Sue, Scott: South Park is the most important satiric vehicle in contemporary American art. Matt Stone and Trey Parker are able to hide behind their pronounced affection for vulgar humor, but the show takes on topics no one else in our Politically Correct epoch is willing to touch. The joke-behind-the-joke in this clip is that Stone and Parker just launched SouthParkStudios.com, which features every episode of South Park — for free, of course.
Eric Bramlett says:
Brilliant!
April 4, 2008 — 6:48 am
Scott Cowan says:
I LOVE it! I’ve never watched South Park before…. Now, I must go and watch….
April 4, 2008 — 8:48 am
louis@homegain.com says:
Funny!!
Perhaps Cartman can come up with a way for Realtors to forego their commissions and make it up in ad revenues. SWEET!
April 4, 2008 — 11:33 am
Sue says:
This is great. I’ve never seen South Park either, guess I thought it was just kids.
April 4, 2008 — 12:22 pm
Louis Cammarosano says:
Sue, While South Park is certainly worth watching, scenes like that one Greg posted are not too common.
Sometimes at the end of an episode one of the kids usually Kyle or Stan will wrap it up with some common sense kid wisdom.
Normally, however, Cartman steals the show with his offensive hilarious behavior and comments.
The off beat plot themes also drive the show.
April 4, 2008 — 1:29 pm
Greg Swann says:
Sue, Scott: South Park is the most important satiric vehicle in contemporary American art. Matt Stone and Trey Parker are able to hide behind their pronounced affection for vulgar humor, but the show takes on topics no one else in our Politically Correct epoch is willing to touch. The joke-behind-the-joke in this clip is that Stone and Parker just launched SouthParkStudios.com, which features every episode of South Park — for free, of course.
April 4, 2008 — 9:00 pm