Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The fourth season of South Park, an American animated television series created by Trey Parker and Matt Stone, began airing on April 5, 2000. The fourth season concluded after airing 17 episodes on December 20, 2000. The first four episodes in this season have the year 2000 at the end of their episode titles.
"Board Girls" is the seventh episode of the twenty-third season of the American animated television series South Park. The 304th episode overall of the series, it premiered on Comedy Central in the United States on November 13, 2019. [1] The episode argues that discussion of transgender athletes is made difficult by political correctness. [2]
A DVD box set of 13 Butters-centric episodes, A Little Box of Butters, was released in September 2010. [28] A pinball game with a Butters theme, entitled "Butters Very Own Pinball" (named after the season five finale "Butters' Very Own Episode"), is playable on the mobile app video game South Park Pinball. [29]
"Cartman Sucks" is the second episode of the eleventh season of the American animated television series South Park. It originally aired on March 14, 2007 on Comedy Central . The main plot deals with Eric Cartman 's efforts to recover an incriminating photograph that may call his sexual orientation into question, whereas the subplot, which ...
Season 4’s theatrical rollout will begin with a two-week run of Episodes 1-3 beginning Feb. 1, 2024, followed by Episodes 4-6 (on Feb. 15) and Episodes 7-8 (on Feb. 29), all via Fathom Events ...
"Two Guys Naked in a Hot Tub" (also known as "Melvins") is the eighth episode of the third season of the American animated television series South Park, and the 39th episode of the series overall. The episode is the second part of The Meteor Shower Trilogy, and centers upon third grader Stan Marsh and his father Randy .
The episode opens with Stan, Kyle, Cartman, and a disembodied Kenny (sharing Cartman's body) playing "The Lord of the Rings." Stan's parents have rented the movie The Lord of the Rings (specifically, The Fellowship of the Ring), and tell Stan, Kyle & Cartman to bring it to Butters' parents, as they had asked to borrow it.
Isler said he enjoyed Kenny's death and Butters' obsession with "bush", but felt the theme of the episode was too obvious and less clever than previous South Park episodes. [13] The A.V. Club writer Zack Handlen appreciated the timeliness and relevance of the subject matter, but felt "the satirical target here wasn't meaty enough to warrant a ...