
While the first three seasons have a few fun episodes (“Cartman’s Mom is a Dirty Slut,” for one), they’re often a chore to get through, and it takes awhile for Parker and Stone to really figure out the characters and fine-tune their humor and writing. In some cases, the jokes really don’t land with the eyes of hindsight see “ManBearPig,” which mocked global warming activism and held up so poorly Parker and Stone made a sequel twelve years later to apologize for it.ĭiving into “South Park” is more challenging than simply watching the show from beginning to end. It also means that plenty of episodes don’t have a lot of staying power beyond the year or month (heck, even week) they aired. The show’s famously fast-paced production schedule and top-of-the-minute parodies means the series can comment on scandals and news stories faster than many other animated shows on television. While “South Park” has managed to stay relatively fresh across 26 seasons, not every episode is created equal. It’s a strategy that has drawn controversy, but it wouldn’t be “South Park” if people weren’t arguing about something. Nowadays, regular “South Park” seasons have been shortened, but are accompanied by a series of Paramount+ special episodes.

For a few seasons, the show broke out of its episodic format in favor of serialized plotlines to mixed results. More shakeups have occurred over the seasons characters were retired (R.I.P Chef), or faded into the background, and others (Randy and Butters, most prominently) grew to rival the four leads in screentime. After three seasons that relied extensively on toilet humor (not that fart and poop jokes have ever faded from the show), the two eventually became impressive satirists, and “South Park” transformed into a ruthlessly topical comedy tackling practically every controversy and hot-button American issue within reach.

Over the seasons - and decades - Parker and Stone have stayed the primary creators behind the show, and watching it back is one way of tracking their growth as writers. Sure, the bones of Trey Parker and Matt Stone’s Comedy Central series have remained consistent: its foul-mouthed dialogue, offensive humor, surrealist tendencies, and central group of four elementary school boys have carried from the first episode through and beyond the show’s 300th.īut the exploits that Stan, Kyle, Cartman, and Kenny get into around their Colorado mountain town these days look a lot different than they did back in 1997, when the show first premiered. Plenty of adult animated shows seem to last forever, but the most impressive thing about the decades-long run of “South Park” is the series’ willingness to evolve and change.
