

The two-part arc sees the Super Best Friends again, Mecha-Streisand, and Cartman's Mitch Conner, along with yet another depiction of the prophet Muhammed. Cruise agrees to drop the suit, but only if he can meet the prophet Muhammed. "200" and "201" saw celebrities the show had previously mocked return to town, including Tom Cruise, Rob Reiner, Steven Spielberg, Kanye West, Paris Hilton, George Lucas, Mel Gibson, and Barbra Streisand.Ĭruise recruits 200 celebrities to bring a class action lawsuit against South Park for defamation in the banned South Park episode. Like the other three episodes, season 14's "200" and "201" still aired on Comedy Central but were heavily censored. Not sure if theres a particular reason for it. The censored tone has a frequency of exactly 1000hz. Like youre 15: The pitch of a sound is measured in Hertz (frequency). Stone and Parker found themselves in a whirlwind of trouble after the South Park episodes "200" and "201" aired, and they are also South Park episodes not on HBO Max. The censored tone is a pitch-perfect note, at the same note, on each system. Parker and Stone were not happy about the censorship, claiming the network was hypocritical, as most other religions were considered fair game, but Islam was not. That being said, it was more well-known for lampooning Family Guy. "Cartoon Wars Part I & II" garnered a lot of attention for its censorship. While one of South Park's many controversial episodes was in production, Comedy Central still hadn't approved major portions of "Cartoon Wars Part I & II." Therefore, upon its release, Comedy Central aired the episode with a black title card over the Muhammed sequence and is unsurprisingly one of the South Park episodes not on HBO Max. However, South Park creators got into a feud with Comedy Central over depicting Muhammed, so they pushed the episode back. The episode, which aired in 2006, was initially set to be the first episode of the season.

"Cartoon Wars Part I & II" is inspired by the Jyllands-Posten Muhammed cartoons controversy, in which a Danish newspaper published cartoons featuring Muhammed in 2005, sparking protests across the globe and even violence and riots in places like Benghazi.
