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  • Welcome to Top10Archive!

  • Race, religion, sexual orientation, and a myriad of other social "concerns" are often

  • considered hot-button issues that many mediums steer clear of.

  • Some animated television shows and cartoons, however, are willing to risk viewer disdain

  • by facing the subjects head on.

  • These 10 episodes of your favorite cartoons push those controversial boundaries - and

  • they're not all South Park and Family Guy!

  • 10.

  • "Dial M for Monkey: Barbequor" - (Dexter's Laboratory)

  • Just how controversial could an episode of a cartoon as harmless as Dexter's Laboratory

  • really be; especially one that spoofs Marvel's galactic metallic surfer - Silver Surfer?

  • Originally aired on May 19th, 1996, the 4th episode of the "Dial M for Monkey" segment

  • featured a character that apparently pushed Cartoon Network's limits on sexuality.

  • The spoof character, The Silver Spooner, was viewed as an obvious homosexual stereotype,

  • with his outward flamboyance and love for Judy Garland.

  • Rumor has it, the episode was banned because the character was too controversial for the

  • youthful crowd.

  • Other rumors have it that the episode was pulled at the legal behest of Marvel.

  • 9.

  • "Beauty and the Beach" - (Pokemon) For a show with a central focus of taming

  • and training wild animals for use in arena battles, controversy isn't entirely a new

  • concept.

  • Even more shocking than PETA's own views of Japan's Pokemon, though, was an episode that

  • veered off the typical plot points to include a beauty contest - and it's there that things

  • take an odd turn.

  • The villainous James of Team Rocket enters the beauty contest sporting a pair of oversized

  • inflatable breasts and mocks the slightly less busty Misty.

  • The episode, which aired in 1997 in Japan, was banned for 3 years in the United States

  • before finally being dubbed over and released in 2000, showing the awkwardness of James

  • wearing an impressive inflatable chest.

  • 8.

  • "Blame It on Lisa" - (The Simpsons) The Simpsons is well known for its fool hearty

  • humor and unique take on social issues, and while the show's writers often use enough

  • tact to avoid being offensive, this 2002 episode pushed some boundaries.

  • The episode sees the titular family traveling to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in search of an

  • orphan that Lisa had been sponsoring, sparking a slew of off-beat stereotypes that Brazilians

  • were none-too-pleased with.

  • From mixing up their culture to depicting Rio de Janeiro as a city rife with kidnappings,

  • street crime, and rat infestations, the episode did little to win over a Brazilian audience.

  • Riotur, the tourist board of Rio de Janeiro even threatened Fox with lawsuits, citing

  • potential damages to an $18 million tourism campaign the board ran in the United States

  • prior to the episode airing.

  • 7.

  • "Flying Dupes" - (TaleSpin) Aint nothin' more fittin' for a children's

  • cartoon like TaleSpin than allusions to terrorism and bombings.

  • No, wait.. is that right?

  • Maybe that's why the 1991 episode of The Disney Afternoon cartoon was yanked from the rerun

  • line-up after its initial airing.

  • In "Flying Dupes," Baloo is given the job of delivering a package to the Thembrian High

  • Marshall.

  • Unbeknownst to the big dopey sloth bear, the seemingly innocent package is a bomb being

  • delivered on behalf of a failing bomb factory in Thembria that's simply trying to revitalize

  • its business bystarting a war?

  • A little heavy-handed for a children's cartoon, the episode remained off the air until an

  • alleged slip-up on Toon Disney in 1999.

  • 6.

  • "With Apologies to Jesse Jackson" (South Park) As promised, we went as long as possible without

  • mentioning the rather obvious - an episode of South Park.

  • Kicking off the 11th season in March of 2007 was "With Apologies to Jesse Jackson," an

  • episode that snuck in 43 uses of the "N-word," completely uncensored.

  • Though the organization Abolish the "N" Word, which is associated with the National Association

  • for the Advancement of Colored People, praised the episode for helping educate the power

  • of the word, the Parents Television Council was a little less forgiving.

  • Surprisingly, as controversial as the episode sounds, the PTC seemed to be the only group

  • to openly speak out against the episode.

  • 5.

  • "Bloody Mary" (South Park) South Park's "Bloody Mary" certainly does

  • earn its place on this list of controversy, especially in the eyes of the Catholic faith.

  • Amongst the plot of an alcoholic seeking a cure for his disease, a statue of the Virgin

  • Mary begins to bleed from its rear.

  • The alcoholic in question, Randy, seeks out the miracle of the bleeding statue and douses

  • himself in rectal blood in order to cure himself.

  • Alas!

  • Things get worse with the arrival of Pope Benedict XVI, who determines the blood is

  • coming from the Virgin's nethers.

  • In only the most sensitive way, the Pope claims this is no miracle, as "chicks" bleed all

  • the time.

  • Of course, the episode is a commentary on "weeping statues" and the power of belief,

  • but Trey Parker and Matt Stone made no friends in the Catholic community with their crude

  • take.

  • 4.

  • "One Beer" (Tiny Toon Adventures) What antics could Buster, Plucky, and Hamton

  • possibly get themselves into that would lead to the banning of an episode of such an innocent

  • cartoon?

  • Well, possibly after a few too many cold ones and a long day of work, the minds behind the

  • perky cartoon decided to tackle the issue of under-aged drinking and drunk driving.

  • The trio stumble upon a bottle of beer and, with the full intention of showing the "evils

  • of alcohol," proceed to get drunk.

  • What follows is a twisted version of how dangerous and bad alcohol can be as the three head to

  • ACME Looniversity, drive away their female counterparts, steal a police car, and drive

  • off the top of a mountain to a graveyard below to their deaths.

  • No, really.

  • To their deaths.

  • Is it a wonder that this lighthearted gem was banned?

  • 3.

  • "Tonsil Trouble" (South Park) So it didn't take long for South Park to show

  • up for a 3rd time, but we promise it more than deserves the #3 spot.

  • For the 11 seasons leading up to this March 2008 premiere episode, the show has pulled

  • zero punches.

  • If it tackles an issue, it does so with absolutely no qualms over who it may offend.

  • In "Tonsil Trouble," those that miss the overall message may be taken aback by the central

  • theme of the AIDS virus.

  • After Cartman contracts HIV during a blood transfusion, the episode launches into a controversial

  • spiral that all-but hints at the miraculous healing power of money.

  • The episode features long-time HIV spokesperson Magic Johnson, who has survived as long as

  • he has by sleeping on a pile of cash.

  • Though the episode continues the show's off-beat way of sending a message, it does so with

  • the highly controversial "Gay disease."

  • 2.

  • "Partial Terms of Endearment" (Family Guy) There are few shows that rival South Park's

  • brash nature, but Seth MacFarlane's Family Guy is pretty high on that list.

  • Topping the show's most controversial episodes is Partial Terms of Endearment, a brave - or

  • possibly foolish - attempt at bringing the topic of abortion to animated television.

  • After Lois becomes the surrogate mother for a couple that later dies in a car accident,

  • Lois and Peter go down a slippery slope of deciding whether to abort the fetus or bring

  • it into the world for adoption.

  • While the episode has been defended by its writers as being an "intelligent discussion

  • of a very difficult subject," the Fox Broadcasting Company banned the episode from airing anyways.

  • 1.

  • "200" (South Park) Aired in 2010, "200" served as a milestone

  • episode for the 14th season of the world's favorite raunchy animated series.

  • It also served as a massive and completely intentional slap in the face to Muslims, as

  • the episode focused around the prophet Muhammad.

  • Depictions of Muhammad in other mediums sparked threats and riots in Muslim communities, causing

  • Comedy Central to disallow images of Muhammad on the network.

  • After the episode aired, the show's creators, Parker and Stone, received threats of retribution

  • from the Revolution Muslim organization in New York, and there's even a possible link

  • to a 2010 car bomb attempt in Times Square.

  • In creation of "200," South Park's showrunners sought to comment on the strict restrictions

  • placed by the Muslims on criticisms of the Muslim faith and beliefs.

  • In response to the backlash the show received, many, such as The Daily Telegraph writer Douglas

  • Murray, believed the episode's point was proven.

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