Hollywood veteran Pam Brady recalls one time she went over the line

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Writer Pam Brady was the woman behind many of the jokes fans have loved on South Park over the last quarter century.
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The Hollywood veteran was a writer and producer on the long-running series from its humble beginnings in 1997 to 2008.
Brady admitted that while she helped co-creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone set the tone for the controversial series, she recalled one time she went over the line.
Brady, who was at 2025βs South by Southwest (SXSW) Festival promoting the upcoming animated Prime Video series #1 Happy Family USA, revealed to Fox News what she believes was the worst joke she ever wrote during her South Park run.
βIt was based on an old frat joke β¦ one character said, βI donβt trust anything that bleeds for five days and doesnβt die,’β she said. βI remember it was just like the most misogynistic frat boy joke that Iβd heard of at that point β¦ but weβre reclaiming it.β
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It was the character of Mr. Garrison, the kidsβ fourth-grade teacher, who uttered the line in the 1999 film South Park: Bigger, Longer, & Uncut.
βI think thereβs always improvement to be made,β Brady said as she shared her thoughts of Hollywoodβs recent treatment of women.
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βI mean, women are 51% of the population, so it should always be 50% [female in writersβ rooms],β she continued.
βBut Iβve been really lucky, you know, South Parkβs writersβ room has always been 50-50, male-female β¦ but the best part about Hollywood is that no oneβs keeping women out. So I never feel like β¦ [itβs] the old boys network.β
Brady did note that the changing culture has affected her joke-writing a bit.
βI do think you have to be more careful now, what you say,β she acknowledged.
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βSouth Park had an episode where they represented β¦ Iβm not going to say what it was, but it was just someone you wouldnβt want to represent on a show β¦ and you could do it 20 years ago, but you canβt do it now,β Brady explained.
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βIβm sort of of two minds about it, because I think the idea of cancel culture and stuff you canβt say β¦ I think times change and I think sometimes itβs good that you go, βOh, you shouldnβt do something thatβs like, a racist phrase that your grandparents would use.β And thatβs sort of just evolving.β
But she added that she doesnβt believe comedy has necessarily been βstifled,β but rather, βyou need to be smarter to make a jokeβ nowadays.
Brady said itβs all about building trust with your audience.
β[Itβs about] knowing that someone is not attacking you,β she said. βAnd to earn that trust, itβs changed. But I think thatβs the fun of it. How can you make a joke now, where everybodyβs in on the joke? I think thatβs the trick. Nobody wants to feel bad and, you know, we donβt want to do stuff that just makes people feel bad.β
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