Trivection oven

The Trivection oven is a convection microwave created by General Electric, which combines radiant heat, convection and microwaves for customized cooking. According to GE, it cooks food five times faster than a traditional oven.[1]

Television chef and Food Network star Alton Brown, host of Good Eats, was consulted in the design of the Trivection Oven.[2]

30 Rock

The product was featured in the pilot of the American situation comedy 30 Rock, in which the character Jack Donaghy describes the product, claiming to have invented it himself and pegging it as his "greatest triumph" after years and years of market research. Donaghy's description of the product was taken near verbatim from GE’s website. He later uses the oven as a metaphor for The Girlie Show, saying that Tracy Jordan is the "third heat".

The Trivection oven’s inclusion in 30 Rock was widely seen as an example of product placement, especially as the product was later advertised during the commercial break.[3][4] However, Tina Fey, the show’s creator and writer of the episode, stated the oven was actually included in the show purely as a joke and that GE had nothing to do with it, although she suspects that "maybe somebody's taking credit for it."[5] Allison Eckelkamp, a spokesperson for GE, confirmed this and says that GE chose to run ads for the oven during the commercial break to make sure viewers knew it was a real product, rather than one invented by the screenwriters for the purposes of the joke.[6] At the time of broadcast, General Electric was the parent company for NBC, which produced and broadcast 30 Rock.

References

  1. GE Profile Ovens with Trivection Technology Combine Three Cooking Energies to Deliver Great Food, Fast, press release, from GEConsumerProducts.com
  2. "Alton Brown teams up with GE". CNET. CBS Interactive. 1 August 2008.
  3. mark. "Great Moments In Shitergy: '30 Rock' And The G.E. Trivection Oven". Gawker.
  4. "Trivection Oven".
  5. "On '30 Rock,' Tina Fey Draws From Her Past At 'SNL'". Access Hollywood.
  6. Bohen, Colleen (12 April 2006). "GE's Trivection Oven Gets Ready For Its Close-Up". Twice. Reed Business Information. Archived from the original on 2007-10-13. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
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