A short clip from an adult movie channel showing full male nudity interrupted the Comcast feed came just after the Arizona Cardinals' Larry Fitzgerald scored on a long touchdown reception during the final minutes of the game, the Arizona Daily Star reported. The second interruption was from the adult film Club Jenna and showed a woman unzipping a man's pants followed by a sexual act between the two, the paper reported. A Comcast spokeswoman said she had "no idea" how the porn got into the feed. The KVOA statement said the station was dismayed and disappointed that some Comcast customers and their families were subjected to the material.

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Sports fans in Arizona got a shock during the TV coverage of the Super Bowl when the broadcast was interrupted by a clip from a porn film. The TV station, based in Tucson, was flooded with complaints from furious parents who were watching the game with their children. The cable feed of the football game from Comcast was replaced with 30 seconds from an adult movie channel called 'Club Jenna'. It showed a woman unzipping a man's trousers and performing a sex act on him. Joel Hilander said he and his young children were shocked after seeing the offensive clip. And I couldn't believe that my children were watching it either,' Hilander said. Broadcasters are famously cautious when it comes to Super Bowl coverage, ever since pop star Janet Jackson's famous wardrobe malfunction during the half-time show in Just this year an advertisement that animal charity Peta wanted aired during the game was rejected for being too provocative, it is claimed.
How did it happen?
Log in with Facebook Log in with Twitter. Log In. If you were watching the Super Bowl in Tucson, Arizona, you might have seen some unwarranted genitalia. A porn clip was aired just after the Cardinals' final touchdown, forcing Comcast to investigate what they called "an isolated malicious attack. Sports Video. Latest News Top News. Tens of thousands march in Belarus capital despite crackdown. TikTok owner says will abide by new Chinese export rules. Op-Ed: Trump has dragged Canadian lobster into his re-election bid. German leaders condemn bid by protesters to storm Reichstag.
Case closed: A former Cox Communications employee in Arizona admitted in court this week that he inserted a brief hard-core porn clip into the Super Bowl broadcast carried on Comcast's Tucson system. Prosecutors said year-old Frank Tanori Gonzalez, formerly a Cox supervisor, pleaded guilty Thursday to two counts of computer tampering, the Arizona Daily Star reported. If he successfully completes his probation, the crime will be designated a misdemeanor rather than a felony, according to the newspaper. Cox's Arizona subscribers were not exposed to the porn.