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Stan "gets served" when a group of kids from Orange County challenge him to a dance-off. It's up to Stan to put a team of South Park's best dancers together to compete against a rival troupe from Orange County. While Butters has won awards for his dancing, he refuses to help Stan out, as he hasn't been able to dance since the tragic death of eight audience members at his last competition. |
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| Originally Aired |
7th April 2004 |
| How Kenny Dies |
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| Guest Starring |
Jessie Thomas (Voice of Unknown) |
| Trivia |
- When they show the flashback to Butter's tap dance recital, the way in
which the people die is a shot-for-shot replication of the first scene
in the 2002 film "Ghost Ship."
- Butters' storyis reminiscent of the 2001 film "Save the Last Dance" in which a girl whose mother was killed on the way to her dance recital is so traumitized she vows to give it up forever. She moves to Chicago to escape her demons, but meets and falls for a streetwise black youth who encourages her to stop blaming heself for her mother's death and to rediscover her love of ballet.
- The music played when Randy tells Stan to "Give 'em Hell", is very similar to the theme used in the song "Lose Yourself", which is performed by Eminem.
- The original airing of the show featured a small difference from all subsequent airings. The leader of the OC crew's hat originally had written on it "Lil' Shiit." The same night it was aired, the repeat of it had already censored it to become "Lil' Sheep."
- Some cable providers listed this show variously as "You Got..." or "You Got F'd in the A", for obvious reasons.
- "Well, it was nine, actually. One of the women was pregnant." - a nod to the new federal legislation making it a separate crime to kill the fetus of a federal employee in the commission of a federal crime. The legislation gives an infant rights that Roe v. Wade had taken away and recognizes that an infant is a separate entity from the mother, and thus, a separate life.
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