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'South Park' Season 14 Episode 2 'The Tale of Scrotie McBoogerballs' - Associated Content from odvdo! - odvdo.com

Mar 25, 2010 "Contribute content like this. Start Here." 'South Park' Season 14 Episode 2 'The Tale of Scrotie McBoogerballs' demonstrated that ability of South Park to present sly social commentary and  cultural criticism along with the massive expulsion of bodily fluids.

In this case, vomit. Spoilers surely follow.

It is an exciting day at South Park Elementary as Mr. Garrison hands out a new book assignment. At first this excites the class not at all. Books? Cartman, for one, hates those things. Reading from the Internet is about the most intellectually challenging thing he can do. Mostly, for him and his classmates, it's TV and violent video games.

However it is not just any book that the 4th graders of South Park Elementary will be reading. It will be the controversial epic of American literature, 'Catcher in the Rye,' recently removed from the banned list. This excites even Cartman. Something that was banned must have some really cool stuff.

As it turns out, not so much. The boys discover, as most have if they are honest, that 'Catcher in the Rye' is a pretentious piece of offal about a lame teenager whining about his equally lame existence. 'Catcher in the Rye' was published in 1951, six years after a lot of other teenagers had more to worry about—Nazi and Japanese bullets—then all of the "phonies" in the world. Indeed, Korea was raging at that very moment.

In response to being disappointed and tricked into reading a book,Closer, Stan, Kyle, Cartman, and Kenny produce their own book, 'The Tale of Scrotie McBoogerballs,' a story so vile that when Stan's mother reads it she vomits at every paragraph.

Discovering the unearthing of their vile tale, apparently a series of events so horrible that even the 'South Park' boys will only hint at them, the boys manage to pin the authorship on Butters. This is a bad move, as aside from being vomit inducing, 'The Tale of Scrotie McBoogerballs' is a classic of American literature, and Butters is now the new Salinger, brooding and sensitive all at the same time.

Date:2011-4-19 【Return】