{"footnote":"\u003Cp\u003E  A strange collective guilt has now attached itself to the use of such film. People with images of the jumpers were rebuffed by the families, most of whom, according to a recent piece by Tom Junod  in American Esquire, were unwilling to accept that their loved one could have chosen to jump from the towers. 11 September strained the taste for reality to the maximum: there is a tendency to  prefer the notion that the buildings were a tomb from the moment the planes hit them. Pictures showing people waving their shirts from the upper windows were pulled from all bulletins, and a man  called Pavel Hlava, who filmed both planes hitting the towers, is suing the cable station New York One \u0026ndash; part of AOL Time Warner \u0026ndash; for using the videotape without his approval. Michael Cohen,  Hlava\u0026rsquo;s boss, who gave the tape to the television station, said he was against Hlava receiving what he considered to be \u0026lsquo;blood money\u0026rsquo; for the footage.\u003C\/p\u003E\n","audio":[],"video":[]}