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Comedy Central: South Park
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Between 1998 and 2002, Comedy Central produced and televised the annual roasts of the New York Friars' Club. After the original five-year agreement expired, the network instead began making their own roasts in the same spirit.[1] The first, featuring roastee Denis Leary (and produced by Leary's production company, Apostle), aired on August 10, 2003. The roast was the most watched non-South Park program in the channel's history.[2] Besides the Jeff Foxworthy roast in March 2005, a new roast has aired annually in August.
Comedy Central Presents: Southern Gents of Comedy Southerners have their own brand of humor, and this Comedy Central showcase features some of the best funnymen from below the Mason-Dixon Line. Ron White, Vic Henley, Otis Lee Crenshaw and Steve McGrew take the stage in these uncensored and undeniably hilarious stand-up performances. Extras include behind-the-scenes footage and deleted scenes that were too raunchy for the final cut, though all of it's guaranteed to be laugh-out-loud.
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"Working in collaboration with COMEDY CENTRAL and the South Florida Improv Comedy Clubs, we have had tremendous success in introducing new talent gathered from the local comedian contest. The previous two winners have gone on to appear on COMEDY CENTRAL," said Mateu. "We're really excited to be collaborating with 'The Paul & Young Ron Show' to find the next best comic in South Florida."
Don't forget to tune into Comedy Central tonight if you want to catch the Guitar Queer-o episode of South Park, featuring a Guitar Hero obsessed Stan and Kyle. Worth tuning into just for a few seconds worth of Boston pumping through your media center. A very brief preview is available online.
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NEW YORK, March 12, 2007 -- Butters' dad does what any good father would do if he believed his son was bi-curious in an all-new "South Park" entitled, "Cartman Sucks," premiering on Wednesday, March 14 at 10:00 p.m. on COMEDY CENTRAL. When another one of Cartman's pratical jokes puts Butters in a compromising position, his dad is determined to "straighten him out." While Butters is at a special camp trying to "pray the gay away," Cartman realizes the joke is on him. Read this RS snippet for the relevant scene.
The show premiered on Comedy Central on August 13, 1997, inspired by Matt and Trey's infamous short "The Spirit of Christmas." South Park continues to surprise even its most devoted fans each and every week. Known for its unbelievably immediate and ruthless responses to world events, South Park's new episodes bring up-to-the-minute news and pop culture icons to the town of South Park, for social commentary and good old-fashioned ridicule.
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