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Chef's Chocolate Salty Balls

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"Chef's Chocolate Salty Balls"

"Chef's Chocolate Salty Balls" is the ninth episode of the second season of the animated television series South Park, and the 22nd episode of the series overall. "Chef's Chocolate Salty Balls" originally aired in the United States on August 19, 1998 on Comedy Central.

Plot synopsis

Park City, Utah, is in the midst of the Sundance Film Festival. Sundance's founder, Robert Redford, has decided that Park City has become too commercialized by the annual migration of the Hollywood jet set, so he decides to move the festival next year to South Park, Colorado.

The Sundance Festival relocates to South Park, which is immediately deluged by Hollywood tourists. In school, Mr. Garrison gives the students an assignment to see one independent film during the festival and write a report on it. Cartman objects to the films shown at the festival. Stan, in the meantime, tries to watch some of the films with Wendy so she could hold his hand; some of the films they see are erotic in tone, even one actually involving Gay Cowboys Eating Pudding.

Chef sets up a sales stand at the festival for his fudge cookie recipes and finally settles on selling his Chocolate Salty Balls, which do brisk business.

That night, Kyle is sitting on the toilet, when he thinks he hears Mr. Hankey, the Christmas Poo, calling to him from the toilet. He becomes convinced that Mr. Hankey needs his help. Kyle persuades Stan, Cartman, and Kenny to help him find Mr. Hankey; and they enter the sewer system to look for him. They first encounter Mr. Garrison snorkeling amongst the sewage with Mr. Twig for an unknown reason, even though he asks the boys if they know how to file a police report. They then find Mr. Hankey, who tells Kyle that he lives in the sewer during the year, but that the influx of all the Hollywood tourists, with their health-food diets (two tourists were earlier seen asking Chef for such yuppie foods as steamed celery and tofu), have disrupted the "delicate ecosystem" of the sewer, which has made him deathly ill.

Kyle and the others appear before a film's showing, and Kyle pleads with the Hollywood visitors to understand that their presence is causing the death of his good friend Mr. Hankey; but they all think Kyle is trying to pitch a script, and they offer movie deals and script changes. One agent approaches Cartman to buy the rights to Kyle's story; and, of course, Cartman readily agrees.

The South Park locals are beginning to tire of the festival, seeing that it is causing the town to become overrun with commercialism and Hollywood kitsch. Even Chef realizes the large sales of his Chocolate Salty Balls is undercut by the fact that South Park is getting run down. Robert Redford's assistant points out that South Park is being slowly corrupted just as Park City was. Robert Redford reveals that he will make all the small towns overrun with Hollywood culture, since he cannot escape it, so he wants to inflict it on everyone else.

A new film appears overnight, based on Cartman's "treatment" of Kyle's story, starring Tom Hanks as Kyle and a monkey as Mr. Hankey. Cartman later sells "Mr. Hankey and Me" movie T-shirts for quick cash after being cheated by the agent in a classic case of Hollywood Accounting, who got more money whereas Cartman got very little.

Kyle tries to show Mr. Hankey to the moviegoers, but Mr. Hankey is pale and near death. Kyle and Chef stand vigil over the dying Mr. Hankey, but Chef feeds Hankey one of his Chocolate Salty Balls, causing Mr. Hankey to return to life. Stan, Kyle, Chef and Mr. Hankey approach Robert Redford as he is on a podium to announce the return of the film festival the next year. After he callously ignores their pleas to relocate the festival, Mr. Hankey rises above the crowd, donning a magician's hat. Mr. Hankey causes the sewers to erupt over South Park, causing Robert Redford and his wife's car to fill up with feces, drowning them, and all the tourists to flee the town.

Cultural references

Cartman refers to independent films as being about "gay cowboys eating pudding." This episode aired seven years before the independent film Brokeback Mountain was released in 2005, but one year after the publication of the short story of the same name by Annie Proulx in 1997. In an interview with the Associated Press in October 2005, Trey Parker and Matt Stone responded to questions about the prophetic statement by Cartman. Parker quipped "...if there’s pudding eating in there, we’re going to sue" and Stone claimed that "No [we're not prophets], but Cartman is. [Laughs] We went to Sundance a lot in the mid-to-late ’90s, and you could just tell it was going toward gay cowboydom."[1]

The episode also features a character resembling Andy Warhol.

References

  1. ^ "Parker and Stone: 'South Park' prophets". The Associated Press. 27 October 2005. Retrieved 22 May 2014.