A Ladder to Heaven
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- This article is about the South Park episode. For the ladder to Heaven in the Bible, see Jacob's Ladder (Bible).
South Park episode | |
"A Ladder to Heaven" | |
Cartman drinks Kenny's ashes | |
Episode no. | 91 |
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Airdate | November 6, 2002 |
South Park - Season 6 March 6, 2002 – December 11, 2002 |
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List of all South Park episodes |
"A Ladder to Heaven" is episode 612 of the Comedy Central series South Park. It originally aired on November 6, 2002.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
The boys won an all-you-can-grab candy prize. But they realize that they gave the ticket to Kenny to hold to before he died. Upon visiting Kenny's house, the boys find out that Kenny was cremated. Not understanding what this means, the boys hope to find the ticket in the urn that Kenny's parents say he is now in. They steal the urn and are disappointed to find it only contains black powder. Cartman (without knowing what it actually is) assumes it must be some kind of chocolate milk powder. He mixes the ashes with milk and drinks Kenny.
The boys decide to build a ladder to heaven to find Kenny so he can tell them where the ticket is. The adults, who only know that the boys want to see their dead friend again, are touched by their concern for their friend. The whole country gets involved in supporting the ladder to heaven. When the boys announce that they had ran out of stuff to build the ladder, the adults consider telling them the truth that they're not actually going to heaven when the military arrives and starts to build a reinforced tower in order to beat the Japanese to heaven.
Suspicious photos taken of heavenly clouds are reported to the President as indicating a potential factory making WMDs run by Saddam Hussein, now dead and permanently living in Heaven. The US decides to bomb heaven, believing Hussein to be building nuclear warheads there.
Meanwhile, Cartman starts channeling Kenny, while the adults try to tell the boys to get back to their lives. When the boys express their urgency to see Kenny, the adults clarify them about Kenny's cremation. When they try to show Kenny's ashes, they discover that it has been replaced by kitty litter. Cartman then admits that he drank Kenny's ashes, to the disgust of the others. Now realising why he has been channeling Kenny, Cartman goes to an abortion clinic in an attempt to get rid of Kenny from his body. His subsequent arguement with the nurse there causes a woman to reconsider her own abortion. Cartman ends up getting hit by the woman's boyfriend and remembers where the ticket is. The boys lose interest in the ladder after they get the ticket and their candy.
Meanwhile, it is announced via television that the Japanese has reached heaven, and although the "heaven" depicted is obviously set in a studio, this convinces the adults that heaven is real. They continue building the ladder and preparing an attack on heaven when they spot the boys. They are disappointed to find out the boys were "only interested in candy", to which Cartman replies, "I've never heard the word 'only' and 'candy' in the same sentence before."
The boys explain that heaven is not some white fluffy place. In fact, Kyle adds, "Maybe heaven is this moment right now." To which the general responds by ordering his subordinate to hold off on firing on heaven, and instead he issues an order to "Fire on this moment right now." But before he does, Randy Marsh stops him and says, "Instead of waiting to get into heaven, we should be trying to create heaven here on earth." The crowd sighs in acknowledgment of this pithy truth and disperses. As the boys are about to go home to enjoy their candy, Kenny starts speaking through Cartman.
The episode ends with a shot of heaven, where Saddam Hussein is in fact building a WMD factory, disguised as a chocolate chip factory. When God suspects this, Hussein uses reverse psychology by saying, "Look God, if I was building a chemical weapons plant, I wouldn't make it look like a chemical weapons plant, would I? No! I would make it look like a chocolate chip factory or something."
[edit] "Ladder to Heaven" Lyrics
Once the boys gain national media attention by building the ladder to heaven, country singer Alan Jackson shows up, singing a song he wrote about the ladder. As noted in the episode, Jackson wrote a song called "Where Were You (When the World Stopped Turning)" about 9/11, and the song he performs, "Where Were You When They Built The Ladder To Heaven," is a parody. The parody song's lyrics are:
Where were you when they built the ladder to heaven?
Did it make you feel like cryin'
Or did you think it was kinda gay?
Well I, for one, believe in the ladder to heaven.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah...9/11.
I said 9/11, 9/11, 9/11, Ni-hi, hi-hine...
...Eleven
Following this verse of the song, Alan Jackson announces that he is selling all of his 9/11 songs on a CD. As bystanders flock to him and buy his music, Jackson can visibly be seen masturbating.
Jackson changes the lyrics slightly to reflect developments in the ladder to heaven's construction. In such cases, only the first line is performed before the action cuts away. Some changes are:
- When the boys run out of things to add to the ladder:
Where were you when they ran out of stuff to build the ladder to heaven?
- When the Army offers help to the boys to beat the Japanese:
Where were you when they saved the ladder to heaven?
- When the boys convince the townspeople that heaven is what they should make Earth like now:
Where were you when they decided heaven was a more intangible idea 'n you couldn't, you couldn't really get there?
It is after this last alteration that people lose interest in the song, upsetting Jackson. He yells to the boys, in a completely different voice from the songs, "You little bastards ruined my latest song!" and breaks his guitar, leaving frustrated. [1]
[edit] Censorship
- In syndication, the comments about the ladder to heaven being a penis to a boy are removed.
[edit] Pop Culture References
- When Cartman sees things through Kenny's eyes, the scenes are similar to scenes in Being John Malkovich.
- The race to Heaven between Japan and the US in this episode is comparable to the Space Race between the US and the USSR. The Japanese ladder to Heaven resembles a space elevator.
- Bombing Heaven is a parody to the Iraq disarmament crisis, and subsequently the invasion of Iraq.
- When the boys build the ladder to reach above the clouds, Stan mentions the lack of the giant from Jack and the Beanstalk. This is preceded by another observation that the boys have not seen Cloud City from The Empire Strikes Back yet, either.
- The creators were spoofing America's sensitive emotions (and the exploitation of said emotions) widely observed around the 1-year anniversary of 9/11 through their caricature of Alan Jackson.
[edit] Miscellanea
- This episode started the mini-arc of Kenny's soul being trapped inside Cartman.
- This episode may be based in part on the Biblical story of the Tower of Babel.
- This episode is among the few not included in the Japanese language dub of South Park.[citation needed]
- The owner of Lolly's Candy Shop may have possibly broken the fourth wall mentioning the ticking clock within the episode.
- Rather than calling Kyle a Jew like in most episodes, Cartman spells it out but spells it j-o-o instead of j-e-w
- At the beginning of the episode, when the boy first flash back to them giving the ticket to Kenny, when Lolly, the candy shop owner, gives them the ticket, he says, "All right, there you go. Hold on to that ticket stub, you'll need it to claim your prize." He then walks off, saying, "Sign up for the five-minute shopping spree!" When Cartman flashes back to this scene through Kenny's perspective towards the end of the episode, Lolly hands over the ticket saying just, "There you go. Hold on to that ticket stub," and walks off without saying anything else.
[edit] External links
Preceded by: "Child Abduction is Not Funny" |
South Park episodes | Followed by: "The Return of the Lord of the Rings to the Two Towers" |