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South Park Is Gay!

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"South Park Is Gay!"
South Parkepisode
From left to right: Kenny, Stan, Kyle, and Cartman as metrosexuals.
Episodeno.Season 7
Episode 8
Written byTrey Parker
Featured music"All Things (Just Keep Getting Better)"byWidelife
Production code708
Original air dateOctober 22, 2003(2003-10-22)
Episode chronology
Previous
"Red Man's Greed"
Next
"Christian Rock Hard"
South Parkseason 7
List of episodes

"South Park Is Gay!"is the eighth episode of theseventh seasonand the 104th overall episode of the American animated sitcomSouth Park.It originally aired onComedy Centralin the United States on October 22, 2003. In the episode,Kylestruggles to understand a newmetrosexualfad that has sprung around the men and boys of South Park and is the only one who does not want to conform to it. The episode features a parody of the TV showQueer Eye for the Straight Guy.

The episode was written and directed by series co-creatorTrey Parker.In 2011, he and co-creatorMatt Stonelisted it as one of their least favorite episodes of the series.[1]However, the "crab people" segment has become one of the sitcom's most iconic moments.[2]

Plot

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After theTV showQueer Eye for the Straight Guybegins showing,metrosexualitybecomes extremely popular among the males, who all begin actingeffeminately.At the school bus stop, instead of their usual winter clothing,Stan,Cartman,andKennywear feminine clothing.Kyle,whom they pressure into conforming but who later returns to his normal self, is beaten up by Craig, Token, Jason, and Tweak at school, and is abandoned by Cartman, Kenny, and even Stan.Mr. GarrisonandMr. Slave,the town's gay couple, are initially excited but quickly turn against the fad when they realize that metrosexuals are straight men imitating gay culture and lifestyle, which Garrison believes insults actual gays. The women of the town initially enjoy their husbands' improvedhygieneand willingness to communicate, but soon tire of the men's increasing self-absorption. When they confront the men and boys about this, Randy accuses them of being "metrophobic" and the other males concur, consequently becoming even more feminine.

Hoping to end the fad, Kyle, Mr. Garrison, and Mr. Slave go toNew Yorkto kill the Fab Five, the hosts of "Queer Eye". Their mission fails but the Fab Five decide against pressing charges. Mr. Garrison then tries to talk the nonchalant gay stars out of selling out gay culture for mere ratings, which they ignore. Mr. Garrison demands to know how gays could betray their own people, slowly realizing that they are not actually gay at all. The five suddenly gravely turn to the others and their human bodies burst open, revealing themselves as an ancient race of "CrabPeople ".

Captured by the Crab People (who chant "Crab People" repeatedly), the gay couple and Kyle fail to stop the crabs from executing their plans of ruling the Earth by destroying the human race (through changing men into metrosexuals) and are forced to become Crab People instead; however, the women attack and kill theQueer Eyequintet, explaining afterwards that masculinity really makes males attractive, even if said males are gross. TheQueer Eyeproducers are about to press charges on the women until they discover that the Fab Five were not human, noting that the Crab People tried this before withThe Jeffersons.They decide instead to "bring back the Latin fad", which the citizens of South Park slavishly adopt.

At school, Stan, Kenny, and Cartman accept Kyle again, but when he complains that they previously forsook him, the others call him "gay" and go and playfootball.He initially walks away in the opposite direction, but then, he stops, turns around, and reluctantly goes to play with them.

Production

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Parker and Stone have since criticized the third-act twist of "crab people" and consider the episode one of their worst. Though they brainstormed for hours to improve the episode (after having deleted the initial subplot of Mr. Garrison leading the other gay people in South Park to "compete" with the metrosexuals), they were unable to come up with anything better than crab people. Executive producer Anne Garefino particularly criticized the idea, deeming it "stupid." Parker later noted that"'Crab people' became this thing [in the writers' room]. It's like, you just know there's something better, but you can't think of it, and now you've just got to go with crab people. "[1]

In the DVD commentary, Stone called the Crab People "the worst idea we've ever had."[3]Despite Parker and Stone's distaste for the characters, however, the Crab People have actually become fairly popular villains with fans of the show.

In the Season 8 episode "Quest for Ratings",Eric Cartman suggests the Crab People while brainstorming ideas for a news show. They are also mentioned at the end of the Season 9 episode"Two Days Before the Day After Tomorrow",where they are blamed for destroying the Beaverton dam. The Crab People also appear in the video gamesThe Stick of TruthandThe Fractured but Whole.[4]

Home media

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"South Park Is Gay!", along with the fourteen other episodes fromThe Complete Seventh Season,were released on a three-disc DVD set in the United States on March 21, 2006. The sets included brief audio commentaries by Parker and Stone for each episode. IGN gave the season an 8/10.[5]

References

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  1. ^ab"'South Park': Matt Stone and Trey Parker Name Their 15 Best Episodes (and 53 Worst) ".Entertainment Weekly.October 11, 2011. Archived fromthe originalon 2015-05-25.RetrievedMarch 21,2016.
  2. ^Goodwillie, Ian (2021-02-14)."South Park: Crab People Are the Series' Best Accidental Gag".CBR.Retrieved2023-01-04.
  3. ^Parker, Trey(November 2004).South Park: The Complete Seventh Season: "South Park Is Gay!"(Audio commentary)(DVD).Paramount Home Entertainment.
  4. ^"South Park: The Stick of Truth sold 1.6m copies, slayed Crab People".technobuffalo.May 16, 2015.RetrievedMarch 2,2021.
  5. ^Schorn, Peter (March 14, 2006)."South Park: The Complete Seventh Season DVD Review".IGN.RetrievedJanuary 25,2017.
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