Die Hippie, Die

"Die Hippie, Die"
South Park episode

Cartman in jail for imprisoning hippies.
Episode no. Season 9
Episode 2
Directed by Trey Parker
Written by Trey Parker
Production code 902
Original air date March 16, 2005

"Die Hippie, Die" is the second episode of the ninth season and the 127th overall episode of the American animated sitcom South Park. It originally aired on Comedy Central in the United States on March 16, 2005. The episode may have been intended as a parody of the 2003 film The Core, and is the subject of the opening chapter of David Sirota's 2011 book Back to Our Future. Sirota argues that Cartman's character can be read as encapsulating the 1980s conservative backlash against 1960s popular culture.[1]

Plot

Cartman runs a 'pest control' service to rid the town of hippies, people he has feared and hated for most of the series, mainly because "they smoke pot, wear crap and smell bad". Having studied hippies in his quest to eradicate them, Cartman deduces the hippies are about to start a music festival in South Park, but his attempts to warn the town council are futile, and he is arrested soon afterwards for imprisoning 63 hippies in his basement.

The town of South Park is soon invaded by the largest population of hippies in history, and the music festival threatens to destroy the town. They manage to convert Stan, Kyle and Kenny to their cause with talks of corporate evils, and the trio get caught up in the massive hippie crowd where they all listen to jam band music. Cartman pleads with the mayor to stop the festival, but it turns out that the mayor was the one who signed the permit for the music festival in the first place thinking it would make the town some money.

After seeing the chaos that the eccentric hippies are creating, the mayor is ridden with guilt and shoots herself in the head (she survives, and appears later in the strategy room when Cartman is enacting his plan). Stan's parents know where the kids are, but when they realized what they did in Woodstock (which was very embarrassing), they go to save Stan. Randy tries to get through the crowd, but fails early due to excessive marijuana smoke exposure. The rest of the town then pleads with Cartman to rid the town of the hippies; Cartman eventually agrees to help, but only after Randy promises to offer a Tonka radio-controlled bulldozer and Kyle's mother assures Cartman that Kyle will never have one, instead having to watch Cartman playing with the bulldozer.

Meanwhile, Stan, Kyle and Kenny realize that the hippies are doing nothing to oppose the corporations that they have demonized and that their idea of a perfect society is the same as the currently existing one. They try to leave but the crowd is 7 miles in radius and Stan's efforts to talk sense into the hippies only makes matters worse. Cartman, with the help of a scientist (Randy), an engineer (Butters Stotch's mother Linda) and a "black man to sacrifice himself in case anything goes wrong" (Chef), builds a giant drill (the "Hippie Digger") to bore through the hippie crowd. While they are boring through, the drill breaks down and Chef goes out and "sacrifices" himself to pull the emergency power switch. Cartman then uploads the Slayer song "Raining Blood" into the speakers (as Cartman reasons, "hippies can't stand death metal"). The plan works and the hippies disperse, saving South Park, while Stan sees Randy and they end up hugging each other, knowing that they are safe. Cartman then pulls out a knife and tells Kyle that he has plans for him; Kyle is then forced to watch Cartman having fun with his Tonka bulldozer in the school parking lot.

Trivia

This is the final episode of the series in which Isaac Hayes provided new dialogue for the character of Chef. Chef would be absent from the rest of the episodes of the ninth season, except for Two Days Before the Day After Tomorrow and Erection Day, where he made nonspeaking cameos in the background. Not long after Hayes quit the show following its controversy with Scientology. Chef would then be retired in the 10th season premiere, "The Return of Chef", which utilized archived audio clips of Hayes due to the actor's absence.

References

  1. Sirota, David (2011). Back to Our Future: How the 1980s Explain the World We Live in Now - Our Culture, Our Politics, Our Everything. Ballantine Books. p. 276. ISBN 978-0-345-51878-1.

External links