South Park’s Season 27 Premiere Shocks with Trump-Satan Satire
Alright, so let’s talk about what just dropped — and trust me, it’s got people talking everywhere. The creators of South Park , Matt Stone and Trey Parker, are back with the Season 27 premiere, and in true South Park fashion, they did not hold back. The episode is titled “Sermon on the ‘Mount,” and wow — it’s already stirring up massive controversy.
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So, less than 24 hours after Stone and Parker reportedly inked a jaw-dropping $1.5 billion deal with Paramount Plus, they released this wild episode. The highlight — or lowlight, depending on who you ask — is a totally unfiltered, no-holds-barred depiction of Donald Trump. And yes, he’s literally in bed with Satan. That’s right. Naked. And the punchline? They give him a ridiculously small penis. Like, cartoonishly tiny. It’s bold, it’s graphic, and it’s classic South Park shock comedy dialed up to 11.
But the satire doesn't stop there. The episode is a multi-layered takedown of Trump’s love for lawsuits, government censorship, religious extremism in public education, and the way big corporations — like Paramount — seem to bend under pressure. The irony? This all comes just after CBS, also under Paramount, pulled The Late Show hosted by Stephen Colbert. Many fans think that cancellation wasn’t just about money — especially since Colbert had recently criticized Paramount for settling with Trump.
In one surreal scene, Trump is shown lying in bed with Satan, who bluntly tells him, “I can’t even see anything, it’s so small.” Ouch. Then comes a parody PSA — which references actual reports that Paramount may be providing airtime to Trump’s administration as part of their agreement — featuring a fully nude, AI-generated Trump wandering the desert with, again, his “teeny tiny” manhood on full display. This isn’t subtle satire. This is scorched earth comedy.
The episode isn't just crude for the sake of being crude — though it definitely is crude. It’s a direct commentary on the strange, twisted relationship between politics, media, and corporate deals in today’s America. It’s also a reminder that South Park still has teeth — sharp ones — and they’re not afraid to bite.
So whether you’re laughing, shocked, or somewhere in between, one thing’s clear: South Park didn’t just return. It detonated.
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