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Wed, Dec 15,
1999
Protest forces NBC to shelve ``Saturday Night Live'' skit
Josef Adalian
Reuters - December 15, 1999
HOLLYWOOD (Variety) - Bowing to pressure from the
Anti-Defamation League, NBC has agreed never again to
air portions of a Dec. 4 ``Saturday Night Live'' sketch
in which a faux Britney Spears refers to Jews as ``having
killed our Lord'' Jesus Christ.
``SNL'' executive producer
Lorne Michaels, however, is insisting the issue is not settled.
The brewing controversy
revolves around a parody presentedon ``SNL'' earlier this
month of CBS's recent yuletide special ``And So This Is
Christmas.'' The sketch was a mock promo hyping an imaginary
CBS special called ``And So This Is Chanukah. ''Members of the
``SNL'' troupe, appearing as various pop music stars such as
Ricky Martin, Lou Bega and Tori Amos, were shown singing several
fake Chanukah songs.
What outraged ADL officials
was a portion of the skit featuring faux representations of pop
divas Spears, Celine Dion and Mariah Carey talking about their
participation in the special.
In one scene, Dion (played by
``SNL'' vet Ana Gasteyer) refers to Jews owning all the movie
studios and banks. Most offensive to the ADL, however, was
another scene in which Spears (''SNL'' guest host Christina
Ricci) says Christians have forgiven Jews ``for having killed
our Lord.
'' The Dion and Spears comments
``represent anti-Semitic stereotypes at their worst and which have
been at the root of much suffering in our own century,'' ADL
national director Abe Foxman said in a letter sent to Roz Weinman,
NBC's execvice-president of East Coast Entertainment and broadcast
content policy.
``We have worked with the
Vatican and others for the last fifty years to educate against this
poisonous doctrine, and for'SNL,' in a lame attempt at humor, to
revive this notion is unacceptable,'' Foxman added.
According to ADL Los Angeles
associate director Amy Levy, Foxman wrote to NBC on Dec. 7 after
receiving numerous complaints about the sketch from across the country.
Weinman responded to Foxman's
protest Friday, writing that after ``having had a chance to review
the material in question, we have decided that a portion of the
sketch, featuring the parodies of Britney Spears, Mariah Carey and
Celine Dion, was problematic, and, therefore, will be excised from
all future broadcasts.''
Michaels, however, isn't convinced
the matter is settled.
``As far as I'm concerned, it's
still under discussion, ''the ``SNL'' exec producer said late
Tuesday through a spokesman.
Michaels was unavailable for
further comment, and an NBC spokesman declined to elaborate on
Weinman's written remarks to Foxman.
The move by NBC represents the
second time in as many years the network has ``banned'' an ``SNL''
segment from being repeated. Last year, the network pulled forever
a Robert Smigel cartoon that linked NBC owner General Electric to
various conspiracy theories.
In his letter to Weinman, Foxman
was careful to recognize ''SNL's'' role as a series designed ``to
poke fun at institutions and individuals in society.'' He added that
other parts of the Chanukah sketch, while perhaps offensive, ``would
fall into that legitimate irreverent category.''
Copyright 1999, Reuters News Service
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