Approaching its 25th year on television, " South Park " stands as an utterly unique institution, even among the small crowd of animated comedies that have endured since the '90s. It didn't experience the perceived lapses in quality that has faded the legacy of "The Simpsons," and never got lost in the shuffle of too many Seth MacFarlane shows like "Family Guy. So naturally, some episodes will feel dated. But if you look at it a different way, such episodes provide valuable insight into things pop culture once found important, and now are mostly asterisks and footnotes.
Stan Marsh has had to deal with a lot in South Park Season There was the tail end of a mismanaged pandemic. His dad Randy got caught up in a cultural appropriation scheme with Tegridy Farms andthe weed-growing company embarked on a race war with its rival. Plus the show worked in the threat of actual war with Russia. Throw in Stan's unconscious bias drawing the ire of Tolkien, and it's safe to say that he needed a break. This respite occurred when Stan and the other boys headed to the Airsoft park for some friendly-fire fun.
While we've done our best to make the core functionality of this site accessible without javascript, it will work better with it enabled. Please consider turning it on! Remember Me. Stephen comes back from a rough day of work and is absolutely in a horrible mood, Randy might just have an idea for his husband to relax.
Butters is sent to a special camp where they try to force children into heterosexuality by praying their bi-curiosity away after his "friend's" Cartman's trick. Well, he was mistakenly accused of being bi-curious, and although he agrees, it's obvious he does not know what this means. As we can see in the episode, most of the kids at the camp are depressed and suicidal. Butters gets to know a character named Bradley, who develops a crush on Butters. But because he was told that it's a sin to like the same sex, Bradley rushes out of of the room and threatens to jump off a bridge.