South Park - Season 1 -

The infamous holiday episode. To this day, conservative pundits cite this episode as the downfall of Western civilization. A singing piece of feces that talks? It was a deliberate provocation, and it worked. It also contains the hilarious, sacrilegious fight between Jesus and Santa Claus. The Legacy of Season 1 Watching South Park Season 1 today feels like looking at a fossil of a prehistoric monster. The animation is rough. The pacing is slower than modern seasons. Kyle’s "You know, I learned something today..." speeches are a little too on the nose.

We were fresh off the sanitized, hug-boxy era of Full House and Family Matters . Adult animation meant The Simpsons —a brilliant, safe, suburban satire. Then, out of the static of Comedy Central, came four crude construction paper cutouts from Hell, Colorado.

Season 1 succeeded because it didn't care about your feelings. It made fun of the left, the right, the rich, the poor, the disabled, the able-bodied, Christians, Jews, Atheists, and even the network airing it. It was the first show to truly weaponize "equal opportunity offense" as an art form. South Park - Season 1

South Park Season 1 didn’t just arrive; it detonated. Before we talk about the plots, we have to talk about the look. The first season is famously animated using stop-motion with actual cut-out construction paper. It is jerky. It is ugly. The characters walk like they have hip dysplasia, and their mouths flap open and closed like sock puppets having a seizure.

It is raw, juvenile, offensive, and occasionally brilliant. It is the sound of two college kids from Colorado proving that if you are funny enough, you can get away with anything. The infamous holiday episode

The boys get a starving Ethiopian kid via a mis-sent mail order. It’s the most politically incorrect thing you can imagine, yet it somehow manages to raise awareness about world hunger while making you laugh at Sally Struthers eating a whole turkey.

It is hard to describe the precise feeling of watching the pilot episode of South Park air on August 13, 1997, if you weren’t there. To understand the impact, you have to remember the media landscape of the late 90s. It was a deliberate provocation, and it worked

The pilot is a fever dream. Alien abduction, a satellite dish stuck in Cartman’s rectum, and a terrifyingly catchy song about mountain lions. It introduces the "chef" (the legendary Isaac Hayes) explaining the birds and the bees via funk music. It is low-budget, weird, and instantly addictive.