South Park Depicts Trump With Micropenis, in Bed With Satan in Episode Mocking Paramount Settlement With President

 

YouTube/South Park

Paramount+ comedy show South Park depicted President Donald Trump with a micropenis on Wednesday in an episode that mocked its streaming partner’s $16 million+ settlement with the president.

In the episode, which revolves around Trump terrorizing America and the town of South Park with lawsuits, the president is repeatedly depicted with a micropenis.

In one scene, Trump threatens to sue a painter in the White House for portraying him with a small penis.

“Why is my dick so small?!” protests Trump, to which the painter replies, “But that’s the size it is in the photo.”

“Get this guy out of here! I’m gonna sue you!” shouts Trump, who then walks into a bedroom, takes off his clothes – revealing a micropenis – and gets into bed with Satan, who tells him, “I can’t even see anything it’s so small.”

At the end of the episode, which concludes with the city of South Park agreeing to a settlement with Trump – where they are forced to pay $3.5 million and engage in “pro-Trump messaging” – the show then cuts to a video of an overweight man with Trump’s face walking through the desert and stripping off his clothes, before collapsing on the sand completely naked.

As he lays on the sand, a small penis emerges from Trump’s body and says, “I’m Donald J. Trump and I endorse this message.”

“Trump. His penis is teeny tiny, but his love for us is large,” a narrator then declares, ending the episode.

The episode was released just days after Paramount reached a $1.5 billion deal with South Park’s creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone for the streaming rights to the show.

This month, Paramount announced it would pay the president at least $16 million as part of a settlement after Trump sued the company over a 60 Minutes interview with former Vice President Kamala Harris.

On Tuesday, Trump claimed he would also receive “$20 Million Dollars more” from Paramount “in Advertising, PSAs, or similar Programming, for a total of over $36 Million Dollars.”

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