IDLEchild
Well-Known Member
Southpark
ANALYSIS: This show started out as an obscure paper constructed phenomenon riddled with foul mouth kids and equally idiotic adults in a cold, disturbing town or Southpark, Colorado. The shows premise was simple: make fun of things, popular or not, and show the absurdity of human nature through extreme situations all leading up to happy endings.
Now into its 8th season the premise remains the same though Southpark has taken a wildly different direction, even though it does what it does best: make audiences laugh. The new season?s episodes all involve events occurring in popular culture today. Since the show production values have changed (more money, lotsss more money) episodes can be produced in a week alone so current pop culture events are dissected in the show weekly.
My concern about Southpark is that it is becoming the social commentator on the obvious that escapes the media and the people that are enraged by these events. If something is happening rest assured it will be in Southpark, from The passion of the Christ to Michael Jackson?s molestation trial?it is all there being mocked and analyzed through comedy. Does Southpark really need to take this direction? Such episodes exist in past seasons but they didn?t make up the bulk of the season, most episodes were comic events occurring in the fictional town of Southpark, concerning its people.
In the 8th season, however, all the episodes seem to be social commentary albeit hilarious social commentaries like that of the Jay Lenos, Jon Stewarts, Conan O Briens and the shock jock DJs of the world. Is that the only road the creators have left to take to get a laugh? Have they stressed out all the ideas and the situations that can happen to Southpark people? Or am I reading too deep into this because I have nothing better to do?
I suppose this mockery of social absurdity was always present but to me the 8th season seem to comprised totally of it and that sort of concerns me when a cartoon with rigid animation of 4th graders, and their less than inspiring parents, seem to speak the obvious truth far in far more clever ways than the media or those highly paid CNN consultants. It also concerns me that it is done so well and so quick that blink and you?ll miss and inside joke.
ANALYSIS: This show started out as an obscure paper constructed phenomenon riddled with foul mouth kids and equally idiotic adults in a cold, disturbing town or Southpark, Colorado. The shows premise was simple: make fun of things, popular or not, and show the absurdity of human nature through extreme situations all leading up to happy endings.
Now into its 8th season the premise remains the same though Southpark has taken a wildly different direction, even though it does what it does best: make audiences laugh. The new season?s episodes all involve events occurring in popular culture today. Since the show production values have changed (more money, lotsss more money) episodes can be produced in a week alone so current pop culture events are dissected in the show weekly.
My concern about Southpark is that it is becoming the social commentator on the obvious that escapes the media and the people that are enraged by these events. If something is happening rest assured it will be in Southpark, from The passion of the Christ to Michael Jackson?s molestation trial?it is all there being mocked and analyzed through comedy. Does Southpark really need to take this direction? Such episodes exist in past seasons but they didn?t make up the bulk of the season, most episodes were comic events occurring in the fictional town of Southpark, concerning its people.
In the 8th season, however, all the episodes seem to be social commentary albeit hilarious social commentaries like that of the Jay Lenos, Jon Stewarts, Conan O Briens and the shock jock DJs of the world. Is that the only road the creators have left to take to get a laugh? Have they stressed out all the ideas and the situations that can happen to Southpark people? Or am I reading too deep into this because I have nothing better to do?
I suppose this mockery of social absurdity was always present but to me the 8th season seem to comprised totally of it and that sort of concerns me when a cartoon with rigid animation of 4th graders, and their less than inspiring parents, seem to speak the obvious truth far in far more clever ways than the media or those highly paid CNN consultants. It also concerns me that it is done so well and so quick that blink and you?ll miss and inside joke.