Tuesday, February 17, 2026

South Park Creators Keep Mocking Trump’s Manhood Despite Earlier Apology

South Park isn’t backing down. Trey Parker and Matt Stone just dropped another bombshell episode targeting President Donald Trump’s manhood. Even after issuing an apology earlier this season, the creators doubled down with scenes so explicit they shocked audiences and reignited a political firestorm.

Brutal White House Mockery

The August 20 episode, titled Sickofancy, made Trump’s manhood the center of its humor. In one jaw-dropping scene, a delegate from Qatar nervously told Trump, “You do not have a small penis,” right inside the Oval Office. The moment was played for both shock and discomfort, setting the tone for what came next. The president was then shown alone in his bedroom, stripping down completely nude before climbing into bed beside Satan. The unsettling imagery pushed the boundaries even by South Park’s standards. Later in the episode, Towelie wandered around Washington, D.C., spotting sculptures of Trump with a small manhood in public spaces. One statue even replaced Abraham Lincoln’s at the Lincoln Memorial, creating one of the season’s most outrageous visual gags.

The episode also tied Trump’s mockery into a wider storyline. Randy Marsh’s marijuana business faced collapse after ICE raids targeted his Mexican employees. Desperate to keep the business afloat, Randy turned to ChatGPT, rebranding the company as Techridy while experimenting with micro-dosing ketamine. The subplot added another layer of chaos while the Trump jokes dominated headlines.

What made the moment so explosive was that Parker had already apologized for similar content just weeks earlier. The Season 27 premiere had shown a naked Trump in bed with Satan, sparking backlash and leading Parker to issue a half-sincere apology at Comic-Con. His words were, “We’re terribly sorry,” delivered with a long, deadpan stare that fueled debate over whether he truly meant it.

White House Slams Back

The controversy quickly drew a sharp response from the White House. After the Season 27 premiere, spokesperson Taylor Rogers blasted the show in a furious statement. He dismissed South Park as “irrelevant” and accused the creators of using “uninspired ideas in a desperate attempt for attention.” He claimed the president had accomplished more in six months than any leader in history. The statement concluded that no “fourth-rate show” could derail Trump’s momentum.

Parker revealed at Comic-Con that producers had even pressured him to censor the scene. They suggested blurring the explicit imagery, but he refused, saying, “No you’re not gonna blur the penis.” Stone added that they debated for days whether putting eyes on the penis would turn it into a character. His comment highlighted just how far the creative team pushed boundaries to get their vision onscreen.

The exchange revealed the strange clash between television comedy and presidential politics. A show that has thrived on offending everyone now found itself locked in a direct fight with the administration. For South Park, it was another season of pushing lines. For the White House, it was another round of defiance against what they called desperate media attacks.

Record Ratings and Relentless Attacks

Despite the backlash, the numbers tell a different story. South Park’s 27th season is enjoying its highest ratings since the 1990s. The premiere episode pulled in a massive 5.9 million viewers, a 68 percent increase over last season. That kind of growth is rare for a series that has been running for nearly three decades. Viewers are clearly tuning in to see just how far Parker and Stone will go.

This season has made Trump the main target, but he’s not alone. Vice President JD Vance, Homeland Security Secretary Karoline Leavitt, and Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt have all been skewered. The show’s relentless style has made sure every political figure in its crosshairs feels the sting. Fans say this is the exact brand of biting satire they expect from South Park.

The White House isn’t letting up either. Rogers blasted the show again in an interview with Rolling Stone, calling the creators hypocritical and labeling their popularity as undeserved. He accused “the Left” of celebrating offensive comedy only when it suits them. He repeated his claim that Trump’s accomplishments far outweigh the show’s criticism. For Parker and Stone, the fight has only fueled interest in the series. For Trump’s team, the feud has become proof of what they call media desperation.