Wednesday, 01 Apr 2026

'South Park' creators say they're 'down the middle' despite Trump takedowns

"South Park" creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker said they remain politically neutral, making fun of "extremists" on all sides, including President Donald Trump and woke culture.


'South Park' creators say they're 'down the middle' despite Trump takedowns

The two creators said that "South Park" only seems more political because they're responding to how deeply the Trump administration - and the resistance to it - have infiltrated pop culture.

The long-running animated comedy has aimed much of its satire at Trump, his Cabinet and his supporters this season.

The show has portrayed the president as Satan's lover, made Vice President JD Vance into Trump's diminutive manservant and mocked conservative activist Charlie Kirk's on-campus organizing - prior to Kirk's assassination.

"President Trump has delivered on more promises in just six months than any other president in our country's history - and no fourth-rate show can derail President Trump's hot streak," the spokesperson added. 

Despite lampooning Trump and his administration, the two creators maintain they're politically centrist and are equal-opportunity offenders. 

"We're just very down-the-middle guys. Any extremists of any kind we make fun of. We did it for years with the woke thing. That was hilarious to us. And this is hilarious to us," Parker said.

The reason Trump has become such a focal point, the pair said, is because the administration dominates the media landscape and sets up taboos they feel compelled to challenge. 

"Trey and I are attracted to that like flies to honey," Stone said. "Oh, that's where the taboo is? Over there? OK, then we're over there."

"It's like the government is just in your face everywhere you look," Parker noted. "Whether it's the actual government or whether it is all the podcasters and the TikToks and the YouTubes and all of that, and it's just all political and political because it's more than political. It's pop culture."

The two said they never intended to make the season all about the administration, but once they targeted Trump in the first episode, they found that they had hit a "vein of comedy" and ran with it.

"We basically start with a song, and we don't know where the album's going to take us," Parker told The Times. 

"I know with the Colbert thing and all the Trump stuff, people think certain things, but they're letting us do whatever we want, to their credit," Stone said. 

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