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South Park - Season 11- Episode 12 Apr 2026

Cartman, with the help of a government official, arranges for Kyle to literally lick Cartman’s balls in front of the entire school assembly. In one of the most cringe-inducing and hilarious moments in the series’ history, Kyle, bound by his word, is forced to perform the act. The scene cuts between the triumphant imaginary beings celebrating in their restored land and Kyle, face twisted in disgust, fulfilling the bet. It’s a stark, hilarious reminder that even after saving the universe, South Park ’s boys are still petty, cruel, and utterly flawed. As the episode ends, Butters is the last one to leave Imaginationland. The Grand Council thanks him, and Aslan gives him a gift: a small, glowing orb of pure imagination. Butters returns to the real world, and as he walks home through the dark, snowy streets of South Park, he releases the orb. It floats into the sky, becoming a new star—a symbol of endless possibility.

What they find is not a weapon but a horrifying inversion of South Park ’s own past. The "evil" is personified by the critters—the adorable, demonic, blood-sacrificing baby animals from Season 8’s "Woodland Critter Christmas." In a terrifying musical number, they summon the ultimate evil: Cthulhu , who proceeds to slaughter Jesus and most of the good imaginary beings in a brutal, hilarious, and genuinely shocking scene.

Original Air Date: October 31, 2007

With the heroes decimated, Butters realizes that brute force won't work. In a moment of surprising clarity and sweetness, he understands the core truth of Imaginationland: He simply closes his eyes and imagines the evil creatures disappearing. They do. He then imagines the wall separating good and evil Imaginationland vanishing. It does. The power of a pure, innocent belief—Butters’ unshakable positivity—saves the day. The Resolution: Cartman’s Ultimate Victory and Kyle’s Humiliation The bomb is stopped. Imaginationland is saved. The good imaginary beings celebrate. But then comes the twist that defines the episode.

It perfectly encapsulates the show’s genius: the ability to make you laugh at a child being forced to perform a degrading sexual act, gasp at the gory death of Jesus, and then feel a genuine lump in your throat as a sweet, dim-witted boy turns his imagination into a star. South Park - Season 11- Episode 12

A masterpiece of animated satire—vulgar, violent, philosophical, and unexpectedly beautiful. It is essential viewing not just for South Park fans, but for anyone interested in how comedy can tackle the nature of reality itself.

Back in the real world, Cartman approaches Kyle. He points out that the leprechaun they originally saw was, in fact, a real imaginary being from Imaginationland. Therefore, Kyle’s original skepticism was wrong. Cartman demands his $10. But the humiliation doesn't stop there. Cartman, with the help of a government official,

When discussing the most ambitious storylines in South Park history, the "Imaginationland" trilogy stands as a monumental achievement. Season 11’s three-part epic—spanning Episodes 10, 11, and 12—took the show’s trademark crude animation and juvenile humor and fused them with high-concept fantasy, Cold War allegory, and a startlingly deep meditation on the nature of belief. Episode 12, Imaginationland Episode III , serves as the chaotic, hilarious, and surprisingly somber conclusion to this saga. To understand Episode 12, a quick recap is necessary. In Episode 10, Cartman bet Kyle he could prove the existence of leprechauns. This led to the discovery of "Imaginationland"—a parallel dimension where every imaginary being from history (from Jesus and Superman to Cthulhu and the Snuggle Bear) physically exists. A terrorist attack by imaginary characters (led by a rogue Mel Gibson, no less) unleashed a horde of evil imaginary beings, from the Joker to the Dark Knight’s demons, turning Imaginationland into a war zone.