How The Beatles Changed New York City

They say the world doesn't change in a day.

But one day, it did.

On Feb 7, 1964, events were set in motion that changed the culture so fundamentally, life for millions could be cleanly divided into before and after. When Pan Am Flight 101, carrying The Beatles, touched down at Kennedy Airport in Queens at 1:20 in the afternoon, they were met by 4,000 teenagers, 200 members of the press and more than 100 New York City police officers. "It felt as though there was a big octopus with tentacles that were grabbing the plane and dragging us down to New York," Ringo commented in "The Beatles Anthology" documentary. "It was a dream."

"They're so cute," 17-year-old June Clayton of Brooklyn told The News right after the band landed. "And Ringo's the cutest. Look at them comb their hair!" Two days later, such swoons and screams would be magnified by a factor of 70 million as the band performed for the first time in America, on the stage of the Ed Sullivan Show at 52nd St. and Broadway.

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