In an incident that will make fans of the film Fight Club smile, the Super Bowl coverage on TV was interrupted for around 30 seconds when the Club Jenna porn show appeared instead. The change in coverage only affected a small percentage of viewers who were watching in standard definition analog through Comcast in Tucson, Arizona. The Super Bowl feed paused, then started to break up before flicking to the Club Jenna content.

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Comcast Super Bowl coverage briefly interrupted by porn
Just in time for another Super Bowl, the FBI and Arizona police may finally have a break in one of the most embarrassing cases of cable tampering on record. Authorities said they believe a former cable employee, Arizona resident Frank Tanori Gonzalez was responsible for interrupting the Super Bowl on Comcast Cable in the Tucson area and broadcasting pornography for 37 seconds. Even worse for already scarred Arizona fans at the time, Pittsburgh clinched the victory, beating the Cardinals After the incident, Comcast told reporters it had boosted its security and left the FBI in charge of the investigation. According to reports, Gonzalez was a Cox Cable employee at the time of the prank. We appreciate the FBI's diligence in thoroughly investigating the programming interruption and determining what happened. Skip to content.
Comcast Airs Porn During Super Bowl
If you were living in Tucson, Arizona and watching the super bowl last night you got an extra little super surprise beside Bruce Springsteen crotch humping the camera. Thank you mystery technician we get your joke. If I was that technician,you would've seen some poon-tang,or a pic of Jay,who was a very sad man at that point in time. Uh titties or GTFo.
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.