This article is within the scope of WikiProject Animation, a collaborative effort to build an encyclopedic guide to
animation on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, you can
the article attached to this page, help out with the
open tasks, or contribute to the
discussion.AnimationWikipedia:WikiProject AnimationTemplate:WikiProject AnimationAnimation articles
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Comedy, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of
comedy on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
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This article is within the scope of WikiProject Science Fiction, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of
science fiction on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
the discussion and see a list of open tasks.Science FictionWikipedia:WikiProject Science FictionTemplate:WikiProject Science Fictionscience fiction articles
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television programs. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page where you can
join the discussion.
To improve this article, please refer to the
style guidelines for the type of work.TelevisionWikipedia:WikiProject TelevisionTemplate:WikiProject Televisiontelevision articles
This article is within the scope of WikiProject United States, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of topics relating to the
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This is a reference to popular science fiction works such as Star Trek in which each alien species seems to exist on a world without (or at least extremely limited) additional animal life. For example, Alien species such as the Vulcans, Klingons, and Romulans all come from worlds named exclusively after themselves.
Klingon's are in fact from
Qo'noS. Other life forms on that world include kolar beasts, lingta, Sark, targs, and t'gla.
Sounds from the game DooM are used in this episode (the door open and close sound)
Sounds from the DOOM games are used in a lot of media(especially that of the DOOM 2 final boss firing). It's kind of irrelevant. --Anarchy_Balsac
It's not really from Doom but from the old Sound General Series 1000 sound effects libraries. id software didn't really make any of the sounds from scratch so nope.
CheapAlert 05:32, 4 October 2006 (UTC)reply
Well, that just strengthens my case that the trivia "fact" shouldn't be there. --Anarchy_Balsac
"Jargon" scene cut
Actually, no. I saw them sucking each other's "jargons" on Comedy Central. --
66.218.13.155 04:07, 16 October 2006 (UTC)reply
Pardon?
No, it's pronounced Jagon, a huge penis on their shoulders. (
See this). Jagon has no r pronouncing.
Simpson's
Does it really count as "Simpson's already did it if the episode aired months before the Simpson's video game came out? —The preceding
unsigned comment was added by
130.85.241.76 (
talk) 17:03, 14 December 2006 (UTC).reply
I added that little nugget to the article, and will grant it's a little on the lame side. It takes months, if not years to develop a video game. Compared to the days that Matt and Trey need to put together an episode, I'm pretty sure the Simpson's plot was already laid out before this one. However, even if the Southpark episode was "first", I thought it was at least another link between the two shows as was illustrated in the Southpark episode
The Simpsons Already Did It. This is as much as I'm willing to defend my addition. Feel free to remove it if you think it's dumb/inaccurate. Now if Bart Simpson had tried to replace the chocolate candy filling with mayonnaise...
Hoof Hearted 14:02, 18 December 2006 (UTC)reply
starving marvin reference
Do the South park kids make a south park reference when they say it is their second time in space? -
QX100 3:04 31 March, 2007 (UTC)
I think so. And Cartman references his other anal probe adventures when he says it's his fifth time.
Hoof Hearted 15:45, 2 April 2007 (UTC)reply
Trivia vs Pop Culture
I deleted the 'too much trivia' tag (maybe a bit hastily) because I don't think that references to pop culture is the same as trivia. I think we should clarify it now, though, instead of just deleting it and replacing it back and forth. For me, I think it's different because while trivia is just a list of bits and pieces of the episodes one may have missed, references to pop culture is stuff you wouldn't know unless you've heard of the references, and it's not exactly 'facts' that can be worked into the article. So really the only options would be to leave them in their own section, or delete them. And deleting them is no good because wikipedia is the site a lot of people go to to read about these things that they'd otherwise never know about- it's what makes the episodes articles interesting.
Since there's no policy on wikipedia about cutting down on references to pop culture, and it'd be almost impossible to work such things into the plot synopsis (without making it extremely awkward, anyway), I think they should be left in their own section. And as long as that's the case, why have that annoying (and IMO wrongly placed) trivia tag?
Just to add to that, if anything, it should be the "Miscellaneous" section that should be tagged as trivia, not the "References to Popular Culture."
Columbo2 23:12, 7 June 2007 (UTC)reply
I've no idea what
Columbo2 means, if something can't be cited then it leaves the article. You can cite "cultural references" with interviews in magazines, DVD commentary etc. And trivia, miscellaneous and "cultural references" are all the same thing, little bits of the plot that have been expanded greatly for no apparent reason.
Alastairward (
talk) 17:09, 16 August 2008 (UTC)reply
space
kyle says this is only their 2nd time in space. wat was there fist?
Д narchistPig 03:52, 30 September 2007 (UTC)reply
kyle goes into space in episode 1 season 1 —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
222.154.153.196 (
talk) 21:50, 13 January 2008 (UTC)reply
Uncited material
Cite the following and it can be returned to the main article;
Jeff's method of figuring out puzzles seems to resemble the one utilized by
Nicolas Cage in
National Treasure, which came out the same year that this episode was aired.
- Actually, I believe that Jeff's figuring out clues through random words with regards to alien activity is directly related to his role in the movie "Independence Day" where Jeff's character associates "catching a cold" with uploading a virus to the alien's computers to knock out their defense shields. —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
209.163.183.227 (
talk) 18:56, 13 October 2008 (UTC)reply
The sound of the power shutting down when Jeff tries to reverse the polarity is the sound of opening and closing doors from the game Doom.
The alien chase scene in the first act parodies the archetypal chase scene in The Dukes of Hazzard, including the
freeze frame narration that would occur before fading to commercial. A
caricature of
Boss Hogg can be seen on a billboard during the chase scene, with the words “Eat Big Pig's BBQ.” The alien giving chase also impersonates the cackling laugh of
Sheriff Rosco P. Coltrane.
The aliens’ car is a 1997 – 2005
Buick Century, complete with a mock Buick emblem.
The Saddam Hussein form the shapeshifting alien takes on and the song he sings is a parody of the classic 1955
Warner Bros. cartoon One Froggy Evening.
The plot where aliens are using earth as a reality TV show and decide to destroy it in the season finale was previously done in
Robert Rankin’s Armageddon.
Jeff claims during one of his Word Association bouts that sixty is the number of episodes they made of Punky Brewster before it was canceled (actually there were
88).
The opening of the decrypted alien reality-TV show resembles the initial opening of Star Trek: The Next Generation, that was only used during the first and second season.
The episode makes reference to
Klingons from
Star Trek when it mentions the TV show Get Me Out of Here, I'm a Klingnanian.
The children wake up aboard the alien ship, sealed into cubicles with a slimy substance. This is a reference to Fire in the Sky and the
Alien movies. However, Cartman initially believes that he is stuck inside
Helen Hunt’s ass.
The scientist, named Jeff, trying to help the boys and Chef looks like a South Park version of
Jeff Goldblum. The last name on character's name tag on his lab coat even appears to read "Dr. Goldblum", although it is not clear enough to be totally certain. In a reference to Independence Day, when puzzling out alien technology and action, Jeff Goldblum’s character follows unlikely chains of thought to come to conclusions that, curiously, turn out to be exactly correct. Other Independence Day references is Chef’s yelling at the visitors, much like
Will Smith’s character does after the aliens crash their ship and in the plot point about uploading a virus to the alien ships, which is pointed out to be ridiculous by Chef.
The clip where people are running scared across a bridge is from the Danish monster horror movie Reptilicus.
The television program is based on the slotscene of
The Truman Show
The idea of the episode is from the episode "
Free Hat", in which Trey Parker and Matt Stone poke fun at the idea of remaking the first episode, to see how much things have changed in terms of the animation of the show.
The planet
Marklar from “
Starvin’ Marvin in Space” is mentioned by the Joozians as a source of subjects for their next show, along with the
Horsehead Nebula, which is mentioned in “The Biggest Douche in the Universe” as one of the “biggest douche nominees” is from there. There is also a reference to the
Gelgameks who were seen in “
Red Hot Catholic Love.”
When the boys first realize they are in space, Stan comments, "This is only the second time we've ever been in outer space." This references the episode "
Starvin' Marvin in Space", where the boys went to outer space along with
Starvin' Marvin. Cartman follows this up with, "This is like my fifth time", referring to his two abductions in "
Cartman Gets an Anal Probe" and possibly the one recounted at the beginning of this episode.
The first scene is reprised in virtually identical fashion as “Cartman Gets an Anal Probe” until the boys realize they’re stuck in a “repeat.” There is at least one change, however. In the original episode, when Ike is about to be kicked by Kyle, he says, "Don’t kick the baby." In Cancelled, he says, "
Don’t kick the ''goddamn'' baby!." Also, instead of babbling, Ike says, “Suck my balls.” Also, the way Kyle hits Cartman with Ike is changed, in "Anal Probe", Kyle spins 360 degrees to hit Cartman. In "Cancelled", he hits him by turning only 90 degrees. Also, in "Cancelled", the boys share a laugh right before Cartman gets hit by Kyle when Cartman calls Ike a long stream of insults, while in "Anal Probe" they laugh after Kenny explains what a dildo is. Cartman then remarks "yeah, that's what Kyle's little brother is all right!", which causes Kyle to hit him.
There are several inconsistencies between the episodes "Cancelled" and "Cartman Gets an Anal Probe". In "Cancelled", Kyle remarks that Cartman didn't get much sleep last night. In the first episode, it is Stan that says this. Also, right before Stan realizes that the events are repeating themselves, he says the line, "Visitors are real. They—" However, Stan never said the word "they" in the original scene. If the line after the original was to be believed, Stan would have said in this episode, "They abduct people and mutilate cows." This line was said by Kyle in the original episode.
Some of the characters seen in the background are; the host from "The Biggest Douche In The Universe contest, the alien from the opening scene in "
Spooky Fish", Several contestants from "
The Biggest Douche in The Universe."
As they[the boys] enter the Fognl studio, slips can be seen playing on the various monitors in the background.
The “Joozians” who run the universe’s media are parodies of
Jews and the charge that Jews secretly run the media; they are shown with a stereotypically Jewish appearance (such as their very large
noses), speak with an exaggerated
Bronx accent, and also use words that sound like
Hebrew. When Kyle (who is Jewish) samples some of their food and likes it, the aliens claim that he seems to have “Joozian ancestry”; Cartman sarcastically replies, “Tell us about it.” Their symbol is a seven-pointed star reminiscent of the
Star of David.
The “Joozians” state that a show should never go past 100 episodes, because it then starts to contain "ridiculous plot lines and settings." This is followed by a pause. This is a joke because this is the 100th episode aired, and features a generally absurd plot.
If you can verify it by looking at the materials described, you don't need additional citations. –
OrangeDog (
talk •
edits) 01:34, 27 January 2009 (UTC)reply
You want citations for things like this? -> "Jeff claims during one of his Word Association bouts that sixty is the number of episodes they made of Punky Brewster before it was canceled (actually there were
88)" I don't get it. --
217.230.247.43 (
talk) 21:53, 9 June 2009 (UTC)reply
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Animation, a collaborative effort to build an encyclopedic guide to
animation on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, you can
the article attached to this page, help out with the
open tasks, or contribute to the
discussion.AnimationWikipedia:WikiProject AnimationTemplate:WikiProject AnimationAnimation articles
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Comedy, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of
comedy on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
the discussion and see a list of open tasks.ComedyWikipedia:WikiProject ComedyTemplate:WikiProject ComedyComedy articles
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Science Fiction, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of
science fiction on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
the discussion and see a list of open tasks.Science FictionWikipedia:WikiProject Science FictionTemplate:WikiProject Science Fictionscience fiction articles
This article is within the scope of WikiProject South Park, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of articles related to South Park on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join
the discussion and see a list of open tasks.South ParkWikipedia:WikiProject South ParkTemplate:WikiProject South ParkSouth Park articles
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Television, a collaborative effort to develop and improve Wikipedia articles about
television programs. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page where you can
join the discussion.
To improve this article, please refer to the
style guidelines for the type of work.TelevisionWikipedia:WikiProject TelevisionTemplate:WikiProject Televisiontelevision articles
This article is within the scope of WikiProject United States, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of topics relating to the
United States of America on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the ongoing discussions.
This is a reference to popular science fiction works such as Star Trek in which each alien species seems to exist on a world without (or at least extremely limited) additional animal life. For example, Alien species such as the Vulcans, Klingons, and Romulans all come from worlds named exclusively after themselves.
Klingon's are in fact from
Qo'noS. Other life forms on that world include kolar beasts, lingta, Sark, targs, and t'gla.
Sounds from the game DooM are used in this episode (the door open and close sound)
Sounds from the DOOM games are used in a lot of media(especially that of the DOOM 2 final boss firing). It's kind of irrelevant. --Anarchy_Balsac
It's not really from Doom but from the old Sound General Series 1000 sound effects libraries. id software didn't really make any of the sounds from scratch so nope.
CheapAlert 05:32, 4 October 2006 (UTC)reply
Well, that just strengthens my case that the trivia "fact" shouldn't be there. --Anarchy_Balsac
"Jargon" scene cut
Actually, no. I saw them sucking each other's "jargons" on Comedy Central. --
66.218.13.155 04:07, 16 October 2006 (UTC)reply
Pardon?
No, it's pronounced Jagon, a huge penis on their shoulders. (
See this). Jagon has no r pronouncing.
Simpson's
Does it really count as "Simpson's already did it if the episode aired months before the Simpson's video game came out? —The preceding
unsigned comment was added by
130.85.241.76 (
talk) 17:03, 14 December 2006 (UTC).reply
I added that little nugget to the article, and will grant it's a little on the lame side. It takes months, if not years to develop a video game. Compared to the days that Matt and Trey need to put together an episode, I'm pretty sure the Simpson's plot was already laid out before this one. However, even if the Southpark episode was "first", I thought it was at least another link between the two shows as was illustrated in the Southpark episode
The Simpsons Already Did It. This is as much as I'm willing to defend my addition. Feel free to remove it if you think it's dumb/inaccurate. Now if Bart Simpson had tried to replace the chocolate candy filling with mayonnaise...
Hoof Hearted 14:02, 18 December 2006 (UTC)reply
starving marvin reference
Do the South park kids make a south park reference when they say it is their second time in space? -
QX100 3:04 31 March, 2007 (UTC)
I think so. And Cartman references his other anal probe adventures when he says it's his fifth time.
Hoof Hearted 15:45, 2 April 2007 (UTC)reply
Trivia vs Pop Culture
I deleted the 'too much trivia' tag (maybe a bit hastily) because I don't think that references to pop culture is the same as trivia. I think we should clarify it now, though, instead of just deleting it and replacing it back and forth. For me, I think it's different because while trivia is just a list of bits and pieces of the episodes one may have missed, references to pop culture is stuff you wouldn't know unless you've heard of the references, and it's not exactly 'facts' that can be worked into the article. So really the only options would be to leave them in their own section, or delete them. And deleting them is no good because wikipedia is the site a lot of people go to to read about these things that they'd otherwise never know about- it's what makes the episodes articles interesting.
Since there's no policy on wikipedia about cutting down on references to pop culture, and it'd be almost impossible to work such things into the plot synopsis (without making it extremely awkward, anyway), I think they should be left in their own section. And as long as that's the case, why have that annoying (and IMO wrongly placed) trivia tag?
Just to add to that, if anything, it should be the "Miscellaneous" section that should be tagged as trivia, not the "References to Popular Culture."
Columbo2 23:12, 7 June 2007 (UTC)reply
I've no idea what
Columbo2 means, if something can't be cited then it leaves the article. You can cite "cultural references" with interviews in magazines, DVD commentary etc. And trivia, miscellaneous and "cultural references" are all the same thing, little bits of the plot that have been expanded greatly for no apparent reason.
Alastairward (
talk) 17:09, 16 August 2008 (UTC)reply
space
kyle says this is only their 2nd time in space. wat was there fist?
Д narchistPig 03:52, 30 September 2007 (UTC)reply
kyle goes into space in episode 1 season 1 —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
222.154.153.196 (
talk) 21:50, 13 January 2008 (UTC)reply
Uncited material
Cite the following and it can be returned to the main article;
Jeff's method of figuring out puzzles seems to resemble the one utilized by
Nicolas Cage in
National Treasure, which came out the same year that this episode was aired.
- Actually, I believe that Jeff's figuring out clues through random words with regards to alien activity is directly related to his role in the movie "Independence Day" where Jeff's character associates "catching a cold" with uploading a virus to the alien's computers to knock out their defense shields. —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
209.163.183.227 (
talk) 18:56, 13 October 2008 (UTC)reply
The sound of the power shutting down when Jeff tries to reverse the polarity is the sound of opening and closing doors from the game Doom.
The alien chase scene in the first act parodies the archetypal chase scene in The Dukes of Hazzard, including the
freeze frame narration that would occur before fading to commercial. A
caricature of
Boss Hogg can be seen on a billboard during the chase scene, with the words “Eat Big Pig's BBQ.” The alien giving chase also impersonates the cackling laugh of
Sheriff Rosco P. Coltrane.
The aliens’ car is a 1997 – 2005
Buick Century, complete with a mock Buick emblem.
The Saddam Hussein form the shapeshifting alien takes on and the song he sings is a parody of the classic 1955
Warner Bros. cartoon One Froggy Evening.
The plot where aliens are using earth as a reality TV show and decide to destroy it in the season finale was previously done in
Robert Rankin’s Armageddon.
Jeff claims during one of his Word Association bouts that sixty is the number of episodes they made of Punky Brewster before it was canceled (actually there were
88).
The opening of the decrypted alien reality-TV show resembles the initial opening of Star Trek: The Next Generation, that was only used during the first and second season.
The episode makes reference to
Klingons from
Star Trek when it mentions the TV show Get Me Out of Here, I'm a Klingnanian.
The children wake up aboard the alien ship, sealed into cubicles with a slimy substance. This is a reference to Fire in the Sky and the
Alien movies. However, Cartman initially believes that he is stuck inside
Helen Hunt’s ass.
The scientist, named Jeff, trying to help the boys and Chef looks like a South Park version of
Jeff Goldblum. The last name on character's name tag on his lab coat even appears to read "Dr. Goldblum", although it is not clear enough to be totally certain. In a reference to Independence Day, when puzzling out alien technology and action, Jeff Goldblum’s character follows unlikely chains of thought to come to conclusions that, curiously, turn out to be exactly correct. Other Independence Day references is Chef’s yelling at the visitors, much like
Will Smith’s character does after the aliens crash their ship and in the plot point about uploading a virus to the alien ships, which is pointed out to be ridiculous by Chef.
The clip where people are running scared across a bridge is from the Danish monster horror movie Reptilicus.
The television program is based on the slotscene of
The Truman Show
The idea of the episode is from the episode "
Free Hat", in which Trey Parker and Matt Stone poke fun at the idea of remaking the first episode, to see how much things have changed in terms of the animation of the show.
The planet
Marklar from “
Starvin’ Marvin in Space” is mentioned by the Joozians as a source of subjects for their next show, along with the
Horsehead Nebula, which is mentioned in “The Biggest Douche in the Universe” as one of the “biggest douche nominees” is from there. There is also a reference to the
Gelgameks who were seen in “
Red Hot Catholic Love.”
When the boys first realize they are in space, Stan comments, "This is only the second time we've ever been in outer space." This references the episode "
Starvin' Marvin in Space", where the boys went to outer space along with
Starvin' Marvin. Cartman follows this up with, "This is like my fifth time", referring to his two abductions in "
Cartman Gets an Anal Probe" and possibly the one recounted at the beginning of this episode.
The first scene is reprised in virtually identical fashion as “Cartman Gets an Anal Probe” until the boys realize they’re stuck in a “repeat.” There is at least one change, however. In the original episode, when Ike is about to be kicked by Kyle, he says, "Don’t kick the baby." In Cancelled, he says, "
Don’t kick the ''goddamn'' baby!." Also, instead of babbling, Ike says, “Suck my balls.” Also, the way Kyle hits Cartman with Ike is changed, in "Anal Probe", Kyle spins 360 degrees to hit Cartman. In "Cancelled", he hits him by turning only 90 degrees. Also, in "Cancelled", the boys share a laugh right before Cartman gets hit by Kyle when Cartman calls Ike a long stream of insults, while in "Anal Probe" they laugh after Kenny explains what a dildo is. Cartman then remarks "yeah, that's what Kyle's little brother is all right!", which causes Kyle to hit him.
There are several inconsistencies between the episodes "Cancelled" and "Cartman Gets an Anal Probe". In "Cancelled", Kyle remarks that Cartman didn't get much sleep last night. In the first episode, it is Stan that says this. Also, right before Stan realizes that the events are repeating themselves, he says the line, "Visitors are real. They—" However, Stan never said the word "they" in the original scene. If the line after the original was to be believed, Stan would have said in this episode, "They abduct people and mutilate cows." This line was said by Kyle in the original episode.
Some of the characters seen in the background are; the host from "The Biggest Douche In The Universe contest, the alien from the opening scene in "
Spooky Fish", Several contestants from "
The Biggest Douche in The Universe."
As they[the boys] enter the Fognl studio, slips can be seen playing on the various monitors in the background.
The “Joozians” who run the universe’s media are parodies of
Jews and the charge that Jews secretly run the media; they are shown with a stereotypically Jewish appearance (such as their very large
noses), speak with an exaggerated
Bronx accent, and also use words that sound like
Hebrew. When Kyle (who is Jewish) samples some of their food and likes it, the aliens claim that he seems to have “Joozian ancestry”; Cartman sarcastically replies, “Tell us about it.” Their symbol is a seven-pointed star reminiscent of the
Star of David.
The “Joozians” state that a show should never go past 100 episodes, because it then starts to contain "ridiculous plot lines and settings." This is followed by a pause. This is a joke because this is the 100th episode aired, and features a generally absurd plot.
If you can verify it by looking at the materials described, you don't need additional citations. –
OrangeDog (
talk •
edits) 01:34, 27 January 2009 (UTC)reply
You want citations for things like this? -> "Jeff claims during one of his Word Association bouts that sixty is the number of episodes they made of Punky Brewster before it was canceled (actually there were
88)" I don't get it. --
217.230.247.43 (
talk) 21:53, 9 June 2009 (UTC)reply