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"Comic Perversion" is the fifteenth episode of the fifteenth season of the American police procedural-legal drama Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. The episode aired on February 26, 2014 on NBC. In the episode, a comedian, who makes jokes about gang rape to his audiences, is put on trial after it emerges that he has raped a young woman.
Law & Order is an American police procedural and legal drama television series created by Dick Wolf that premiered on NBC on September 13, 1990. Set in New York City, where episodes were also filmed, the series ran for twenty seasons before it was cancelled on May 14, 2010, and aired its final episode ten days later, on May 24. [1]
Here are five comedians who were arrested over material they performed onstage. Before obscenity laws were deemed unconstitutional in the early 1970s, comedians risked the threat of arrest for ...
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit season 2 episodes; No. overall No. in season Title Directed by Written by Original air date Prod. code U.S. viewers (millions) 23: 1 "Wrong Is Right" Ted Kotcheff: Jeff Eckerle & David J. Burke: October 20, 2000 () E1403: 13.39 [33] 24: 2 "Honor" Alan Metzger: Jonathan Greene & Robert F. Campbell: October 27 ...
[Editor's note/trigger warning: Due to the nature of Law and Order: SVU, the episode descriptions below contain mentions of rape, incest, and other sexual crimes.] “Nocturne” - Season 1 ...
Although the jury acquitted him, other law enforcement agencies began monitoring his appearances, resulting in frequent arrests under obscenity charges. Bruce in 1963, after being arrested in San Francisco. Bruce was arrested again in 1961 in Philadelphia for drug possession, and again in Los Angeles two years later.
Ed Zuckerman, who was co-executive producer on the original Law & Order, replaces David Matthews. Ice-T announced on Twitter that filming on the fourteenth season began on Monday, July 23, 2012. [1] Leight said of the two episode premiere, "Where we got lucky was, quite by chance, NBC called and said they wanted two episodes for our first night ...
NBC. Louis C.K. In May 2015, Louis C.K. hosted "Saturday Night Live" and used his opening monologue to joke about child molestation, saying a pedophile lived in his neighborhood growing up.