You Know I Learned Something Today
Y'know, I learned something today...
South Park Fun Fact #876
While this might be a trivial more obvious to some, not everyone's a sci-fi geek, then… Digressing, Moses' depiction in the evidence is heavily based off of the MCP (Master Command Plan) AI adversary in Tron.
MCP has some level of omnipotence, but, by all ways, isn't completely all-knowing. This is referenced by Moses' unsure, bullshit-sounding answers filled with "Um" and "I guess".
South Park Fun Fact #921
The reason Bigger, Longer, and Uncut (1999) was a musical by and large stems from Trey'south love for them and the fact that the moving picture they released just prior, Orgazmo (1997), wasn't a musical, which is to appointment their simply major moving-picture show to not have bountiful songs.
South Park Fun Fact #839
Eric'due south "all-time stuffed brute" (stated in S9E2′s Die Hippie, Dice), Clyde Frog, is based off a grapheme with the same name on an eponymous late 70s prove.
The educational boob show was made past a local Mississippi station for the sake of education children most attitudes, safety, and other important evolution lessons.
This can all be seen as a little ironic because the Due south Park version of the frog was owned and somewhen murdered by a mentally unstable, defiant child.
South Park Fun Fact #954
There's a little-known guest vocalization that shows up in a couple episodes, such every bit the simulated Mr. Hankey in the mall in Merry Christmas Charlie Manson! (S2E16), Satan's lover Chris in the two-parter Practice the Handicapped Go to Hell? / Probably (S4E9/10), and the game prove announcer in Moo-cow Days (S2E13).
The vocalisation belongs to Dian Bachar, a guy that Matt and Trey befriended while in higher. He acted in several of their other productions as well, most notably as Kenny "Squeak" Scolari in Baseketball (1998).
South Park Fun Fact #524
In tardily 1999, Matt and Trey were contacted by Macromedia (they're responsible for Flash and, consequently, all the shitty porn games on the interwebs) to get them to use their software to promote information technology and their "new" website, shockwave.com, since they observed how well S Park was doing.
They were offered about $2 million, and the duo agreed under the status that they could do whatever they wanted. In fact, they explicitly stated they were going to make 10-rated one-act.
Macromedia agreed, and in 2001, Matt and Trey produced and released two episodes of what was supposed to be a much longer series they called Princess. Though you'd imagine information technology'd follow the antics of the titular Lhasa Apso canis familiaris, Princess, it actually revolves around the family.
If you picket the first episode attached above, even a small part of it, you can immediately see how Matt and Trey weren't lying when they promised to become for X-rated.
Of course, upon receiving the beginning two pilot episodes, Macromedia somewhat predictably, even though they claimed that they could handle whatever would come, never responded.
The series was abandoned, but the start two episodes are readily available on YouTube.
South Park Fun Fact #804
In late 2008, Trey, assuming the role of Cartman, had an informative interview with NPR host Julie Rovner.
Such fantastic details revealed include:
>Eric's to the lowest degree favorite words are "no," "don't," and "ecosystem."
>His biggest fault is "sometimes I'thousand so cool that information technology makes other kids feel bad."
>And his favorite color is "definitelyCaucasian."
Though he afterward adds, "I'thousand fine with black people." (To which Julie scoffs and replies, "that'south duly noted.")
S Park Fun Fact #350
In the beginning, Matt and Trey wanted ane of them to be the vocalisation of Chef, every bit they were opposed to bringing on more people than necessary. All the same, Comedy Central thought it would be racist for a white person to voice a black person.
That changed, however, in The Succubus (S3E3), when Chef'south parents are introduced. The couple'due south antics with the Loch Ness Monster and tree fiddy was a recurring joke Matt and Trey would often make in higher, so naturally, they thought Chef's parents' appearance on the show, along with the joke's, was 1 of the funniest things ever.
Of grade, humor is relative, and many people stated how racist they thought it was. Matt and Trey thought that in itself was funny, because the other characters they'd voiced, from Iraqis to Ethiopians in Season One alone; not to mention Saddam Hussein.
Anonymous asked:
Take you ever been to Costa rica? Because it'south an amazing identify with awesome people. I loved it so much and tin can't believe you would say stuff similar that of such a identify.
South Park Fun Fact #352
Upon the recommendation of Flea from the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Trey went to Costa Rica with his then-girlfriend. Much to his displeasure, it was "hot, dirty, smelly," and there were snakes everywhere.
Though "like a lot of people, we all grew upwards with Earth Day and 'gotta save the rainforest'", he quickly came to the conclusion that "this place sucks! We don't need to salve this, fuck this identify."
Almost every argument Cartman makes in the episode Rainforest Shmainforest (S3E1) reflects his stance on the rainforest, though he and Matt admit "it's not fuck the rainforest, it's fuck the people who love the rainforest."
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