South Park: Joining the Panderverse is funny but a dead end for political and social commentary.
This article contains spoilers forSouth Park: Joining the Panderverse.
Silly as it sounds, Panderverse works in its takedown of right-wing, anti-woke social media accounts.
Audiences frequently forget that Matt and Trey are politically libertarian to a T, for better or worse.
D.C. (Diverse Cartman) is the embodiment of that Hollywood sentiment.
Her interactions with Kenny, Stan, and Kyle and some callbacks got colossal cackles out of me.
Through Diverse Cartman, Stone and Parker make their argument regarding casting optics fleshed out.
The boys then mention where laziness ends, and innovation begins, using Miles Morales as a counterpoint.
When the story focuses on them, the conversation is fluent.
The specials references tothe latestIndiana Jonesstarring Phoebe Waller-Bridge makes it sound like Ford wasnt portraying Jones in the picture.
As consistently funny as it is,Joining the Panderverseis a stalemate in commentary.
South Park: Joining the Panderverseis available to stream on Paramount+ now.