Entertainment

30 Rock episode mocks star's real-life row

NBC comedy 30 Rock often finds laughs in real-life events in the show business world it inhabits. But Thursday's edition targeted one of its own cast members, Tracy Morgan.

Harkens to 2011 controversy over Tracy Morgan's anti-gay remarks

In June 2011, comedian and actor Tracy Morgan, right, held a news conference to apologize for anti-gay remarks he made during a Nashville comedy performance. He listens to a man who attended the show and first reported the incident on Facebook. (Mark Humphrey/Associated Press)

NBC comedy 30 Rock often finds laughs in real-life events in the show business world it inhabits. But Thursday's edition targeted one of its own cast members, Tracy Morgan.

The comedian  found himself in real-life hot water in June 2011 after making anti-gay remarks during a stand-up appearance in Nashville, Tenn.

On the 30 Rock episode, Tracy Jordan, the character Morgan plays, sparked a protest after making a couple of ridiculous gay-oriented jokes at a club date.

A contrite Jordan mistakenly apologizes to the makers of Glad bags, rather than to the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation, known as GLAAD. Jordan's boss, played by series star Tina Fey, is forced to apologize for him.

"He's not capable of hate," she assures the media. "He's just an idiot who doesn't know what he's saying."

In real life, Tracy Morgan publicly apologized to his fans and the gay and lesbian community for what he called "my choice of words." He denied being a hateful person and acknowledged that "even in a comedy club" what he said went too far "and was not funny in any context." During his rant, Morgan had said in part that if his son were gay, he would "pull out a knife and stab" him.

Fey, who is also the creator and an executive producer of 30 Rock, issued a statement at the time declaring "I hope for his sake that Tracy's apology will be accepted as sincere by his gay and lesbian co-workers at 30 Rock."

Mirroring that real-life statement on Thursday's episode, Fey's character, Liz Lemon, chides Jordan by saying, "Do you know how many of your hardworking and dedicated co-workers are gay?"