Trapper Keeper (South Park)

"Trapper Keeper"
South Park episode
Episode no. Season 4
Episode 12
Directed by Trey Parker
Written by Trey Parker
Production code 413
Original air date November 15, 2000
Episode chronology

"Trapper Keeper" is the twelfth episode of the fourth season of the animated television series South Park, and the 60th episode of the series overall. It originally aired on Comedy Central in the United States on November 15, 2000. In the episode, a man from the future wants Cartman's new Trapper Keeper, while Mr. Garrison's kindergarten class holds an election for class president with confusing results. The subplot with the class president election is a parody of the 2000 United States presidential election and the controversy surrounding its outcome.

Plot

Kyle comes to school with a Dawson's Creek Trapper Keeper. He is joined by Cartman who reveals he has a special, advanced Dawson's Creek Trapper Keeper Ultra Keeper Futura S 2000, which has incredibly advanced computerized features including a television, a music player with voice recognition, OnStar and the ability to automatically hybrid itself to any electronic peripheral device. He purchased it to make Kyle envious; around the same time, a mysterious white man going by the pseudonym Bill Cosby appears and begins to ask about Cartman's Trapper Keeper, which the man then attempts to steal. He succeeds by buying Cartman's trust, despite Cartman saying "I'm not supposed to have male friends over 30; I kinda got screwed over on that once." When "Bill Cosby" is caught by Officer Barbrady and Cartman, he explains his actions: the Trapper Keeper binder is destined to gain sentience and hybrid into a supercomputer to conquer the world in the future and wipe out all traces of humanity. Cosby himself is a cyborg from the future named BSM-471, sent back in time to destroy the binder before it could rise to power; Cosby manages to destroy it, but Cartman buys another one and refuses to allow it to be destroyed.

Meanwhile, Mr. Garrison has been demoted to a kindergarten teacher, and his class holds an election for class president. Kyle's brother Ike, who has been admitted to kindergarten two years early because of his intelligence, runs against a boy named Filmore, the result being a tie that would be broken by the vote of a little girl named Flora. Unfortunately, she cannot decide whom to pick. After she picks Ike, the children demand recounts and then involve Rosie O'Donnell, who comes to protest that Filmore (her nephew) has not won. While this is going on, Stan, Kyle and Kenny have gone with their robotic companion to Cartman's house to convince his mother to help them, but she goes off with Bill Cosby to have sex; Cartman's Trapper Keeper, meanwhile, integrates itself into Cartman's computer and most of his belongings, and then absorbs Cartman himself, transforming into a giant, cybernetic blobby monster that retains most of Carman's features. It kills Kenny and destroys the house, and sets off to Cheyenne Mountain to absorb the secret military base's computer, and if so, it will become unstoppable.

Kyle sneaks into the huge Cartman-Trapper Keeper hybrid through a ventilation pipe, but before he can disable it the Trapper Keeper incapacitates him. Soon Rosie O'Donnell appears and yells at the Trapper Keeper for blocking the road. The Trapper Keeper then absorbs her, but infusing with her ultimately makes the behemoth sick. Kyle is freed and disconnects the Trapper Keeper's CPU, and the beast returns to its powerless state. The Trapper Keeper's destruction causes Bill Cosby to disappear and Stan tells Cartman to thank Kyle, who just saved his life. Cartman starts to thank Kyle just as the episode ends, but credits roll before he can finish and cuts him off at "Kyle..." As for the kindergarteners, after countless lawyers come in and legal forms and endless meetings, Filmore concedes because "this game is stupid." With Ike as president, the kids decide to go fingerpaint, much to Mr. Garrison's delight.

Development

Background

The episode is a parody of the controversy surrounding the 2000 United States presidential election on November 7, 2000. State results tallied on election night gave 246 electoral votes to Republican candidate George W. Bush and 255 to Democratic nominee Al Gore, with New Mexico (5), Oregon (7), and Florida (25) too close to call that evening. Mathematically, Florida's 25 electoral votes became the key to an election win, despite the fact that both New Mexico and Oregon were declared in favor of Gore over the next few days. After an intense recount process, Bush officially won Florida's electoral votes and as a result, the entire presidential election. There was a disagreement over who won Florida's 25 electoral votes, the recount that happened there, and the uncommon event that the winner got fewer popular votes than the loser.

Production

Trey Parker wrote the episode.

"Trapper Keeper" was written by South Park co-creator Trey Parker when he, Matt Stone, and a group of friends visited Lake Powell. It is one of the many South Park episodes that parodies a current event.[1] The main plot of the episode involving the Trapper Keeper was written before the election,[1] but the subplot is a parody of the controversy surrounding the election's outcome.[2] "Trapper Keeper" did not originally feature the election storyline, only a subplot about Ike attending his first day of kindergarten.[3]

Parker and Stone said the presidential election controversy was "kids' stuff", and that is what they were trying to show with the episode.[4][5] Stone commented that "it makes perfect sense because everything is just so childish anyway, the way people are acting about the election and the way candidates are. Usually you try to satirize something by taking it to the extreme. But it was actually kind of hard to satirize because it's just so stupid you can't even take it to an extreme."[5][6] Anne Garefino, executive producer of South Park, said that when they applied the presidential election process to kindergarten, it "finally [made] sense."[7] Stone added that the story-line "kind of wrote itself. When you put this same situation in with kindergartners, everyone's actions kind of make a lot more sense."[8]

The voices of the kindergarteners were provided by actual children, including the son of one of the producers on the show. Parker and Stone said they had fun recording the kindergarten scenes, because "instead of adults doing the voices of the kids, it was so funny to hear a little kid actually doing it."[1] The episode was completed at approximately nine in the morning on the day it aired, November 15, 2000, only days after the election was over.[8] Parker and Stone worked with a team of 70 animators and computer engineers to get the episode finished in time.[8]

Cultural references

The main plot of "Trapper Keeper" is a parody of the Terminator films. The episode also features references to 2001: A Space Odyssey[9] and Akira.[10][11] The Trapper Keeper's ability to take on the physical forms of the various things it has consumed is a reference to the eponymous entity in the 1982 version of the movie "The Thing."

The New York Post's Andrea Peyser analyzed the episode's references to the 2000 United States presidential election. She commented that in "Trapper Keeper", the election of class president ends in a deadlock, while in Florida, the election for president was "hopelessly deadlocked."[7] She went on to say that in South Park, the school "rousts a sick kid from his hospital bed" to vote by absentee ballot, and in Florida, "officials roust people from the cemetery to vote by absentee ballot."[7] Peyser added that Rosie O'Donnell appears in "Trapper Keeper" and gathers lawyers, media and her friends to "help settle the race the way she sees fit," while in Florida, O'Donnell, Harvey Weinstein, Gloria Steinem, Bianca Jagger "and all the usual members of the Hollywood nitwit brain trust have signed a petition demanding a revote in Palm Beach County, ensuring the race would go to Gore."[7] One of the kindergarteners is named Flora, referencing the state Florida that was undecided in the election.[1]

Reception

Alan Sepinwall and Matt Zoller Seitz of The Star-Ledger thought it was "terrific, especially the vote for kindergarten class president, and the recount-recount-recount bit."[3] Sepinwall added that he was "pretty amazed myself that the South Park guys were able to put together such a sharp election satire so quickly. I called up Comedy Central and found out that they do all the animation in-house on computers that allow them to work much faster than shows like The Simpsons, which contract out all the animation to firms in Korea that take months to complete an episode."[3] Bill Gibron of DVD Verdict described "Trapper Keeper" as "a clever attack on the entire Florida voting debacle in the 2000 election—the show's take on the entire childish nature of the fighting is fantastic. As a Terminator knock-off 'Trapper Keeper' is a lot of fun. But adding in the political element really increases the deliciously derogatory tone."[12]

DVD Movie Guide's Colin Jacobson characterized "Trapper Keeper" as "a clever riff" on Terminator and the controversy of the 2000 election. He thought both plots "work really well, as the show tosses in lots of cool little moments. [...] It's funny and smart, and a good [episode]."[13] IGN's David Galindo called the episode "great",[14] and Fort Worth Star-Telegram's Lisa Davis named Mr. Garrison line "You're all acting like a bunch of kids!" the "best line of the week".[15]

"Trapper Keeper" originally aired on Comedy Central in the United States on November 15, 2000. Though a rerun of the episode aired in the middle of the night on WPIX because of offensive content, a The Star-Ledger critic did not think it was "that dirty to begin with."[16] The episode was included in the UMD South Park: When Technology Attacks that was released on October 11, 2005 for the PlayStation Portable. Other episodes included in the collection were "Best Friends Forever", "Cancelled", "Simpsons Already Did It", and "Towelie".[14]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Parker, Trey; Stone, Matt (2002). South Park - The Complete Fourth Season: Audio Commentary for Trapper Keeper (CD). Sunset Strategic Marketing; Comedy Central.
  2. "Timely Parody On 'South Park'". The Philadelphia Inquirer. November 15, 2000. p. D11.
  3. 1 2 3 Sepinwall, Alan; Seitz, Matt (November 25, 2000). "Bush league stunt". The Star-Ledger. p. 45.
  4. "Entertainment Briefs". Chicago Sun-Times. November 16, 2000. p. 52.
  5. 1 2 "'South Park' Satirizes Vote". The Stuart News. November 16, 2000. p. A2.
  6. "John spends millions a month just living". The Hawk Eye. November 18, 2000.
  7. 1 2 3 4 Peyser, Andrea (November 17, 2000). "My Fellow Americans: Waaaah! Mine! Mine!". New York Post. p. 004.
  8. 1 2 3 Kaplan, Don (November 15, 2000). "Just In Time - 'South Park' On Fla. Mess". New York Post. p. 087.
  9. Booker, Keith (2006). Drawn to Television - Prime-time Animation from the Flintstones to Family Guy. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 137. ISBN 978-0-313-07615-2.
  10. "Trapper Keeper". IGN. Retrieved 2009-07-30.
  11. "Quantcast South Park episode Parodies Anime". Anime News Network. November 17, 2000. Retrieved 2009-07-30.
  12. Gibron, Bill (July 19, 2004). "South Park: The Complete Fourth Season". DVD Verdict. Retrieved 2009-07-30.
  13. Jacobson, Colin (June 18, 2003). "South Park: The Complete Fourth Season (2000)". DVD Movie Guide. Retrieved 2009-07-30.
  14. 1 2 Galindo, David (October 31, 2005). "South Park: When Technology Attacks!". IGN. Retrieved 2009-07-30.
  15. Davis, Lisa (November 18, 2000). "Buzz!". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. p. 1.
  16. "Ominous signs". The Star-Ledger. September 16, 2005. p. 57.
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