First aired: 12/12/2001 Production Code: 514 Butters finds out what his father has been up to late at night and when his mother hears, she overreacts by trying to kill her son and then herself back at home. After returning home and forgiving her husband, she realizes what she has done to her son (she doesn’t know she failed) they spin a story to the media to cover their tracks. Meanwhile, Butters obsesses with returning home so that he can join his parents for an anniversary dinner at Bennigan’s.
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Add as favorites (65) 1 Plot Written by BOT , on 09-24-2007 19:22 The episode begins with a theme song about Butters. Then Butters expresses excitement about his parent's upcoming anniversary, which they are going to celebrate at Butters' favorite restaurant, Bennigans. A few days before their anniversary, Mrs. Stotch asks Butters to spy on Mr. Stotch, in order to find out what his gift for her will be. She is convinced that it'll be better that her gift for him. Butters, instead of seeing whatever the gift was, watches his dad as he enters first a gay theater, then a gay bathhouse, and has casual sex with men. He doesn't understand the seriousness of what he saw, so he is quite cheerful when he tells his mother about what occurred, and shows her the photos he took to prove it. She then goes insane, and spends the entire day next day painting coat after coat of paint on the wall. Butters again follows his dad to the bathhouse that night, and meets up with him as he's masturbating on a bed in one of the rooms. Mr. Stotch is horrified upon seeing Butters there, and advises him to go back home, like a good little boy. Butters cheerfully says goodbye, and leaves. When he gets home, Butters' dad explains to him that it's okay to tell a little white lie in order to avoid emotionally hurting people, and asks him not to tell his mom what he just saw. Butters says that it won't be any problem, since she already knows. Mr. Stotch is frightened, now. Mrs. Stotch then comes into the room, and says in a dull tone that she wants to take Butters for a little car ride. She says she also wants her husband to stay behind so he can think about what he's done. Mr. Stotch is concerned, but momentarily at a loss for words. It turns out that she intended to kill herself, but before she did that, she decided that she should kill Butters so he wouldn't be without a mother. She is going to drown Butters in the river. Butters once again has no idea what's really happening, and he proceeds to tell his mom about some difficulties he is having at school. She then gets out of the car, without putting the brakes on, and says that she will be with him shortly afterwards. Butters, however, does not drown as she expected him to, rather, the current carries the car for a long time down the stream. When it finally stops, Butters, who is convinced that the car-in-the-water incident was merely an accident, gets out and hurries back home so he and his parents can still go to Bennigans. Later, Mr. Stotch comes into the house just as his wife finishes her suicide note and goes to hang herself. He manages to stop her from killing herself, and admits to his homosexual affairs. He explains that his bicuriousness grew out of experimentation on the Internet, and tells her that it's become an addiction. He refuses to take responsibility for his actions, and instead blames the Internet. He insists that he still loves Mrs. Stotch, and he doesn't want to lose his family, but then his wife confesses to having "killed" Butters. He then agrees to cover the murder up, and they tell the press that Butters was kidnapped by "some Puerto Rican guy". As the media centers in on the "missing child" case, the pair are inducted into a "club" of people whose loved ones have taken from them by "Some Puerto Rican Guy", including Gary Condit, O.J. Simpson, and the Ramseys. Butters, after quite an adventure, finally returns. But when his parents begin fighting over which version of their story he must tell, he scolds them for lying and trying to teach him to lie as well. Deciding that he is right, they go outside and confess as to what really happened. They explain about Mr. Stotch's bicuriousness and affairs, Mrs. Stotch's attempted murder, and the whole cover-up, and it is only at this point that Butters realizes what actually happened, and is visibly disturbed. This is followed by a lengthy scene in which Butters' father repeatedly screams about "slimy scumbag liars" and "murdering murderers" while the camera cuts to the blank but smiling faces of Condit, Simpson, and the Ramseys, implying that they themselves are guilty for the loss of their own "loved ones". Butters, having been completely ignorant of the truth, is aghast and deeply traumatized. When Stan, Kyle and Cartman look at him in shock, he attempts to respond with a joke. He then explains to the boys that, while the knowledge of what really transpired is horrible and his faith in the inherent goodness of truth is shaken, he's certain a delicious meal at Bennigan's will get him feeling back to normal: "I'm gonna be ok!" The boys are stunned and Stan asks "Really?" to which Butters sadly replies "No, I'm lying." He then leaves to join his family at Bennigan's, and the scene ends with one more round of the theme.
2 The New Main Character Written by BOT , on 09-24-2007 19:22 This episode is perhaps most notable for marking the point where Butters became a popular and important character. Before this, he had been little more than a supporting character. When Kenny died "semi-permanently" in the previous episode, a new door was opened, however temporarily, for one of the background characters to become a main character, and Butters turned out to be the one who rose to power. He held this position until the season six episode Professor Chaos. In DVD commentary, Parker and Stone indicate they already planned to make Butters the fourth group member, and created this episode as a prelude to his assuming a more prominent role in the series. Even though he stopped being the fourth friend after Professor Chaos, he still remained a prominent character. His role increased yet again about two seasons later, and he still remains a "fifth" main character today, appearing in large roles in many modern episodes, even though much time has elapsed since Kenny was resurrected.
3 Trivia Written by BOT , on 09-24-2007 19:23 * One of the articles in the newspaper Mr. Stotch is reading states "Towelie Ban Lifted". This is a referrence to the comment Towelie made in Osama Bin Laden Has Farty Pants. * The theme song "Everyone Knows It's Butters" is sung to the same tune as The Association's 1967 hit Windy.
4 References to Pop culture Written by BOT , on 09-24-2007 19:23 * The scene at the restaurant, where Simpson, the Ramseys, and Condit start chanting, “One of us! One of us! Gooble gobble! Gooble gobble!”, is a homage to the famous scene in the 1932 horror film, Freaks. * The events of the episode parallel the well-publicized case of Susan Smith. * Butters encounters the three laser dots of an unseen Predator that watches him with infared vision on the creepy road to South Park. * The old man that tells Butters how to walk back to South Park is based on Jud Crandall from Pet Sematary. * When Butters is in the bathroom you hear the song It Feels So Good by Sonique. * This episode features samples from Warcraft II. When Butters is walking through the creepy road, there is a moment you can hear the same sound dragon units make in the game.