Comcast apologized to the customers in Tucson affected by the 10-second appearance of pornography during the fourth quarter of the Super Bowl. “We are mortified by the incident and we apologize to our customers,” a Comcast spokeswoman said. The Wall Street Journal reports that the company does not think there was a technical problem with their feed. Comcast believes the porn made its appearance because it was inserted by someone with designs on disrupting the broadcast. KVOA, the NBC affiliate that sent out the feed, said that only Comcast customers were subject to the porn’s untimely appearance. Customers of Direct TV and Cox Communications (cue Beavis and Butthead [Editor’s note: Or Florio]), among others, received “clean feeds.”