I never thought in a million years I'd ever see a South Park reference in Arthur. Also, I love 2:40. It's sort of like, Mr. Burns is evil, but behind him, a dark cast shadow, lurks something even worse.
0:43 boy meets world had a lot of south park references in that season lol eric does his cartman impression twice, a kid named kenny is killed, and they say “oh my god, they killed kenny!” lmaoo i love both of the shows so much
@@animalcrossingfan0768 that’s not true. Kenny died early on in season 6 and magically returned to life in the last episode of the season. Season 7 was when they stop killing him off constantly.
I remember watching that episode of Arthur before having learned of South Park, and was so confused by the references. Looking back, they're pretty good. Indicative of a better time in both shows lives.
its funny to imagine that but really in the early seasons, babies were drawn like current canadians and terrance and philip was just poorly animated instead of a canadian show
I will always love South Park, love other cartoons reference it, just shows what a punch it has, no matter how bad this show has been lately, Matt Stone and Trey Parker, will always be my #1.
@@What-wm2fuThe creators love Japanese pop culture, studied Japanese in college and referenced it since the very beginning. Over there? They probably love the references, but the characters have big eyes and the comedy isn’t like anything over there, where it’s stuck in the 50s.
I think in the EP9 Season 4 In Gilmore Girls, Lorelai announced that when she gets bored at the football game she will impersonate South Park characters, but then she reveals that she can only do Cartman (if that wouldn't be just the script, it would be impressing)
Another one: In Carnival Phantasm (a spinoff of Fate and Tsukihime), Lancer dies in every episode. Everytime he dies, someone says "Lancer died! You aren't human!", which is based on the whole "You killed Kenny! You bastard" running gag.
ik this video is old but once in jessie [the disney show about the nanny], Luke was sad because his koala named Kenny got its head ripped off, and right after he said, “OH MY GOSH, THEY KILLED KENNY”
Very interesting I didn't know iCarly had a South Park reference. I know South Park and iCarly are both owned by ViacomCBS which is now known as Paramount Global. Even the other Comedy Central TV programme Drawn Together has two South Park references.
There’s also a South Park reference in Camp Camp season 3 episode 3 it’s where Max one of the main character muffles with tape over his mouth and in the subtitles it said “Maxy Mccormick”
There was a second SP reference in BASEketball, following the Beers merchandise montage. Trey slips into Mr. Garrison's voice when he says, "Oh, sorry, I forgot how much Doug Remer cares about kids!"
There's a reference to SP in the Jessie episode "Creepy Connie comes a callin" In it Connie destroys Luke's stuffed animal, Kenny the koala. Luke screams "No! They killed Kenny!" after seeing the damage.
0:00 Okay, but why didn't they just use the actual designs? One episode actually have the official design as a reference, albeit they have Simpsons mouths.
In Jessie there’s a scene where Luke’s koala stuffie named Kenny gets its head torn off and he yells “YOU KILLED KENNY” I forgot which episode but it’s there somewhere.
Power puff girls has one to, I watching power puff girls with my lil cousin. And it was the one where Mike had a imaginary friend and Blossom flew into the jackets and hats and was dressed up as cartman
Its funny enough seeing a PBS kids show reference South Park, but the fact that they specifically reference "Cartman Gets an Anal Probe" and completely nail the art style, movement, and line cadence makes it especially hilarious to me. Someone on the Arthur crew was definitely a South Park fan. I'd love to see Matt and Treys reaction.
I love how Baseketball is in here, despite that literally just being Trey Parker in the clip. The voice actor of Cartman and one of the creators of the show.
@BlueIsTher It wasn't made by them, it was made by David Zucker. They did, however, adlib most of the dialogue and contributed to the overall humor of the movie through suggestions to Zucker.