The Propaganda Behind South Park
Essay Preview: The Propaganda Behind South Park
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“Join Stan, Kenny, Kyle and Cartman as these four animated types take on the supernatural, the extraordinary and the insane. For them it is all part of growing up in South Park”.
It all started in 1995, when filmmakers Trey Parker and Matt Stone were hired by a Fox executive who paid them $2,000 to make a video for him to send it as a Christmas card. The video was called “The spirit of Christmas” and showed an imaginary fight between Santa Claus and Jesus Christ. The video circulated around and soon the cable channel Comedy Central offered them a weekly series. It took fewer than six episodes to emerge as Comedy Centrals biggest hit. South Park is the story of four third-grade boys, Stan, Kyle, Cartman and Kenny, growing up in the small mountain town of South Park, Colorado. The show is a loose interpretation of the term “cartoon”, which appears to be made with construction paper cut-outs (although it is actually done with computers now). One has to see it to believe it.and once he does, he will either be hooked or want it banned.
South Park contains adult language, animated violence, and very suggestive material (episode titles such as “Merry Christmas, Charlie Manson”, “Not without My Anus” or “Cartmans Mom is Still a Dirty Slut” are just the tip of the iceberg). Every race, religion or culture is made fun of or stereotyped. One viewing, and the watcher will either love it or want it taken off the air. Many viewers think that these rude boys are worth their time.
South Parks setting and characters are simple. In particular, each child has its own character which portrays propagandistic elements in various ways. Stanley Marsh, widely known as Stan, is a “normal” average American messed up kid. He has an aging grandfather, who continuously pressures Stan into killing him, and owns a gay dog named Sparky (played by George Clooney). In every episode Stan announces Kennys death by saying “Oh my God, they killed Kenny”. On the other hand, Kenny (whose full name is Kenny McCormick) is the unlucky one. He is poor and lives in a run-down shack with his violent and drunken family. He muffles when he speaks, and we are left only to guess at what he has said. Eric Theodore Cartman always gets bullied by his classmates because of his weight. He weighs about ninety pounds but denies his being fat by saying that he is only “big boned”. Unlike the rest of the children, Cartman does not have a father and lives with his hermaphrodite mother. Last but not least, we have Kyle Broslofski. Although, he is the “smart” one, everyone makes fun of him because of the fact that he is Jewish. Kyle is the one who shouts that Kennys killers are bastards — “You Bastards!”–. Apart from these four main figures of South Park, there are also some others appearing with similar and/or more serious problems and are as funny as the four main characters. A gay teacher, with a manic disorder, that thinks that his puppet is his best friend and allows him to reveal the bad side of his character. A black chef who constantly thinks that everything involves around sex, and Kyles adopted brother, who happens to be Canadian, and is constantly treated in a vile manner: “kick the baby!” and “Kyle your little brother is a dildo!”.
Way ahead of their time, these quick-witted, foul-mouthed, smart- assed third-graders ever to attend school have already figured out the purpose of life. South Park is probably the only show that pulls the whole country apart. It spares no one. With all the profanity, twisted, scatological references and comical portrayals of everything from happy talking turds to euthanasia, gay issues and bellicose, hypocritical do-gooders out there, its sure to be the religious rights and parents groups target across the board. Bob Smithouser, a representative of the Evangelical Christians, calls the show “extremely mean-spirited” and “deplorable”. He adds that South Parks own tongue-in-cheek disclaimer, at the start of every episode, may be the most accurate warning of all: “Due to the content of this show, it should not be viewed by anyone”. The Christian Family Network–a group whose mission is to advance Christ-centered values, restore morality, and protect life for the individual, family, and community — goes even further. It has prepared a South Park Education / Action Guide to “help make people aware of South Park and its potential affect upon our youth”. “Working together” the authors write, “we can help protect our youth from vile trash like South Park”. There also many schools that have advised parents to stop their children watching this cartoon. Martin Horrox, school development director in the Kings School in Ely, Cambridgeshire, has warned parents that South Park “contains obscenities, swearing, lavatorial actions and filth of a most unsavory nature”.
Thats what many people think about South Park. But others feel otherwise.
South Parks propaganda is loaded with moral content, which is achieved by a very difficult-to-use