Who'd have thought that television's first cartoon to be dubbed
TV-MA (a rating reserved for "mature audiences" only)
would be Comedy Central's highest-rated original series to date?
Well, the guys at Comedy Central, probably. With a scant six episodes
(and the wickedly funny Halloween special which ran last week)
to its name, "South Park" has already stirred up a cover
story in TV Guide, a slew of merchandising and a cult of
die-hard fans.
Every Wednesday night, rabid fans tune in to witness the adventures
of four precocious fourth graders--Kyle, Stan, Kenny and Cartman--in
bucolic South Park, Colo. But this ain't no "Peanuts."
The quartet's profanity-laced adventures so far have included
alien abduction (complete with anal probing), assisted suicide,
homosexual house pets and an entire episode built around "explosive
diarrhea." Rude? You betcha. Funny? Absolutely. Hey, any
show that involves a nine-year-old kid (mumble-mouthed, heavily
parka-ed Kenny) getting killed in some gruesome way every week
is tops on my list.
"South Park" got its start when two University of Colorado
students, Matt Stone and Trey Parker, produced the short film
The Spirit of Christmas. The simple construction paper
cut-out animation involved Jesus and Santa Claus in a knock-down
drag-out fight over who owned Christmas. The film became a major
underground hit in Hollywood and eventually landed Stone and Parker
a development deal at Comedy Central. The Spirit of Christmas
can now be seen as part of Spike and Mike's Sick And Twisted
Festival of Animation (currently touring the country, but
coming nowhere near Albuquerque, of course).
Just last week a "South Park" float was unveiled at
the 24th Annual Village Halloween Party in New York's Greenwich
Village. The annual gay pride parade featured "Big Gay Al's
Big Gay Float"--a tribute to the highly popular "South
Park" episode in which Stan learns compassion for his gay
dog Sparky (voiced by George Clooney) thanks to Big Gay Al and
his "Big Gay Animal Sanctuary." While the float trolled
through Greenwich Village, actors dressed as "South Park"
characters repeated popular gags from the show: Kyle kicked his
baby brother into the crowd, Stan puked on his girlfriend, Cartman
broke wind and--in keeping with the Halloween theme--Kenny was
killed repeatedly by the Grim Reaper.
Creators Stone and Parker are riding their wave of popularity
for all it's worth. They recently premiered their first live-action
film, Orgazmo,at the Toronto Film Festival. Orgazmo
tells the story of a young Mormon's involvement in the porno
industry and should prove as controversial as their TV series
when it opens in America later this year.