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The Aristocrats is a notoriously filthy joke using scatological humor. This clip was included on a documentary about the joke, also called The Aristocrats, which featured various actors and comedians retelling their versions of the joke, as well as shedding some light on its origins. The film was created by Penn Jillette with Paul Provenza and was released in 2005. This is the second theatrical appearance of South Park.

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  • The Aristocrats Sketch
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  • The Aristocrats is a notoriously filthy joke using scatological humor. This clip was included on a documentary about the joke, also called The Aristocrats, which featured various actors and comedians retelling their versions of the joke, as well as shedding some light on its origins. The film was created by Penn Jillette with Paul Provenza and was released in 2005. This is the second theatrical appearance of South Park.
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dbkwik:southpark/p...iPageUsesTemplate
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  • 15(xsd:integer)
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Release
  • 2005-08-12(xsd:date)
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abstract
  • The Aristocrats is a notoriously filthy joke using scatological humor. This clip was included on a documentary about the joke, also called The Aristocrats, which featured various actors and comedians retelling their versions of the joke, as well as shedding some light on its origins. The film was created by Penn Jillette with Paul Provenza and was released in 2005. This is the second theatrical appearance of South Park. The joke itself generally begins with a family auditioning for a talent agency. Although the talent agent initially brushes them off as too 'cutesy', he is eventually persuaded to allow them to show him their act. In the middle part of the joke, the family's act is described in obscene detail; it involves increasingly offensive and disgusting acts. After the performance, the talent agent asks them just what the hell their act was supposed to be, to which they respond, "The Aristocrats!" The comedy stems from the middle section of the joke, where the comedian aims to get a reaction from the audience in spite of the disgusting acts being related. In the South Park version, Cartman tells the other boys the joke his grandfather told him while at the school bus stop. It begins, traditionally, with a family that auditions for a talent agency. Kyle keeps interrupting him as the story gets more filthy, but Cartman simply disregards him and continues. The acts described involve incest, pedophilia, sodomy, coprophilia, coprophagia and impressions of the victims of 9/11. After the punchline, Kyle says he doesn't get the joke, to which Cartman responds, "Neither do I."
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