logo
South Park has lashed Trump again. So why are MAGA supporters trying to get in on the joke?

South Park has lashed Trump again. So why are MAGA supporters trying to get in on the joke?

South Park has continued its satirical hammering of the Trump administration in its latest episode, taking aim at ICE, right-wing podcasters and introducing a version of Vice President JD Vance – but this time the administration and its supporters are trying to get in on the joke.
The second instalment of the 27th season of the animated series dropped on Thursday, two weeks after the first episode showed President Donald Trump in bed with Satan, depicted him nude and making fun of the size of his genitalia and also featuring Trump suing the town of South Park itself.
That episode attracted the ire of Trump's MAGA supporters and earned a rebuke from the White House. 'This show hasn't been relevant for over 20 years and is hanging on by a thread with uninspired ideas in a desperate attempt for attention,' White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers said in a statement. 'President Trump has delivered on more promises in just six months than any other president in our country's history – and no fourth-rate show can derail President Trump's hot streak.'
What happened that week
The first episode of South Park' s 27th season was released just hours after Paramount's $US8 billion merger with Skydance was approved by the US Federal Communications Commission.
It also came a week after The Late Show With Stephen Colbert was cancelled, just days after that host had taken aim at Paramount's $US16 million settlement with Trump over his lawsuit against 60 Minutes, which was broadcast on the company's CBS network.
Loading
Trump had sued the program over the editing of a Kamal Harris interview in the lead-up to last year's US presidential election.
Speculation was rife that Colbert's sacking and the settlement with Trump were an effort by Paramount to remove any potential blocks to the approval of the sale to Skydance – and South Park also referenced those incidents in the show.
However, Paramount said the decision to end Colbert's show was financial, and reports later claimed the show cost the network between $US40 million and $US50 million ($61 million to $76 million) a year.
At the same time, South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone reached a $US1.5 billion, five-year streaming deal with Paramount in which they also agreed to produce 10 episodes a year.
Days later the first post-deal episode emerged, going on to dominate the news cycle, pleasing Trump critics and enraging his supporters and surprising the creators. 'Even just three days ago, we were like, 'I don't know if people are going to like this,'' Parker said at Comic-Con after the first episode's release.
Despite the backlash, the show has clearly doubled down on its criticism of the administration and the broader ecosystem around it – even as those in the satirical firing line try to claim the joke as their own.
The new episode
At the core of the new episode is school counsellor Mr Mackie's new job with ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement), after he is sacked from his job in favour of Jesus (another long-running character in the show).
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem features heavily in the episode, shooting a dog within moments of her on-screen arrival (Noem admitted to killing her 14-month-old dog, Cricket, claiming it had an 'aggressive personality' and wasn't particularly good at chasing down pheasants in her memoir No Going Back).
Loading
The Noem character also leads various ICE raids, including one on a Dora The Explorer concert and another in heaven, while delivering the character's slogan: 'If it's brown, it goes down'.
Mackie, naturally, turns out to be an effective ICE agent, setting the story up for its big finale at Mar-a-Lago. There he is welcomed by Trump and Vance, depicted in a kind of Fantasy Island motif, with Trump as Mr Roarke and Vance as the diminutive Tattoo.
In an even wilder twist, earlier this week the Department of Homeland Security posted an image of ICE agents from the show, with a link to a recruitment site.
Meanwhile, a subplot of the episode has Eric Cartman setting up a rival a right-wing podcast after his fellow fourth grader Clyde's podcast has huge success.
Cartman is incensed by the way Clyde has leveraged the bigotry Cartman assumed was his own (taking aim at woke students, women's rights, Black people, Jewish people and others), and is determined to do a bigger and better right-wing podcast, soon calling himself a 'master debater', a gag as silly as it seems.
The show uses the arc to target right-wing podcaster Charlie Kirk, with Cartman's usual beanie gone and his hair styled like Kirk, who has now changed his X profile photo to the image of Cartman in podcaster mode.
Towards the end of the episode, Cartman and Clyde head to The Charlie Kirk Award for Young Master Debaters. Again, Kirk appears to have taken the jibes well, posting a clip of that scene on his X feed. Kirk also suggested that some of Cartman's rants are taken straight from his show.
Why are MAGA supporters embracing the episode?
Melbourne University Associate Professor in the School of Social and Political Sciences Lauren Rosewarne says the efforts to co-opt the satire are an attempt to get in on the joke and frame it for MAGA supporters.
Loading
Unlike The Late Show With Stephen Colbert, Rosewarne says, South Park has always had a large conservative audience, making the attempt worthwhile.
'Outsiders might think that is lame, but for insiders it's a way to express bravado in the face of a pop culture attack … for the past six months, you've seen a turn where MAGA thinks of themselves as the mainstream and this [ South Park ] is a reminder that no, you are not,' Rosewarne says.
'They feel they have a lot of cultural capital, more than the first administration... this is about them talking to their own people and reframing it: 'We are not the victims, we are in on it'. They would not do the same to Colbert.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump confirms he will meet Putin ‘very shortly', but without Zelensky
Trump confirms he will meet Putin ‘very shortly', but without Zelensky

The Age

time6 minutes ago

  • The Age

Trump confirms he will meet Putin ‘very shortly', but without Zelensky

Washington: US President Donald Trump has confirmed he will meet Russian President Vladimir Putin 'very shortly' and suggested a deal was in the works that would involve the 'swapping' of territory to end the war between Russia and Ukraine. Trump said the location for the meeting would be announced later on Friday (Saturday AEST). It will be the first time Putin has met a sitting US president since he launched his full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. The confirmation comes after days of speculation about a meeting between the two leaders, and confusion over whether there were preconditions for the summit to take place, such as the involvement of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky or a separate meeting between him and Putin. Friday also marked Trump's own deadline for Putin to agree to a ceasefire and peace deal or face additional US sanctions and secondary sanctions aimed at Russian trading partners. So far, Trump has announced an extra 25 per cent tariff on Indian exports to the US as punishment for India buying Russian oil, to begin on August 27. As the deadline loomed, Putin pushed for a meeting with Trump, and the Kremlin announced there would be a summit 'within days' – without confirmation from Washington, which had pushed for a trilateral meeting with Zelensky. But Trump indicated on Friday it would be a bilateral meeting. 'We're going to have a meeting with Russia, we'll start off with Russia,' he said. 'We'll announce a location ... I'll be meeting very shortly with President Putin.' Asked if it was the last chance for the Russian president to agree to a ceasefire and peace deal, Trump said: 'I don't like using the term 'last chance'.' He indicated the deal under consideration involved the exchange of territory currently occupied by opposing military forces, but did not go into detail.

Trump confirms he will meet Putin ‘very shortly', but without Zelensky
Trump confirms he will meet Putin ‘very shortly', but without Zelensky

Sydney Morning Herald

time6 minutes ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Trump confirms he will meet Putin ‘very shortly', but without Zelensky

Washington: US President Donald Trump has confirmed he will meet Russian President Vladimir Putin 'very shortly' and suggested a deal was in the works that would involve the 'swapping' of territory to end the war between Russia and Ukraine. Trump said the location for the meeting would be announced later on Friday (Saturday AEST). It will be the first time Putin has met a sitting US president since he launched his full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. The confirmation comes after days of speculation about a meeting between the two leaders, and confusion over whether there were preconditions for the summit to take place, such as the involvement of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky or a separate meeting between him and Putin. Friday also marked Trump's own deadline for Putin to agree to a ceasefire and peace deal or face additional US sanctions and secondary sanctions aimed at Russian trading partners. So far, Trump has announced an extra 25 per cent tariff on Indian exports to the US as punishment for India buying Russian oil, to begin on August 27. As the deadline loomed, Putin pushed for a meeting with Trump, and the Kremlin announced there would be a summit 'within days' – without confirmation from Washington, which had pushed for a trilateral meeting with Zelensky. But Trump indicated on Friday it would be a bilateral meeting. 'We're going to have a meeting with Russia, we'll start off with Russia,' he said. 'We'll announce a location ... I'll be meeting very shortly with President Putin.' Asked if it was the last chance for the Russian president to agree to a ceasefire and peace deal, Trump said: 'I don't like using the term 'last chance'.' He indicated the deal under consideration involved the exchange of territory currently occupied by opposing military forces, but did not go into detail.

International community condemns Israel's Gaza takeover plan
International community condemns Israel's Gaza takeover plan

SBS Australia

time24 minutes ago

  • SBS Australia

International community condemns Israel's Gaza takeover plan

Listen to Australian and world news, and follow trending topics with SBS News Podcasts . TRANSCRIPT International criticism of Israel's plan to further escalate military actions in Gaza A possible meeting between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin about the war in Ukraine. And in sport, the Raiders continue their rapid-fire return to the top of the NRL ladder. The international community has broadly condemned Israel's plans to intensify its military operations in Gaza. Top United Nations officials say the plan to seize Gaza runs counter to international law, and the German government has announced it will suspend the sale of arms for use in the assault on Gaza until further notice. Britain and other key European allies have also joined Australia in opposing the complete Gaza takeover, calling on Israel to reconsider. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney says the decision is wrong. "This action is not going to contribute to an improvement in the humanitarian situation on the ground. It is going to put the lives of the hostages at greater risk rather than lessening it. We reiterate our call for an immediate ceasefire." Greens senator David Shoebridge says the Australian government needs to go beyond 'hollow rhetoric' in its response to the Israeli government's plan to occupy all of Gaza. Labor has condemned the move in a statement saying forced permanent displacement was a violation of international law, whilst calling for a ceasefire, the return of hostages, and the unimpeded flow of aid. The Greens have been calling for sanctions on the Israel and for the government cease two way arms trade. Mr Shoebridge says there are further actions that could be taken. "What we get again from the Albanese government is a series of words increasing the empty hollow rhetoric condemning the actions of doing nothing. Nothing practical nothing material to try and stop this escalation of violence in a situation which is already a genocide." Israel strongly denies the allegation it is committing genocide in Gaza. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says he believes a ceasefire is possible, as the US and Russian leaders prepare to hold a possible face-to-face meeting. US President Donald Trump had signalled he would intensify sanction targeting Russia if President Vladimir Putin didn't agree to a ceasefire by Friday. Now both presidents say they are prepared to meet to advance negotiations towards ending the war, although Mr Zelenskyy may not be included. The Ukrainian leader says he is talking with partners to try and find a common position for a solid peace in Ukraine. "We are in constant communication with the American side, and our partners are talking to the United States of America. Everyone is united by the awareness that there is a possibility of achieving at least a ceasefire, and everything depends on putting the right pressure on Russia. It is there that a decision must be made that the war they started must be ended by them." The New South Wales government has strongly defended its decision to pay two million dollars in compensation to Kathleen Folbigg, who spent 20 years in jail after her wrongful conviction for killing her four children. The payment has been widely criticised as inadequate, with supporters citing her lost opportunities and the economic circumstances now faced by the now 58-year-old. But Premier Chris Minns says Ms Folbigg is free to sue the state government if they feel the grace payment is inadequate. He says he won't budge without a court order. "There's no NDA (non disclosure agreement) involved. There's no future action that cannot be pursued by Ms Folbigg or her lawyers. But you have to appreciate it's not my money. This is public money. We'd have to take it from another initiative. And this was the most amount that we could justify, given it would come from other resources." The prospect of a Canberra-versus-Penrith grand final is gathering speed following the Raiders' rapid-fire return to the top of the NRL ladder. A try-scoring hat-trick from 20-year-old five-eighth Ethan Strange helped Ricky Stuart's relentless Raiders repel an ambush from Manly and add to the Sea Eagles' woes with a 28-12 win in chilly Canberra last night. Rebounding from a shock first defeat last week against St George Illawarra, the Raiders' pivotal win knocks Melbourne off a perch the Storm only enjoyed for 24 hours after Thursday night's 22-2 triumph over Brisbane. With the Panthers entering the top four for the first time all season after extending their own mid-season winning run to nine games with a 48-12 win in Newcastle, fans dream of a repeat of the classic 1990 and 1991 title deciders.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store