Entertainment

Steve Rannazzisi Lied About His 9/11 Escape

No matter how bad of a day you think you're having, someone's officially having a worse one, because comedian and The League star Steve Rannazzisi lied about being in the towers on 9/11, according to the New York Times. The comedian admitted to his lie in a statement on Sept. 16. Oof. Rannazzisi has said that it was his proximity to the destruction on Sep. 11, 2001 that convinced him to move to Los Angeles and pursue his dream of working in comedy, a story he now admits was almost entirely fabricated. I'm feeling the beginnings of a shame spiral just typing this, but for over a decade, Rannazzisi has claimed that on that fateful day in 2001, he was working for Merrill Lynch on the 54th floor of the south tower, and felt from his office the collision of the first plane with the north tower. In a 2009 interview with Marc Maron for his WTF podcast, which was more aptly-named than we could have realized at the time, he stated, "I was there and then the first tower got hit and we were like jostled all over the place." He then claimed to have made his way down to the street, escaping his own building just moments before the second plane crashed into it.

I couldn’t tell exactly where it went in. So, I called up to the office, and it was pandemonium. They were like, ‘We are on our way down, we are on our way down.’

Pretty vivid account, right? Pretty damn vivid. Which only makes it more insane that it didn't actually happen that way. Not even a little bit. Not only was Rannazzisi not in the World Trade Center that day, but there is no record that he ever worked for Merrill Lynch, and the company never even had an office in either building. So basically, the moment someone did any digging into his suspicious story, which it took them 14 years to do because most people would assume no one is lying about this kind of thing, it fell apart. And probably the only vaguely good (or at least not completely and utterly terrible) news about this entire situation is that after being confronted with inconsistencies in his story, Rannazzisi is finally coming clean about being lying, releasing the following statement to the Times via his publicist:

I was not at the Trade Center on that day. I don’t know why I said this. This was inexcusable. I am truly, truly sorry.

As he says, he was not able to offer a reason for the initial falsehood, but says he clung to the story because he didn't know how to reverse what he'd done.

For many years, more than anything. I have wished that, with silence, I could somehow erase a story told by an immature young man. It only made me more ashamed. How could I tell my children to be honest when I hadn’t come clean about this?

Uh, yeah. I don't really have an answer for you, buddy. This is really messed up. But at the very least, he seems to know just how messed up it was:

It was profoundly disrespectful to those who perished and those who lost loved ones. The stupidity and guilt I have felt for many years has not abated. It was an early taste of having a public persona, and I made a terrible mistake. All I can ask is for forgiveness.

But while it's a relief to hear Rannazzisi contrite after all these years of lying about being on the scene of a terrorist attack, this wasn't the only lie he told that day. He also claimed that his then-girlfriend, now-wife, worked on the 24th floor of the south tower, but had been late and blessedly didn't make it to work that day. Except whoops! Not quite! As Rannazzisi's publicist clarifies, Tracy Rannazzisi was supposed to work as a temp that day, but at the nearby World Financial Center, not in the twin towers.

At least the guy came clean, but I still feel sick to my stomach.

Update: Rannazzisi also tweeted his apologies and a plea for forgiveness after his statement went public.