Pee (South Park)

The episode was written and directed by series co-creator Trey Parker, and was rated TV-MA L in the United States.

The destroyed park is quarantined, and the scientist advises against a mission to rescue those trapped inside, fearing their exposure to "pee contamination" has turned them into dangerous, hate-filled mutants.

Noticing he is the only white person in the raft, Cartman assumes he is the "last of his species", and that his envisioned 2012 scenario has occurred three years early.

He imagines a world in which he must speak in minority slang, is paid lower wages, and eventually forced to live in a concentration camp.

Kyle reluctantly agrees to do the job as he said at the start of the episode that he could hold his breath for the longest, but is horrified to learn he must drink some of the pee in order to offset the fluid pressure he will encounter at the depths.

Back inside the park, Kyle reluctantly drinks a jarful of pee in preparation for his plunge into the flood.

Just after he finishes the jar, helicopters arrive as part of the rescue mission, which makes Kyle extremely furious for drinking pee for nothing.

After escaping the pee-filled water park, Cartman reunites with his friends, and is glad that he is not the last of the species and he declares that he will live up to the fullest.

"Pee", the South Park thirteenth season finale, was written and directed by series co-founder Trey Parker, and was rated TV-MA in the United States.

The episode parodies many common elements of such disaster films, including scientists struggling to figure out the source of the problem.

[9] "Pee" also includes several references to the 2012 phenomenon, the prediction that cataclysmic events would occur in the year 2012, which is said to be the end of the Mayan Long Count calendar.

Additionally, the episode references the film 28 Days Later, where the authorities and scientists believe that the urine creates feelings of "rage", a direct reference to 28 Days Later's Rage virus In its original American broadcast on November 18, 2009, "Pee" was watched by 2.87 million overall households, according to the Nielsen ratings, making it the most watched cable show of the night.

But he praised Kyle in the ending scene, as well as the way South Park found a new, literal twist on "toilet humor" by featuring rivers and tsunamis of pee.

The sets included brief audio commentaries by Parker and Stone for each episode,[13] a collection of deleted scenes, and a special mini-feature Inside Xbox: A Behind-the-Scenes Tour of South Park Studios, which discussed the process behind animating the show with Inside Xbox host Major Nelson.

Trey Parker wrote and directed the episode