LOS ANGELES — An executive producer for “The Charlie Kirk Show” and close friend of the conservative personality has asked Paramount to continue airing reruns of the episode that features a parody of the slain political influencer. “As someone who can speak with some authority on this, Charlie loved that he was featured in ‘South Park,’” Andrew Kolvet posted Wednesday on X. “He would want the ...
Character cut-outs are seen at Paramount+' s South Park in San Diego event during 2025 San Diego Comic-Con on July 25, 2025, in San Diego.
Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images North America/TNS
LOS ANGELES — An executive producer for “The Charlie Kirk Show” and close friend of the conservative personality has asked Paramount to continue airing reruns of the episode that features a parody of the slain political influencer.
“As someone who can speak with some authority on this, Charlie loved that he was featured in ‘South Park,’” Andrew Kolvet posted Wednesday on X. “He would want the episode back up.”
Comedy Central, which is owned by Paramount, announced it will not air reruns of the second episode of the latest season after Kirk was assassinated Sept. 10 in Utah. The episode can still be found on the Paramount+ streaming service.
Paramount did not respond immediately to The Times’ request for comment.
“Got a Nut,” which premiered Aug. 6, follows Cartman taking over a podcast where he argues with students about political topics. In the episode, the South Park character changes his hairstyle to resemble Kirk’s and says he wants to become a “master debater.”
When Comedy Central teased the episode, Kirk told Fox News Digital that he saw it as a badge of honor.
“We as conservatives need to be able to take a joke,” he told Fox in late July. “We shouldn’t take ourselves so seriously.”
Around the same time, Kirk changed the profile picture of his podcast’s Instagram and TikTok accounts to a picture of Cartman sporting the host’s hairdo.
Since Kirk’s death, some businesses are showing little mercy to employees who speak out negatively about the situation. On Wednesday, ABC pulled “Jimmy Kimmel Live” indefinitely after affiliates complained about comments the host made on Monday’s show. DC Comics canceled its “Red Hood” comic book series after writer Gretchen Felker-Martin made comments mocking Kirk’s death on her Bluesky account. (Felker-Martin is transgender; Kirk regularly spoke out against transitioning.)
On Thursday, Federal Communications Commission Chairman Brendan Carr told CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street” that “we’re not done yet” in terms of making changes to the media ecosystem.
Here’s hoping this article passes the vibe check.