South Park - Season 16 ((exclusive)) Jun 2026

While the entire season is worth watching, several episodes from have entered the pantheon of "instant classics."

The season is split into two halves, each tackling different cultural obsessions: A Brief Retrospective of South Park (Seasons 16-23) South Park - Season 16

This is the heavy-hitter of the season. Butterballs deals with bullying—specifically, the viral nature of anti-bullying campaigns. Butters is relentlessly bullied, but when he tries to stand up for himself by making an anti-bullying music video, the attention goes to his head and he becomes a sanctimonious jerk. Simultaneously, Stan’s Grandpa Marvin is dealing with elder abuse at a nursing home. The episode flips the script on the "It Gets Better" project, arguing that awareness campaigns often serve the egos of the participants rather than the victims. The song "Stop Bullying Me" is painfully catchy, and the finale, where Kyle realizes even he bullies his brother Ike, is brutally honest. While the entire season is worth watching, several

A pseudo-sequel to "Tweek x Craig," this episode celebrates the return of the goth kids. Cartman plays matchmaker to get two black kids (Token and Nichole) together to prove he "isn't racist." It backfires horribly. The episode is a surgical takedown of virtue signaling. Cartman doesn’t actually care about race; he cares about looking good. Meanwhile, Cupid Cartman (a returning character) fires arrows of "romantic fluff" that cause spontaneous musical numbers. It is a hilarious exploration of how white liberals sometimes tokenize relationships. A pseudo-sequel to "Tweek x Craig," this episode