‘South Park’ Creators on Anti-MAGA Turn: ‘Politics Became Pop Culture’

Over the past three decades, South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone have managed to infuriate partisans on both sides of the political divide on countless occasions. They enraged environmentalists in 2006 by dismissing climate change as a fiction no different than the mythical beast ManBearPig, pissed off the right by conceding their mistake and apologizing 12 years later in the episode Time to Get Cereal, and angered most everyone by comparing John Kerry and George W. Bush to a douche and a turd days before the 2004 election.
Over the past couple of months, however, theyâve aimed all their shots at the MAGA movement in a viciously funny storyline that paints Donald Trump as a narcissistic lunatic with a tiny penis, Vice President Vance as a subservient clone of HervĂŠ Villechaizeâs character on Fantasy Island, Attorney General Pam Bondi as such a kiss-ass that her face is literally coated in Trumpâs fecal matter, and Homeland Security Secretary Pam Bondi as plastic surgery-scarred freak whose face literally falls off her head and scurries away. The storyline revolves around Trump impregnating Satan with a demon baby. (And yes, we see Trumpâs tiny penis on several occasions. Itâs funny every time.)
In a new interview with The New York Times, Parker and Stone explained whey they are leaning so heavily into the MAGA storyline. âItâs not that we got all political,â Parker said. âItâs that politics became pop culture.â
âTrey and I are attracted to that like flies to honey,â Stone added. âOh, thatâs where the taboo is? Over there? OK, then weâre over there.â
This all started just weeks before Comedy Centralâs parent company, Paramount, officially merged with Skydance Media as part of an $8 billion deal that required regulatory approval by the Trump administration. This led to big changeups at CBS, including the cancellation of Stephen Colbertâs late night show, and Bari Weiss taking over as the head of CBS News.
âWe just had to show our independence somehow,â Stone said. âI know with the Colbert thing and all the Trump stuff, people think certain things, but theyâre letting us do whatever we want, to their credit.â
From a ratings perspective, itâs been a huge success: Theyâve doubled their numbers from 2023. Itâs also generated more critical buzz for the show than theyâve enjoyed in years. âAt precarious moments like this, certain things need to be said out loud, even if theyâre being packaged with juvenile dick jokes,â wrote Rolling Stoneâs Alan Sepinwall. âWhen so many of their peers are too scared to offer even a mealy-mouthed version of criticism, Parker, Stone, and South Park just went for it.â
But it doesnât mean Parker and Stone have finally settled on one side of the political divide. âWeâre just very down-the-middle guys,â Parker said. âAny extremists of any kind we make fun of. We did it for years with the woke thing. That was hilarious to us. And this is hilarious to us.â
Greta Gerwig’s ‘The Magician’s Nephew’ Narnia Movie to Open in 2027
A few years after Greta Gerwig pulled off the unimaginable and turned Barbie into a feminist...
Donald Trump Demands ABC Fire Jimmy Kimmel Again
Donald Trumpâs seemingly endless fixation with getting Jimmy Kimmel fired continued...
‘Melrose Place’Â Star Patrick Muldoonâs Cause of Death Revealed
The actor died on Sunday, April 19 Patrick Muldoonâs cause of death has been...
Stephen Colbert Explains Why ‘The Late Show’ Became More Political
Stephen Colbert said he leaned into current events on The Late Show after initially planning...