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Gentrification In TV S South Park Essay

South Park's SodoSopa The animated series South Park on Comedy Central often features controversial and taboo subject matter on its show in its attempt to satirize contemporary social trends. In episode three of season 19, the show satirized the class issue of gentrification, by depicting South Park's poor neighborhood undergoing a re-vitalization process in order to become "Sodosopa" -- a typical gentrified neighborhood like so many across the U.S. which were previously impoverished neighborhoods. The inequality that results in the show is illustrated by Kenny's family being priced out of the neighborhood where they live so that wealthier clientele can come in to enjoy the fine dining experiences offered by the Sodosopa project. The poor families are displaced from where they have lived and the rest of the community shows no real care or concern for the plight of the poor, as they are happy to embrace the new lifestyle upgrades that are being offered them by the new, hip and happening location in a part of town that was formerly never visited or thought of by them. In fact, the entire purpose of the revitalizing of the poor part of town is so that the city can attract new business and re-brand its image. It is, in other words, a business plan that puts profits before people.

To make the social class inequalities all the more apparent, the gentrification project takes place around Kenny's family's house....

Kenny and his family are not allowed to mingle and mix with the clientele of the upscale restaurants. They serve only as backdrop for these upper class citizens, who resemble aristocrats on safari, entering into the wilds of the "jungle" all the while protected from harm (contamination/danger) by the elitist surroundings, balconies and booths from which they enjoy the view of the rundown and "urban" city life.
It is, in other words, a voyeuristic approach to the urban setting that divorces the reality of urban life from the experience. The upper class citizens from the suburbs descend on the newly gentrified block because it is new, novel and caters to their tastes; the fact that the enter into a formerly dangerous part of town adds to the appeal -- it is exotic and unlike anything else they have experienced before. Yet, having this experience comes at a price: just like the hunting of the rhino comes at the price of the possibility of extermination, the issue of gentrification comes at the price of displacement: Kenny and his family are further marginalized from society by the fact that they are not even recognized as…

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References

Davis, M., McBride, A. et al. (2008). The State of American Cuisine. The James Beard

Foundation: 1-13.

Glickman, D. (2000). Upfront: ... Eating in the 20th century. Food Review, 23(1): i.
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