Last Week Tonight Donates Giant Train Set to Scranton Trolley Museum
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Summary
The bonus segments recap Last Week Tonight's obsession with WNEP Scranton's small backyard train visible during weather forecasts. Oliver responds to viewer calls by building and gifting an oversized custom train set featuring local landmarks, a waterfall, and multiple tracks. The set proves too large for the station backyard and is donated to the Electric City Trolley Museum, where it is unveiled with a police escort; Scranton later adds John Oliver's face to a train in a humorous thank-you. Segments draw on WNEP talkback calls, museum footage, and Oliver's on-camera narration.
Editorial Assessment
The broadcast accurately documents a self-initiated comedic stunt with transparent sourcing from the station's own footage and public reactions. Viewers receive full context on the gift's impracticality and ultimate museum placement. No substantive factual errors or omitted counter-evidence exist; humor occasionally exaggerates logistics for effect but does not mislead. The piece maintains a light, self-deprecating tone without political slant or selective statistics.
Key Moments
WNEP's backyard train draws obsessive viewer calls during talkback segments.
Multiple WNEP videos and articles confirm talkback callers repeatedly discuss the train.
Last Week Tonight built an 18-foot-wide, 16-foot-tall train set with Scranton landmarks and a waterfall.
Corroborated by WNEP, 6abc, and PhillyVoice reporting from September 2017.
The oversized set was donated to the Electric City Trolley Museum after failing to fit at WNEP.
Confirmed by WNEP articles detailing the move, police escort, and September 2017 unveiling.
Scranton's museum added John Oliver's face to a train as a thank-you.
Stated in the segment and consistent with the show's own follow-up references.