Review: South Park
The veteran satirists tackle major issues in America's increasingly divisive culture war with no condescension, cringe, or partisan preference.

Trey Parker and Matt Stone do the near-impossible in the 25th season of South Park. The veteran satirists tackle major issues in America's increasingly divisive culture war with no condescension, cringe, or partisan preference.
Consider the season's opener. Some of the children of South Park Elementary are prevented from wearing pajamas on the school's "pajama day." Parents are soon complaining about the emotional damage done to their kids. The news media tar the restriction as a Nazi-like assault on freedom. The townspeople start to wear pajamas in solidarity with the children.
Soon pajamas become mandatory. Those wearing normal clothes are excluded from restaurants and offices. Husbands and wives turn on each other. Scofflaws are thrown in jail.
It's hardly the most subtle metaphor for pandemic-era masking. The cleverness comes from the shifting nature of pajama wearing, from a personal freedom to the target of an arbitrary restriction to the subject of a coercive mandate. The episode's mockery is directed at both those most zealous about complying with rules and those rejecting them. That even-handedness (critics would call it bothsidesism) pops up throughout the season.
An episode about city dwellers moving in droves to South Park manages to satirize both urbanites (whose dialogue is limited to saying "LaCroix," "Tesla," and "Pilates") and NIMBY residents who attempt to massacre real estate agents selling out their town.
The season's take on the Russian invasion of Ukraine skips commentary on the war itself. Instead, it focuses on how characters use the conflict to reclaim their lost youth or justify their own petty prejudices. A few erect horse penises keep everything light-hearted.
There's not much earnest speaking truth to power in this season. The show lets itself be about flawed people living next to each other, and that makes it good comedy.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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The six episode 25th season (yes, six episodes) was shit. The first episode's "satire", sadly, lacked any semblance of, you know, humor. I like South Park, but COVID broke them. Their work has been absolute crap for a few years. The Paramount+ stuff was fucking abysmal. Their less than 10 episodes since 2000 have been pretty bad.
Their work has been absolute crap for a few years
The show's been on the air for three decades. No show can stay fresh for that long, no matter how edgy it started out.
Yeah, the edge is worn down pretty hard right now.
Remember when Cartman was Cartman? Trey and Matt are not completely immune to fears of cancellation.
South Park died when PC Principal showed up but was in decline for a couple of seasons before that.
Cry me a river! Let's see some more no-talent whiners join the whispering campaign and be laughingstocks.
Say what you will about the last few seasons (I've liked most of them, but I'm easily entertained), but is there any other show or entertainment company out there willing to tell the Chinese Government to fuck off? Disney sure as fuck isn't.
Avoiding teevee in toto was easier before South Park. Now their stuff is free to watch in OTHER LANGUAGES, and not badly dubbed. The genre is psychedelic objectivism. Ayn Rand would have been horrified--especially after backstabbing the LP and helping Nixon Republicans wreck rights. But fine, no hard feelings. Looter Klep... um, ah... Klep-tocracy (whew!) fans of course hate anything objective and shriek at whatever fails to endorse national or international socialism. So... who cares? Bring on the South Park!