List of South Park families

The following are fictional characters in the American animated television series South Park.

The Marshes

Stan Marsh

Main article: Stan Marsh

Randy and Sharon Marsh

Randy and Sharon Marsh are the most prominent set of parents on the show. Their first names are derived from the first names of series co-creator Trey Parker's parents,Trey Parker had told insiders in the middle of season six that his parents often sexually molested him as a child hence given him the idea for these characters.[1] and Parker describes Randy as "the biggest dingbat in the entire show". [2] Randy is voiced by Parker. Sharon was originally voiced by Mary Kay Bergman, later Eliza Schneider, and is currently voiced by April Stewart.

Shelly Marsh

Shelly Lynn Marsh is Randy and Sharon's daughter and Stan's older sister. The character was voiced by Mary Kay Bergman until Bergman's death, and Shelly has subsequently been voiced by Eliza Schneider. Her new voice artist is April Stewart.

Shelly has an extremely aggressive temper and has very little respect for Stan and his friends, usually referring to them as "turds". In "An Elephant Makes Love to a Pig", she physically abused him, hurled him around their house, and in the feature film South Park: Bigger, Longer, Uncut, she demolished a wooden chair over his head. This does not mean she hates her brother, as in the former episode she lies to protect him from being sent away. There have been other moments when she also seems to have superhuman strength, and once had the ability to lift a piano over her head with ease, seen during "Mr. Hankey's Christmas Classics". She does help Stan when he is in real danger, although in "Pre-School" this was apparently only because she wants the privilege of beating up her brother all to herself.

In the episode "Cat Orgy", Shelly was dating Skyler, a 22-year-old who has his own band. Shelly also internet dated a boy named Amir in the episode "Over Logging" who she later met in California but could not properly look him in the eye.

Shelly is prominent in the episodes "An Elephant Makes Love to a Pig", "Chickenpox", "The New Terrance and Phillip Movie Trailer", "Cat Orgy", "Over Logging", "Pandemic", "Pandemic 2: The Startling", and "Broadway Bro Down".

Grampa Marsh

"Grampa" (Marvin) Marsh is Stan's grandfather. He is voiced by Trey Parker, who also provides the voices for both his son Randy and his grandson Stan. In "Something Wall-Mart This Way Comes" Sharon acknowledges to Sheila that Marvin is her father (although she may just refer to her father-in-law that way). According to the episode "Death", Grampa is 102 years old. It is also revealed in the episode that he helped his grandfather commit suicide. In the episode "Grey Dawn", he revealed that he worked 55 years in a steel mill and he flew Spitfire fighter planes over Germany in World War II. He is also familiar with typically British words as "wanker" and "poofter". Both Grampa Marsh and his own grandfather call their grandsons "Billy", even after being corrected multiple times.

Jimbo Kern

Jimbo Kern (sometimes portrayed as Kerns or Uncle Jimbo) is uncle to Stan. Earlier episodes indicated him to be the brother of Stan's mother Sharon, but an interview with Stone established him as the half-brother of Stan's father, Randy,[3] though their fraternal relationship is rarely explored on the show. Jimbo is voiced by series co-creator Matt Stone. Jimbo is a Vietnam veteran and gun enthusiast, owning a local firearms store and leading an outdoors lifestyle. He is often accompanied by his war buddy Ned Gerblansky. Jimbo frequently keeps company with the town's working-class citizens, and often expresses a blue-collar point of view during the show's frequent satire of both liberal and conservative politics. Jimbo and Ned were inspired by characters series co-creator Trey Parker used to draw during high school.[4] It is hinted in the episode "It Hits the Fan" that Jimbo is gay, as he is the only character apart from Mr. Garrison who can say "Fag" without being bleeped. However, he was seen in the episode "Scott Tenorman Must Die" peeking at the title antagonist's mother when Cartman saw that she was removing her bra; putting his possible homosexual identity in question.

Jimbo is shown on numerous occasions to drive a Hummer.[5][6][7][8][9] He likes to place bets on local sporting events, such as elementary school football games[10] and boxing matches.[11] Jimbo campaigned in opposition of a proposal to change the South Park flag because the flag depicted the town's racist past. As a show of friendship with Chef, Jimbo agreed to a compromise with supporters of the change.[12] Jimbo has also publicly voiced his opinion on other occasions, such as when he was displeased with a fireworks ban,[9] and clashed with protesters of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.[13]

Aunt Flo

Aunt Flo Kimble was Sharon's aunt. She appears solely in "Spookyfish" although characters mention that used to visit the Marshes every month, and stay for about five days or so. This would turn Sharon into "a total bitch". During the episode, the goldfish she had given Stan for Halloween killed her, and this upset Sharon, because now Aunt Flo could never visit her again. Her monthly routine of visiting, the standard time her visits lasted, and Sharon's reaction to them, was a parody of menstruation. Similarly, her death parodied menopause, as the phrase "a visit from Aunt Flo" is a common euphemism for menstruation. Aunt Flo also had Parkinson's disease and sounded like Katharine Hepburn when she spoke.

The Broflovskis

Kyle Broflovski

Main article: Kyle Broflovski

Ike Broflovski

Sir Ike Moisha Broflovski (born Peter Gints)[14] is the adopted baby brother of Kyle, born in Canada. He has appeared in the series since the very first episode. Ike has black hair, and, like all Canadians portrayed on the series, is depicted as having small beady eyes and an ovoid head which is completely divided in two, and separates completely from the lower half whenever he talks.

Ike's original birth name was Peter Gints. He was put up for adoption by his Canadian parents after Canada had been 'devastated by the cola wars'. Although Kyle initially rejected Ike upon finding out that he was adopted, Ike idolizes his brother and Kyle watches out for him. In a recurring gag during some earlier season episodes, Kyle would exclaim "Kick the Baby!" and proceed to punt Ike like a football.

It is revealed in season four that Ike is a genius and is sent to kindergarten a year early. At age 3, he composes sheet music, reads John Steinbeck novels, and watches The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer every night. On his first day at school, he ran for class president and won, and at Jewbilee camp, he recreates Leonardo da Vinci's the Last Supper using macaroni. He was knighted in "Royal Pudding" after saving the Canadian Princess and was involved in Barack Obama and John McCain's plans to steal the Hope Diamond in "About Last Night..."

Throughout the show's run, Ike's dialogue has consisted of sound bites provided by various small children of the show's production staff. Despite Ike being a genius, his dialogue mostly consists of toddler-like, nonsensical babble, such as "I pooped my pants" or "ring around a rosy". Later season episodes depict him as speaking more coherently. His body was temporarily taken over by the spirit of Michael Jackson in the episode "Dead Celebrities". In the episode "Canada on Strike" he stands out in the cold for days waiting for the strike to end. He embarked on a sexual relationship with his adult kindergarten teacher in the episode "Miss Teacher Bangs a Boy", which gives him admiration and envy from nearly every person in town who finds out about it other than Kyle. In the seventeenth season episode "Taming Strange", Ike (voiced by Eric Bauza who was credited as True List), experiencing precocious puberty due to accidentally taking steroids intended for Tom Brady, becomes hostile towards Kyle, and has developed habits that include speaking of engaging in sex acts with child entertainment characters (which Ike refers to as "taming strange"). The brothers eventually reconcile when Ike, after realizing that while rebellion is part of growing up, decides he would rather let it happen naturally instead of pushing it.

Kyle Schwartz

Kyle Schwartz is Kyle Broflovski's irritating and stereotypically Jewish cousin from Connecticut, with certain mannerisms distinctly modeled after Woody Allen. Kyle Schwartz has a tiny body, large head and breathes heavily all the time due to asthma. He has poor eyesight for which he wears large glasses. As voiced by Trey Parker, Kyle Schwartz sounds like Tony Curtis' impression of Cary Grant in the film Some Like it Hot. Curtis' real name was Bernard Schwartz, which may explain Kyle's surname. The character's first appearance was in "The Entity" when he had to stay with Kyle and his family because his mother was in the hospital. At the end of "The Entity", Schwartz receives a $5 million check after the "IT", a vehicle he invested in, was banned and the airline companies were bailed out. He appears in the season 9 episode "The Losing Edge" as a reverse ringer the other kids bring in to make their team lose.

Cleo

Cleo Broflovski (1928-1999) was Sheila's mother and Kyle's grandmother, who died three months before "Korn's Groovy Pirate Ghost Mystery". The boys dig her up in an attempt to scare the fifth-graders on Halloween. The prank backfires as her body is eaten by stray dogs due to the boys having hidden the body unprotected near the harbor.

The Cartmans

Eric Cartman

Main article: Eric Cartman

Liane Cartman

Liane Marie Cartman, originally voiced by Mary Kay Bergman and later by Eliza J. Schneider and April Stewart, is the generally sweet-natured mother of Eric Cartman; though in later seasons, she has been shown to be a more proactive mother and not put up with his antics or foul language. Initially, her promiscuity, often with total strangers, was a running gag. It seemed as though all of the adults in South Park had slept with her (including the women). Although in episode 7, she is indicated to be a "crack whore", she says in "The Poor Kid" that she has not done drugs in some time, and works two jobs, even though she and Eric are the second-poorest family in South Park (at least of those whose children attend South Park Elementary) after Kenny McCormick's.[15] It is also revealed that she is a hermaphrodite, though this is brought to debate when Dr. Mephisto states that as a hermaphrodite she could not bear children and in episode "201" it is revealed that Eric's real father is Jack Tenorman, the father of his nemesis Scott Tenorman.

Jack Tenorman

Jack Tenorman is the father of Scott Tenorman and Eric Cartman. He dies in the season five episode "Scott Tenorman Must Die", when he and his wife are shot dead by a farmer who had been told by Cartman that they were going to kill a pony he owns.

In the season two episode "Cartman's Mom Is Still a Dirty Slut", Cartman is told that Liane is a hermaphrodite (has both male and female genitalia) and that she is actually his father, having impregnated an unknown woman. However, in the season fourteen episode "200", Mr. Garrison tells Cartman that this was actually a cover-up. In the following episode "201", it's revealed that it was a lie the entire town told to protect the Denver Broncos American football team, especially since they were in the midst of a Super Bowl run. Jack, a Broncos player, was Cartman's actual father and Liane is his mother after all, meaning also that his nemesis Scott Tenorman is his half-brother. Cartman, however is more distraught to learn that he is "half ginger", than to realize that he fed his own father to his half-brother.

Scott Tenorman

Scott Tenorman is Jack's son, and Cartman's half-brother. Scott and Cartman have an ongoing feud with each other. In his first appearance in "Scott Tenorman Must Die", Scott is depicted as a bully to Cartman, selling him his pubic hair, stealing his money and publicly humiliating him, which further encourages Cartman to keep their feud alive. Their feud temporarily dies down after Cartman feeds Scott his parents' remains in the form of chili. In the season nine episode "The Death of Eric Cartman", Cartman, with help from Butters Stotch, attempts to officially end their feud by giving Scott a fruit basket. It is revealed in "201" that Scott is the leader of the "Ginger Separatist Movement" and wants revenge on Cartman. Scott also takes glee in the facts of informing Cartman that they share the same birth-father, the fact that their father was a ginger and that Cartman already had him killed. He was the antagonist in the 2012 game Tenorman's Revenge.

Extended Cartman family

The extended Cartman family is shown in the episode "Merry Christmas, Charlie Manson!", where Eric and the others go on a trip to Nebraska to visit them for Christmas. Most of his relatives (except for his grandmother) appear to be physically similar to him; all fat (this is in direct contradiction to the episode "Fat Camp" in which Eric's mother Liane states that the Cartman extended family is in fact not genetically fat as she had led her son to believe), with the same speech impediment and catchphrases such as "Kick-ass!", "I'll kick you squah in the nuts", "Respect mah authoritah!", and "No, kitty that's my pot pie. No, kitty that's a bad kitty!". The family returns in the episode "Cartmanland" at his grandmother's funeral, where she leaves her entire estate (valued at $1 million) to Eric, citing that all the other family members would have spent it all on crack. His grandparents' names are Harold and Mabel; his uncles are Howard (who is imprisoned in the Nebraska state penitentiary, and who "attends" Thanksgiving dinner every year via closed-circuit television) and Stinky. He has an aunt, Lisa, and three cousins, Fred, Alexandra (who is thin, like Liane and unlike the other Cartmans) and Elvin. He also has a great-grandmother, Florence, and a relative named "Fat Bob".

The McCormicks

Kenny McCormick

Main article: Kenny McCormick

Stuart and Carol McCormick

Stuart and Carol McCormick are both unemployed alcoholics raising their son Kenny, older son Kevin and youngest daughter Karen under poverty-stricken circumstances. Stuart is voiced by series co-creator Matt Stone and Carol, who was originally voiced by Mary Kay Bergman, is currently voiced by April Stewart.

The McCormicks are one of the poorest families in the town of South Park, living in a small, dilapidated house overrun by rats. Aside from Stuart once mentioning that he was missing work,[16] he and Carol have always been portrayed as being unemployed with little means of income; they are involved in methamphetamine production,[17] and Eric Cartman has mentioned numerous times that the two are dependent on welfare. In the episode "Death", Sharon Marsh and Sheila Broflovski are both referred to as Carol, and during the fourth season so was Linda Stotch. The name 'Carol' was attached to Mrs. McCormick after the episode "Cripple Fight", although exactly which of the men's wives was being discussed is unclear.

Stuart was childhood friends with Gerald Broflovski, and the two worked together as teenagers at a pizza store. Having been unable to hold a steady job since, Stuart later felt contempt for and had a falling out with Gerald after Gerald went on to attend college and became a lawyer.[18] Early in the show's run, it was revealed that the McCormicks' house was actually a play fort Stuart and Gerald built when they were young.[18] The two later reconciled their differences, and Stuart has been portrayed as maintaining a friendship with Gerald and other adult characters on the show by keeping company with them at a local bar.

Kevin McCormick

Kevin McCormick is the rarely seen eldest McCormick child. He has parted, messy brown hair that sticks up and has a messy face like his parents. His age is unknown. He has only spoken on two occasions and was voiced by Trey Parker with a rough voice similar to the former characters Bill and Fosse, though with a Southern accent.

Karen McCormick

Karen McCormick (voice of Celeste Javier) is the youngest of the McCormick children. She first appeared briefly in "Best Friends Forever". Her first prominent role was in "The Poor Kid", in which she and her brothers are placed in foster care, and Kenny adopts his Mysterion persona in order to protect and comfort her. Mysterion is also known as her guardian angel. It is unknown if Karen will make another appearance in the near future.[15]

Grandfather

Kenny's unnamed grandfather appears in "Fat Camp" which has Kenny giving him a "sensual full-body massage" in front of a live audience for money. Kenny's grandfather is also mentioned in "Chickenpox", where Gerald Broflovski implies that he was an unemployed drunk much like Stuart. He also appears to have masturbation problems.

The Stotches

Butters Stotch

Main article: Butters Stotch

Stephen and Linda Stotch

Stephen (sometimes Chris) and Linda Stotch are Butters' parents. Stephen, a handsome yuppie, is voiced by Trey Parker, and Linda by Mona Marshall. The couple began appearing towards the end of season 4, in correlation with their son becoming a more significant character. In his first role as a major character, Stephen was discovered to have been frequently going to a gay movie theater and a bath house to have casual sex with men.[19] This led Linda to a psychotic break and she attempted to kill Butters by driving her car into a river. Butters survives, blissfully ignorant of everything. The couple then had to concoct a story about their presumably dead son being abducted by a "Puerto Rican man", which leads to later appearances by O.J. Simpson and Patsy and John Ramsey. Claiming to Linda that he only did so out of curiosity, Stephen promises to suppress any future homosexual urges.[19]

Stephen and Linda were portrayed in another episode as having established a friendship with the parents of the show's other main child characters, joining them for book club meetings[20] and vacationing with them in Aspen.[21]

In keeping with the show's tradition of portraying adult South Park residents as irrational, Stephen constructed a mountain bunker as a proverbial "ark" to provide shelter for John McCain supporters who thought Barack Obama's victory in the 2008 presidential race would bring about chaos and the end of civilization.[22] Stephen adheres to a strict method of running his household, such as demanding that items in the kitchen pantry be alphabetized, noting that a well-organized pantry is "what keeps a family together".[23]

Linda, despite being a strict disciplinarian herself and rarely objecting to the punishments her husband imposes on their son, is usually shown to be a sympathetic mother towards her son. Serving on the city council as the town's treasurer, she is also an engineer.[24]

Stephen and Linda exhibit somewhat extreme reactions and a notable level of selfishness in their relationship with their son, often causing them to overlook or ignore Butters' attempts to communicate. In Marjorine, both are visibly distressed by Butters' (faked) death with Stephen going so far as to attempt bringing him back to life. When Butters returns home intending to expose the hoax, both parents think he is a zombie and chain him up in the basement. Though disgusted and afraid to approach their son, they nonetheless lure a woman to their home and kill her in order to "feed" Butters.[25] They both often seem to care for Butters, but were willing to sell him to Paris Hilton in "Stupid Spoiled Whore Video Playset". Their mixed sentiments are a likely cause of Butters' anxiety and neuroses.

Extended Stotch family

Butters has an aunt and uncle living in Los Angeles as seen in the episode "AWESOM-O". He mentions having cousins in Florida in "Major Boobage", and an Uncle Bud who he admits sexually molested him in "The Return of Chef". He has a grandmother who suffered a stroke, the cause of which was seeing Butters on national TV with prosthetic testicles attached to his chin. The grandmother also appears in the episode "Butterballs" in which she visits the Stotch family and bullies Butters whenever his parents are not looking.

List of other families

The Tweaks

Tweek's family. Tweek's parents run a coffee shop called Tweek Bros. Coffee (a parody of Dunn Bros Coffee). It was nearly put out of business by the major coffee corporation, Harbucks. After a large feud both businesses learned to work together. The Tweaks are their own product's most devoted fans. Even their son consumes several cups of coffee a day (despite his age), hence his constant twitching and general nervousness. Despite the family's passion over coffee, its implied their product is of poor quality and was originally successful simply because theirs was the only coffee store in town until Harbucks moved in. They usually have heart-to-heart talks with their son in times of concern or crisis (such as child abduction or their company going out of business), but unfortunately they often oversimplify or overexaggerate the problems making Tweek's paranoia worse—generally speaking, every time Tweek has a new concern or problem his parents tend to aggravate it. Richard Tweak wears a maroon jumper which is his shirt for work (hence the name tag on it) and black trousers. He has a long pointed nose and dark curly brown hair. Mrs. Tweak, whose first name has not been revealed on the show, wears a blue dress with a white apron, and long light brown hair.

Tweek's parents have appeared in several episodes, most notably "Gnomes" and "Child Abduction Is Not Funny". They play a major role in South Park: The Stick of Truth, it is revealed they send their son to pick up a meth delivery daily, and it is an essential ingredient in their coffee. Mr. Tweek is voiced by Trey Parker and Mrs. Tweek has been voiced by Mary Kay Bergman and Eliza Schneider, but did not speak again for over ten years until "Informative Murder Porn", when she joined the men of the town and Linda Stotch to get their crime dramas back by playing MineCraft.

The Blacks

Token's family. They are the "token" black people on this show, and Token Black is the "token black kid" at school. The only African-American family in South Park and also the richest. In "Here Comes the Neighborhood", it is revealed that Token's mother is a chemist (although Randy Marsh is considered the only scientist[26] in South Park, despite the presence of other scientists in later episodes), and his father Steve is a lawyer. They are sometimes called Bob and Linda from an ambiguous exchange in "Proper Condom Use", but Token's father is referred to as Steve in "The Return of the Fellowship of the Ring to the Two Towers".

Cartman always makes fun of Token for being black and is very stereotypical toward him. Token's last name in the series was originally "Williams". The name "Black" is given, because he is the only black child in South Park. Some of Cartman's racist comments include that Token has a bass guitar in his basement and that he knows how to play it, both of which turn out to be true, despite Token not knowing it. Cartman bases these assumptions about Token and his family on nothing more than the stereotype that "if you're black, you can play bass".

The Donovans

Clyde's family (portrayed as Harris in one episode). Clyde's father, Roger, has been stated in different episodes to be a geologist (although Randy Marsh is considered the only scientist{{season 3, episode 2, "Spontaneous Combustion"[27]}} in South Park, though others, including further geologists, have appeared since) or in the episode "The List", it is said that Clyde's father owns a shoe store at the Mall. Clyde's mother, Betsy (originally Martha) is of Dutch ancestry. Both characters come to the foreground in "Reverse Cowgirl", when Betsy is shown to verbally abuse Clyde frequently for leaving the toilet seat up, an action that eventually leads to her death when she becomes trapped in the toilet and could not be freed. A sister has been mentioned, but has not been seen. Roger has continued to appear since his wife's death. Betsy Donovan was voiced by April Stewart until her final appearance, where she was voiced by Trey Parker.

The family was accidentally referred to as the "Harrises" in "Lice Capades", however, this was changed back to Donovan in the later re-airings of the episode.

The Testaburgers

Wendy's family. The Testaburgers seem fairly well-off and functional, although it appears they don't pay much attention to their daughter or listen to her. They do intercede when she seems to be behaving badly. Wendy's mother tries to prevent her daughter from getting breast implants in "Bebe's Boobs Destroy Society", while Wendy's father is indignant when she wants to dress like a whore in "Stupid Spoiled Whore Video Playset", although he was eventually convinced to allow it by the store's whorish clientele. They also refused to listen to her excuses for beating up Cartman in "Breast Cancer Show Ever", and forced her to promise it wouldn't happen again. In the episode "Night of the Living Homeless", it is revealed that Mrs. Testaburger is the city planner and she defends the homeless from the other council people.

Mr. Testaburger has been voiced by both Trey Parker and Matt Stone.

The Stevenses

Bebe's family. From what has been shown of them, they are very stereotypical. Her mother appears in "Bebe's Boobs Destroy Society", where it is implied that she is dumb and managed to get by relying on her looks. In that episode, Bebe is more smart and thoughtful than her mother, though she seems more interested in make-up and boys than Wendy. Bebe's father is briefly seen in "Stupid Spoiled Whore Video Playset".

The Tuckers

The Tuckers are Craig's family. The family consists of Craig, his insanely tall, portly, redheaded father, Thomas Tucker, who is balding with an orange semi-mohawk, his mother, Laura Tucker, and his younger sister named Ruby. Little is known of them except that flipping each other the middle finger appears to be the family norm. Craig's family's tendency for flipping each other off has been heavily ingrained into Craig, who for the first several seasons is implied to have been sent to either the principal's or counselor's office on a daily basis because of the habit, though the habit has largely faded out of view since the sixth season. In the episode "Pandemic", they got into a heated argument with the Broflovskis and Marshes when their son disappeared.

All members of the Tucker family were first seen in the episode "Tweek vs. Craig", and were not seen again in their entirety until the "Pandemic" duology (Craig's sister only appeared in a photograph), but Mr. and Mrs. Tucker have made short cameos throughout the series. The Tucker family is featured prominently in the episode "The Magic Bush" as Laura's unshaved pubic hair is recorded by drone planes and becomes a viral video.

The Burches

Timmy's parents are named Richard Burch and Helen Burch, and apparently suffer from the same form of mental retardation as Timmy himself. When they are interviewed on television in "Timmy 2000", all they can say are their own names, just like their son. Their living room wall displays a picture of the Burches in front of the Eiffel Tower, implying that they have visited Paris at some point.

The Valmers

Formerly named Swanson (and often misspelled Vulmer), this is Jimmy's family. His father, Ryan Valmer, dresses much like Stephen Stotch, and apparently likes coffee and sexual exchange talk. At the beginning of the episode "Night of the Living Homeless", Mr. Valmer displays the title "Chief of Fire Department". It is unknown if being the Fire Chief is his actual job or if he volunteers for the fire department in his spare time. Very little is known about his mother, Sarah Valmer, but she appears to be very emotional and caring towards him. Jimmy's parents also say (in the episode Krazy Kripples) that the reason Jimmy was born with a handicap because they made fun of handicapped people in high school and it was God's way of punishing them.

References

  1. "FAQ Archives". South Park Studios. Retrieved 2009-03-01.
  2. Jake Trapper and Dan Morris (September 22, 2006). "Secrets of 'South Park'". ABC News. Retrieved 2009-04-18.
  3. "FAQ Archives". South Park Studios. Retrieved 2009-01-22.
  4. Trey Parker, Matt Stone (2003). South Park: The Complete First Season: "Weight Gain 4000" (AUDIO COMMENTARY) (CD). Comedy Central.
  5. Trey Parker and Matt Stone (1997-08-27). "Volcano". South Park. Season 1. Episode 103. Comedy Central.
  6. Trey Parker and Matt Stone (1998-06-10). "The Mexican Staring Frog of Southern Sri Lanka". South Park. Season 2. Episode 206. Comedy Central.
  7. Trey Parker and Matt Stone (2002-07-17). "Bebe's Boobs Destroy Society". South Park. Season 6. Episode 610. Comedy Central.
  8. Trey Parker and Matt Stone (2006-03-29). "Smug Alert!". South Park. Season 10. Episode 1002. Comedy Central.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Trey Parker and Matt Stone (1998-06-24). "Summer Sucks". South Park. Season 2. Episode 608. Comedy Central.
  10. Trey Parker and Matt Stone (1997-09-03). "Big Gay Al's Big Gay Boat Ride". South Park. Season 1. Episode 104. Comedy Central.
  11. Trey Parker and Matt Stone (1998-02-04). "Damien". South Park. Season 1. Episode 108. Comedy Central.
  12. Trey Parker and Matt Stone (2000-07-05). "Chef Goes Nanners". South Park. Season 4. Episode 408. Comedy Central.
  13. Trey Parker and Matt Stone (2003-04-09). "I'm a Little Bit Country". South Park. Season 7. Episode 701. Comedy Central.
  14. Trey Parker and Matt Stone (May 27, 1998). "Ike's Wee Wee". South Park. Season 2. Episode 204. Comedy Central.
  15. 15.0 15.1 "The Poor Kid". South Park. Season 15. Episode 14. November 16, 2011. Comedy Central.
  16. Trey Parker and Matt Stone (1999-11-24). "The Red Badge of Gayness". South Park. Season 3. Episode 314. Comedy Central.
  17. Trey Parker and Matt Stone (2003-04-23). "Lil' Crime Stoppers". South Park. Season 7. Episode 706. Comedy Central.
  18. 18.0 18.1 Trey Parker and Matt Stone (1998-08-26). "Chickenpox". South Park. Season 2. Episode 210. Comedy Central.
  19. 19.0 19.1 Trey Parker and Matt Stone (2001-12-12). "Butters' Very Own Episode". South Park. Season 5. Episode 514. Comedy Central.
  20. Trey Parker and Matt Stone (2001-08-01). "Proper Condom Use". South Park. Season 5. Episode 507. Comedy Central.
  21. Trey Parker and Matt Stone (2002-03-13). "Asspen". South Park. Season 6. Episode 603. Comedy Central.
  22. Trey Parker and Matt Stone (2008-11-05). "About Last Night...". South Park. Season 12. Episode 1212. Comedy Central.
  23. Trey Parker and Matt Stone (2008-11-19). "The Ungroundable". South Park. Season 12. Episode 1214. Comedy Central.
  24. Trey Parker and Matt Stone (2005-03-16). "Die Hippie Die". South Park. Season 9. Episode 902. Comedy Central.
  25. Trey Parker and Matt Stone (October 26, 2005). "Marjorine". 'South Park'. episode 909. season 9. Comedy Central
  26. (Episode 302, Spontaneous Combustion)
  27. http://beta.southparkstudios.com/full-episodes/s03e02-spontaneous-combustion#source=95470ee4-9bca-4d46-8969-3757d59b3734%3A25eeba14-ed8e-11e0-aca6-0026b9414f30&position=16&sort=airdate''. Missing or empty |title= (help);