
Comedy Central
South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone appeared at San Diego Comic-Con on Thursday night, just one day after the season 27 premiere of their long-running Comedy Central series took aim at Donald Trump.
In addition to offering a sarcastic apology and revealing that they produced a fake commercial for the network, Parker and Stone also revealed they faced push back from the network over one particular aspect: the caricature of Trump’s “teeny tiny” manhood.
At the end of the episode, South Park aired what they claimed to be “1 of 50” Pro-Trump PSAs, which saw an AI-created Trump roaming through the desert, eventually stripping down to no clothes.
When Trump eventually collapses with exhaustion, his googly-eyed micro-manhood popped up and began speaking, saying “I’m Donald Trump and I approve this message.”
Trey Parker and Matt Stone says Comedy Central initially pushed back on how they portrayed Donald Trump’s manhood
At Comic-Con on Thursday night, the South Park duo detailed their conversation with Comedy Central over the portrayal of Trump’s minuscule johnson.
“It’s always like, ‘So, we love the episode,’ but that’s what happened. They’re like, ‘OK, but we’re gonna blur the p—-.’… I’m like, ‘No, you’re not gonna blur the p—-,’” Parker said.
“If we put eyes on the penis, we won’t blur it. And then that was a whole conversation for about four f—ing days. It’s a character.”
In addition to Trump himself — whom was also given a photorealistic face instead of an animated one and was depicted as being in a relationship with Satan — the season 27 premiere of South Park, titled “Sermon on the ‘Mount”, also touched on Trump being in the Epstein files, using Christianity as a guise to line his own pockets, whining liberals on NPR radio, the use of ChatGPT CBS acquiescing to Trump’s demands and canceling The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, and more.