Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Following that I went on to make a cake bot and a queef bot.
"Eat, Pray, Queef" was written and directed by series co-founder Trey Parker.
Mr. Mackey ends up telling the boys what a queef is, describing it as "a vaginal expulsion of gas, mmkay."
Shortly after "Eat, Pray, Queef" was originally broadcast, the site also featured T-shirts and hooded sweatshirts based on the episode.
This female-male divide in the appreciation of toilet humor was further satirized in the thirteenth season episode "Eat, Pray, Queef".
The 13th season introduced the characters Katie and Katherine, stars of a television show, The Queef Sisters, that consists largely of vaginal flatulence jokes.
"Eat, Pray, Queef" was released on DVD and Blu-ray along with the rest of the thirteenth season on March 16, 2010.
Television host Martha Stewart ("Eat, Pray, Queef", "Red Hot Catholic Love")
Since "Eat, Pray, Queef" was coincidentally also set to air on April Fools' Day, they considered a similar joke revolving around Katherine and Katie.
"Eat, Pray, Queef" is the fourth episode of the thirteenth season of the American animated television series South Park, and the 185th overall episode of the series.
Troy Queef - A spoof columnist claimed to be the Executive Associate Editor-At-Large for Dab Of Oppo magazine.
The episode ends with the South Park men recording "Queef Free", a charity song in the style of "We Are The World" mixed with lyrics from "I Am Woman".
In its original American broadcast, "Eat, Pray, Queef" was watched by three million households overall, according to the Nielsen Media Research, making it the most-watched Comedy Central production of the week.
The fifth season episode, "Terrance and Phillip: Behind the Blow", also references the controversy over the airing of this episode, as does the thirteenth season episode, "Eat, Pray, Queef".
The episode "Eat, Pray, Queef" demonstrated a double standard between rights of men and women by showing the South Park men, who have no problem with farting, strongly objecting to vaginal flatulence from women.
"Eat, Pray, Queef", along with the thirteen other episodes from South Parks thirteenth season, were released on a three-disc DVD set and two-disc Blu-ray set in the United States on March 16, 2010.
Niki Payne of the Philadelphia Examiner said "Eat, Pray, Queef" was "probably one of my all-time favorite episodes of South Park right now" because it was so on point concerning the double standards between men and women.
A federal lawsuit, deciding a major loss for feminist equality was decided by a woman queefing the Road Warrior, an enraged Wez and Lord Humungus, in "Eat, Pray, Queef", an episode in the thirteenth season of South Park.
Meanwhile, the Queef Sisters appear on Regis and Kelly to promote their book Eat, Pray, Queef, and Terrance and Philip's show gets canceled due to the rising popularity of the Queef Sisters.
To their horror, it is then revealed that, as an April Fools Day joke, the channel is airing a new show called the Queef Sisters, about Canadian sisters Katherine (voiced by Trey Parker) and Katie Queef (voiced by Matt Stone).