South Park season 8
South Park | |
---|---|
Season 8 | |
No. of episodes | 14 |
Release | |
Original network | Comedy Central |
Original release | March 17 December 15, 2004 | –
Season chronology | |
The eighth season of South Park, an American animated television series created by Trey Parker and Matt Stone, began airing on March 17, 2004.[1] The eighth season concluded after 14 episodes on December 15, 2004, and was written and directed by Trey Parker. The season deals with various topics that were relevant at the time of release. The episodes portray a spectrum of topics, from the effect of large scale retail corporations to illegal immigration.
Production history
[edit]On the DVD commentary for the episode "Cartman's Incredible Gift," series co-creator Trey Parker referred to the eighth season as "the year from hell," due to the grueling work schedule under which he and co-creator Matt Stone worked on both the series and their feature film Team America: World Police.[2]
Episodes
[edit]No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date [3] | Prod. code | U.S. viewers (millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
112 | 1 | "Good Times with Weapons" | Trey Parker | Trey Parker | March 17, 2004 | 801 | 3.31[4] |
The boys buy Japanese weapons at a fair and imagine themselves as anime characters, but when Kenny injures Butters in his Professor Chaos guise with a throwing star, they must rush to get him medical attention without being caught. | |||||||
113 | 2 | "Up the Down Steroid" | Trey Parker | Trey Parker | March 24, 2004 | 803 | 3.64[5] |
Jimmy uses steroids to cheat in the Special Olympics and Cartman disguises himself as a child with a developmental disability in order to enter. | |||||||
114 | 3 | "The Passion of the Jew" | Trey Parker | Trey Parker | March 31, 2004 | 804 | 4.43[6] |
Kyle finally sees Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ and is convinced that Cartman was right about his Jewish deicide claims. Stan and Kenny also see the movie and hate it, prompting them to head to Malibu to retrieve their ticket money from Mel Gibson himself. | |||||||
115 | 4 | "You Got F'd in the A" | Trey Parker | Trey Parker | April 7, 2004 | 805 | 3.96[7] |
In this spoof of You Got Served, Stan recruits a Raisins girl, a Goth, and a Dance Dance Revolution master to compete against a group of breakdancers from Orange County. Butters is discovered to be a good dancer, but he has flashbacks of causing death and mayhem at a tap dancing contest. | |||||||
116 | 5 | "Awesom-O" | Trey Parker | Trey Parker | April 14, 2004 | 802 | 3.81[8] |
Butters befriends a robot (actually Cartman in disguise) he receives in the mail and takes him to Hollywood, where movie execs want him for film ideas, over 800 of which star Adam Sandler. The government pursues Cartman for national security reasons. | |||||||
117 | 6 | "The Jeffersons" | Trey Parker | Trey Parker | April 21, 2004 | 807 | 4.23[9] |
A mysterious and very eccentric new neighbor named Michael Jefferson moves into town with his sheltered son, sparking fears that he is an unfit parent, and the police scheme to frame him for crimes he didn't commit. Meanwhile, Kyle begins to worry for the man's son, who is being neglected by his father. | |||||||
118 | 7 | "Goobacks" | Trey Parker | Trey Parker | April 28, 2004 | 806 | 2.79[10] |
The townsfolk becomes angry when immigrants from the year 3045 arrive and take the residents' jobs for lower wages. | |||||||
119 | 8 | "Douche and Turd" | Trey Parker | Trey Parker | October 27, 2004 | 808 | 2.91[11] |
Stan is forced to vote in an election for the school's new mascot after the old one is protested against by PETA. | |||||||
120 | 9 | "Something Wall-Mart This Way Comes" | Trey Parker | Trey Parker | November 3, 2004 | 809 | 3.05[12] |
When a Wall-Mart store comes to South Park, the townsfolk are torn between their love of the store's low prices, and their anti-corporate hatred of the retail giant which has reduced their local business center into an abandoned ghost town. | |||||||
121 | 10 | "Pre-School" | Trey Parker | Trey Parker | November 10, 2004 | 810 | 3.26[13] |
A bully from the boys' past is paroled from juvenile hall, which sends them into hiding. | |||||||
122 | 11 | "Quest for Ratings" | Trey Parker | Trey Parker | November 17, 2004 | 811 | 3.20[14] |
The boys' school news show is in competition against a rival television program created by Craig. | |||||||
123 | 12 | "Stupid Spoiled Whore Video Playset" | Trey Parker | Trey Parker | December 1, 2004 | 812 | 3.14[15] |
Wendy feels left out when all the fourth-grade girls start emulating the slutty antics of Paris Hilton, who tries to buy Butters from his parents. | |||||||
124 | 13 | "Cartman's Incredible Gift" | Trey Parker | Trey Parker | December 8, 2004 | 813 | 2.66[16] |
Cartman thinks that he has gained paranormal powers after getting in an accident, and abuses them to become a psychic detective for hire. | |||||||
125 | 14 | "Woodland Critter Christmas" | Trey Parker | Trey Parker | December 15, 2004 | 814 | 2.58[17] |
In the show's final Christmas episode for a decade, Stan helps the woodland animals build a manger for the birth of their Lord. |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "South Park Episode Guide (seasons 6, 7 and 8)". MSN. Archived from the original on April 15, 2009. Retrieved March 14, 2009.
- ^ Hicks, Jesse (December 10, 2006). "South Park: The Complete Eighth Season" Archived 2017-07-06 at the Wayback Machine. PopMatters.
- ^ "Watch South Park Episodes Online Season 8 (2004)". TV Guide. Archived from the original on August 13, 2019. Retrieved September 13, 2019.
- ^ Comedy Central Ratings Report (March 15–21, 2004). Nielsen Media Research (Report).
- ^ Comedy Central Ratings Report (March 22–28, 2004). Nielsen Media Research (Report).
- ^ "Nickelodeon Slimes Cable Ratings Competition". Zap2it. April 8, 2004. Archived from the original on April 9, 2004.
- ^ Vasquez, Diego (March 14, 2004). "Fox's 'Swan,' no ugly ducking". Media Life Magazine. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved July 9, 2015.
- ^ Comedy Central Ratings Report (April 12–18, 2004). Nielsen Media Research (Report).
- ^ Comedy Central Ratings Report (April 19–25, 2004). Nielsen Media Research (Report).
- ^ Comedy Central Ratings Report (April 26–May 2, 2004). Nielsen Media Research (Report).
- ^ Comedy Central Ratings Report (October 25–31, 2004). Nielsen Media Research (Report).
- ^ Comedy Central Ratings Report (November 1–7, 2004). Nielsen Media Research (Report).
- ^ Comedy Central Ratings Report (November 8–14, 2004). Nielsen Media Research (Report).
- ^ Comedy Central Ratings Report (November 15–21, 2004). Nielsen Media Research (Report).
- ^ Comedy Central Ratings Report (November 29–December 5, 2004). Nielsen Media Research (Report).
- ^ Comedy Central Ratings Report (December 6–12, 2004). Nielsen Media Research (Report).
- ^ Comedy Central Ratings Report (December 13–19, 2004). Nielsen Media Research (Report).
External links
[edit]- South Park Studios - official website with streaming video of full episodes for the United States, Australia, and New Zealand
- The Comedy Network - full episodes for Canada