Donald Trump Knocks Up Satan in Unhinged New ‘South Park’ Episode
NEED TO KNOW
- South Park is giving more insight into its fictional version of Donald Trump and his relationship with Satan
- During the Comedy Central hit’s Wednesday, Sept. 3, episode, the series reveals that Satan is pregnant with the president’s child
- Previous episodes in the show’s 27th season have taken shots at the Trump White House and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem
South Park‘s latest episode tackles toy trends, tariffs and an apparent presidential pregnancy as President Donald Trump‘s ongoing relationship with Satan progresses in an unexpected way.
In the Wednesday, Sept. 3 episode of Trey Parker and Matt Stone’s long-running comedy series — which now marks the fourth episode in its 27th season — Satan discovers that he is pregnant with the president’s baby amid the pair’s already established secret romance.
While the episode largely follows the character of Butters trying to impress a girl, Red, with an ultra-rare Labubu doll on her birthday, it ends with the shocking baby news when fictional Fox News media personalities question if the cartoon Trump had been “f—— Satan” all along.
“You all want to know the truth? Yes, we’re together,” Satan admits of himself and animated Trump to the residents of South Park, including Jesus Christ.
“We’ve been together for months,” Satan adds. “And I want to leave him, but I can’t. Because I’m pregnant.”
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After Satan reveals he’s now “forced to stay in this situation for several years,” he takes his lover’s hand and the fictional media frenzy continues.
South Park‘s Fox News “science expert” later confirms how “demonic pregnancies” work (calling the child a “butt baby”) and conservative media personalities rejoice.
“Fox News can confirm, Donald Trump has been f—— Satan this whole time,” they declare, as they pop champagne, the Fox & Friends crew cheers and another program airs an exclusive with an enthusiastic depiction of Kid Rock.
The episode, titled “Wok Is Dead,” largely follows the students of South Park Elementary as they’re overcome with Labubu fever.
The story itself begins with students fighting each other in hallways as they compare their collections of the trendy blind box toy, which in South Park can be purchased in a revamped version of the fictional Colorado town’s City Wok restaurant. So after Red tells Butters she wants a specific Labubu for her birthday, he gets to shopping.
That’s when the reality of tariffs sets in for Butters, as he has to grapple with the stress of claw machines and over-priced toys to get Red what she wants.
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On the Trump end of things, the fictionalized Fox News begins to question animated Trump’s relationship with Satan early in the episode after noticing the first lady being absent from the White House. While departing Air Force One with his romantic interest, South Park‘s Trump is asked directly by reporters if he has been “f—— Satan,” which he denies.
“We’re just, sort of, hanging out,” Satan says.
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As the students of South Park Elementary continue to be enamored by Labubus — which in the episode ends up having “demonic” abilities — Satan himself has to grapple with the reality of his pregnancy. He contemplatively sits at the recently revamped White House Rose Garden, which the real-life Trump had paved over to form a patio area this past summer, and reveals to a miniature version of Vice President JD Vance that he wishes “to be gone from this place.”
“I am forced to stay by the dark tides of destiny,” Satan says of his secret. “I wanted to leave months ago, but I cannot.”
The story comes together at the end of the episode, when Red and her friends show off the “super rare” Labubu in a TikTok — essentially summoning Satan and Trump as the Labubu begins to levitate. From there, Fox News shows up in South Park to cover the story and Satan reveals his secret pregnancy to the world.
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Beyond exploring Trump’s relationship with Lucifer, the latest season of South Park has brought back beloved character Towelie, spoofed ICE raids and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and poked fun at tech giants visiting the White House. Following the season’s premiere, Trump’s real-life White House claimed that the show “hasn’t been relevant for over 20 years,” while series co-creator Parker issued a response of his own to the Trump administration at San Diego’s Comic-Con International in July: “We’re terribly sorry.”
South Park airs every other Wednesdays at 10 p.m. ET/PT on Comedy Central and streams next day on Paramount+.
Credit to Nypost AND Peoples