Episode 13: Anchors
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\"Dances with Smurfs\" is the thirteenth episode of the thirteenth season of the American animated television series South Park. The 194th overall episode of the series, it originally aired on Comedy Central in the United States on November 11, 2009. In the episode, Eric Cartman becomes the reader of the elementary school announcements, and starts making politically charged accusations against student body president Wendy Testaburger. The episode was written and directed by series co-creator Trey Parker, and was rated TV-MA L in the United States.
\"Dances with Smurfs\" serves as a parody of the political commentary style of Glenn Beck, a nationally syndicated radio show host and former Fox News Channel pundit. The episode also satirizes the 2009 James Cameron film Avatar, suggesting the plot of that film borrows heavily from the 1990 film Dances with Wolves, and comparing Avatar's blue aliens to the cartoon Smurfs. It also includes references to the Tea Party protests, radio personality Casey Kasem, and former-vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin.
On the \"EC\" set the next morning a reluctant Wendy joins Cartman (who has his sideburns dyed gray in make-up) who promises he will stick to school-related questions and go easy on her. However, as soon as filming begins, he immediately asks about her rumoured promiscuity and involvement in the Smurf genocide. To Cartman's surprise, Wendy claims she indeed bulldozed Smurfland to get the valuable Smurfberries, but alludes that Cartman was involved with the plot, and that the Smurfs would have left Smurfland if Cartman had not integrated himself with them. She steps down as student body president, turning the title over to Cartman, and announces her own new book Going Rogue on the Smurfs. Cartman is angry that she has turned the tables on him and stolen his Smurf idea, particularly when she announces she sold the movie rights to filmmaker James Cameron, who turned the book into his new film, Avatar. With being the student body president, Cartman cannot do the morning announcements anymore because a student cannot hold both positions at the same time. Cartman, much to his anger, also learns that being the student body president is a meaningless position with no real power. The episode ends with Casey Miller reading the announcements, which include a student's letter of disgust for Cartman's performance as president, causing him to run out the room crying, \"I'm doing the best I can!\"
\"Dances with Smurfs\" was written and directed by series co-founder Trey Parker, and was rated TV-MA L in the United States. It first aired on November 11, 2009, in the United States on Comedy Central. The episode marked the final appearance of Gordon Stoltski, the third grade student who read the morning announcements for South Park Elementary.[1][2] The day after \"Dances with Smurfs\" was originally broadcast, four T-shirts based on the episode were made available at South Park Studios, the official South Park website.[3][4][5][6] All four featured Cartman wearing a suit and tie, saying a quote from the episode. These included \"I'm not some dog on a leash\", \"We're in the poop box, my friends\", \"I'm a normal kid... I just ask questions\", and \"I ask questions\".
Cartman's televised morning announcements are patterned after the Glenn Beck Program, using the same types of music and imagery, as well as a logo with the initials \"EC\" that closely resemble the logo of Beck's show, which use the initials \"GB\". Cartman also writes comments about Wendy on a blackboard, which is a prop often used by Beck on his television program. The day after \"Dances with Smurfs\" originally aired, Beck himself discussed the episode on his radio program. Beck said he had not watched the episode himself but took the parody as a compliment, and that he particularly enjoyed Cartman's hair, which was combed in a style similar to Beck. Steve \"Stu\" Burguiere, the executive producer of Beck's radio show, also complimented the episode, and said of Parker and Stone, \"These guys skewer everybody and they are always very good at it\".[9]
\"Dances with Smurfs\" satirized Avatar, the 2009 science-fiction epic film directed by James Cameron, which tells the story of humans in the distant future mining for minerals on an alien planet inhabited by blue natives.[7][10] Although Avatar had not yet been released in theaters by the time the episode aired, the script of \"Dances with Smurfs\" compares the plot of Avatar to that of Dances with Wolves, a 1990 drama epic film in which a United States soldier becomes integrated with a tribe of Native Americans.[11][12][13][14][15] At the end of \"Dances with Smurfs\", Cartman watches Avatar at a movie theater and grows angry that his idea was stolen, expressing the idea that Avatar borrows from other previous films.[10] Avatar had already been compared to Dances with Wolves prior to the broadcast of \"Dances with Smurfs\", and James Cameron said he welcomed the comparison.[16] Cartman's movie prominently features the Smurfs, a fictional group of small blue cartoon creatures, which draws a further parallel to the blue alien creatures in Avatar.[10] On the commentary Trey Parker and Matt Stone described the Na'vi who are natives of Pandora in Avatar as \"ten foot tall sexy Smurfs\".[9][17]
The episode received generally positive reviews. Ramsey Isler of IGN said Cartman worked well for a Beck satire, and said, \"The real accomplishment of this episode is how it totally roasted a semi-political figure, without being political at all.\" However, Isler said the script loses focus with the appearance of the Smurfs, and that Gordon's death was disturbing and inappropriate in the light of recent school shootings in the United States.[1] The A.V. Club writer Sean O'Neal, a vocal critic of Beck, said mocking Beck is an easy task, but the episode \"handled it with just enough of the show's usual surrealist bent that it was never wholly predictable\". He praised some of the episode's unexpected elements, like Cartman's Smurf film and Wendy's surprise resignation.[7] Carlos Delgado of iF magazine said \"Dances with Smurfs\" became \"a little strange\" starting with Cartman's Smurf story, but he called the episode \"smart, sharp, and poignant\". Delgado said the episode had less \"laugh out loud\" humor than traditional South Park episodes, in favor of intelligent satire.[2] AOL Television writer Donald Deane called it one of the funniest episodes of the season.[8]
\"Dances with Smurfs\", along with the thirteen other episodes from South Park's thirteenth season, were released on a three-disc DVD set and two-disc Blu-ray set in the United States on March 16, 2010. The sets included brief audio commentaries by Parker and Stone for each episode,[20] a collection of deleted scenes, and a special mini-feature Inside Xbox: A Behind-the-Scenes Tour of South Park Studios, which discussed the process behind animating the show with Inside Xbox host Major Nelson.[21]
SpongeBob is chosen to receive the last wish, and so he defeats the Flying Dutchman by wishing that he turns into a vegetarian. Pronto, he does as punishment for his true colors and SpongeBob and the others are transported in front of a familiar-looking pineapple, but before they could celebrate the Flying Dutchman's defeat, they soon realize that they have been turned into fruit and are chased by the Flying Dutchman who is now a hippie around his ship that is now a hippie van with a sail while the episode finishes.
The episode is 15 minutes long, longer than an average length of a short but shorter than a 22-minute episode. The episode was later featured on the Sea Stories VHS and DVD releases, after being shown on television. The Sea Stories DVD release featured all three endings (see below).
When this episode was first aired, segments with Patchy the Pirate were shown to announce a poll that was held that lets viewers decide between three possible endings to the episode, with a different character receiving the final wish in each end.
Patchy then states that if the viewer watches the episode \"Land Lubin' style\" (as a rerun), Nickelodeon will only play the voted ending. He also calls the viewer an official big-time decision-maker and a video of monkeys playing instruments is shown. Patchy says not to let it go to the viewer's head and signs off.
The episode begins with Colonel Hogan and Corporal LeBeau walking in the woods near a road close to Stalag 13. They suddenly stop and turn around, as they hear Sergeant Schultz calling them, soon informing them that neither of them should be out of camp. As LeBeau continues up the road, Hogan tells Schultz that they haven't forgotten, before he tells Schultz why they are out there: they are waiting for an escapee from Stalag 5 to appear. After asking Schultz if he would like to be part of the welcoming committee, Schultz accuses Hogan of wanting to see him sent to the Russian Front. Hogan denies it, saying that he would miss Schultz, plus it would take him and his men too long to break in a new man. At this point, the pair hear LeBeau, who warns them that a German truck is headed their way. The two quickly duck beside the road, soon joined by LeBeau, as they wait for the truck to drive past them. As they wait, LeBeau warns Schultz not to tell anyone that they are meeting an escaped prisoner, which gets a reply from Schultz of why would he do something so foolish. The truck then suddenly stops in front of them, before the truck's driver is seen taking off his helmet. As he does, Hogan quickly recognizes him as the escape prisoner, Michaels, that he and LeBeau are to meet, and as he and LeBeau gets back up, he asks Schultz if he would like to join them, so as not to insult their guest. Soon standing in front of the 'captured' truck, Hogan exchanges pleasantries with Michaels, before Michaels apologizes for startling them with the truck, which he says he has stolen in the confusion caused by his escape. LeBeau, noticing the kind of truck it is, asks Schultz how much he thought they could get for it on the black market, which gets a reply from Schultz that he didn't know about any such activity. After Hogan informs Michaels that Schultz is indeed a German soldier, Michaels informs them about what he has earlier discovered in the back of the lorry: A gunsight which uses a computer for tracking airplanes, which Michaels thought would be of interest to London. Michaels suggests that they take one part of the gunsight with them to the camp to send to London, instead of making blueprints, but Hogan suggests that they instead take the whole gunsight with them, which Michaels quickly agrees to. After Michaels asks if it would be hard for them to do, Hogan comments that all they needed to do is to send it along with him, before he suggests that they take Michaels into camp. As they head back towards the front of the truck, Michaels informs Hogan that he finds the entire situation hard to believe. Schultz agrees with him, before he asks Hogan what they are to do with the truck. Hogan asks Schultz to simply hide it for them, before he, LeBeau and Michaels leaves Schultz alone with the truck. 59ce067264
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