Put a chick in it and make her gay




South Park satirise Disney's Kathleen Kennedy for shoehorning diversity into everything. Put A Chick In It, And Make Her Lame And Gay refers to a catchphrase from a South Park episode titled, "Joining the Panderverse." The line is said by a Cartman-like character representing then- Lucasfilm Kathleen Kennedy. Specifically, Eric Cartman as Kathleen Kennedy informs the Disney board how to make their movies, “Put a chick in it.

Make her lame and gay.” Following the release of the episode, Midnight’s Edge reported on rumors they heard about what the reactions at Disney were like. points • 8 comments - Your daily dose of funny memes, reaction meme pictures, GIFs and videos. We deliver hundreds of new memes daily and much more humor anywhere you go.

Kennedy Cartman: [slams her fist down on table] Put a chick in it, make her gay!

put a chick in it and make her gay

Female Executive: Uh, yes, Mrs. Kennedy, uh some of the execs are just expressing that maybe For years, South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone have been one of the few duos in Hollywood willing to call them as they see them. The long-running series has done a few of these specials in recent years which have covered topics like COVID and even the show itself being stuck in a legal battle between streaming platforms.

But Joining The Panderverse seemed to get the most attention before its release because it dared to call out the ridiculous of lazily flipping characters' races and genders in the name of pandering. Cartman keeps having nightmares that everyone he knows is going to be replaced by racially diverse women. Ones with a habit of constantly talking about the ills of the patriarchy.

Now, why would that be a concern? It's not like that's Hollywood's favorite thing to do or anything. His nightmares come to fruition when he swaps places with a Black, female version of himself from another universe. Are you following? Because this entire plot was designed to do two things. The first was to point out the laziness of multiverse storylines that are a dime a dozen in Hollywood these days.

This inadvertently leads to an alternate universe version of Kennedy — which is essentially Cartman — swapping places with the real Kennedy. Is that a little confusing? While a little dense, the story serves to tee up an opportunity to goof on one of the greatest multiverse offenders: Disney. The episode touches on the continued decline of Disney and places the blame on its habit of pandering to audiences.

Toward the end of the special, Kennedy explains her rationale for this to Cartman. This was one instance where I thought the show may have missed the mark a little. Kennedy says that she started pandering to audiences in a bid to fix the racism and sexism she saw in the world. This, she said, was a reaction to the hate mail she received for swapping characters' genders and races. Hate mail is jokingly attributed to Cartman.

The show argued that this recent trend in pandering is a feedback loop. Well, there had to be a first instance of this brand of pandering for there to be criticism. The pandering had to come first for there to be criticism of it.

The online South Park fandom’s

It had to start as an attempted cash grab or a bid to push progressive ideologies. Take your pick. The show places the blame on both sides of the argument: the people who pander and the people who loathe it. We've seen as of late, they don't make college-educated folks like they used to, and South Park was more than happy to pole fun at this. The B-story involves Randy Marsh trying to fix an oven door. Because of a reliance on technology and 8-years of college spent studying geology, he calls a handyman to fix it.

However, handymen are so in demand because nobody knows how to fix anything. This leads to them becoming exceedingly rich, while the college-educated end up looking for work outside of Home Depot, because they don't have any actual skills. I thought this was the funnier of the two main stories, and even had the stronger social commentary.