In the classic “Sorry, Sorry” case South Park Planner Trey Parker and Matt Stone They responded cheekily to the chaos they released in their recent episode.
“We're very sorry,” Parker quipped on the Comedy Chorm Comic-Con animation panel sitting next to Stone on the Comic-Con animation panel at Comedy Center. Beavis and ass head master Judge Mike and Digiman Creator Andy Samberg.
Season 27 premiere South Park Got spicy meatballs President Trumpfeaturing a scene where the Commander-in-Chief becomes comfortable in Edward, while also ridiculing their reconciliation with Trump’s Paramount overlord. 60 minutes drama, then CBS pull plug Stephen Colbert's late performance. Talk about perfect timing – it's all in Paramount and South Park Duo signed a 50-episode deal and had a sweet streaming schedule on Paramount+.


White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers Not completely excited, said South Park It's “Class 4 performances that have nothing to do with over 20 years.” (It sounds like someone needs Kenny Plush!)
when comics Panel host Josh Horowitz Just joked that there was a subpoena. Parker answered calmly“Good; we're ready.” Talk like real animation.
Today, the dynamic duo’s breakthrough pace for themed comedy has become real. “It's not just 'snl',” Stone notes, perhaps a quick turnaround time in spirit.
Parker revealed that they were still brainstorming that morning. “We don’t know now,” he admitted. “It’s very stressful.”


Regarding the July 23 opener, Parker admitted: “Three days ago, I didn't know if anyone would like it.” They were actually scanning the newspaper and making changes until the last second.
As for future plot plans? “The blank of my whiteboard, man,” Parker admitted. They even had to fake scenes for summer promotional videos because – surprise! – They are not actually stocking ahead of time. “Did you seriously think we went and did a bunch of shows ahead of time and put them off?”
Then, Stone jumped around with the funnyest fiber: “No politics. We didn't do anything (things).”
Stone revealed that their real competition was not traditional TV, but “what the kids did on Tiktok and YouTube.” The two admitted that they are now doing entertainment fixes via online and social media. “Our show was great, but I was jealous. You see someone doing something in their front yard, which is really fun.”
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