Topic > The Propaganda Behind South Park - 1236

"Join Stan, Kenny, Kyle and Cartman as these four animated types face the supernatural, the extraordinary and the crazy. For them, it's all part of growing up in South Park" Everything is began in 1995, when directors Trey Parker and Matt Stone were hired by a Fox executive who paid them $2,000 to make a video to send 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, and soon cable channel Comedy Central offered them a weekly series. It took less than six episodes to emerge as Comedy Central's biggest hit. South Park is the story of four third graders, 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 cardboard cutouts (although it is actually now made with computers). It has to be seen to be believed... and once you do, he'll either be hooked or want to banish it. South Park contains adult language, animated violence and very suggestive material (episode titles like "Merry Christmas, Charlie Manson", "Not without My Anus" or "Cartman's Mom Is Still a Dirty Slut" are just the tip of the story). iceberg). Every race, religion or culture is made fun of or stereotyped. One vision and the viewer will love it or want to take it off the air. Many viewers think these rude kids are worth their time. The setting and characters of South Park are simple. In particular, each child has his own character which represents propaganda elements in various ways. Stanley Marsh, widely known as Stan, is a "normal" and screwed-up average American boy. He has an elderly grandfather, who constantly pressures Stan to kill him, and he owns a gay dog ​​named Sparky (played by George Clooney). In each episode Stan announces Kenny's 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 dilapidated shack with his violent, drunken family. He speaks in muffled silence and we are left to guess what he said. Eric Theodore Cartman is always bullied by his classmates because of his weight. He weighs about ninety pounds but denies being fat, saying he is just “large-boned".".