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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Entertainment
Salma Loum

'South Park' mocks Putin's invasion of Ukraine and suggests he's stuck in the past

"South Park" has always had a knack for being tapped into the pop-culture zeitgeist and often moves quickly to comment on current events. And now it's the first animated sitcom to address the war on Ukraine.

A week after Russia invaded Ukraine, the show's Wednesday episode, "Back to the Cold War," mocked Russian President Vladimir Putin for catalyzing an international crisis.

While Ukrainian cities Kharkiv, Chernihiv and the capital, Kyiv, are under attack, the irreverent series brought attention to the war the best way it knows how: By framing it as an outlandish allegory involving an equestrian dressage competition that pits the gullible character Butters against a stoic Russian competitor.

The Season 25 episode starts with the South Park Elementary's school counselor, Mr. Mackey, confusing Putin's name with the more crude "Pootin" during a class discussion about the conflict.

Mr. Mackey runs the students through terrifying nuclear-bomb drills out of the 1960s, with references to famous '80s hits such as Peter Gabriel's "Games Without Frontiers" and war films including "Rambo," "Red Dawn" and "WarGames"

The episode further poked Putin by imagining a World War III scenario where Mr. Mackey activates a DEFCON 3 alarm to warn against Russian nuclear threats. But he does it through the outdated DOS (Disk Operated System), a simple and minimal memory processing system.

It's a pointed joke about Putin being stuck in the '80s, as driven home when he's shown dancing to Frankie Goes to Hollywood's 1984 single "Two Tribes."

The Comedy Central episode ends with Mr. Mackey ridiculing the Russian leader, who prides himself on being a strongman autocrat, for getting older and becoming increasingly aggressive because his penis allegedly "doesn't work the way it used to."

Another animated series was also back in the news recently for predicting the crisis between Russia and Ukraine. Fox's long-running series "The Simpsons" anticipated the Russian invasion during a 1998 episode titled "Simpson Tide" in which Homer Simpson unwittingly prompts a similar crisis.

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