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Thing You Didnt Know About South Park Kenny

Fictional character in South Park

Kenny McCormick
South Park grapheme
KennyMcCormick.png
Offset appearance Jesus vs. Frosty (1992) (short)
Created by Trey Parker
Matt Stone
Designed by Trey Parker
Matt Stone
Voiced by Matt Stone
Mike Estimate (Bigger, Longer & Uncut)
Eric Stough (unhooded)
In-universe information
Full name Kenneth McCormick
Aliases
  • Kenny
  • Mysterion
  • El Pollo Loco
  • Lady McCormick
  • Princess Kenny
  • Dr. McCormick
Gender Male
Occupation Educatee, scientist (hereafter)
Family
  • Stuart McCormick (male parent)
  • Carol McCormick (mother)
  • Kevin McCormick (brother)
  • Karen McCormick (sis)
Relatives Gramps McCormick (paternal grandad)
Nationality American
Residence South Park, Colorado, U.Due south.
Died 126 Times (episodes: Kenny Dies ; movies: South Park: Post Covid[i])

Kenneth "Kenny" McCormick [two] is one of the iv main characters in the adult animated tv set series South Park along with Stan Marsh, Kyle Broflovski, and Eric Cartman. His oftentimes muffled and incomprehensible oral communication – the result of his parka hood covering his mouth – is provided by co-creator Matt Stone. He debuted on television when South Park first aired on August 13, 1997, after having first appeared in The Spirit of Christmas shorts created by Stone and long-time collaborator Trey Parker in 1992 (Jesus vs. Frosty) and 1995 (Jesus vs. Santa).

Kenny is a third, afterwards 4th-grade student who normally has extraordinary experiences not typical of conventional small-town life in his hometown of Due south Park, Colorado, where he lives with his poverty-stricken family unit. Kenny is animated by computer to await as he did in the evidence's original method of cutout blitheness. He too appears in the 1999 full-length feature film South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut, in which his truthful appearance and vocalisation were offset revealed, and diverse South Park merchandise.

Kenny has gained a lot of popularity thanks to a running gag almost prevalent during the first five seasons of the series, in which Kenny would suffer an excruciating death before returning live and well in the next episode with little or no explanation. Stan would frequently apply the catchphrase "Oh, my God! They killed Kenny!", followed by Kyle exclaiming "You lot bastards!". Since the show began its sixth season in 2002, the practice of killing Kenny has been seldom used by the show's creators, although he did eventually possess Eric Cartman'due south body for 4 episodes. Diverse episodes have set upwards the gag, sometimes presenting a number of explanations for Kenny's unacknowledged reappearances. In the episode "Mysterion Rises," it is establish that Kenny actually has the superpower of resurrection, claiming that no matter how many times he'south died, he e'er wakes up in his bed the next day wearing his usual clothes. He too states that none of his peers or family unit can remember him dying any. However, in some episodes, the other kids tin can recall Kenny being killed and mention how he died all the time.

Role in S Park [edit]

Kenny attends South Park Simple as part of Mr. Garrison's fourth-grade class. During the first 58 episodes, Kenny and the other main child characters were in the third grade. Kenny comes from a poor household, presided over by his alcoholic, unemployed father, Stuart McCormick. His female parent Carol McCormick has a job washing dishes at the Olive Garden.[3] Kenny has an older brother named Kevin. He besides has a younger sister who is shown with his family unit in the flavour ix episode "Best Friends Forever", but does non reappear until the 15th season episode "The Poor Child", where her name is revealed to be Karen, whom he loves unconditionally. Kenny is friends with Stan, Kyle, Cartman, and Butters. Kenny is regularly teased for living in poverty, particularly by Cartman.[four]

Kenny's superhero alter ego, Mysterion, first appeared in the Flavour xiii episode "The Coon",[five] every bit a rival to Eric Cartman's eponymous superhero alter ego. He unmasks himself at the cease of the episode, but his identity is left intentionally ambiguous to the viewer. He is non revealed to be Kenny until the Season 14 episode "Mysterion Rises", the character's 3rd appearance equally function of a story arc.[6]

Deaths [edit]

Prior to flavor six, Kenny died in almost every episode. The nature of the deaths was oftentimes gruesome and portrayed in a comically cool fashion,[7] and usually followed by Stan and Kyle respectively yelling "Oh, my God! They've killed Kenny!" and "You bastards!"[viii] Shortly afterward, rats would commonly announced and brainstorm picking at his corpse.[ix] In a following episode, Kenny would reappear alive and well, usually without whatsoever caption. Most characters appear oblivious or indifferent to the phenomenon, although occasionally one volition acknowledge awareness of information technology.[10] In "Cherokee Hair Tampons", Kenny gets irritated and offended when Stan laments Kyle'due south critical condition while utterly ignoring Kenny's past demises. Eric Cartman commented on Kenny's deaths in the episode "Cartmanland" when he is being sued for unsafe rides insisting to attorneys representing his family unit that "Kenny? He dies all the fourth dimension!" In "Mr. Hankey, the Christmas Poo", every bit the episode is most to end, the kids signal out that "something feels unfinished", and Kenny celebrates as "The Finish" sign appears; information technology is the first episode in the series he survives.[11]

Near the end of the production run of the show's fifth season, Parker and Rock contemplated having an episode in which Kenny was killed off permanently. The reasoning behind the idea was to genuinely surprise fans, and to allow an opportunity to provide a major part for Butters Stotch, a breakout graphic symbol whose popularity was growing with the viewers and creators of the bear witness. In the episode "Kenny Dies", Kenny dies after developing terminal muscular dystrophy,[13] while Parker and Rock claimed that Kenny would not exist returning in subsequent episodes. The duo insisted they grew tired of upholding the tradition of having Kenny dice in each episode.[14] Stone stated that thinking of humorous ways to impale the character was initially fun, just became more mundane every bit the series progressed.[xiii] When they determined that it would be as well difficult to develop the character because he was too much of a "prop", Parker and Rock finally decided to kill off Kenny permanently.[eight] [15]

["Kenny Dies"] was the one episode where [all the characters] cared [he was dying] for once. Subsequently that, nosotros said, 'Why doesn't he only stay dead?' And it was like, 'Okay, let'southward just do that.' Information technology was that piece of cake of a decision. I call up a lot of people probably haven't noticed. I couldn't care less. I am so sick of that graphic symbol.
—Matt Rock, from a 2002 article in the Knoxville News-Lookout man [13]

For much of season 6, Kenny remained dead, though he still appears to possess Cartman'south body, and both Stone and Parker entertained the idea of somewhen bringing the graphic symbol back.[15] According to Stone, only a small minority of fans were significantly angered by Kenny's absence to threaten a cold-shoulder of the cable aqueduct Comedy Primal, on which South Park is aired.[eight] For most of the season, Stan, Kyle, and Cartman fill the void left by Kenny by allowing the characters Butters Stotch and Tweek Tweak into their group, paving the way for those characters to receive more focus on the show; nevertheless, Kenny returned from the year-long absence in the season half dozen finale "Red Sleigh Downwardly", has remained the main character since, and has been given larger roles in episodes.[xv] [16] [17]

The first explanation given for Kenny'south deaths and reappearances was given in "Cartman Joins NAMBLA", wherein the McCormicks accept a baby exactly like Kenny, including the feature orange parka, shortly after the sometime Kenny dies. Mr. McCormick exclaims, "God, this must be the fiftieth time this has happened", to which Mrs. McCormick quickly replies, "Fifty-2nd". This explanation is expanded upon in the Season 14 episodes "Coon 2: Hindsight", "Mysterion Rises" and "Coon vs. Coon and Friends", in which Kenny, while playing superheroes with his friends, claims his "superpower" is immortality. He actually dies several times during these episodes—even committing suicide more than than once—reawakening alive and unharmed in his bed each time. He is frustrated and angry that no i can retrieve him dying every time he regenerates and longs to know the source of his power, which he views as a expletive. Unbeknownst to him, his parents were previously connected to a Cthulhu-worshipping decease cult. Subsequently Kenny shoots himself the 2d time, Mrs. McCormick awakes with a scream, shrieks "It's happening again!", and minutes later, is shown gently placing a newborn Kenny in his bed. "We should never have gone to that stupid cult meeting," she grouses as she and her husband return to bed.[18] [xix]

In "Put Information technology Down", he is killed off-screen by a driver on his phone, equally his picture is shown among those of kids killed past a commuter on phone texting tribute. In "Bike Parade", Jeff Bezos tells Alexa to kill Kenny, and Cartman hauls his bury while riding his bike in the parade. "The Pandemic Special" sees Kenny being gunned down by the constabulary when they are equipped with armed services weaponry to deal with the children breaking costless from COVID-nineteen quarantine.[20]

In South Park: Mail service Covid, as a millionaire scientist in the time to come finding the cause of COVID-nineteen, McCormick dies due to a time travel experiment that got him a variant named COVID Delta+ Rewards.[i] This death is undone in Due south Park: Mail service Covid: The Return of Covid after Stan, Kyle, and Cartman time travel to the past.[21]

Graphic symbol [edit]

Creation and design [edit]

When developing the character, the show's creators had observed that most groups of babyhood friends in small-scale middle-form towns always included "the one poor kid" and decided to portray Kenny in this calorie-free.[22]

In a 2000 interview, Parker said that Kenny was based on a childhood friend of his who was too named Kenny and wore an orange parka that muffled his vocalism. He likewise was the poorest kid in the neighborhood and often skipped schoolhouse, causing Parker and his friends to jokingly say he died, only for him to return to school later.[23]

An unnamed precursor to Kenny first appeared in the get-go The Spirit of Christmas short, dubbed Jesus vs. Frosty, created by Parker and Stone in 1992 while they were students at the University of Colorado. The character was composed of construction newspaper cutouts and animated through the use of stop move.[24] When tasked three years later by friend Brian Graden to create some other short as a video Christmas card that he could send to friends, Parker and Stone created another similarly-blithe The Spirit of Christmas brusk, dubbed Jesus vs. Santa.[25] [26] In this short, Kenny is given his first name, and first appears as he does in the serial. Kenny side by side appeared on Baronial xiii, 1997, when Southward Park debuted on Comedy Central with the episode "Cartman Gets an Anal Probe".[27]

In tradition with the show's animation style, Kenny is composed of simple geometrical shapes and master colors.[10] [24] He is non offered the aforementioned free range of motility associated with manus-drawn characters; his character is mostly shown from merely i angle, and his movements are blithe in an intentionally hasty fashion.[10] [24] [28] Ever since the show'due south second episode, "Weight Gain 4000" (season one, 1997), Kenny, like all other characters on the show, has been animated with computer software, though he is portrayed to give the impression that the show still utilizes its original technique.[24]

Kenny/Mysterion unmasked at the terminate of "The Coon". Originally intended to have been a generic, unnamed classmate of the main characters, he was revealed to be Kenny in "Mysterion Rises".[6]

The result of Kenny'south oral communication is achieved by Rock mumbling into his own manus as he provides Kenny's lines.[24] While he originally voiced Kenny without any computer manipulation, Rock at present does and so by speaking in his normal vocal range and then adding a childlike inflection. The recorded audio is then edited with Pro Tools, and the pitch is altered to make the voice sound more like that of a 4th-grader.[29] [30] Every bit the technique of Kenny's muzzled enunciation frequently implies, many of his lines are indeed profane and sexually explicit, the lengthier of which are mostly improvised past Rock.[24]

He first appeared unobscured past his hood in South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut, where it was revealed that he had messy blonde pilus. Mike Judge provided the voice for Kenny's i line of uninsulated dialogue: "Goodbye, you guys."[31] On a few occasions during episodes that have originally aired since the movie'southward release, he has been seen without the parka;[note 1] all the same, unlike in Bigger, Longer & Uncut his unabridged confront has been only seen iii times in the television series without being partially obscured or otherwise altered, this being in "The Losing Edge", "The Jeffersons", and "You're Getting Erstwhile". He as well speaks unmuffled during some of these instances, in which case co-producer Eric Stough provides Kenny'southward voice.[31] During "The Coon" episodes of seasons 13 and 14, Kenny has his first major speaking office as the character Mysterion.[32]

Personality and traits [edit]

While well-nigh child characters on the show are foul-mouthed, Kenny is frequently even more risqué with his dialogue.[33] Parker and Rock land that they draw Kenny and his friends in this way in lodge to display how immature boys really talk when they are alone.[10] [34] While Kenny is often cynical and profane, Parker notes that in that location yet is an "underlying sweetness" aspect to the character,[35] and Time mag described Kenny and his friends every bit "sometimes cruel but with a core of innocence".[36] He is amused past toilet sense of humor and actual functions,[36] and his favorite television personalities are Terrance and Phillip, a Canadian duo whose comedy routines on their evidence-within-the-show revolve substantially around fart jokes. Kenny is shown to desire intercourse in the episode "The Band", when Kenny gets a girlfriend and is overjoyed to detect out that she has a reputation as a slut. Kenny is also lecherous,[iv] and ofttimes portrayed equally existence eager to practice and say disgusting things in an attempt to impress others or earn money.[22] Conversely, his alter-ego Mysterion is seemingly mature, principled, and serious-minded, the only exception being one instance in "Mysterion Rises" in which he takes please in irritating Cartman. Every bit Mysterion, he convinces his parents to accept meliorate intendance of themselves and their children, as seen by their reaction when he questions them about the cult of Cthulhu. He also uses his disguise to protect his sister Karen (who refers to Mysterion as her "guardian affections"), as revealed in "The Poor Kid"; nonetheless, in all of his guises, Kenny is depicted as being exceptionally selfless, dying for the sake of others and spending all of his time working and so he could buy his little sister a doll.[37] [38]

In the trilogy of episodes "Blackness Friday", "A Song of Ass and Fire" and "Titties and Dragons", in which the boys play-deed characters from the Idiot box series Game of Thrones, Kenny cantankerous-dresses as a fantasy-fashion princess with a wig and dress similar to the video game character Princess Zelda, and becomes a Japanese-speaking moe anime graphic symbol at one point. When Cartman complains, "You lot're never going to be a existent princess", Princess Kenny responds (via her translator, Stan) angrily to Cartman, calling him a "brawl-licking lesbian".[39] [forty] [41]

This portrayal continues in the video game S Park: The Stick of Truth where Cartman notes that playing a "chick" is "just how [Kenny] seems to be rolling right now". Kenny's sister besides refers to Kenny every bit a girl, if you talk to her in the McCormick house. Throughout the game, Kenny posts 'status updates' referring to herself equally "the cutest of them all".[42]

In other media [edit]

Kenny had a major function in South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut,[43] the full-length film based on the series, and appeared on the film'south soundtrack singing (albeit muffled) several lines of the song "Mountain Town" from the pic.[44] Every bit a tribute to the Dead Parrot sketch, a short that features Kenny as a "expressionless friend" existence returned by Cartman to a store run past Kyle aired during a 1999 BBC tv special commemorating the 30th ceremony of Monty Python's Flying Circus.[45] Kenny was also featured in the documentary movie The Aristocrats, listening to Cartman tell his version of the motion-picture show'southward titular joke,[46] and in "The Gauntlet", a short spoofing both Gladiator and Battleground Earth that aired during the 2000 MTV Pic Awards.[47] [48]

Kenny besides appears in six South Park-related video games: In S Park, Kenny is controlled by the player through the first-person shooter manner who attempts to ward off enemies from terrorizing the town of Due south Park.[49] In Southward Park: Chef's Luv Shack, a user has the option of playing as Kenny when participating in the game's several "minigames" based on other popular arcade games.[50] In the racing game S Park Rally, a user can race as Kenny against other users playing equally other characters, while choosing to place him in any of a variety of vehicles.[51] In South Park Permit'south Go Belfry Defense force Play!, Kenny tin can be selected as a playable grapheme used to establish a tower defence against the game's antagonists.[52] In South Park: The Stick of Truth, Kenny (every bit Princess Kenny) can exist selected as a companion over the class of much of the game.[53] In Southward Park: The Fractured But Whole, Kenny is seen as his alter-ego Mysterion.[42]

Cultural bear upon [edit]

Kenny'due south deaths are well known in popular culture,[eight] and was one of the things viewers almost normally associated with South Park during its earlier seasons.[54] IGN ranked Kenny at #6 on their "The Top 25 South Park Characters" listing.[55] The assertion of "Oh my God! They killed Kenny!" apace became a popular catchphrase,[13] [36] while both Kenny and the phrase have appeared on some of the more than popular pieces of South Park trade,[eight] including shirts, bumper stickers, calendars and baseball caps,[4] and inspired the rap song "Kenny's Dead" by Master P, which was featured on Chef Assistance: The Due south Park Anthology.[viii]

The running gag of Kenny's deaths in before seasons was incorporated into the flavour 9 (2005) episode "Best Friends Forever" when Kenny, in a vegetative country, is kept alive by a feeding tube while a media circus erupted over whether the tube should be removed and allow Kenny to dice. The episode received much attention as it served to provide commentary on the Terri Schiavo case,[56] [57] originally ambulation just one day earlier Schiavo died.[58] The episode earned S Park its starting time Emmy Laurels for Outstanding Blithe Plan.[59]

Kenny'south deaths have been subject to much critical analysis in the media and literary globe. In the book South Park and Philosophy: Bigger, Longer, and More Penetrating, an essay by Southern Illinois University philosophy professor Randall Auxier, entitled "Killing Kenny: Our Daily Dose of Decease", suggests that the style of the recurring gag serves to help the viewer become more than comfy with the inevitability of their own death.[60] [61] In the book South Park and Philosophy: You Know, I Learned Something Today, University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point professor Karin Fry wrote an essay concerning the parallels between Kenny's function in the show and the unlike concepts of existentialism.[62]

When Sophie Rutschmann of the Academy of Strasbourg discovered a mutated gene that causes an adult fruit wing to die within two days afterward it is infected with certain leaner, she named the cistron "Kenny" in laurels of the character.[63]

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ Including "The Tooth Fairy Tats 2000", "Super Best Friends", "Lil' Crime Stoppers", "The Jeffersons", "Good Times with Weapons", "The Losing Edge", "South Park Is Gay!", "Lice Capades", "Margaritaville", "Westward.T.F.", "Pee", and "You're Getting Old".

References [edit]

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External links [edit]

  • Kenny McCormick on SouthParkStudios.com

burrowsgragairehe1972.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenny_McCormick

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