Children will sometimes say the darnedest things, and on the Comedy Central's "South Park," children say the crudest, raunchiest, most obscene things imaginable. In fact, the whole town does.
This show is obviously the work of warped minds -- its creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker began collabora
If Walter Ruttman had not been killed while making a newsreel on the frontlines of World War II, the history of film might have turned out differently. He made breathtakingly beautiful movies -- both animated and shot --that radically departed from the traditional narratives of contemporaries like Ch
Children will sometimes say the darnedest things -- on "South Park," children say the crudest, raunchiest, most obscene things imaginable.
This show is obviously the work of warped minds. Its creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker began collaborating in the early '90s. They were commissioned in 1994
Angry Kid's hair flames out from both sides of his lopsided head like two blood-red pizza slices. He sits in the back of his father's car and spits obscene annoyances out of his gnarled lips. "My tape, my tape," he squeals. Pops puts in the tape and a wicked death jam blasts from the speakers. He eje