WhileSouth Parkhasn’t made a new Thanksgiving episode in over a decade, the show’s last celebration of the holiday did set up one of its biggest format changes.South Parkseason 27won’t arrive until 2025, marking the longest gap between the show’s outings in its 28-year history. However, this is far from the first timeSouth Parkhas changed.South Park’s first few seasons were absurdly crude, shamelessly silly, and primarily concerned with gore and chaos, but from season 4 onward, the show began to center on real-life news stories more frequently.

South Park’s Most Controversial Halloween Joke Still Feels Too Far, Even After 18 Years

South Park has plenty of jokes that go too far, but one of the show’s most controversial missteps came from a Halloween special 18 years ago.

SinceSouth Parkis written, directed, and animated in the six days between episodes airing, the animated satire is uniquely suited to mocking events as they unfold. This means thatSouth Park’s character comedyoften took a backseat to spoofing current events in later seasons, while earlier seasons were more concerned with the gang and their antics.South Park’s banned episodesprove that this approach often courted controversy, but it wasn’t the last change that the series made to its style. In 2013, a Thanksgiving special led the creators ofSouth Parkto experiment with another formal change.

Stan stands dressed as a doll looking scared beside a brutally injured Kenny in South Park

South Park Season 17’s Thanksgiving Trilogy Introduced Serialized Storytelling

The Three-Episode Event Began With Episode 7 “Black Friday”

South Park’s most recent Thanksgiving episode set up the show’s experiments with serialized storytellingin season 17, episode 7, “Black Friday.” This was not the first time the show had played with serialized stories, thanks to outings like season 10, episodes 3 and 4, “Cartoon Wars Part 1 and 2,” and season 11, episodes 10-12, “Imaginationland Episodes 1-3.” However, while the latter was only two episodes long and the former was released as a standalone movie after airing as three episodes, the Black Friday trilogy’sGame of Thronesparody wasSouth Park’s first attempt to serialize the show’s main story.

The trilogy gained critical acclaim and the show’s co-creators Matt Stone and True Parker revisited serialized storytelling in season 18.

Cartman giving out KFC in South Park

“Black Friday” centered on the kids of South Park arguing over which games console to buy in the titular shopping day’s sales, while episode 8, “A Song of Ass and Fire,” committed even more thoroughly to the show’s ambitiousGame of Thronesparody. Episode 9, “******* and Dragons,” brought the trilogy to a close, but this wasn’t the end ofSouth Park’s infatuation with this long-form storytelling style. The trilogy gained critical acclaim and the show’s co-creators Matt Stone and True Parker revisited the approach in season 18, beforeSouth Park’s Donald Trump plotdoubled down on this new approach again.

South Park Season 18 Took Serialized Storytelling Further

Unlike later seasons,South Parkseason 18 was not fully serialized. Instead, certain plot points and newly introduced characters followed through from one episode to another, breaking with the show’s usual reliance on returning to the status quo at the end of each episode.South Parkwas a particularly exaggerated example of this typical sitcom storytelling trope. The first few seasons ofSouth Parkeven featured one of the main characters, Kenny, dying in every episode, only to appear in the next outing without explanation. However, season 14 upended this with plots that bled from one episode into the next.

Season 19 took things significantly further with the introduction of PC Principal andSouth Park’s version of Donald Trump, Mr, Garrison. These characters came to define the events of the season asSouth Parkcovered the news from Trump’s controversial presidential campaign, and the final episodes of season 19 told a cohesive story that only made sense for viewers who had been tuned in since episode 1. This was a radical departure fromSouth Park’s usual storytelling style and, for a while, it seemed as if the long-running series had found an effective way to reinvent itself after twenty years.

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Why South Park Dropped Serialized Storytelling

Season 20’s Election Plotline Highlighted The Format’s Limitations

However,South Park’s love affair with serialized storytelling was too good to be trueand season 20 proved this for viewers. Long beforeSouth Parkseason 27 was delayedsince the show’s creators admitted toVanity Fairthat they had nothing more to say about Trump, the politician was central to the story of season 20. Unfortunately for Stone and Parker, it proved impossible to center an entire season’s story around the assumed outcome of an election, only to predict it incorrectly. A lot of people assumed Hillary Clinton would win, butSouth Parkseason 20 relied on this.

The self-aware season 10 finale was dubbed “The End of Serialisation as We Know It,” but season 21 kept Heidi and Cartman’s relationship storyline going.

Although this did result in the final episodes of season 20 feeling disjointed and messy, this wasn’t the end ofSouth Park’s flirtation with serialization. The self-aware season 10 finale was dubbed “The End of Serialisation as We Know It,” but season 21 kept Heidi and Cartman’s relationship storyline going for another ten episodes. Likewise, seasons 25 and 26 left Cartman living in a hotdog when his antics led to this fate, instead of immediately retconning this twist and returning to normal. Thus,South Parknever fully abandoned serialization, although the show did drop its reliance on the storytelling strategy.