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South Park predictions: All the times the show seemed to predict the future

From the Carnival ‘poop cruise’ to PC culture to Ebola, here are some of the times the long-running animated comedy accurately predicted the future

Rachel Brodsky
Los Angeles
Wednesday 10 March 2021 22:53 EST
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'South ParQ Vaccination Special' Preview

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Not unlike fellow animated comedy The Simpsons, South Park has been accurately predicting the future for years.

The Comedy Central mainstay, launched by Matt Stone and Trey Parker in 1997, has covered a lot of subject matter over the course of its nearly 25 years on the air.

Through its zany, often gross-out storylines involving the adventures of four boys living in the titular Rocky Mountain town of South Park, Colorado, the show has managed to predict everything from the Carnival Cruise defecation disaster of 2013 to PC culture to Ebola to banning Confederate flags and statues.

Now that a South Park vaccination special is due to air on 10 March at 8 PM on Comedy Central, here's a look at eight times the prophetic series accurately “predicted” the future.

Carnival Cruises

Three years before the Carnival "poop cruise" disaster of 2013, South Park dropped an offhanded quip in Season 14, episode 14 ("Creme Fraiche"). As Randy and Sharon watch TV, a newscaster says, “Passengers said the carnival cruise line smelled like poop, but that that was an improvement.” A few years later, an engine fire caused the electric toilets on an actual Carnival cruise ship to stop working. No need to recount what happened next – it wasn't pretty, and it didn't smell good.

South Park season 14 episode 14 'Creme Fraiche': Me time

Osama Bin Laden

Eight months before Osama Bin Laden was shot and killed by a Navy SEAL in 2011, South Park was ahead of the game when the episode titled “It's a Jersey Thing” had the al-Qaeda leader shot by a Special Forces commando.

South Park feature Osama bin Laden in series

PC Culture

In Season 19, South Park introduced a new character, PC Principle, whose mission is to enforce all things Politically Correct. The character, who debuted in 2015, appeared to predict the way PC – and you could even go so far as to say “cancel” – culture would become a central topic in future political debates.

SouthPark's PC Principal asks 'where are the Hispanic kids?'

Banning the Confederate flag

In the season 4 episode “Chef Goes Nanners”, the residents of South Park discuss whether they should change their town’s flag when Chef (voiced by Isaac Hayes) declares it racist, seemingly predicting the discussions Americans would have about whether or not to ban Confederate flags and other racially charged signage.

South park: Chef says he finds South Park flag racist

Pokémon Go

In 1999, an episode from Season 3 called “Chinpokomon” poked fun at the popularity of the Pokémon video game franchise when the South Park kids become obsessed with a Japanese fad called “Chinpokomon” and decide to buy every piece of merchandise related to the game. Turns out, the Chinpokomon devices actually track each player’s location and send the information back to the game’s developers, much like the real-life Pokémon Go.

READ MORE: When is the South Park Vaccination Special on TV?

Sports teams changing names

In the previously mentioned episode “Chef Goes Nanners”, South Park character Uncle Jimbo asks what’ll come next if and when South Park decides to change its flag, “What about the baseball team, the Cleveland Indians, huh? Should they change their name because it’s racist?” Some years later, in December 2020, the baseball team announced its decision to formally change its name in the wake of protests from fans and Native American groups.

Ebola

In 2014, South Park aired an episode titled “Gluten Free Ebola”, where town residents begin to experience violent gluten-related deaths. That same week, an Ebola strain was discovered; two nurses contracted the virus, but they both recovered.

South Park mocks scientific advice on diets

Brokeback Mountain

In the second season of South Park, an episode titled “Chef’s Salty Chocolate Balls” appeared to predict the award-winning 2005 film Brokeback Mountain when Cartman refers to independent films as being about “gay cowboys eating pudding”.

Read more: The 43 best original films to watch on Netflix, ranked

In an interview with the Associated Press in October 2005, series creators Parker and Stone addressed the prophetic moment, with Parker saying, “...if there’s pudding eating in there, we’re going to sue”, while Stone claimed, “No [we're not prophets], but Cartman is.”

“South ParQ Vaccination Special” premieres 10 March at 8 PM on Comedy Central.

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