South Park: D-Yikes!
Garrison’s Fancy New Vagina,” and while I thought her obsession with scissoring and the culmination into a 300-style battle against Persians who want to ruin Les Bos with their horrible design sense was funny, it lacked that element of surprise that’s at the core of all the best South Park episodes. S/he’s now been both straight and homosexual as a man and as a woman, but the one constant that remains is that whatever her preference happens to be that week, she takes it very seriously.
Perhaps that’s why that episode, while funny, didn’t quite knock my socks off, or “scissor me timbers” to use Ms. I’ve seen that tenacious side of Garrison before in the episode “Mr.
The miscommunication with the Mexican workers by what “essay” meant was the best part of the episode, though, so I have to give Matt and Trey props for that one.
From a scale of 1 to 7, I’m going to give that one a 4, considering I hold South Park to a
Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments
Garrison: Kids, I need to tell you something that you might find a little shocking: I’m homosexual.
Stan: Again?
Longtime fans of South Park know that Mr./Ms. Garrison’s orgasmic exclamation. Still, I felt that episode, overall, was funnier in theory than in execution. The episode leaned more toward parody than satire, which is fine, but it’s not my personal preference.
Filed under: OpEd, South Park
(S11E06)
Mrs. I like those episodes that take the viewers in a million directions, like last week’s Easter episode.
I don’t want to say the episode was a complete write off, considering the 300 spoof was inspired, and the narrator at the end telling us “no dyke should be without cocktails” was pretty damn funny. Garrison is a mercurial sexual beast.
Original post by Adam Finley
No comments yet. Be the first.
Leave a reply

























