Anti-Woke ‘South Park’ Fans Don’t Understand That ‘ing The Panderverse’ Made Fun of Them, Too

‘Put a chick in it, make her gay!’ has already become a rallying cry for every Cartman on the internet
Anti-Woke ‘South Park’ Fans Don’t Understand That ‘ing The Panderverse’ Made Fun of Them, Too

The online Cartman.

The most predictable outcome from the success of the most recent peak “both sides are equally dumb” centrist South Park moment.

However, the many, many South Park fans who understand the principle of “You’re Not Supposed To Share Cartman’s Beliefs” have noticed that the rest of the fandom missed the point of ing the Panderverse about as badly as the Mulan remake missed the mark. A recent thread in the South Park subreddit, titled simply “r/southpark,” called out the Cartman apologists for abusing the ittedly punchy catchphrase and being dumber and lazier than even the wokest Disney screenwriter.

These s’ gripes follow a month straight of the subreddit seeing daily posts wherein Kathleen Cartman Kennedy was the face of whichever video game franchise, film series, TV show, comic book or podcast went woke and broke. “They missed the whole point and it's embarrassing,” the original poster wrote of the targets of his “say the line, Bart” meme. Another commenter added, “South Park: ‘I guess wailing on woke stuff all the time is pretty lazy.’ r/southpark: wails on woke stuff all the time.” 

“A lot of people in this sub missed or didn't want to acknowledge the other point that arc of the special made; that Cartman's toxic fandom, resistant to any kind of change from what had been before and definitely against anything ‘replacing’ straight white heroes, was as bad as or worse than the pandering to Woke culture itself,” another expounded. “(South Park) went so far as to essentially blame fans like Cartman for creating the over-correction towards pandering to Woke culture by being caustic, bile spewing ‘fans’ who cannot accept anyone or anything different than what they perceive as ‘right’. Yet, naturally you see fans here who didn't get the whole point.”

The phenomenon isn’t contained to the South Park subreddit, either — anti-woke Twitter warriors have co-opted “put a chick in it, make her gay” to celebrate the struggle of the female-focused flop The Marvels, and the rumor that the  Fantastic Four film would feature a woman playing the Silver Surfer inspired the same reaction. One such mouth breather wrote, “You think Marvel/Disney couldn't stoop lower than the Marvels? Kevin Feige says hold my Bud Light! The Panderverse strikes the SILVER SURFER! Put a Chick in it and make her Gay and Lame!”

Though it’s easy and justified to blame the hordes of barely literate, irony-blind, anti-woke keyboard warriors who adopted the catchphrase to engage in the exact same behavior as Cartman did in ing the Panderverse, the entire “put a chick in it” meme highlights a problem with South Park’s approach to satire that’s as old as the show itself. By sitting on every fence and attempting to insult each side equally regardless of the issue the show’s tackling, Trey Parker and Matt Stone give ample reason for those with a strong enough confirmation bias to believe that South Park s their bigoted, narrow beliefs — because, if it didn’t, then why does the funny fat kid always say exactly what they think?

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