Donald Trump’s slapstick efforts to get rid of his butt baby with Satan keep befalling the hapless FCC chair in the show’s latest episode
As if Jimmy Kimmel’s return to late-night wasn’t enough, South Park put FCC chair Brendan Carr through a grueling gauntlet of slapstick pain in its latest episode, Wednesday, Sept. 24.
The episode isn’t a direct commentary on how the Trump administration pressured ABC and affiliate owners to preempt Jimmy Kimmel Live!, though Trey Parker and Matt Stone made their views on the matter evident enough. Carr is part of an episode subplot involving Donald Trump’s efforts to get rid of his unborn butt baby with Satan, but all the zany schemes the president concocts keep befalling the hapless FCC chair instead.
These include: Slipping down a greased flight of stairs, eating a stew laced with Plan B, and finally, getting covered in dirty cat litter and infected with toxoplasmosis. The last trap puts Carr in the hospital, where a doctor quips about his condition: “His bones are healing, so he may regain full range of motion. But if the toxoplasmosis parasite gets to his brain, I’m afraid he may lose his freedom of speech.”
In a more direct nod to the Kimmel controversy, J.D. Vance shows up at the hospital, delighted that Carr is in critical condition and thus unable to challenge the VP for the presidency. Vance even threatens Carr with the same words the FCC chair used on a podcast when revealing his desire to get Kimmel booted over a joke he made about the suspect accused of killing Charlie Kirk: “We can do this the easy way or the hard way.”
Last night’s South Park aired a week later than expected, after Parker and Stone admitted they were unable to get the episode “done in time.” The show’s blockbuster 27th season has been airing every other week, as opposed to weekly, to ostensibly give the pair and their staff more time to craft episodes in response to current events. (Case in point: The Carr plot was almost certainly added after last week’s episode was delayed, as Stone and Parker announced the postponement the same day, Sept. 17, ABC suspended Kimmel.)
South Park will air five more episodes this year, with the tentative schedule set as: Oct. 15, Oct. 29, Nov. 12, Nov. 26, and Dec. 10.
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