South Park’s Creators Share The Season 28 Fan Reactions They’ve Been Hearing, And I’m Surprised How Different They Are

If you’ve watched South Park’s latest run, you’ve probably noticed the show isn’t just dipping a toe into politics, but cannonballing. The long-running animated chaos machine has spent much of the television schedule and Season 28 lampooning the Trump orbit, cable-news hysteria, and the general weirdness of American public life. And according to the guys steering the ship, how fans feel about all that depends on where they’re watching from.

Speaking with The New York Times, co-creator Matt Stone, who’s been in New York lately, says strangers keep stopping him to say thanks. And these aren’t typical South Park diehards, but people newly tuned in by the show’s take on MAGA-world. Meanwhile, Parker, home in Colorado, hears something very different:

I’m in my little bubble here in Colorado, where everyone’s going, ‘When are you going to bring the boys back and stop doing all this political stuff?’

South Park Season 28 has become a neat little Rorschach test. Viewers who see the season as catharsis are cheering; viewers bored or exhausted by politics want Cartman and the gang causing garden-variety municipal disasters again. Same episodes, wildly different vibes depending on your zip code.

(Image credit: Paramount+)

The irreverent comedy duo said the shift isn’t that South Park “got all political,” so much as politics officially became the culture. The pair described new “taboos” that made the season a magnet for controversy, and, apparently, viewers. Ratings for the past few months have more than doubled compared to the show’s previous season in 2023, per Nielsen cited by the Times. Parker and Stone framed their approach as classic South Park, and that’s to chase whatever the pop culture of the day is.

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