIGHTMARE
"turning point in history" lol maybe for Americans who have no history
@@Intrspace America was definitely not the only one that changed after 9/11. Dont act like Islamophobia was relevant out of thin air
@@Whatthescallop1776 11/9 isn't the source of islamophobia in Europe
@Jason Voorhees nope, and you don't know how to read
As if the vibes couldn't get any worse
It's not worse, exactly. Just raw and melancholic.
@@E4439Qv5 you're facial expression says a lot
_"I am hurting,_
_I have lost it all~"_
I hate to break it to you, terrorist attacks happens a lot more than you can imagine at least globally, not sure about number of terrorist attacks on America. So the coincidence of this happening alongside the depressing show like this isn't very low.
Shrugs shoulder
I’ve always found 9/11 era stuff like this interesting since i was born only 5 months after it happened, the culture and media like this around the time is cool to look back at
Same here man, was born 6 months after. The early 2000s was more of a continuation of the 90s than a new decade and its cool to look back on
I came back from the beach and all the electricity didnt work so I just slept and went to do my thing and I missed the event only to be told after the fact
@@yuzat 7!!!!
@@yuzat
Like every decade actually.
@@shizukagozen777 true
The timing of her looking at the shadow of the bird though, it felt like a symbolism of the plane. I got goosebumps
true
I made a comment talking about how you could say it's a metaphor because time also stops at that exact moment. Pretty interesting
Lol
I even felt that bro
That’s what kills me every time. It is otherworldly scary how close the symbolism is to these corresponding events in time and space
God this intro just emanates melancholy, the tone, the lyrics, even the visuals really give the general feeling of sadness.
You do seem to understand
You really are an honest man
You don't hold your fears
They won't turn to whisper in your ear.
What they say might hurt you
This is such an unreal artifact of such a specific moment in world history. This really encapsulates the turning point of american culture that was 911. That feeling of a melancholic early internet, when things were just beginning to turn into what they are today. Imagine the night after 911 happened, sitting down after the emotional whirlwind of the day and watching, out of all things, Lain. Slowly coming to the realization that the world you knew is gone, and the world is going to be crazy for the next decade and a half.
ok zoomer.
@@chunkymilk Don't be that guy. You don't have to find every genuine expression cringe, and you don't have to be sarcastic, cynical and emotionally detached about everything. It's just sad and makes you look childish.
@@viljamtheninja ok bloomer.
@@chunkymilk anime avatar
@@chunkymilk ur gonna die alone
" *I am falling*
*I am fading*
*I have lost it all*
*Help me to breathe* "
Oh yeah that feels appropriate instead of a travel show.
Port this to physical media, it needs to be preserved.
why do we need physical when we have the wired
milk pfp
@@amerashi1111Cuz we do.
Burn it to a CD, if you still have a CD reader that is.
@@Myspace.com6 dawg what do u think a hard drive is
The imagery, outside of the show's context, of Lain looking to the skyline in a typical city morning, then continuing to walk on as the world seems to stop is rather poignant within the historical context of 9/11. She's obviously not seeing the tragedy unfold right there, but it becomes an accidental reflection of reactions during the time: having to keep moving when the world comes to a halt.
In other words, not something you play in deference to 9/11!
Lain is looking at a bird
@@jemoah yeah I know, I'm just observing from an impressionistic view. I also can't count how many times where I was seeing a bird fly away to then see how nice the sky was or random smoke emissions, or the bird and my hat stop mid-air, then I walk away casually. This actually happened to my buddy Frankie last week, what an odd day
@@danielpridemore3997 My hat always stops mid-air. I think it's the material that let's it float 😔
@@Thankuforsubing You need more brain cells
It's not that deep
LAIN TURN ON THE TV! THEY HIT THE PENTAGON!!! THEY HIT THE FUCKING PENTAGON!!!!
Turn on tv, doesn’t matter what channel! Fuuuck!
@spawnerist malding lmao
@spawnerist imagine dick-riding the us this hard LMFAO
its been 23 years dude u gotta let it go at least a little bit
wow, what a historical yet creepy video.. definitely getting a nostalgic feeling from it too
The video seems creepy thanks to the low quality.
Agreed asuka
@@TornaitSuperBirdyeah
wait this is real? i can’t tell if it’s legit or not since there’s so many fake videos on here
@@umjammereddyit seems plausible.
Lots of re-scheduling on other channels too
I was 13 when 9/11 happened-almost every channel was like this for the rest of the day. Some of them completely suspended programming because of it. Seeing stuff like this unlocks a lot of memories.
Life before 9/11 was amazing. The soviets were defeated. America won. The race riots of the early 90s were a distant memory. There was never going to be a war again.
Where I was the only 2 channels on our cable that didn't switch over to news coverage were Comedy Central and Nickelodeon. I've always wondered how many people watched comedy central all day and didn't know anything was going on until The Daily Show came on at 11.
@@owllymannstein7113 I was a daily show viewer at the time (16/yo) the show was cancelled for the next 3 days.
It happened at 8-9am so everyone had time to figure out what was going on by the afternoon. Everyone was watching CNN all week anyway
Yep. I remember QVC being one of those channels. I heard cartoon Network suspended programming as well. But I did not have that channel at the time so I cannot confirm.
@@i_used_adblock_to_watch_this CN didn't neither did Nick from what I remember. All I remembered was there was no Fox Kids or Kids Wb.
It's crazy to think that KTEH aired one of the most depressing animes on the most depressing day in American history
this makes me so unbelievably sad especially because of how unreal the song makes it seem
KTEH got a lot of money from Silicon Valley guys. Hence why they aired anime and British sci-fi you couldn't see anywhere else (they were the first channel in this country to pick up Red Dwarf IIIRC), and co-produced shows like Computer Chronicles.
It's sad that KQED bought them. KTEH was doing great on it's own. It's like the case of WNYC in New York and NJN in New Jersey.
Oh hey I know red dwarf :) it still shows on many British TV channels, didn't know it was that old :)
That's genuinely fascinating to me
@@shonenjumpmagneto in addition, one of the old guys who actually ran the channel was apparently a weeb as well.
Edit: Thomas Fanella, regional VP
@@GoldenDaggerProductions Well said. Facts.
I wish we had more archived videos like this. Tapings from the days after 9/11, showing how channels like this, MTV, CN, Disney, Nick, AS (which if I remember correctly was only a few days old at the time), and more handeled the tragedy and how the culture of the US and the world change because of that day. Especially in cartoons and media meant for young adults and kids like this. Sadly, most of this is lost media. And not the kind easy to find....
Me too, Cartoon Network removed Gundam
From their slot that day
@@abreckenridge3001 really? That's the first I've ever heard of that happening! That is fascinating if it's true. Thank you for sharing
I haven't seen this anime, but after reading it about it on Wikipedia it definitely doesn't seem like something for kids or young adults. In Japan, there's animation for people of all ages, not just kids.
so who has tapes lying around
@@timelymirror7826Wish I had some but my Mom and Dad were in Europe at the time and ik 100% they didnt tape anything because they just got off the nigh shift
If you were a kid or preteen during those times, THIS is how you knew something was big.
Your tv schedule changes to address it.
I was in 2nd grade during this time. All I remember is my teacher turning the TV on and gasping when the 2nd plane hit. I didn't really notice what was happening, so I just kept coloring. Apparently, my mom also picked me up early, too. I wonder if anyone else's parents have done that.
when USSR was collapsing all of the TV channels changed their schedule to Swan Lake to distract people from this situation. since then if they show Swan Lake on TV you know that something is fucked up
I was in 10th grade when it happened and I remember wanting to watch something that wasnt covering it and the only channel that wasnt rebroadcasting other news was disney channel
9/11 was a fart in the wind compared to the violence that America was inflicting on the globe and still does to this day. The US is the most genocidal organization in human history.
@@desertchannel7 It did, schools were dismissing early in NYC. I was in first grade when it occurred and had no idea why I was getting picked up early.
0:10 the part when she appears like that is my favorite in the opening
The lyrics hurt...
It's crazy that the episode name is "Society" too. Talk about coincidence...
This is both fascinating, creepy, eerie and sad all at the same time. I’m not sure what this show or channel is but seeing this and the thing they cancelled just goes even further to show the major impact 9/11 had on everyone
@@konosek4iI’ll look into it :)
This show is Serial Experiment Lain and it was broadcasted on KTEH
@@konosek4i it s also impossible to understand 💀
@@kamimatsuyama ikr the first time I watched it I had no idea what was going on💀
@@kamimatsuyama I've watched it so long ago I vaguely remember the themes, loss of individuality and digitization of the soul being some of them. Since it was released in 1998 it was heavily influenced by the various huge social changes technology was going to have in the new century, I find this anime fascinating since I haven't really experienced that time myself, the change from analog to digital, the impact Internet had on society at the very start when it became worldwide and so on.
One of the lost artifacts of the days after 9/11 is that there was essentially no regular television for at least 2 days in the US after the attack occured, everything transitioned to 24 hour news broadcasts.
Something similar happened here in Argentina too...
11 days*
@@matiasfpm call me a braindead American all you want, but what happened in Argentina? I would say the falklands but that shit literally happened in the 80s
@@parmesancheez6087 no offense given...
In 2001 the economy was on the verge of collapse, and in regular hours , the state channel was airing Superman (the very old seasons, but at least was in color). Or, anything recorded that it had no copyright trouble.
But on 9-11 , every news media was on THAT event, nothing else, non-stop.
So, for us, it was the end of a "relatively" good decade, and started the "socialist decay" that is reaching to this year, or the next one...
@@matiasfpm ah I see, yeah I can understand why they would be similar, but in any case, I know my words aint gonna do shit, but im sorry you guys are going through that, sounds like a pain in the ass to me
Watching this months later still gives me the feelings of this. Its way different from what i usually think.
im amazed that lain was even airing in 2001
To be fair, the late 90s, early 00s (before 9/11 at least) was filled with growing concern about the rise of the internet.
@@RealLotto I wish we listened.
It was licensed in North America in 1999. I remember watching it on Adult Swim/Toonami alongside other classics like Cowboy Bebop, Trigun, FLCL, and GITS.
I think it's more weird that a local PBS news channel of all things had a regular anime block for like 7 years. They're also apparently the first to air NGE in America
When I was young maybe age 11 in the early 90s I got into anime only because a channel I believe to be TBS? at the time showed an anime block in the middle of the night on weekends. I watched Robot Carnival, Vampire Hunter D and others I cant recall right now. Then theyd show a commericial during the breaks for some VHS subscription service where they send you a VHS anime once per month for some outrageous price. It truly was the wild west of anime back then in America lol
please dont ever take this video down. it fills me with indescribable nostalgia without ever knowing this show existed
People need to understand, EVERYTHING made some kind of reference to the tragedy after it happened
For a couple months, _the Disney Channel_ ran a series of shorts of their teen celebrities talking about how they were processing 9/11
Looking back, it was a bizarre time
It's actually crazy because the first line to that show goes like "just between you and me. Let me tell you something, something that's going on in our society without you being even vaguely conscious of it." It's absolutely one of the most chilling things to hear while reading the words. "We can help" followed by a hotline number while hearing her say those lines. It's like she's speaking to the viewer at that point. It's crazy to think I was alive in that time. I remember every detail of it though, I remember my mom walking through the living room into the kitchen, turning on the radio and then just shrieking and crying. Riddled in panic from head to toe. We were alone in the house at the time so she picked me up and went to a neighbors house and we ended up having a really somber dinner with them while we waited for my dad to get home from work. The whole street was in an uproar. People shouting outside, crying. Some getting weapons ready in case we were attacked. Some just speeding away from home in their cars. It was actual panic. Stuff straight out if a disaster movie scene. After that day, nobody seemed the same. That shiney yellow tint to the world was gone. Replaced with the fear that said "it could happen again, any day" 9/11 the day that ended the world as we knew it and ushered in a new era of fear, control, restriction, obedience, and apathy. Rest in peace, to an era...
I know I commented the other day by saying "the world we grew up in was gone" but I was really busy at the time and wanted to use that as a mental bookmark to come back here and type this out whenever I got the chance. Sorry for the double comment.
Don't say sorry! You described this feeling with such incredible emotion that me as a foreigner got emotional for this. Actually, thank you for commenting. (๑`✪̤◡✪̤)◞ღԵհɑղƘՏღ
Big buildimg go boomz
Okay now, imagine the same panic and anguish multiplied thousand-fold, and spread across populations ten-fold that of the USA across all the countries the US has terrorized and bombed. I'm not saying that 9/11 was justified or that the people of USA deserved to witness it, but it's ridiculous to me how all of what went down on the other side of the world goes unnoticed.
@Talha Siddiqui it isn't, there's people that notice the other side of the world everyday. the world sucks. People are allowed and are going to have traumatic moments bro.
Damn, people thought for a second it was gonna be full on red dawn, huh
Crazy that this was 21 years ago. I know I didnt see this live. And yet I feel like I had.
It makes sense
"I am falling, I am fading, I am drowning // people fell from skyscrapers
Help me to breathe // After the destruction, a large amount of dust rose
I am hurting, I have lost it all
I am losing
Help me to breathe"
Non english guy here, until now i did not paid atention to the lyrics. Tho i watched the original videoclip, seems it was more "happy".
[DISSONANCE INTENSIFIES]
Here in Brazil we have this weird Mandela effect were we think Goku Transformed in super saiyan 3 right as the towers fell
That’s so funny, any idea if there’s any webpages or forums discussing that?
@@lucy4660I know the comment is 11 months old, but this story is interesting, as it was practically a Mandela effect on a large scale, I can't put links here, but there are many Brazilian sites They talk about this, but the short story is: a lot of people think that the news interrupted Dargon Ball Z, but that never happened, and the news interrupted a cartoon called "garrafinha" And the worst thing is that to this day we don't know the moment before the interruption because that day's programming from globo (the largest TV channel in the country) is lost media. But recently the TV channel Globo itself confirmed this on its website
@@lucy4660
Canal mundix uploaded a video
Oh my god
I’ve never seen Lain, but the visuals of the intro along with Duvet and its lyrics fit almost too well with 9/11. It’s haunting.
god early 2000s TV recordings are surreal. something about them. so depressing
this is strangely nostalgic; despite being born way after 9/11 and never experiencing it, watching stuff from around that time period can give me a view into a world i never even knew
imagine waking up after the tragedy and turn on the tv just to see this depressing intro for an equally depressing anime
i am so glad youtube showed this to me. i’ve never seen or heard of Lain before and now it’s my favorite anime ever.
Experiencing the same thing! Most shows are just entertaining but this one really shifts your perspective
Same happened to me
This is a PBS television station in the bay area. Apparently they were at the forefront of airing never before seen anime in America. This also would have been on the night after 9/11, since that's when they aired anime.
PBS aired anime ? Crazy I
Thought toonami was the only one back then
I remember that. I was like, "when the hell did PBS of all stations start airing anime?"
They also had a lot of British shows like Dr Who and The Prisoner. And Red Dwarf and Blake's Seven.
Growing up in the Silicon Valley, this kinda unlocked a memory for me. My grandma frequently tuned into KTEH/KQEH, sometimes leaving it on long enough for anime to play. Yet I was too young at the time to really recognize how devastating 9/11 really was. It makes me wonder how life pre-9/11 was.
Pre 9/11 was probably less militaristic and nationalist, more civil. Maybe, just a conjecture
@@LostSoulSilver Nahhh there was a whole car brand that was jump started into popularity because of the gulf war. The late 80s and early 90s were probably just as if not more militarized as they are today.
@@DGTelevsionNetwork which brand?
@@marioandwes Hummer I think
it was very gay honestly
well well well
if it isnt that time of year again
yes yes
I always found 911 era (being within the next following weeks of the incident) to be so interesting. Some of the exclusive merch made in support of first responders. an example is the final fantasy first responders tshirt.
Never knew Lain intro combined with 9/11 message would be a perfect match.
This reminds me of that one hxh episode where they jus had sept 11 as date in on a board and they had to put “this was made before the events of September 11th” in the subtitle lol
What episode was it?
This video makes me feel a unique emotion.
my mom often talks about 9/11 and the impact it had on america at the time. even though i wasn’t alive when the events happened, coming across this video reminds me of old tv commercials that would run while i stayed up late watching tv. so eerily nostalgic.
yeah thats how i feel aswell
As someone who witnessed 9/11 and lived through the changes of the country, the world changed literally overnight. The fact that the country is so divided now was set in motion by 9/11. It's not as though the USA didn't have it's problems in the 90s but things were night and day compared to now. 9/11 launched an economic recession and what has essentially been a 20+ year war overnight. It's been twenty years and our country still hasn't recovered from the effects and it's wild to see.
Life before 9/11 was amazing. The soviets were defeated. America won. The race riots of the early 90s were a distant memory. There was never going to be a war again.
Ok zoomer
... was in middleschool at the time. Saw the second impact on tv in real-time. I remember most of the kids thinking it was just an accident at the time. I remember watching the unedited news broadcast that night. It was horrifying and watching it provoked an automatic sadness without thinking about it. It was unreal.
This is giving me mixed weird feelings I didn't know humans had
Right? Like I'm unsettled but also comforted and also sad
The VHS quality nowadays give a sensation of old, but not-so old days, given the circunstances on that airing and the song gives to some people a dissonance or melancholic effect.
Like it's delusional and hopeless,there i nothing you can do about it,just embrace the void of hope as you feel more confortable with it.
frrr
I discovered that song about 4 months ago and I really love it. Never knew it was used in Lain since I never watched the show.
What’s the name of the song?
@@TriniGamerGirl7 Duvet by Bôa
“Given recent tragic events we’ve choosen to not bore the living shit out of you with our regular scheduled auction show and instead air something interesting”
My question is why tf would they air an unsleepable nightmare type shit of an anime instead of a News about Travel and other bs
@@DaWhiteHowhard not enough time to reschedule something other than a re-run, which this probably was, and there's also airing rights to consider: Probably the contract they had with the series allowed them to just use it right away, or the people in charge gave the okay really fast. Also they were evading the topic of "travelling" because just after 9/11 talking about anything related to planes would be seen as tactless.
Or maybe the channel director felt it was fitting to air Lain in a day like that idk. Which would be based.
Imagine after a tragedy where someone might have lost a loved one, you wake up and turn on the tv to just hear this banger
the music, the quality image, the moment, it really feels nostalgic. Makes you wish to live those times again, before the tragedy i mean, and feel the calmness of a quite world
Man, that late 90's to 2000's vibe of anime is just so good. Shows like Lain and Ergo Proxy really has some good songs in their opening.
I'd never forget this video, it's special to me.
So it's true! An irl acquaintance of mine told me that this happened but this sounded really crazy to me haha. Thank you for the upload! 💖
0:20- Lain walking off, now disappointed she can't watch The Travel Auction
There’s something unsettling about this, like, I feel uncomfortable in so many ways from this, mostly physical discomfort
God, now I can't stop thinking about where the new millennium would've gone if it wasn't for 9/11.
“Why are you crying lain? Because they hit the second tower?”
It’s fascinating that so many countries felt the need to express any condolences over 9/11, it really was that important and impactful but it’s also appreciated that they felt so sorry for us
Jeez the turn of the millenium feels like an entirely different world, there was so much more optimism even after a tragedy like 9/11. I know it wasn't as simple as it seemed when I was a kid but that doesn't stop me from missing it.
I feel like a young child watching this in a dark room on a crt tv, blind to the misery of the current world.
This video has a vibe to it that I just can't explain.
I can so I unliked the comment
for me i felt comforted, disturbed and almost nostalgic, despite the fact that i was only born only 9 months after this and with no way of knowing that this happened.
@@shonenjumpmagneto r/madlads
Horrors don't bother me anymore.
I've played countless horror games, watched movies, and although I am usually scared, I don't get the chills.
This hits different.
Just.. the fact that it's real, makes it so much more terrifying than all the tapes you can find. It really gives you chills.
This happens because your sub-conscient does not know what it is, you must be a gen Z.
Older boys got accustomed to the VHS crap (and its problems) 😅
@matiasfpm yeah, that's actually right - I am a gen z, hehe. the explanation actually makes a lot of sense, I didn't think about it from such perspective, thanks!
Don't worry, you'll get used to this, if you look at more real-life tragedies because usually fiction is inspired by real-life experiences or trying to capture the same feeling.
I’m now remembering that this is how I first experienced lain. I would later get into the series thanks to “I am balling I am fading”,but I thought THAT was my first experience
…also looking back,this recording feels very surreal. Just something chilling about duvet being paired with the message in memory of the attack. I cant really say it dosent fit because well,it does.
Same lol
I thought it was "I am falling, I am fading..."
@@captsorghum it is but the meme is i am ballin
@@arkahv Huh. I guess it's like "pwned" vs "owned" then.
@@captsorghum you’re right,though there’s a meme where the lyrics to duvet are interpreted as “balling and faded” instead. That’s how I rediscovered lain.
Song matches the tragedy
@@koala-s3q You know who ELSE was falling then?
@@seronymus how original
"Help me to breathe"
True
"oh god i can't believe what just happened....... i'll watch some cooking show or whatever to calm myself down..."
AND YOU DONT SEEM TO UNDERSTAA~ND
I grew up on the anime they showed on KTEH. First channel outside of Japan to air Evangelion. I was only 12 and saw some of the most psychological anime I have ever seen at that time. It truly shaped my tastes for anime and movies moving forward.
I'm from Bolivia and even down here 9/11 hit like a truck! Those were some very strange days, weeks, and months, to say the least. Remember them like they were yesterday because of how clear they are in my memory. All media and the internet of younger days were places of both escapism, and self flagellation related to the events on going.
STILL THE SAME!!!
Insane feeling of early 2000 with the vibes you described nostalgic immensely, especially when the guitar started playing it gave me 2000 summer vibes
The muffled music paired with this VHS kind of filter in like a little dark setting made this video nostalgic. I've never watched Lain but I have heard of Duvet by Boa. I wasn't born in the 1990's but the feeling-the vibe that it gives is somewhat fresh but old. Maybe because a lot has changed. From tapes to smart TV's, I wanna go back to the simpler times.
The muffled sound it is caused because VHS is cheap crap.
And in video resolution too 😂.
And DONT get me started when the tape got distortion and plays at twisted speeds 😂😂😂😂
True, the resolution might be worse but you just can’t get that tactile feeling with digital. From putting on a vinyl, to inserting a vhs tape, to recording your voice/music on a tape recorder.. idk, it just feels more intentional and real. Any opportunity to do something that isn’t in “The Wired” these days is immensely valuable
It's not gonna come back buddy, it's better to move on now, it will hurt less.
Holy crap, I cannot stop rewatching this video for how... well, I got no idea how to phrase it.
Now the theme song is stuck in my head, and so is Lain losing her hat and freezing time in this VHS quality...
Guess I'm watching Lain next...
I wonder how it felt to watch TV at the same moment as this airing. I mean, the typical programming being interrupted because of the most horrifying attack in the country's history. Must've been real surreal.
Believe me, "most horrifying" is exagerating.
Knowing US history, there are better examples of that "category"
Every single time I watch this, I always get goosebumps. Tears come to my eyes. It just goes to show how emotionally powerful this piece of media really is.
this inspired me to start watching lain, 4 eps in and i love it. thanks otaku.
It feels like something I'd watch while I'm comfy yet sad on my bed with such early nostalgic and melancholy 2000s vibes
I don't know anything about this show, but seeing this one video made me incredibly sad
ngl this adds to the aesthetic
I wonder if there's a name for an aesthetic of this time period. The sort of low-quality yet kinda futuristic look with heavy use of dark blue, another place i remember seeing this was the briefings in AC4.
Man the art style in that show is so charming. I love just looking at everything.
Every time i look back at my childhood, i'm surprised how technology, media and society as a whole has changed. You don't notice change as it is passing by.
Truly a one of a kind mint version of such a classic
the fact that this popped up on my feed today….
I don’t know anything about this show, but just the song, the animation, the scrolling text… Something makes me come back to this video every once in a while, and just feel.
I recommend checking out the show, it's a sci-fi show but the 90's big clunky computers kinda sci-fi
You should definitely give it a try
@@walp8408
Does it have anything that could be potentially scary or creepy? I wanna check it out but get easily scared, especially by blood or stuff like that.
you should give it a try, its very confusing but its very captivating
Trust me this show is pretty weird and amazing in it's predictions for future in areas.
Gave me goosebumps. Such a ethereal song and reading about such a tragedy and knowing they occured at the same time takes me back.
Whats the song?
@@extazychou1731 1 month late, but it's duvet by boà
The message being broadcasted while the OP is playing is fucken on point.
something about this feels eerie to me...
Weirdly looking at the condolences up on the screen as watching this is kind of unnerving in a kind of way. Idk why but it just feels really weird and uncanny
i feel that. it’s oddly haunting despite any kinda desensitization of the event
Nothing could encapsulate the end of an era better than this clip.
I’m just in love with how this show looks in CRT quality
I have a strange false memory of early 2000's, living in a city full of skyscrapers, that was filled with a gloomy atmosphere that felt "warming" and watching this on a CRT TV. Human brain is really capable of doing things.
yeah bro very like to do review bout Lain ith the scenes with skyscrapers. recently made a trailer