RichardV-38
jul 2025 se unió
Te damos la bienvenida a nuevo perfil
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Distintivos2
Para saber cómo ganar distintivos, ve a página de ayuda de distintivos.
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Clasificación de RichardV-38
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Clasificación de RichardV-38
Sermon on the 'Mount feels like a return to South Park's golden era: fearless, irreverent, and refreshingly balanced in its satire. No political group is spared. Whether you're left, right, Democrat, Republican, or something in between, this episode reminds us that comedy can, and should bring us together through brutal honesty and shared laughter.
The jokes are sharp, the commentary timely, and the visuals some of the most outrageous in South Park history. From NPR cancellation to a deepfake Trump PSA involving Satan and surreal nudity, it's absurd in all the right ways. And despite (or because of) its chaos, there's a surprising amount of catharsis here.
This is South Park at its best: taking no prisoners, pointing fingers in every direction, and making us laugh until it hurts.
The jokes are sharp, the commentary timely, and the visuals some of the most outrageous in South Park history. From NPR cancellation to a deepfake Trump PSA involving Satan and surreal nudity, it's absurd in all the right ways. And despite (or because of) its chaos, there's a surprising amount of catharsis here.
This is South Park at its best: taking no prisoners, pointing fingers in every direction, and making us laugh until it hurts.
A masterclass in overproduction, empty spectacle, and blatant riggery that insulted the intelligence of the fandom and the legacy of the queens who built this franchise.
From the moment the Rate A Queen order were announced, it was clear that the path to the crown wasn't going to be paved by merit, but by narrative convenience.
What should have been a triumphant finale was instead a monument to how far Drag Race has strayed from its roots. It forgot what made it powerful: real queens, real talent, real stakes. Instead, Season 10 All Stars ended not with a bang, but with a whimper drowned out by the sound of producers high-fiving behind the scenes.
The winner could have won on her own, she didn't need the constant meddling of producers behind the scenes.
A legacy tarnished. A fanbase betrayed. A crown unearned.
From the moment the Rate A Queen order were announced, it was clear that the path to the crown wasn't going to be paved by merit, but by narrative convenience.
What should have been a triumphant finale was instead a monument to how far Drag Race has strayed from its roots. It forgot what made it powerful: real queens, real talent, real stakes. Instead, Season 10 All Stars ended not with a bang, but with a whimper drowned out by the sound of producers high-fiving behind the scenes.
The winner could have won on her own, she didn't need the constant meddling of producers behind the scenes.
A legacy tarnished. A fanbase betrayed. A crown unearned.