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annihilation
08-28-2006, 03:36 PM
http://www.deadlinehollywooddaily.com/emmy-what-was-nbcconan-thinking/
EMMYS: What Was NBC/Conan Thinking?
The very idea that tonight's Emmy showcast on NBC was so scripted-in-stone that neither the network nor host Conan O'Brien could change a word of the broadcast opener, or decide not to show it altogether and substitute another skit crafted at the last minute, is absurd. After all, isn't that the reason Hollywood pays writers for these awards shows? C'mon, couldn't one executive or producer, much less Conan or the television academy that puts on the Emmys, pipe up and say, "Uh, maybe starting with a plane crash comedy skit on the same day there was an actual plane crash might be in poor taste? Let's rewrite." But, noooooooooo. Now the NBC affiliate general manager at the Lexington, Kentucky, site of today's tragedy says he was "horrified" by NBC's callowness. "We wish somebody had thought this through. It’s somewhere between ignorance and incompetence." So I ask: Will someone get fired for this? Host Conan riffed off the ABC's series Lost which was all-but-ignored by the Emmies by starting the ceremony with a filmed comedy bit in which O'Brien was seen sipping champagne aboard a jetliner. "What could possibly go wrong tonight?" he says — before the plane crashes onto an island resembling the one in ABC's drama. Today, in Lexington, Kentucky, commuter jet Delta Comair Flight 5191 mistakenly trying to take off on a runway that was too short crashed into a field Sunday and burst into flames, according to media reports, killing 49 people and leaving the lone survivor -- a co-pilot -- in critical condition. Really, is there even one person at NBC with a brain left in his head?
Understandably, the NBC affiliate in Lexington, WLEX Channel 18, was shocked and dismayed by NBC's Emmy broadcast opener. According to news reports, the Lex 18 News was just ending a recap of the crash coverage when the station saw the Conan plane spoof skit come over the live feed. WLEX’s president and general manager, Tim Gilbert, was home watching the telecast with his family and would have pulled the plug on the Emmy broadcast if only NBC network execs had had the sense to warn him ahead of time. "It was a live telecast — we were completely helpless," Gilbert told the local newspaper. "By the time we began to react, it was over. At the station, we were as horrified as they were at home." Gilbert said he’ll complain to NBC, but he said an apology won’t make up for insensitivity. "They could have killed the opening and it wouldn't have hurt the show at all," Gilbert said. Here's the video of the poor taste skit if you missed it <http://hotair.com/archives/2006/08/27/emmy-parodies-planecrash-hours-after-kentucky-accident/>.

He219
08-28-2006, 03:45 PM
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v101/He219/dailypix/fresh/freshest/30978116.jpg

This still photo from video, supplied by NBC and the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, shows Emmy Awards show host Conan O'Brien's opening gag -- a filmed comedy bit. The sequence prompted criticism that it was in bad taste following the fiery crash of a commuter jet earlier in the day in Lexington. Ky., that killed 49 people. (AP Photo/NBC-Academy of Television Arts and Sciences)

Hellfish
08-28-2006, 03:59 PM
They had it planned for weeks, if not months. They probably couldn't unschedule all of that at the last minute. Either way, I didn't watch it and I'm not offended. It was a spoof of Lost, if I'm informed correctly, and relevant to the joke.

2Sheds_Jackson
08-28-2006, 04:17 PM
Oh come on. Skits like this are broadcast all day every day, all over the US, before during and after all kinds of horrible accidents. I can see where this was bad timing - but what are we supposed to do now - send out warnings to all TV stations about the content of every new and rerun comedy show in every market in the US to make sure nobody is ever offended? Do people who's parents have died of disease or old age constantly pester the producers of ER?

This looks more like an attempt to deflect blame. I can't see why the operator of a local TV station would place the onus of sensitivity on a national entity like NBC - as if they are to somehow figure out what bad things have happened in every city of the US over the last week and send out warnings. "WARNING - COMEDY INVOLVING A FLOOD". Seems to me that if he demands that level of sensitivity, then he should be the one to closely monitor the one program at a time that is broadcast so that he's ready if need be.

annihilation
08-28-2006, 04:32 PM
I agree with all of you. As a traggic thing the accident was, this was no way intentional, just poor timing. The world doesn't stop when something bad happens. I doubt very many were offended by it.

MACT-1
08-29-2006, 02:36 AM
The skit was made far in advance. If people don't like what they see on tv there are several other channels to choose from. :roll: