It Hits the Fan

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South Park episode
"It Hits the Fan"
502 chef boys wizard.gif

Chef and the children learn about shit

Episode no. 66
Airdate June 20, 2001
South Park - Season 5
June 20, 2001December 12, 2001
  1. Scott Tenorman Must Die
  2. It Hits the Fan
  3. Cripple Fight
  4. Super Best Friends
  5. Terrance and Phillip: Behind the Blow
  6. Cartmanland
  7. Proper Condom Use
  8. Towelie
  9. Osama Bin Laden Has Farty Pants
  10. How to Eat with Your Butt
  11. The Entity
  12. Here Comes the Neighborhood
  13. Kenny Dies
  14. Butters' Very Own Episode

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List of all South Park episodes

"It Hits the Fan" is episode 502, or the first aired episode (second in sequence, with Scott Tenorman Must Die being the first episode in sequence, which was delayed for several weeks) of the fifth season of the animated series South Park. It originally aired on June 20, 2001. It is best known for its repeated use of the word shit. (To be precise, the word is used 162 times: a counter in the corner of the screen tallies the repetitions.) The episode questions whether there is an empty significance to taboo words and ridicules the relationship between television networks that use shock and the viewers that are predictably captivated. ABC's NYPD Blue, a show known for controversial network television firsts, is specifically parodied within the episode when a show named Cop Drama on "HBC" first introduces uncensored "shit". The creators of the show argued that they were angry because "if a drama or a serious show breaks the boundaries, it's 'bold' and 'artistic', but if a comedy show [like theirs] tries it, it's just stupid, or shitty, or bullshit."

A sub-plot in the episode revolves around Mr. Garrison's ability to say the word fag due to his outing as a homosexual; all other characters who say "fag", excluding Jimbo, are censored.

Executives at Comedy Central felt the profanity was justified by context and decided to allow the uncensored episode to air, which surprised even the show's developers. Despite broadcasting a record setting amount of profanity, little controversy was stirred by the airing. Co-creator Matt Stone explained the passive passage by citing changing cultural standards, "No one cares anymore...The standards are almost gone. No one gives a shit or a bullshit."

This episode made #8 on the list of "10 South Parks That Changed The World."

[edit] Plot

Kyle has tickets to go to The Lion King, but Cartman tells him that the HBC crime show Cop Drama was going to use the word shit. This leads to widespread acceptance of the word, even in schools, causing people to say it constantly, in casual and often illogical conversation. An example would be when Mr. Garrison randomly sang "Shitty, shitty, fag, fag" to the tune of "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang" after he realized he could say shit and fag (because he is homosexual). People start spewing up their intestines, so action is taken—the boys ask Chef to take them into the HBC Head Office to sort it out. Research proves that the word is actually a literal "curse(d) word," and its constant utterance has caused a resurgence of the bubonic plague. A special live event, Must Shit TV, also called The Night of a Million Shits, in which episodes of existing shows are taped live with almost every word of dialogue replaced with the word shit, goes ahead anyway until the boys come back and tell everyone that curse words are actually cursed. However, by this point the word has been said enough to awaken a demonic dragon (with a voice just like Cartman's; Cartman comments, "Man, what a stupid voice"), which Kyle destroys with an ancient magical tablet belonging to a knight in the mystical Order of Standards & Practices. The moral of the story is not that saying shit is wrong per se, but saying it in excess leads to boredom with the word.

[edit] Kenny's death

Kenny dies from the Bubonic Plague, which causes him to vomit out his intestines. Strangely enough, Kenny had only spoken twice and only said "shit" once (as can be noted when the count increases).

[edit] Reference

  • Rutenburg, Jim (June 25, 2001). "'South Park' Takes Gross to New Frontier". The New York Times, Section C; Column 5; Business/Financial Desk; Pg. 9
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Preceded by:
"A Very Crappy Christmas"
South Park episodes Followed by:
"Cripple Fight"