You don’t have to imagine, you can see a scene like this in Better Call Saul
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SloganLessons@lemmy.worldto
Television@piefed.social•Trey Parker Says South Park Didn't Get Political, But "Politics Became Pop Culture"English
2·19 days agoYes, like what’s happening now. Thus, what he said
SloganLessons@lemmy.worldto
Television@piefed.social•Trey Parker Says South Park Didn't Get Political, But "Politics Became Pop Culture"English
3·19 days ago… hum, you lost me
News of the day != administration
Like, I’m double checking the article, what I wrote, what you wrote, and I find myself scratching my head if there’s something obvious that I am missing in the middle of all this
I’m reading the first two paragraphs and they show, clearly, that his quote is in reference to them talking about the administration this season. Which, as I said, it’s unusual how vicious and non stop it has been. (Deservedly, but that’s a tangent and another discussion)
This is what I was talking about, this was the point I made. I have no clue what you are talking about
SloganLessons@lemmy.worldto
Television@piefed.social•Trey Parker Says South Park Didn't Get Political, But "Politics Became Pop Culture"English
3·19 days agoTo be clear, I didn’t say that it never did, what I said is that it never did >as much< as it’s doing now. Because in this season, so far, it’s been every single episode
SloganLessons@lemmy.worldto
Television@piefed.social•Trey Parker Says South Park Didn't Get Political, But "Politics Became Pop Culture"English
201·20 days agoReading the comments is weird because to me it feels like either people are unaware of the context, or are ignoring it on purpose.
His response was about this season’s unusual targeting of the administration. South Park was always political, but it is unusual for the show to focus so much on the current administration of the US, that’s what he was talking about and asked about.
Maybe he could’ve used different words but to me it’s clear what he meant.

Dear god…