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'South Park' enjoys a silver anniversary of satire

Reaching the age of 25 is usually a sign of hitting adulthood, a signal to put away all childish things

Via AP news wire
Friday 12 August 2022 14:27 EDT
TV-South Park Anniversary
TV-South Park Anniversary

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Reaching the age of 25 is usually a sign of hitting adulthood, a signal to put away all childish things. Not for ā€œSouth Parkā€ and stars Stan, Kyle, Kenny and Cartman.

The Comedy Central staple about four bratty, perpetually bundled-up youngsters in an unhinged Colorado cartoon town celebrated its silver anniversary by trundling along, fueled by poo jokes and razor-sharp social satire.

Just some of its targets over the years include religions like Christianity, Islam and Scientology as well as climate change deniers, cryptocurrencies, Phil Collins, Tiger Woods, smoking bans, ā€œGame of Thronesā€ and pedophiles. One of its child stars used to die in every episode, violently.

ā€œSome people are like, ā€˜Wow, I canā€™t believe they made fun of that because thatā€™s such an important thing.ā€™ And thatā€™s exactly why we made fun of it,ā€ says Trey Parker, who created the show with Matt Stone.

To celebrate the seriesā€™ 25th birthday, Parker and Stone have returned to Colorado with a concert filmed at Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre near Denver, headlined by Primus and alternative rockers Ween. Rush members Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson also stopped by to play.

The concert, which will debut Saturday on Comedy Central and hit Paramount+ on Sunday, will feature songs from the seriesā€™ history. Stone calls it ā€œa celebration, a party and a retrospective.ā€

Since the Peabody Award-winning showā€™s first episode in 1997, Parker and Stone have blurred the boundary between good taste and bad, even more so than that other, long-living adult cartoon ā€œThe Simpsons.ā€

ā€œSouth Parkā€ had a cartoon Jesse Jackson insist on having his rear end kissed by Kyle's dad to apologize for his use of a racial slur and depicted Jesus Christ defecating on former President George W. Bush and the American flag.

ā€œAs much as I love ā€˜The Simpsonsā€™ and I think ā€˜The Simpsonsā€™ is really important, I think ā€˜South Parkā€™ has definitely done things that ā€˜The Simpsonsā€™ havenā€™t,ā€ says Dr. Jonathan Gray, a media and cultural studies professor at University of Wisconsin-Madison, whose books include ā€œWatching with The Simpsons: Television, Parody, and Intertextuality.ā€

One highlight was the three-episode 2007 arc that told the story of Imaginationland, a place where Gandalf, Charlie Brown, Count Chocula and all the inventions of human imagination live. When terrorists attacked Imaginationland, our pint-sized heroes had to set things right before the U.S. military nuked the place.

Typically, each episode of the show culminates in a cut-the-crap, commonsense sort of moral ā€” some version of ā€œdo the right thingā€ or let people make their own decisions.

Gray says Parker and Stone fit poorly in either the Democratic or Republic camps and places the pair on the political spectrum as ā€œleft-skewing libertarians.ā€

One common target is pontificating celebrities, like when Bono of U2 was revealed to be the world's largest turd. But Parker and Stone only like to skewer powerful celebs, showing a surprisingly tender side to Brittney Spears, who in an episode has blown off her own head, but the music industry keeps making her perform.

ā€œThey hate celebrities when celebrities try to tell us how to run our lives,ā€ Gray says. "Some of their criticisms are ones that unite the left and the right. Like we all find celebrity culture vacuous."

ā€œSouth Parkā€ is the series that gave us cultural touchstones like Cheesy Poofs, ManBearPig and Mr. Hankey, the Christmas poo. It gave us Professor Chaos and General Disarray and the sight of Cartman exacting revenge on a teenage bully by making him eat his own parents and then gleefully licking the tears from his face.

It has morphed into full-length movies like ā€œSouth Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncutā€ ā€” which snagged an Oscar nomination for best original song ā€” and video games like ā€œSouth Park: The Stick of Truth.ā€ On Broadway, their musical about Mormons has been a hit since 2011.

The Parents Television Council, which hopes to restore ā€œdecency to the entertainment industry,ā€ has frequently criticized the show, calling it ā€œhome for graphic sex and violence.ā€ The show has confounded censors across the globe, and the show itself even launched a ā€³#CancelSouthParkā€ ad campaign, pretending that someone was trying to sanitize the show.

Parker and Stone first bonded as fans of Terry Gilliam and the Monty Python comedy troupe. They hand cut and glued their first ā€œSouth Parkā€ cartoons from construction paper and found a freedom in the low-key method.

ā€œIf you had pitched the show and said ā€˜Oh, and thereā€™s this little 8-year-old boy and he dies violently and isnā€™t that great?ā€™ Well, that would never fly. Even in good animation thatā€™s not funny. But in construction-paper animation, itā€™s funny,ā€ Parker says.

From paper to computers, the show keeps going. It has been a GIF and meme generator long before there were GIFs and memes: ā€œIā€™m not fat, Iā€™m big boned!ā€ ā€œOh, hamburgers!ā€ and ā€œRespect my authoritah!ā€

Celebrating its 25th anniversary with a concert makes sense since music has been at the show's heart. Some 100 songs have been used over the years, and ā€œSouth Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncutā€ was itself a musical film. Parker and Stone think of themselves less as animators and more as members of a band.

ā€œWhen we go into a new season, we go to the studio like a band, and we have no idea whatā€™s going to come out,ā€ says Parker. ā€œWeā€™re always surprised at the end of the season of like, 'Oh, we did that? Thatā€™s crazy!' Thatā€™s what kept it fun and fresh for 25 years.ā€

___

Mark Kennedy is at http://twitter.com/KennedyTwits

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