In what can only be described as a desperate meltdown from the Left, late-night comedian Stephen Colbert and the long-running animated series South Park have turned their sights once again on President Donald Trump.
Their recent vulgar and unhinged attacks underscore a growing panic among liberal entertainers and media elites who see Trump’s political momentum surging—and know they’re powerless to stop it.
Colbert, whose Late Show is set to end in 2026 following years of declining ratings, gleefully jumped on a Wall Street Journal report claiming Trump’s name appeared in Jeffrey Epstein-related documents.
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The report, citing former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi, alleged that Trump was notified of his inclusion in the files back in May.
However, there has been no formal release of the files, and the Justice Department has declined to make them public—fueling suspicions that this is little more than politically timed rumor-mongering.
“There’s been a lot of smoking guns in this case,” Colbert said sarcastically, “but shortly before we taped this show, we got the smokiest yet — because the Wall Street Journal is now reporting that back in May, Attorney General Pam Bondi informed the president that his name was in the Epstein files.”
He then performed a theatrical mock celebration, taunting: “He’s in the files! He’s in the files! Yay! Yay!”
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Mockery is nothing new for Colbert, but this time he descended into outright personal degradation. He cruelly referred to Trump with a string of demeaning nicknames, culminating in a crude label: “Micropenis DJT.” The so-called “joke” wasn’t just in poor taste—it reeked of desperation.
This is the same man who once said, “You know how they say there’s no such thing as bad publicity? They’re not talking about this.”
Colbert’s obsession with Trump appears to have intensified ever since Trump celebrated CBS’s decision to pull the plug on The Late Show. “I absolutely love that Colbert got fired,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.
“His talent was even less than his ratings. I hear Jimmy Kimmel is next. Has even less talent than Colbert! Greg Gutfeld is better than all of them combined, including the Moron on NBC who ruined the once great Tonight Show.”
Colbert fired back with a juvenile response on air: “Go f–k yourself.”
Hardly presidential material for someone who once branded himself as America’s late-night moral compass.
Ironically, CBS claimed Colbert’s show’s cancellation was purely “a financial decision,” though it coincided with Colbert’s criticism of Paramount Global—CBS’s parent company—for a $16 million settlement payout to Trump.
That lawsuit stemmed from a deceptive 60 Minutes interview with then-VP Kamala Harris, which Trump said was intentionally edited in a misleading way.
Adding to the pile-on was South Park, which launched its 27th season with an episode that devolved into crude parody, showing a cartoon version of Trump in bed with Satan and reducing its message to personal attacks about his memes, manhood, and supposed links to Epstein.
In a particularly grotesque scene, Satan tells Trump, “I can’t even see anything. It’s so small,” referring to his genitalia. Later, the episode shows a nude, AI-generated Trump walking through a desert, as his penis literally endorses the narration: “Trump. His penis is teeny tiny, but his love for us is large.”
It’s clear that this wasn’t satire—it was a hit job.
Why now? Why the sudden wave of coordinated attacks from Paramount-owned properties? Some insiders say this is no accident.
South Park YouTuber Blooms pointed out on X (formerly Twitter) that creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone, who recently signed a $1.5 billion streaming deal with Paramount, are playing a deeper game.
“They want to piss him off so bad that he either sues Paramount again or refuses to let the merger happen,” Blooms posted. “This is supervillain-level 200 IQ plays from Matt and Trey, and they just became billionaires from it.”
I don’t think you guys realize that this episode wasn’t made out of spite for Trump, he was just the means to the end. This episode’s entire point was to fuck over paramount as hard as possible, and it’s beautiful.
— Blooms (@Bloomser1) July 24, 2025
In response to the South Park episode, White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers blasted the Left’s hypocrisy, noting: “The Left’s hypocrisy truly has no end—for years they have come after South Park for what they labeled as ‘offensive’ content, but suddenly they are praising the show.”
The statement continued: “This show hasn’t been relevant for over 20 years and is hanging on by a thread with uninspired ideas in a desperate attempt for attention.
President Trump has delivered on more promises in just six months than any other president in our country’s history—and no fourth-rate show can derail President Trump’s hot streak.”
Indeed, while Colbert and South Park stoop to genital jokes and rage baiting, President Trump continues doing what he’s always done: winning. Whether it’s through legal victories, financial settlements, or political traction in poll after poll, Trump remains the central force in American politics.
And no amount of juvenile late-night mockery or animated vulgarity is going to change that.
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