South Park
by Julie on Oct 11, 2004 06:45:01
Example:
Cartman: How would you like to
suck my balls?
Mr. Garrison: What did you say?
Cartman: Oh, Im sorry, Im sorry. Actually, what I meant to say was *gets out
loudspeaker* How would you like to suck my balls, Mr. Garrison?
South Park
by Madison P on May 24, 2015 09:21:19
The most misunderstood TV show of all time, it basically accurately puts a satirical mirror on modern society, politics, social issues and anything relevant to the world. People tend to factor out the satire because their IQ is to low to understand it, so they simply take the swearing to face value humour, even though the humour goes into so much depth intellectually. It is about 4 boys from Colorodo,
Eric Cartman,
Stan Marsh, Kyle Brofloski, and
Kenny McCormick, as they travel through different misadventures through their years of adolescence.
Example:
"Hey did you see that episode of South Park where they talked about how China was invading America? Funny
how that is actually happening! They are buying out our land, man the creators make genius predictions!"
"Wow, I
learnt an amazing lesson South Park about racism, politics, and basically everything, it's almost like they
educate me on the issues!"
South Park
by Dude#1 on Dec 27, 2004 18:44:26
A popular show created by
Matt Stone and
Trey Parker. Based off of a cartoon they made in college, The Spirit Of Christmas, it has become popular with many 15-26 year olds in the last 8 years. In the past half-decade adolescent pre-teens and degenerates began to watch, imitate and sue, similar to MTV's Jackass stunt show. The show, currently airing Wednesdays on Comedy Central, is ulitimately a big middle finger to society's ignorance and utter stupidity, mixing political and pop culture jokes with
vulgarity.
South Park
by Mikey G on Oct 15, 2003 22:49:13
The funniest, most shocking, and
relevant show on television. Incorporates all aspects of comedy, though it is less
scatalogical than it used to be. To idiots, this is a bad thing and it automatically disqualifies South Park as a relevant sociopolitical voice. But the same people who
write off South Park are the ones who don't care about the world around them.