#cancelsouthpark Read Count : 106

Category : Blogs

Sub Category : Miscellaneous

      Please tell me this isn’t real. Tell me this is solely a fun prank creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker are pulling to unnerve long-time fans, such as myself. What they’re doing is inciting a Purge-like riot with my emotions. 

      My denial is at war with acceptance. Recognition and going along with it will not stand a chance against my unyielding, dedicated denial that I have raised as a baby, into being the lengthy, grief-stricken stage it is today. 

      Since 1997, South Park has mad me in tears from laughing my heart out. Here, my tears aren’t completely from a place of sadness, but in remembrance of being that 10-year old boy in his room watching and listening to four kids cursing, swearing, and getting into trouble.

      Nearly every episode consists of a moral or message to keep it on air to teach kids—and adults—its many smart, but sometimes absurd, life lessons. I wouldn’t be the person I am today had I not have been for this show. Then, as the years went by and I grew older, South Park stayed there alongside, growing as well. It has evolved over the years into having intelligent, meaningful episodes, focusing on more current and relative events happening around the world. 

      Despite its explicit, offensive, and sometimes racist wit, I’ve learned to be a better person growing up alongside its crudeness. I had already been raised with good morals and knowing right from wrong. Watching the show at a young age didn’t have a negative effect, at all. I’d say it had more of a positive effect, giving me a way to laugh at the violence and horrible things happening in the world, as opposed to being depressed or even afraid to go outside. 

      I want to say more, but I know nobody will read past this—if they’ve read this far. 

I love this show and am going to miss it if this hashtag is true. 

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  • Oct 10, 2018

  • Oct 14, 2018

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