President Donald Trump's cameo in the 1992 movie "Home Alone 2: Lost in New York" was cut from a Canadian television channel's recent broadcasts. The scene shows Mr. Trump walking through the Plaza Hotel in New York City — which he owned at the time — as actor Macaulay Culkin's character, Kevin McCallister, stops him to ask for directions.

Twitter users watching the movie on CBC this holiday season pointed out that Mr. Trump's scene didn't appear. The CBS-owned site Comicbook.com reported the broadcaster acknowledged cutting the scene and provided an explanation.

"As is often the case with feature films adapted for television, "Home Alone 2" was edited for time," CBC spokesperson Chuck Thompson said on Thursday in a statement. "The scene with Donald Trump was one of several that were cut from the movie as none of them were integral to the plot. These edits were done in 2014, when we first acquired the film and before Mr. Trump was elected president."

Some viewers were happy with the cut, while others slammed the broadcaster for leaving Mr. Trump on the cutting room floor.

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One user tweeted, "When CBC edits out Donald Trump from home alone" along with a gif of Meryl Streep clapping. Another, however, called it "pathetic" and added the hashtag "#censorship."

When CBC edits out Donald Trump from home alone pic.twitter.com/icwSHE8z6B — rebecca (@_rburtt) December 15, 2019

@CBC how pathetic that Trump was edited out of Home Alone 2 while being aired on CBC today. #censorship — Frank DiBiase (@DiBiaseFrank) December 15, 2019

Mr. Trump recently mentioned his appearance on the iconic holiday film while talking to military members in a teleconference on Christmas Eve."Well, I'm in 'Home Alone 2,' and a lot of people mention it every year, especially around Christmas," he said.

"They say 'I just saw you.' Especially young kids, they say, 'I just saw you on the movie.' They don't see me on television as they do in the movie. But it's been a good movie and I was a little bit younger, to put it mildly, and it was an honor to do it."