South Park/Tropes W-Z

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"Cartman: Aw dude, you shot him in the dick. Butters: Huh? Cartman: That's not cool Butters. You don't shoot a guy in the dick. Butters: But I was just trying to stop him, and you said- Cartman: [faces him] It doesn't matter, Butters! You never shoot a guy in the DICK. Everyone knows that! Shooting a guy in the dick?? That's just, that's just weak. I can't believe you, Butters."
 * War Has Never Been So Much Fun: Vietnam was actually a lot of fun, and involved waterslides.
 * Wasteful Wishing: God allows the human race the answer to a single question, and Stan asks him... why he hasn't gotten a period yet.
 * Watching the Sunset: Stan and Kyle are briefly seen doing this in the opening of "The Return of Chef".
 * Weaponized Landmark: The Lincoln Memorial. Combated with a giant stone John Wilkes Booth.
 * Weirdness Magnet: Heavily lampshaded by Craig in 'Pandemic'.
 * We Should Get Another Tape: Cartman's video of his Boy Band in "Something You Can Do With Your Finger" runs on to a bondage/urine fetish video his mom made.
 * Wham! Episode: "Kenny Dies" and "You're Getting Old"
 * Wham! Line:
 * What Do You Mean It's Not Awesome?: Make Love Not Warcraft makes transporting a flash drive to succeed in a computer game epic. Takeshi Obata would be proud.
 * Wasted Song: In South Park commentary for the season seven episode "Christian Rock Hard", it is revealed that full songs were written for the Cartman's band "Faith+1". However due to lack of time they only played a small amount of each song. Word of God says they may be release the full songs on a CD, so far they haven't.
 * What Do You Mean It's Not for Kids?: Much like The Simpsons in the early 1990s, the show met with controversy over being a cartoon about kids that looked like it could be for kids that was filled to the brim with the sickest, most depraved humor ever.
 * What Do You Mean It's Not Heinous?: The boys get this a lot from their parents.
 * What Happened to the Mouse?: At the end of "201"
 * What Kind of Lame Power Is Heart, Anyway?: Mint-Berry Crunch, with the combined powers of Mint and Berry with a tasty crunch!
 * What's a Henway?: The Mole asks the boys if they brought along "the butfor" in The Movie. ("For pooping, silly.")
 * "What the Hell?" Dad: Pretty much all the parents. Justified in that most, if not all, of the adults are complete idiots. Randy takes the cake in the later episodes.
 * What the Hell, Hero?: In "The China Probrem", after Butters accidentally shoots a hostage in the crotch:
 * What Kind of Lame Power Is Heart, Anyway?: Mint-Berry Crunch, with the combined powers of Mint and Berry with a tasty crunch!
 * What's a Henway?: The Mole asks the boys if they brought along "the butfor" in The Movie. ("For pooping, silly.")
 * "What the Hell?" Dad: Pretty much all the parents. Justified in that most, if not all, of the adults are complete idiots. Randy takes the cake in the later episodes.
 * What the Hell, Hero?: In "The China Probrem", after Butters accidentally shoots a hostage in the crotch:

"Police Officer: Well, kid, you made an entire town panic, you lost all your friends, and now you're going to juvinal hall for a week. Was it Worth It? Cartman: ....Totally."
 * In "Timmy 2000", a woman thinks the boys are making fun of Timmy for being handicapped, but actually the boys were cheering him on for being a good singer.
 * "Fun With Veal": The adults call the boys out for "saving" the baby cows from becoming veal. You can't help but side with the kids on this, though.
 * Sharon calls Stan and Kyle out for not doing their homework on American history in "I'm A Little Bit Country".
 * "The F-Word" : The school staff calls the boys out for spray-painting "FAGS GET OUT" on a wall to get the annoying Harley riders out of South Park. Mayor McDaniels does this twice, one of them during the call out.
 * Widget Series
 * Wise Beyond Their Years: The four protagonists, despite being only 8 – 9 years old, are usually smarter and act more mature than most adults in the show. They usually see a problem or approaching danger first and come up with the solution for it in the end.
 * White Dude, Black Dude: Cartman needs to form a band, he gets Token to play bass. Because he's black. When Token protests that he doesn't own one, Cartman tells him to look in the basement. Sure enough, there's one there. When Token further protests that he's never picked up a bass in his life, Cartman tells him that he's black, he can play bass. Sure enough, he can.
 * Token: "Dammit..."
 * Who's Laughing Now?: Played and subverted with Butters, his own attempts at revenge as Professor Chaos always fail miserably, though he manages to accompolish amazing acts of retribution for his abuse completely by accident (eg. AWESOME-O, The Tale Of Scrotie McBoogerballs).
 * Who Wants to Live Forever?: In "Mysterion Rises".
 * Wiki Walk: In the episode "Canceled".
 * With Friends Like These...: Cartman and everyone else on the show, especially Kyle.
 * Worth It: From "Casa Bonita":
 * Worth It: From "Casa Bonita":

"Butters: Whoa, you sure seem with it, Eric. You must have some... ih-inspiration. Cartman: Yes, the tears of Kyle Broflovski when he loses his ten dollars to me."
 * Wouldn't Hit a Girl: Often played straight, but sometimes averted ("Up the Down Steroid" and "Wing").
 * Would Hit a Girl: Kenny in "The Poor Kid". You don't fuck with Karen McCormick.
 * Wouldn't Hurt a Child: Subverted in the case of Kenny and Butters quite often, and subverted to a lesser degree with Ike.
 * Wounded Gazelle Gambit: Cartman is quite fond of these as a method of manipulating his mother. He, Stan, and Kyle also pull this at least Once Per Episode in Season Six, using Kenny's death to garner sympathy from their friends and family.
 * Xanatos Gambit: Cartman pulls one off in the season 3 episode "The Red Badge of Gayness" (The one with "S'more-flavored Schnapps") - He makes a bet with the others that he can make it so the south won the civil war, and the agreed stake in the bet is, the loser(s) have to act as the winners' slaves. When he loses the bet, he (successfully) argues that he can't be a slave because the south losing the civil war resulted in the abolition of slavery.
 * X Must Not Win: Kyle's feud with Cartman is usually justified given the latter's highly malicious intent. However even in petty wars, Kyle takes a sometimes disturbing extra mile to make sure Cartman's plans go up in smoke. eg. In "Douche And Turd" he and Cartman create opposing school mascots, with Kyle using increasingly manipulative methods to get people to vote against Cartman's candidate. Similarly a lot of Cartman's intentions are built around making Kyle lose.


 * To add onto the Cartman example, there are plenty of occasions Cartman comes out with amazing success and fame due to a bet with Kyle, but brushes it all off because he didn't win the bet in particular. In "Christian Rock Hard" for example, Cartman bets Kyle he can make a Platinum album before him. Cartman succeeds in making a highly successful Christian rock band, gaining enormous popularity and wealth. However once he finds out that Christian record labels don't give out Platinum albums (thus he can never win his bet with Kyle) he flies into a rage in public, destroying the band's career.
 * And for more Cartman, in "Fat Butt and Pancake Head," Cartman pretends he (or his hand, at least) is Jennifer Lopez. "Ms. Lopez" creates a hit album, gets affectionate with Ben Affleck, and enjoys the wealth and fame of celebrity life via Xanatos Speed Chess. The reason is to make Kyle admit the possibility that the hand is an independent living being from Cartman and calls the whole thing off when Kyle makes even the tiniest admission. (In the episode "200," the hand is proven to be an actual separate entity.)
 * Xylophone Gag: Played surprisingly straight, albeit with a ukelele.
 * Setting off a bunch of Chekhov's Boomerangs in the process.
 * Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe: Justified Trope in that Randy's an idiot.
 * You Bastard: Occasionally.
 * You Can Panic Now: The parents in South Park, usually.
 * Your Head Asplode: Cartman's reaction to KFC's closing down in "Medicinal Fried Chicken", combined with a Big No. Also a Big Lipped Alligator Moment (his head is back to normal the next time he's seen, and the explosion is never mentioned since).
 * A juror's reaction to the original Chewbacca Defense.
 * You Fail Logic Forever: Randy. Continuously. Also a lot of the other adults as well.
 * Parodied in Creme Fraiche when the boys make a terrible job of impersonating Gordon Ramsay. Stan remarks, "I know my Dad's retarded, but not THAT retarded." Randy proves, that yes, he is that retarded.
 * You Say Tomato: The planetarium manager in the episode "Cheesy Poofs" has a rare disorder that doesn't allow him to pronounce the t in "planetarium", although he seems to have no problem pronouncing it elsewhere.
 * In the episode where Mr. Garrison wants to scare all the "rich" people out of town, the "richers" scream when they see their neighbors in ghost sheets and say: "South Park is hainted!"
 * When Al Gore shows up looking for ManBearPig, a Running Gag has him pronouncing "serious"/"seriously" as "serial".
 * In South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut, the Americans make fun of how Canadians pronounce "about" to sound like "a-boot."
 * Youtube Poop: Chef's dialogue comprised from his voice in previous episodes gives the impression of one of these.
 * Zombie Apocalypse: Played straight and parodied. In two different episodes.