From 9/11 CEO Crisis Leadership in New York | Andrew Rosen | Hixecutive Breakout Session · · Hixecutive Sessions
“We lost one radio station on top of the World Trade — KTU — so we're able to get the FCC to move KTU and allow us to broadcast; all the studios were shut down and people had to go to the Empire State Building where our other signals were.”
On , Andrew Rosen, Executive Vice President at GRAHAM HOLDINGS CO, spoke about regulation during 9/11 CEO Crisis Leadership in New York | Andrew Rosen | Hixecutive Breakout Session on Hixecutive Sessions.
Andrew Rosen, executive vice president at Graham Holdings and former CEO of Kaplan, has spoken publicly about his experience leading radio stations during the September 11, 2001 attacks in New York. In a 2025 interview, he described the day as one for which he had no training, recalling that his primary mission was to keep employees safe and provide relevant information to listeners within the stations' signal. He noted that one station was lost on top of the World Trade Center and that the FCC allowed them to move its broadcast; staff created temporary studios at the Empire State Building. In a separate 2025 podcast appearance, Rosen discussed broadcast industry trends, stating that investing in digital assets is a core fundamental for broadcast groups and that artificial intelligence should be ingrained in operations to automate tasks and improve efficiency. He also commented on the creator economy in a 2022 interview, describing it as "thousands of permutations" enabled by new tools and platforms. In earlier appearances, Rosen advocated for higher education reform, proposing a "Learning Playbook" that would reward institutions based on learning outcomes, access, affordability, and accountability, and he drew historical parallels between criticism of land-grant colleges and modern scrutiny of for-profit institutions.