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8 Scorching "South Park" Episodes That Left A Mark

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Ubiquitous

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Nov 20, 2023, 8:37:05 AM11/20/23
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"South Park" doesn't believe in half measures.

The Comedy Central series has been delivering brutal takedowns since its very
first season.

The pandemic. Trans athletes. The King of Pop. Paris Hilton. Jesse Jackson.
PC gone wild. Name the subject, and chances are Stan, Kenny, Kyle, and
Cartman have tackled it, sans apology.

The following eight episodes offer "South Park" unleashed. Pity the targets
of the show's satirical cudgel. They may never recover from the animated
tongue lashing.

1. "With Apologies to Jesse Jackson" - Season 11, episode 1

Stan Marsh's father, Randy, accidentally says the "n-word" as a contestant on
"Wheel of Fortune." He's quickly branded a racist, and the reverberations
fall on both his son and the boys' elementary school.

The episode mocks Jackson for pretending to be the embodiment of black
America while initiating a tough conversation about race and the word in
question.

It's blunt satire, full stop, and an example of how "South Park" is willing
to explore complicated issues from various angles. It's not a lecture, and
the laughs are both consistent and, often, uncomfortable.

2. "Board Girls" Season 23, Episode 7

It's the episode even "South Park" creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone may
not be able to get away with today given the trans community's rage against
criticism.

The episode aired in 2019 before the trans issue flared up across the
country. Vice Principal Strong Woman announces she's entering a Strong Woman
competition, in part, to inspire female students to be empowered. She's
upstaged by a biological man who transitioned to womanhood mere weeks ago.

And the trans athlete happens to look and sound like Randy "Macho Man"
Savage, the wrestling icon from the '80s and '90s.

Chaos ensues, naturally, with the storyline echoing future conversations
about trans athletes and biological differences. Clips from the episode went
viral earlier this year, connecting the 2019 satire with modern conversations
on the topic.

3. "The Worldwide Privacy Tour" Season 26, Episode 2

The couple known by their first names, Harry and Meghan, enjoy a rarefied
space in pop culture. Mock the duo relentlessly and suffer the consequences.
Just ask Piers Morgan, who did just that and lost a high-profile gig with
"Good Morning Britain."

"South Park" turned that cultural protection racket on its head.

The episode features a Canadian royal couple who wish to be left alone. And
they'll shout their wishes from the rooftops until every living soul hears
them. It's obviously Harry and Meghan, and the secondary plot involving a
quest for victimhood makes the comedy bite even harder.

After the episode aired we learned about Meghan Markle's dubious podcasting
tics, a story that may not have been told if "South Park" hadn't made it
culturally acceptable to do so. Her feminist podcast ended after just one
season.

4. "The Jeffersons" Season 8, Episode 6

What if the biggest pop star on the planet moved to South Park? Even more
improbable? An animated series skewers him in ways many were thinking but
couldn't discuss in polite society.

Yes, the Mr. Jefferson in question is a Michael Jackson stand-in, complete
with a child named Blanket. The new neighbor can't connect with adults and
dresses like Peter Pan for his young South Park friends.

When the adults accuse him of oddball behavior he cries, "that's ignorant" in
a high-pitched whine. Later, Mr. Jefferson's face begins to crumble after one
too many plastic surgeries.

We all knew about Jackson's eccentricities, but "South Park" lined them all
up for our inspection in one withering, 30-minute broadside.

A subplot, riffing on the O.J. Simpson case, finds local police trying to
frame Mr. Jefferson because he's wealthy and black. Satire atop satire, and
all of it stings.

5. "ManBearPig" Season 10, Episode 6

Former Vice President Al Gore's climate change mantras are rarely, if ever,
questioned in the media. He's considered an oracle on the subject, even
though he's profited off his declarations and some of his predictions have
been less than accurate.

"South Park" mocked him all the same.

The episode finds an animated Al Gore tracking down the evil ManBearPig, a
creature which feasts on innocent humans. It's clearly a metaphor for Climate
Change, and the episode depicts Gore as an attention seeker first and
foremost.

Few, if any, satirists approached Gore in such a fashion before or after the
episode.

6. "Joining the Panderverse" 326th stand-alone episode

Parker and Stone pay homage to countless YouTubers who have been calling out
Kathleen Kennedy's disastrous Disney tenure. She's been behind the wheel as
"Star Wars," the MCU, and "Indiana Jones" took sizable stumbles.

The episode finds Cartman dreaming of an alternate universe where he and his
buddies are swapped out for diverse versions of themselves.

It gets meaner.

Cartman boils down the Kennedy ethos into a phrase sure to become as
ubiquitous as "yada yada yada" and "Not that there's anything wrong with
that" from "Seinfeld."

"Put a chick in it and make her gay!"

7 & 8. "Cartoon Wars Parts I & II" Season 10, episodes 3 and 4

The show featured a bizarre cross-promotion with FOX's "Family Guy" sitcom.
The latter plans to show a character based on Islamic Prophet Muhammad,
sending the town of South Park into a frenzy.

Could the series spark violence in the Colorado town or elsewhere?

The two-part episode matters for several reasons. Parker and Stone took the
free speech fight into the public arena, coming after the attacks against a
Danish newspaper for publishing a cartoon image of the Prophet.

Plus, it's rare to see Parker and Stone lose a public fight with Comedy
Central. The channel opted not to show the Muhammad character illustrated for
the series, showing a black screen when the image was supposed to appear.
Later, these episodes and several more with similar themes have been yanked
from various streaming platforms.

--
Let's go Brandon!

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