English citations of Closetgate

scandal involving the aftermath of events that occurred following the airing of the South Park television episode "Trapped in the Closet"

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2006
2008
2009
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  • 2006 March 18, Scott Collins, “Clamor outside `South Park' closet”, in Los Angeles Times[1]:
    Closetgate is heating up! Paramount has joined Tom Cruise's public relations rep in denying reports that the movie star strong-armed the studio into spiking a "South Park" episode that ridicules him and Scientology.
  • 2006 March 19, David Usborne, “South Park declares war on Tom Cruise”, in The Independent[2]:
    The Los Angeles Times dubbed the flap Closetgate. "For Stone and Parker, Closetgate will be the gift that keeps on giving," it said.
  • 2006 March 20, Jim Emerson, “Closetgate: Latest shocking updates!”, in Chicago Sun-Times[3]:
    Los Angeles Times reporter Scott Collins, who has dubbed the brouhaha "Closetgate" ...
  • 2006 August 23, Anu Anand, “Congo, Iran & Tom Cruise”, in BBC World Service[4]:
    Viacom says it's dropping actor Tom Cruise for his strange behaviour. You fans will remember the South Park 'Closetgate' episode and 'couch incident' on the popular talk show, The Oprah Winfrey Show of May 23, 2005.
  • 2008 May 15, Thoralf Fagertun, “Den nye gamle komedien: Aristofanes og South Park: En komparativ analyse av det obskøne, det satiriske og det fantastiske”, in University of Tromsø[5], page 42:
    Closetgate førte til at publikum begynte å lure på om Tom Cruise var mer lik Tom Cruise fra ”Trapped in the Closet” enn superstjernen likte å innrømme. (Norwegian)
  • 2009, David Lake, “The 10 Most Controversial 'South Park' Episodes”, in MSN TV[6]:
    Dubbed Closetgate, Comedy Central, a network owned by Viacom, pulled a rerun of this Emmy-nominated episode, supposedly under pressure from Tom Cruise, who threatened to bail out of promoting his upcoming film "Mission: Impossible III," which was being released by Paramount, a division of Viacom.
  • 2009, “Tom Cruise - Biography”, in Turner Classic Movies[7]:
    Matt Stone and Trey Parker – the show’s fearless creators – were not afraid to call out Cruise on his power play – being dubbed “Closetgate” by The L.A. Times – even taking out ads, proclaiming tongue-in-cheek that they themselves were "servants of Xenu" and that the "million-year war for Earth" had only just begun, presumably now that their show had been screwed with backdoor deals.
  • 2009, “Off-screen antics cost Cruise”, in Herald-Sun[8]:
    Loony toon ... Controversy erupted in March over a South Park episode that made light of Tom's religion, Scientology. The LA Times dubbed it "Closetgate" as Comedy Central pulled the episode at the last minute.