By Jesse Walker on 3.19.04 @ 12:04AM
South Park and its Republicans are out to prove that there is a difference between smart bad taste and plain dumb bad taste.
South Park launched its eighth season this week with an
episode that parodied Japanese anime, mocked the crackdown
on "indecency," and showed a kid getting a ninja throwing star
stuck in his eye. At this point, Trey Parker and Matt Stone's
cartoon is almost as old as its boy protagonists, but it hasn't
lost its impudent appeal. That is an impressive achievement, all
the more so now that the show has withstood two blows that might
have sunk a lesser program: popularity and respectability.
The popularity came quickly after the cartoon's debut, stuck
around for a year or two, then inevitably faded. South
Park survived the transformation from buzz magnet to old news
by revising its formula, reasserting Parker and Stone's creative
control, and aiming more at maintaining its cult following than at
reaching for a mass audience. This evidently worked, given that the
show not only is still on the air but is arguably funnier than it
was in its most popular period.
The respectability was slower to come, and it didn't really
descend until the South Park movie hit theaters in 1999.
Mainstream film critics, forced to sit through 90 minutes of
this filth, gradually realized that they were watching a
clever, daring satire filled with brilliant musical parodies. By
2002, the cartoon was respectable enough that a fellow named
Stephen W. Stanton was declaring the existence of the "South Park Republican,"
a new breed of GOPer who doesn't fit the old stereotype of "stodgy
white guys with money."
Writing in TechCentralStation, Stanton briefly noted
that South Park "communicates the Republican position on
many issues" -- which is true --
then went on to list such purported South Park Republicans as
Arnold Schwarzenegger, Bruce Willis, and ("if he were alive today")
John F. Kennedy. In other words, the South Park Republican is a
not-so-stodgy white guy with money.
No -- sorry -- actually, the South Park Republicans are supposed
to be a hodgepodge of libertarian-leaning, pop-savvy, socially
tolerant, and/or nonwhite Republicans who, as Stanton noted in a
follow-up article, don't even have to like South
Park. You know you're respectable when you're a harmless
mascot for a poorly defined political tendency. And if there's
anything that could destroy South Park's appeal, it's
turning tame.
FORTUNATELY, THERE'S LITTLE chance that Parker and Stone are going
to be asked to address any mainstream political conventions this
summer. As the new season begins, they've maintained all
the essential elements of the show: an unusually realistic portrait
of the politically incorrect ways that kids actually talk to each
other, a much less realistic penchant for surreal and fantastic
plots, a generally libertarian political stance, a distaste for
celebrities, and -- this is the important part -- a rich current of
bad taste.
It's the bad taste that made South Park's reputation,
it's the bad taste that allowed it to slip under most
intellectuals' radar screen for so long, and it's the bad taste
that will keep it from ever growing too respectable. The show has
made jokes about cannibalism, child molestation, and every
excretory function. It giggles about sex and drugs; it plays
footsie with forbidden stereotypes. It has devoted several
Christmas episodes -- Christmas episodes! -- to the adventures of a
singing turd. In its early years, every installment included the
death of one of its central characters, who would then return, like
Prometheus, to die another horrible death the next day. This is
what the program is famous for, especially among those who never
watch it.
But there's smart bad taste, and there's dumb bad taste. Dumb
bad taste is a morning shock jock doing a skit
about Shaggy from Scooby-Doo becoming a crack whore. Smart
bad taste is South Park's Eric Cartman tricking a bully
into eating a chili made from his parents, in a revenge lifted
(sort of) from Titus Andronicus.
If you just blanched, you're the reason why no winning
presidential candidate will ever identify himself as a South
Park fan. Keep it up; the show needs it.
topics:
Satire, Books