MrRant 0 Report post Posted September 4, 2003 By Steve Gorman LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Stan, Kyle and the rest of the potty-mouthed, pint-sized gang on cable network Comedy Central's animated hit "South Park" may soon be staying up past their bedtimes on broadcast television. The Viacom Inc.-owned cable network and the creators of its signature show, Trey Parker and Matt Stone, have struck a deal with distributor Debmar Studios to sell reruns of the show into syndication on late-night TV. Financial terms of the deal, announced on Tuesday, were not disclosed. But Hollywood trade paper Daily Variety said potential earnings from "South Park" during its first four years in syndication could reach $100 million, making it the highest-grossing series to come off cable. The subversive cartoon comedy, which this season drew the writing talents of "All in the Family" creator Norman Lear, would be one of the first scripted shows to make its way into daily broadcast syndication from the world of basic cable. Debmar president Mort Marcus, a former TV executive at Walt Disney Co., acknowledged that the main hurdle he faces in selling "South Park" is possible hesitancy over the four-letter words that flow from the mouths of the show's crudely drawn grade-school protagonists. Eight or nine episodes probably contain a profanity quotient that is too high for syndication, he said. But the rest of more than 100 episodes available for sale are "perfectly suitable for broadcast, and where there's a bad word, we're going to clean it up," he said. BLEEP, BLEEP Comedy Central spokesman Tony Fox said the cable network itself routinely bleeps out the hard-core four-letter words. Lesser vulgarity like "damn" and "ass" have already crept into the lexicon of prime-time network TV and are not expected to pose a problem for late-night syndication. In any event, viewers should not look forward to anything like the profanity that figured prominently in the 1999 big-screen musical adaptation, "South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut," which featured such songs as "Uncle Fukka" and "Kyle's Mom's a Bitch." "Any episode that is similar to that we would pull out of the mix," said Marcus, former president of Disney's Buena Vista Television. He added that broadcast standards overall have loosened up considerably since "South Park" caused a stir with its foul-talking young characters six years ago. "In 1997, we were blown away by the rawness of it, but if you watch it today, I don't think you'd feel that way," he said. "The bar's been lowered pretty substantially." Marcus and Comedy Central executives are touting the show's potent ratings among young adult males, an especially key demographic among late night viewers. "South Park" has remained the highest-rated show on Comedy Central since its debut in August 1997, averaging nearly 3 million viewers in its current season. A recently commissioned Nielsen Media Research study found that the show consistently finished No. 1 against broadcast competition in most of the top 20 TV markets, including New York and Los Angeles, in the battle for male viewers aged 18 to 34. Built around the misadventures of four elementary school kids -- Stan, Kyle, Cartman and accident-prone Kenny -- the series logged its 100th episode in April, a rare milestone on cable, where few original programs have run long enough or become popular enough to be viable in syndication. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Mole 0 Report post Posted September 4, 2003 "In 1997, we were blown away by the rawness of it, but if you watch it today, I don't think you'd feel that way," he said. "The bar's been lowered pretty substantially." That is sooo true. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
the max 0 Report post Posted September 4, 2003 Maybe SpikeLee TV will pick it up. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Zetterberg is God 0 Report post Posted September 4, 2003 Well here in Canada Global TV has been showing old episodes late at night for years so this is nothing new for us Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JasonX 0 Report post Posted September 4, 2003 Assuming that only those episodes involving large amounts of foul language will be the criteria for shows being kepted out of syndication, which ones will get pulled? The Shit-Episode is the only one I can think of right off the top of my head.... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ripper 0 Report post Posted September 4, 2003 Yeah, cause people shitting from their mouths and Christopher Reeves breaking open dead fetuses to drink stem cells from the back of their neck has NOTHING on the shit episode. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Choken One Report post Posted September 4, 2003 Just keep it on C.C The show was cute at first but it got over bearing and old QUICK. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest TheZsaszHorsemen Report post Posted September 4, 2003 The show has been better now then it was in it's first two years. Now it's like The Simpsons but it deals with issues that are more controversial and does it with no tact Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
razazteca 0 Report post Posted September 5, 2003 It hits the fan, NAMBLA, Free Hat, the fetus episode are the ones I can see never getting the rerun shown on tv. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
kkktookmybabyaway 0 Report post Posted September 5, 2003 Now what was so bad about the National Association of Marlon Brando Look-alikes?... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
DrVenkman PhD 0 Report post Posted September 5, 2003 I feel less special as a Canadian now that it's going into US syndication. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites