The station said it had no explanation for what happened but was investigating the incident during the match between the Arizona Cardinals and the Pittsburgh Steelers. The KVOA statement said the station was dismayed and disappointed that some Comcast customers and their families were subjected to the material. Censors object to plan to make them watch pornography alone. Super Bowl TV viewing figures down on last year.
Comcast Super Bowl coverage briefly interrupted by porn - kartaplovdiv.com
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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.
Comcast confirmed the action saying it was "a malicious act" and will work with authorities to investigate the culprits. The kind of football pornography that Arizona Cardinal fans were looking for never materialized as the Pittsburgh Steelers led by Santinio Holmes and Ben Roethlisberger pulled off a dramatic late forth quarter drive including a miraculous catch by Holmes in the end zone. Officials doused all Arizona hope of a Super Bowl victory when they blew a call for excessive celebration a 15 yard penalty in the NFL by Holmes after the touch down and failed to review the forward motion of Arizona quarterback Kurt Warner's arm. The game ended with a "fumble" recovered by the Steelers who won their league leading sixth Super Bowl.