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Every day at South Park Studios is different, but Trey Parker said this particular afternoon, Monday, September 12, was especially memorable.
"There are times where we go, 'How do we tell Comedy Central we don't have a show?'" he said with sardonic delight."This is one of those."
Parker and Matt Stone, the creators of 'South Park,' exuded an appearance of calm as they brainstormed in their airy offices, in a gray building on a stretch of highway at the edge of Los Angeles. But they were under considerable pressure to finish the first episode for the 20th season of their satirical animated series, which was due in less than 48 hours and would air soon.
At this stage ” on the ninth draft of a script called 'Member Berries' ” they would like to have had 16 minutes of a 22-minute episode. Stone and Parker said they had 12 1/2. ("That doesn't mean that's what we have done," Parker cautioned."That means that's all we have figured out.")
A dry-erase board in the room showed a nearly nonexistent third act, all empty ovals stacked like pancakes, as the collaborators kicked around the episode's story elements: a new American national anthem rebooted by JJ Abrams, a comically inept xenophobe running for president and an addictive talking fruit that induces nostalgia for the pop culture of one's youth.
How these pieces fit together wasn't clear yet. But after two decades of making their show in this stressful, hands-on, seat-of-the-pants way, Stone and Parker were reasonably certain they would figure out something.
"I can't believe I'm surprised by it," Stone said."How do we get to this point and have no story? But we just go through it again. For the eight-millionth time."
Since its debut in 1997, 'South Park' has spun more than 250 tales about foul-mouthed fourth graders in a Colorado town that invariably gets swept up in whatever social crisis the nation is facing that week. What began with a show about aliens installing a satellite in a child's butt has evolved ” sort of ” into a series that, in its unapologetically crude way, can address debates over transgender bathrooms, racial discrimination or gratuitous sex and violence in 'Game of Thrones.'
Even as animation technology has improved and the 'South Park' staff has grown exponentially, the show is still fundamentally the work of Parker and Stone, 46 and 45, who agonise over every instalment. (Parker has had sole writing and directing credit on all but a few episodes since 2001.)
If the earliest 'South Park' episodes reflected a juvenile desire to see what they could get away with on television, their later work suggests that Parker and Stone have honed their ability to channel their growing exasperation with a polarised world into comedy.
Vernon Chatman, a comedy writer who has worked on 'South Park' for more than 15 years, said that Stone and Parker have thrived by embracing their roles in"their right-brain, left-brain relationship."
"Matt has this sharp, analytical mind that's focused and relentless," he said."Trey has the dreamy, emotional storyteller thing."
Chatman added,"To be in such a heightened, intense relationship, with so much stakes and pressure on it ” the fact that they haven't killed each other is incredible."
Already Parker and Stone had spent their day in a multi-hour meeting with Chatman and Anne Garefino, an executive producer, talking through plot points for 'Member Berries' and shooting them down.
"If we only have three scenes left to write, that's a win," Garefino said."It's when you still have that whole last act ..."
In the afternoon Stone and Parker caromed from office to office in a building decorated with their trophies ” 'South Park' toys and memorabilia, framed posters from their Tony Award-winning Broadway musical, The Book of Mormon (2011) ” while trying to bring 'Member Berries' into focus.
For a few minutes Parker stepped into a recording booth to perform the voices of two football announcers introducing the new national anthem, while Stone directed him to be more excitable.
Then it was off to an editing suite, where Parker reviewed a vividly vulgar montage featuring Mr Garrison, the 'South Park' character who has turned into a buffoonish populist demagogue, describing exactly how he'd bring death to America's enemies.
In a telephone interview a few days earlier, Parker had explained how he and Stone had abandoned their preseason ritual of holding a writers' retreat to drink, carouse and think up ideas.
"As soon as we're like, 'We could do this, this could be funny,' we're like, 'Stop talking about it,'" Parker said."Because in two months, when we're doing the show, it won't be funny to us anymore."
Being more extemporaneous, he said, led to unexpected discoveries like their 19th season in 2015, presented as 10 interconnected episodes that told a broader story about gentrification, identity politics and a perceived resurgence of political correctness.
The renewed debate about sensitivity in speech and the policing of language was one that 'South Park' could not avoid, for its own sake.
"This might finally be the year that we get run out of town," Parker recalled thinking at the time."If we're going to, let's make fun of the fact that we're the old guys at the table. All those shows were an honest part of us going, 'Should we go away?'"
Instead the 19th season was a critical hit: In a review for The New York Times, James Poniewozik wrote that 'South Park' had"gone and revitalised itself," in part"by asserting that it takes an outrageous comedy to capture an era of outrage."
Herzog, who has worked with Parker and Stone since the debut of 'South Park,' said that they have Comedy Central's"absolute, 1,000% eternal trust." As long as the show satisfies the network's Standards and Practices department, he said,"we're cool with the show."
Yet that success created more angst for Stone and Parker as they approached Season 20. Were they obligated to tell a serialised narrative again? Did they have to dwell on the 2016 campaign, when their indifference to presidential politics is a well-worn subject?
All they can do, the 'South Park' creators said, is to continue to apply a principle that has guided them from the beginning.
No matter how serious an issue seems, Parker said,"Looking at it with a sense of humour is not only healthier for you, it actually makes you think more clearly about things ” being able to make fun of either side of an issue, rather than just, 'Trump is evil and Clinton is good.'
"There's always room to equally rip on both of them."
Comedy Central has signed Parker and Stone to keep making 'South Park' through 2019. Garefino, who has worked on the show for 19 of its 20 years, suggested that they could stick around longer still.
"They said they didn't still want to be making 'South Park' when they were 40," she said."I think they'll be doing it when they're 50."
'Member Berries' was broadcast at 10 pm on September 14, but hardly without last-minute incidents. That morning South Park Studios suffered a system crash, and the episode's audio went missing for an hour and a half.
When the episode was transmitted to Comedy Central, it had a mysterious six-frame sync problem that was finally fixed and delivered one hour before airtime.
The following day, Garefino said,"Trey's like, 'I think, from now, we should think about getting the show in earlier.'"
Even 'South Park' would have to bleep out Garefino's response.

(Cover photo: Matt Stone (left) and Trey Parker created 'South Park,' and remain the creative minds behind the popular series.)
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27/09/2016
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