The Four Color Media Monitor

Because if we're going to try and stop the misuse of our favorite comics and their protagonists by the companies that write and publish them, we've got to see what both the printed and online comics news is doing wrong. This blog focuses on both the good and the bad, the newspaper media and the online websites. Unabashedly. Unapologetically. Scanning the media for what's being done right and what's being done wrong.


South Park undergoes censorship anew at HBO

Deadline Hollywood (via Breitbart) reports that South Park's just encountered censorship and cancel culture yet again when dealing with Islam:
All 23 seasons of the Comedy Central animation South Park are available on HBO Max – except for five episodes that depict Islam’s Prophet Muhammad.

Sources tell Deadline the missing episodes were not part of the 23-season package shopped by Viacom to streamers last year, and Viacom had made the decision to exclude them in agreement with series producer South Park Studios before the show was licensed to HBO Max.

The controversial episodes violate a widespread Islamic belief that depictions of Muhammad or any of the other prophets of Islam are forbidden, as they encourage the worship of idols. The prohibitions cover images, drawings, statues and cartoons.
I remember Trey Parker and Matt Stone lamented that the episodes originally got censored in more ways than one a decade back, and now, if this is correct, they themselves sold out, all for the sake of getting their series aired in reruns for the sake of residuals. This certainly suggests quite a 360 degree swing from their original positions, which is surely saying something.

While we're on the subject, the Federalist also wrote about South Park's history of satire, noting HBO's troubling PC positions:
However, one place it is bizarre to see this bastion of offensive comedy is HBO Max. The newly launched streaming service, a breakout of HBO, has been using its acquisition of “South Park” aggressively in their marketing,

The streaming service faced serious scrutiny due to its attempts to make their content increasingly politically correct. First, they rid “Looney Toons” cartoons of guns, as choosing give Elmer Fudd a scythe to hunt Bugs Bunny is obvious less scary than a rifle. Then, the service announced it would no longer stream “Gone with the Wind,” eventually adjusting to delay the arrival of the 1939 epic romance until they can discern some means by which to put the film into historical context for viewers.

You would be hard pressed to find a single “South Park” episode less offensive than “Gone with the Wind.” The show has featured every stereotype known to man. One of the four protagonists, Eric Cartman, is a virulent racist, antisemite, sexist, and all-around evil kid. The show compared the PC mob to a concentration camp in a “Schindler’s List” homage. The “Pokemon” parody episode displayed Japan as an imperialist nation intent on destroying the United States.
I think the main mistake the network made is if they got rid of firearms entirely from their new Looney Tunes. What they could've done was give Elmer a mix of different weapons, including a Klashnikov for rapid fire jokes, and even a grenade launcher. Instead, they unmasked themselves as PC advocates, and chances are high these newer cartoons will be far less funny than their classic predecessors as a result.

Maybe the biggest irony in all this is the double standard of cancel culture advocates, as explained in this recent Fox News column:
Commentators deride today’s students as “snowflakes” because they appear so fragile. Young people demand “safe spaces” and “trigger” warnings to alert them that an incoming opinion may jar their preconceptions and sensibilities.

But these are the same students who adore gory video games and profanity-laced music. They are the same students who hurl obscenities and insults at professors who cross them.

They are not fragile, they are intolerant.
If the new Looney Tunes stem from this mindset, it suggests that it's not the violence per se in the cartoons that offends PC advocates, but rather, that they don't go far enough with it. And that the original cartoons frequently engaged in scientific mockery. And if the snowflakes are so accepting of violence accompanied by obscene language, can we be shocked if they accept Islam's building on the same as a result? It's no wonder they may support HBO Max's political correctness with South Park by extension.

South Park may end up being one of the last products to defy PC in today's disastrous, university-influenced landscape. And if the above news is correct, the creators may have sold out regardless. Too bad.

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5 Responses to “South Park undergoes censorship anew at HBO”

  1. # Anonymous Anonymous

    "But these are the same students who adore gory video games and profanity-laced music. They are the same students who hurl obscenities and insults at professors who cross them."

    This shows how shallow and out of touch Fox news has become. These are not "the same students"; the same generation, maybe. Students are generally less extremist than Fox news, but they are not monolithic. Some adore gory video games, some hate them.  

  2. # Blogger eotness

    Off topic, this might actually be pleasing to you, since not only is Superman getting a new movie this year, but it looks as though they're adopting his more classic stuff rather than going to do to him what they did to Supergirl (to say little about how he's been mangled by comics as of late even without Batman):

    https://www.oneangrygamer.net/2020/06/superman-man-of-tomorrow-trailer-seems-to-bring-back-the-wholesome-hero-we-need/112145/

    Of course, then again, Supergirl almost came across as non-woke, but then they brought in James Olsen as a black person, and then in Season 2 they dove right into far wokeness, so who knows, they're probably going to just wait until release to go all out. But hey, at least the hope's there.  

  3. # Blogger Avi Green

    Thanks. I'll see if I can write a post about the Superman production later.  

  4. # Anonymous Anonymous

    "The controversial episodes violate a widespread Islamic belief that depictions of Muhammad or any of the other prophets of Islam are forbidden, as they encourage the worship of idols. The prohibitions cover images, drawings, statues and cartoons."

    Orthodox Islam eschews figurative art in general, not just images of Mohammed. Another rationale, in addition to the concern about idolatry, is that figurative art is imitative of God's work of creation, and forbidden as an infringement on God's prerogative.  

  5. # Anonymous Anonymous

    "This certainly suggests quite a 360 degree swing from their original positions"

    You might want to think about which direction you wind up facing if you swing around 360 degrees! It may be dizzying, but it doesn't change anything.  

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