Saturday, July 4, 2015

REELZ CHANNEL SUPPORTS AMERICAN LAWS Donald Trump's Miss USA back on TV: Reelz channel steps in



Donald Trump's Miss USA back on TV: Reelz channel steps in

 


Donald Trump defends calling Mexican migrants 'rapists'

Days after the Miss USA pageant was dropped by Univision and NBC, the July 12 event has found a new home on television, the Reelz channel.

Reelz, a relatively obscure cable channel, saw an opportunity to fill the space left by NBC. It says it's helping to "save the sash."
 
The Miss USA organization is half owned by Donald Trump. Univision and NBC backed out of airing the pageant after Trump's incendiary comments about Mexican immigrants caused an outcry in June. 

The pageant's organizers then tried to seek out other distributors, like Reelz, which has entertainment shows including "Hollywood Hillbillies" and repeats of "Access Hollywood Live." 

Reelz says it's available in 67 million of the roughly 100 million cable-connected homes in the United States. It is hard to find on some channel lineups, however.
Related: The dump-Trump-a-thon rages on
Related: Trump says networks "abandoned" pageant contestants
 
Stan Hubbard, CEO of the Hubbard family-owned Reelz, said the decision to air the pageant "should not be construed as anything political."
"The Miss USA pageant is about as non-political as anything could possibly be -- it's an iconic television event," he told CNN on Thursday. "This is television; this is entertainment." 

"An independent network like Reelz is able to look at this pageant, look at the contestants, look at the community, look at this American tradition ... and bring it to television," he added. 

Hubbard said that Trump was likely to lose money on the pageant, which Reelz is paying roughly $100,000 to air. 

The Hubbard family has been supportive of Republican candidates and conservative causes in the past.


This isn't the first time Reelz has stepped in. The channel agreed to air a miniseries about the Kennedy family in 2011 after several other broadcasters passed on it.
The miniseries included negative material about the famous Democratic family, and there were claims at the time that political considerations were behind the other networks' decisions to skip it, and Reelz's decision to go ahead with it.
The pageant found itself entwined in political controversy after Trump entered the Republican presidential race last month.

 
 

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