Summary

  • South Park's Halloween episodes are not as popular as its Christmas specials due to scheduling changes and a lack of consistent Halloween-themed episodes.
  • The Halloween episodes often parody popular culture, with varying levels of success, such as the homage to Cloverfield in the "Pandemic" two-part episode.
  • Some of the Halloween episodes miss the mark by focusing on secondary characters, like the goth kids in "Goth Kids 3: Dawn of the Posers," instead of the main characters that fans love.

The South Park Halloween episodes aren’t as popular as the Christmas specials, but this is mostly because the animated adult comedy doesn't have one every season. Over the course of 25 seasons, there have been 10 legitimate Halloween episodes and at least six more that fit into the theme of the October holiday season. Created by Matt Stone and Trey Parker, South Park tells the story of four foul-mouthed and curious kids in the small Colorado town of South Park and the show remains popular for its lampooning of popular culture, almost as it happens. This remains true for the Halloween episodes.

The very first South Park Halloween episode arrived in season 1 with "Pinkeye," and it set off the tone many fans expected to see in the future for Halloween episodes from Stone and Parker. Sadly, there haven't been that many in the show's history. One of the big reasons that there aren't very many Halloween episodes is because of scheduling changes, which means new episodes of South Park don't always air in the month of October. However, Stone and Parker try to add an episode celebrating the spooky season every chance they get, often with varying levels of success.

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14 Pandemic Homages Cloverfield

Season 12, Episode 10

The giant guinea pigs attack South Park in Pandemic.

The Halloween two-part episode “Pandemic” follows the aftermath of the boys trying to form a Peruvian flute band to make money, only for the world to be consumed by masses of giant guinea pigs, including some in Halloween costumes. Randy tries to capture the events on a new video camera, overreacting as he stares into the lens and proclaims how startling everything is. "Pandemic" was meant to capitalize on the success of the then-recently-released movie Cloverfield, using shaky cam and a plot about giant monsters. However, outside that homage, it doesn't offer much more, as one of the lesser Halloween episodes.

13 Pandemic 2: The Startling Concludes The Two-Part Halloween Episode

Season 12, Episode 11

The giant guinea pig on South Park.

This is the sequel to the Season 12 episode “Pandemic.” The story from the previous episode about giant guinea pigs continues, taking the boys to the jungles of Peru where they explore the lost ruins of an ancient Incan temple that predicts how Peruvian flute bands (and Craig) will be able to drive off the giant guinea pigs. Sometimes, the silly over-the-top nature of episodes works, but this is not such an episode. The entire two-part horror tale was a take on Cloverfield, but it didn't rate as high as other South Park Halloween episodes in the series.

12 Goth Kids 3: Dawn Of The Posers Features The Goth Kids

Season 17, Episode 4

The South Park goth kids tied to chairs.

“Goth Kids 3: Dawn of the Posers” has a fun take on goth and emo culture, imbuing it with vampire fiction and a parody of Invasion of the Body Snatchers, but unfortunately, the goth kids have to carry the episode. This Halloween episode really misses Stan, Kyle, Cartman, and Kenny. The horror aspects are clearly there, including references to Edgar Allen Poe and a hidden TV horror show, but the goth kids really didn't have what it took to be as entertaining for an entire episode on their own. Missing the four main characters is the one thing the most divisive South Park episodes have in common.

11 Dead Celebrities Brings The Dead To South Park

Season 13, Episode 8

Dr Philips helping the boys on South Park.

In 2009, several celebrities died, and the summer was coined “the Summer of Death.” South Park tackled this with a spooky parody of movies like Poltergeist and The Sixth Sense in which Ike sees dead celebrities. The episode has the boys call in the Ghost Hunters team and then even get help from a doctor at the hospital who is based on Zelda Rubinstein's character from Poltergeist. It turns out that Michael Jackson is keeping all the dead celebrities from crossing over because he refuses to accept his death. The Halloween episode even has a dark twist at the end when the dead celebrities finally pass on.

10 The Scoots Terrorizes South Park With eScooters

Season 22, Episode 5

A shot from the South Park episode The Scoots.

“The Scoots” is a South Park Halloween episode that takes on the e-scooter craze and Fortnite, all while playing like a Halloween-themed parody of Alfred Hitchcock’s The Birds. The episode sees the boys realizing that the only way they can get as much candy as possible on Halloween is by using e-scooters to get around town as quickly as possible. No one in town knows where these scooters came from, and the townspeople are worried about how much money all this candy will cost them when the e-scooters descend upon the town. Hilariously, the entire episode is bookended by adult Kenny as the narrator.

"The Scoots" is the only South Park Halloween special to actually air on Halloween.

9 Spookyfish Brings Spooky Vision To South Park

Season 2, Episode 15

“Spookyfish” is a second-season episode presented in what South Park refers to as “Spooky Vision,” which means Barbra Streisand’s face is on every corner of the screen. The best part of the episode featured Cartman's evil twin. The punch line was that everyone liked him better than the "good" Cartman. The episode also introduces Aunt Flow, who visits once a month in a cheap gag that mostly confuses the young South Park kids. The actual horror comes with the Spookyfish, which is a goldfish that kills innocent people and frames Stan for the murders. When Sharon starts cleaning up the dead bodies to protect her son, it hits its mark.

8 City Sushi Brings Turf Wars To South Park

Season 15, Episode 6

Butters with a Paranormal Activity spoof on South Park.

"City Sushi" might not technically count as a Halloween episode, since it aired in June 2011 and its plot doesn’t revolve around Halloween, but there are enough spooky moments and horror movie spoofs in “City Sushi” to make it at least a semi-Halloween episode. Butters hands out fliers for a new restaurant called City Sushi, but when he gives one to Lu Kim, the owner of City Wok, it starts a turf war and the police blame Butters. When his parents decide he needs to undergo therapy, Butters ends up in danger when the therapist begins terrorizing the child. The episode parodies Paranormal Activity with an ending that mimics the end of Psycho.

7 Tegridy Farms Halloween Special Brings The Zombie Pot Apocalypse

Season 23, Episode 5

The “Tegridy Farms Halloween Special” follows Randy and his business growing and selling marijuana from Tegridy Farms. When Randy decides he needs a new strain of weed to sell for Halloween, he and Towelie make a new hybrid which they call their “Halloween Special.” However, Randy’s daughter Shelley has a problem with his marijuana business. To express her disapproval, she pours a vat of chemicals all over the new strain of marijuana, causing it to grow Lovecraftian vines. When people smoke it, they hallucinate a zombie apocalypse. It shares a lot with "Pinkeye," one of the better early South Park episodes.

6 The Magic Bush Is A Butters' Horror Episode

Season 18, Episode 5

Butters and his dad in The Magic Bush on South Park.

“The Magic Bush” might not be a proper Halloween Special, but it has definite horror elements to it and first aired on October 29th, 2014, so it fits the bill. When Cartman, Butters, and Kenny use Butters’s dad’s new drone without permission, they spy on Craig’s mom while she is undressed, then upload a video of her onto the internet. Butters’s dad begins to suspect his drone is flying by itself and is terrified it has become sentient, which makes more sense to him than thinking his son Butters would fly it without permission. The perceived fear of drones and the lampooning of leaked celebrity nudes helped this episode hit at the time.

5 Korn’s Groovy Pirate Ghost Mystery Stars The Real Members of Korn

Season 3, Episode 10

Korn in an episode of South Park.

Plenty of celebrities have guest-starred in South Park, but they’re usually used for an ironically small role, like when Jay Leno played Cartman’s cat. In “Korn’s Groovy Pirate Ghost Mystery,” the entire band Korn plays themselves in a parody of Scooby-Doo. From the Antonio Banderas sex doll that Cartman mistakes for a Christmas present to jokes about necrophilia, this episode is full of the inappropriate, hysterical humor that made South Park a cultural phenomenon in the first place. Plus, the spoofing of Hanna-Barbera’s animation style comes off brilliantly, with all the recognizable colors, quirks, and visual reference points.

4 Pinkeye Was The First South Park Halloween Special

Season 1, Episode 7

“Pinkeye” was not only the first-ever South Park Halloween episode – it was the seventh episode of the show altogether. Viewers were still getting to know the characters and the style of humor and animation and this episode went a long way to show how this series could satirize popular culture. “Pinkeye,” with its skewering of zombie movies, Worcester sauce, and Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” video, is a perfect example of how to blend the crude satire of the show with the spooks and frights of Halloween. It set the template for the rest of the show’s Halloween episodes in the best way possible.

3 Sons A Witches Mocks The #MeToo Movement Detractors

Season 21, Episode 6

Gerald Broflovski driving a car in South Park Sons A Witches.

In the fall of 2017, the #MeToo movement saw Harvey Weinstein and Woody Allen claim it was becoming a "witch hunt." With Halloween approaching, South Park took aim at the comment in "Sons A Witches." In the episode, Randy, Gerald, and more dads dressed up like witches and went to get drunk and stoned in the woods. However, when Chip Duncan transformed himself into a real witch and began abducting children, the other dads worried they would get blamed even though they were "good witches." It was a great episode targeting male insecurity, enabling others, and denying the existence of toxic culture.

2 A Nightmare On FaceTime Parodies The Shining

Season 16, Episode 12

Randy Marsh with Blockbuster tapes in a Shining homage.

In “A Nightmare on FaceTime,” Randy Marsh buys a Blockbuster store during the store's final days and expects Halloween to make him a ton of money as people rent “spooky movies.” He refuses to accept that video rental is a dead industry and devolves into full Jack Torrance mode, a pitch-perfect parody of Stanley Kubrick's The Shining. Parker and Stone nail the framing, camera movements, facial expressions, and musical cues perfectly to emulate the horror masterpiece. The B-plot, involving Stan going trick-or-treating via FaceTime, with his iPad strapped to a skateboard, adds a bit of Halloween to the episode.

1 Hell On Earth 2006 Features Satan's Sweet 16

Season 10, Episode 11

Satan at a costume party in South Park's Hell on Earth.

After the success of My Super Sweet 16 episode of South Park, Trey Parker and Matt Stone parodied it with “Hell on Earth 2006,” which replaces the teenagers in the original episode with Satan, who simply wants to plan the perfect Halloween party. This Halloween episode has unabashedly dark humor, including depicting Ted Bundy, Jeffrey Dahmer, and John Wayne Gacy as the Three Stooges. Satan summons Biggie Smalls from the dead, makes a Steve Irwin sting ray joke right after his real-life death, and even shows Satan making the Catholic Church jealous. In the end, this is one of the better South Park episodes, Halloween or otherwise.

  • South Park Season Poster
    South Park
    Summary:
    Beginning in 1997, South Park has become one of the most successful and popular adult animations ever. The five-time Emmy-winning series follows Stan Marsh, Eric Cartman, Kyle Broflovski, and Kenny McCormick, as they find themselves in unbelievable situations in South Park, Colorado, while trying to navigate the world as fourth graders.
    Cast:
    Trey Parker, Matt Stone
    Release Date:
    1997-08-13
    Seasons:
    26
    Main Genre:
    Comedy
    Genres:
    Comedy, Sitcom
    Story By:
    Trey Parker
    Writers:
    Trey Parker
    Network:
    Comedy Central
    Streaming Service(s):
    Netflix
    Franchise(s):
    South Park
    Directors:
    Trey Parker
    Showrunner:
    Trey Parker