White House Fires Back at ‘South Park’ Over Scathing Trump Parody: “Desperate Attempt for Relevance”2 min read

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In an unusually sharp rebuke from the executive branch, the Trump administration has slammed South Park following its Season 27 premiere, which featured a nude deepfake PSA of the president and a storyline where Trump begs Satan for sex—only to be mocked for his “teeny-tiny” anatomy.

White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers dismissed the episode as a flailing attempt at relevance, telling Variety: “The Left’s hypocrisy truly has no end—for years they’ve attacked ‘South Park’ as ‘offensive,’ but now they’re suddenly applauding it because it suits their agenda.” The statement escalated: “This show hasn’t been relevant for over 20 years and is clinging to expired shock humor. President Trump’s historic accomplishments can’t be derailed by a fourth-rate cartoon.”

The episode, titled “Sermon on the ‘Mount,” depicted Trump suing critics (mirroring real-world legal battles) while a protest erupts in South Park. In a surreal twist, Jesus descends to warn the town that mocking Trump could get them “canceled”—a nod to the president’s litigious reputation. The episode’s most viral moment, however, was Trump’s bedroom scene with Satan, where the commander-in-chief’s “comically small” penis became the punchline of a faux PSA later uploaded to a dedicated South Park website. The deepfake clip shows a naked Trump wandering the desert as a narrator deadpans: “His penis is teeny-tiny, but his love for us is large.”

The White House’s reaction underscores how South Park—now in its 27th season—remains a cultural lightning rod. The show’s renewed audacity coincides with creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone securing a landmark deal with Paramount for 50 new episodes and full streaming rights, suggesting the series has no plans to soften its satire.

Industry analysts note the irony: A sitting president attacking an animated comedy—while that comedy mocks his sensitivity—may only amplify the episode’s impact. As South Park’s deepfake Trump declares in the PSA: “No matter how hot it gets, he’s not afraid to fight for America.” The show, it seems, is happy to return the heat.

Key Takeaways:

  • White House frames South Park as “desperate” and “irrelevant”
  • Episode’s nude deepfake PSA goes viral, prompting official parody website
  • Timing notable: Follows Parker/Stone’s 50-episode Paramount renewal
  • Political subtext: Show likens Trump’s lawsuits to censorship

With South Park’s creative future secured and the administration digging in, this clash may mark the start of a new era for the series: no longer just a provocateur, but a bonafide political antagonist.


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