logo
‘South Park' Global Fans Furious as Show Pulled From Paramount+ Amid Licensing Dispute

‘South Park' Global Fans Furious as Show Pulled From Paramount+ Amid Licensing Dispute

Yahoo12 hours ago
International fans of Stan, Kyle, Cartman and Kenny were left reeling last week after South Park was pulled off streaming service Paramount+ amid an ongoing licensing dispute between the show's creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone and Comedy Central's parent company, Paramount Global.
The Hollywood Reporter broke the news that Paramount+'s international license to stream episodes of the long-running animated series has expired, forcing the streamer to pull the show off its global service. Outside the U.S., Paramount+ is available in the English-speaking territories of Canada, Australia, the U.K. and Ireland; in France, Italy and German-speaking Europe; in Japan, and across Latin America.
More from The Hollywood Reporter
Kanye "Ye" West Struggles Through Chaotic, Rain-Soaked Shanghai Concert
'Superman' Star Nicholas Hoult Takes on New Role as Save the Children Ambassador
'Better Go Mad in the Wild,' 'Bidad,' 'Sand City,' 'Forensics' Win Karlovy Vary Festival Awards
Threads on the South Park subreddit and social media have lit up with foul-mouthed complaints from international fans, most of them directed at Paramount and David Ellison's Skydance Media, whose $8 billion buyout of Paramount is at the heart of the South Park dispute.
'wtf. 100 % cancelling my subscription now,' noted user @emale27. 'The only reason I had Paramount+ was to watch South Park. I just canceled,' concurred @jaywinner.
'How does one go about setting Paramount on fire?'' asked @Acceptable-Bid-1019, prompting another user, @probably420stoned to quip: 'They've basically just done this themselves.'
Amid threats to cancel their Paramount+ subscriptions, devotees of the long-running animated series from Canada, Australia, France, Germany and elsewhere traded tips on how to watch the show, legally or otherwise, from their respective territories.
Paramount+ still has the rights to stream South Park specials internationally. South Park remains on the air on Paramount's Comedy Central channels worldwide, whose footprint spans most of Europe, Latin America, the Middle East and Australia/New Zealand. Paramount's ad-supported streaming service Pluto.TV also carries the show in several territories, including Canada, Latin America and select European countries. Back episodes are available for purchase on other services, including Apple TV and Amazon Prime. In some territories, including Germany and the Latin American region, back episodes are available to stream, ad-supported, on a stand-alone South Park website.
That fragmented global access was not what Paramount had in mind ahead of the season 27 premiere of South Park, which is set to bow on Comedy Central in the U.S. and internationally on July 23, two weeks later than originally planned.
Sources close to Paramount told THR the studio remains in negotiations and hopes to have the show back on Paramount+ soon.
Talks over a new South Park streaming deal, to replace its now-expired five-year pact with Warner Bros. Discovery's HBO Max, have stalled amid Paramount's protracted sale to Skydance.
As first reported by The Hollywood Reporter last month, Parker and Stone, through their Park County business entity, threatened legal action against Paramount. Park County accuses incoming president Jeff Shell, currently chairman of sports and media at Skydance investor Redbird Capital Partners, of interfering with their contract negotiations with Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) and Netflix to modify certain terms 'to benefit Paramount at the expense' of Park County. It pointed to Shell pushing WBD to give Paramount+ an exclusive 12-month window for new episodes of the show and to shorten the term of the licensing deal from 10 to five years.
A representative for Skydance released a statement dismissing the allegations. 'Any accusation that Jeff Shell tried to lower the price or devalue the franchise in any way is not only nonsensical but patently false,' the statement reads. 'Under the terms of the transaction agreement, Skydance has the right to approve material contracts.'
Paramount has two years left on its $900 million licensing deal for South Park but without unified international streaming rights, many global fans of the potty-mouthed kids from Colorado will remain frustrated.
But that doesn't mean they've lost their sense of humor.
'The silver lining of all this merger crap,' noted @Kalse1229 on the South Park subreddit, 'is that it's gonna make for an excellent South Park takedown.'
Best of The Hollywood Reporter
'The Studio': 30 Famous Faces Who Play (a Version of) Themselves in the Hollywood-Based Series
22 of the Most Shocking Character Deaths in Television History
A 'Star Wars' Timeline: All the Movies and TV Shows in the Franchise
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Margot Robbie Is All In on '90s Minimalism
Margot Robbie Is All In on '90s Minimalism

Vogue

timean hour ago

  • Vogue

Margot Robbie Is All In on '90s Minimalism

The jeans and tank top approach to heatwave dressing is nothing new. But if there's one star who's perfected the art of stripped-back, off-duty chic, it's Zoë Kravitz, whose '90s minimalist style has (and continues to have) social media in a chokehold. Every day, there's a new inspo account cropping up on my feed: you can try to unfollow them all, but like Medusa, cut one head off and three more crop up. Now, it seems that Margot Robbie has officially enrolled in the Zoë Kravitz school of dressing. Stepping out in London after a stint at Glastonbury, she perfected the formula: black tank top, straight-leg jeans, and the inescapable Alaïa mesh ballet flat. Strange shoe-induced tan lines aside, her low-key look was the perfect incognito cover to blend in with the army of tank-and-jeans girls currently pacing the pavements of every zip code, with only her Phoebe Philo bag hinting at her A-lister status. Perhaps it's the softening influence of an oppressively hot London summer, but Margot Robbie's pared-back off-duty look is a million miles away from her much documented Barbie press tour. Plus, it was topped off with the most important city accessory of all: the anti-snatch phone strap.

Drake's New Single Debuts At No. 1  — But Not On The Most Important Chart
Drake's New Single Debuts At No. 1  — But Not On The Most Important Chart

Forbes

timean hour ago

  • Forbes

Drake's New Single Debuts At No. 1 — But Not On The Most Important Chart

Drake's 'What Did I Miss?' debuts at No. 1 on eight Billboard charts but narrowly misses topping the ... More Hot 100, landing at No. 2 behind Alex Warren's "Ordinary." LONDON, ENGLAND - JULY 12: (EDITORIAL USE ONLY) Drake performs live on stage during day two of Wireless Festival 2025 at Finsbury Park on July 12, 2025 in London, England. Drake is headlining an unprecedented all three nights of Wireless Festival. (Photo byfor ABA) Drake is used to hitting No. 1 whenever he releases new music. The Canadian superstar typically scores a huge launch with either an exciting single or a full-length project, and his latest tune "What Did I Miss?" is no exception to this trend. The track brings the rapper back to the highest reaches on many Billboard rankings as it arrives. While it doesn't debut atop every list, including the Hot 100 — the most important of them all — it does manage to begin its run at No. 1 on multiple rosters, earning Drake even more leaders in the U.S. "What Did I Miss?" Launches at No. 1 "What Did I Miss?" debuts at No. 1 on eight different Billboard charts. The tune performs well enough to lead tallies focused on streaming activity, pure purchases, and overall consumption, but only when looking specifically at genre-focused rosters. Drake commands both the Streaming Songs and Digital Song Sales charts with 'What Did I Miss?' The same cut also manages to lead all of the following half-dozen genre-specific lists: Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, R&B/Hip-Hop Streaming Songs, R&B/Hip-Hop Digital Song Sales, Hot Rap Songs, Rap Streaming Songs, and the Rap Digital Song Sales rankings. Drake Extends His No. 1 Collection Drake is already familiar with the top spot on every tally he reaches with "What Did I Miss?" This week, the Grammy winner racks up his fifteenth leader on the Digital Song Sales chart, which is an impressive figure, but still the lowest number among all the rankings where he leads this frame. The same single becomes his thirty-first No. 1 on both the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and Hot Rap Songs charts simultaneously. "What Did I Miss?" Narrowly Misses the Hot 100's Top Spot Drake almost conquers the Hot 100 again this week, but "What Did I Miss?," appropriately, just misses the summit. The single kicks off its time in the runner-up spot, coming in behind "Ordinary" by Alex Warren, which is turning out to be one of the biggest songs of the year in the U.S. The track gives Drake his eighty-first top 10 smash on the Hot 100, and he extends his lead for the most placements inside that region among all artists. The same cut also becomes a top 40 hit on the Billboard Global 200, Rap Airplay, and Rhythmic Airplay tallies, debuting at Nos. 9, 21, and 36, respectively.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store