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10 Grey Dawn
(5 votes)
First aired: 11/5/2003    Production Code: 710

Due to a rise in deaths by senior citizens behind the wheel, the State of Colorado has revoked all the driver licenses of senior citizens. Soon after, the AARP shows up to fight for the rights of their comrades.

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 1 Plot
Written by BOT, on 09-24-2007 20:39
At the South Park Farmer's Market, Priest Maxi is holding a memorial service for the nine people who died the previous day when they were run over by a senior citizen who still holds a driver's license. The proceedings are marred by another unfortunate senior related driving incident. Stan asks his father Randy why old people are still allowed to drive. 
 
Grandpa Marsh overhears his son's opinion and lets his own feelings on the matter be known, he still wants to be able to drive. Out on Stark's Pond, a man is fishing in his boat until a senior motorist drives off the bridge and kills him. The news covers the recent rash of senior related driving tragedies. Grandpa Marsh and the other seniors have a meeting at the community center to decide what to do. Naturally, they have trouble remembering why they are all there. They eventually remember and Grandpa Marsh decides they should have a meeting. They then realize that they are having a meeting. 
 
When Randy finds out about the meeting he becomes worried, realizing that when the meeting is over, all the seniors will be driving on the road at the same time. Randy goes into the town and the farmer's market and shouts out a cry of alarm. He asks Gerald where the boys are. The boys are playing street hockey. Randy manages to save the boys and they flee from the many cars recklessly wandering the streets, eventually hiding in an abandoned house. Moments later, the house gets overrun by seniors making the wrong turn and going the wrong way (even on the second floor). 
 
The state of Colorado has demanded all seniors turn in their driver's license and the seniors are not happy. Stan's grandfather wants Stan to accompany him, in the car, to go and pick up his new Hover Round. All the boys accompany Grandpa Marsh on the trip, theorizing they'll be safer if they are in the car. Grandpa's driving is at the current senior standard of bad and Officer Barbrady pulls the car over and takes Stan's grandfather to jail. Randy is reluctant to bail his father out, but his father doesn't care, the AARP is sending their aid. 
 
Outside of his classroom, Mr. Garrison sees a large number of old people dropping out of the sky. The AARP has air-dropped in reinforcements, for it appears they are in fact a terrorist group. They begin taking hostages and liberating their colleagues from the retirement home. "The revolution is on" and the AARP has taken over the town. To show they mean business, the AARP starts killing hostages. 
 
More reinforcements arrive but then so does the military. The seniors list their demands, their driver's licenses, more Medicare and keeping those kids and their skateboards off the sidewalk. The AARP leader realises they could even take over the whole country. The children find their parents under lockup. Randy tells the boys that since they get up early, they are the only hope for getting the town back. Fleeing to the woods, the kids strategise on how to save their town, their parents, and possibly the whole country. Cartman suggests they dress up as black people and attach stolen explosives to Kyle, and then send Kyle to blow up the Country Kitchen Buffet, a popular restaurant among elders to the point that they are dependant on it. Stan suggests that they just lock the doors from the inside, which is exactly what they do. 
 
The AARP plans on taking stronger action, but their plans are thwarted when they start starving to death outside of the Country Kitchen Buffet at 6:00 AM, just like the boys predicted. Their defenses weakened, the hostages are released. Grandpa is turned back over to his family. Stan sums up the lessons learned by the Marsh family today, that Randy shouldn't treat his father like a child and that Grandpa should be proud to be a senior, but he should realize that he is a killing machine when he is driving. They all go home laughing, except the kids. As he walks offstage, Stan mutters, "Dude, I hate my family."
 2 References to Pop culture
Written by BOT, on 09-24-2007 20:40
* The restaurant that all the elderly eat at is named Country Kitchen Buffet, which is in reference to the restaurant chain Old Country Buffet. 
* The topical reference of this show is George Russell Weller's fatal car accident at the Santa Monica farmer's market in July 2003, in which he killed 10 people. The car Weller drove, a Buick LeSabre from 1992, is also featured in the episode, as the car which killed a man who was fishing when the car was driven off a bridge. This scene also parodies the movie Jaws, using the theme music from the movie. 
* The title of this episode and many of its scenes are a parody of the 1984 movie Red Dawn. Specific examples include the AARP troops parachuting into the town while Mr. Garrison lectures his class on Genghis Khan and sees them outside the window. Also many of the townspeople rounded up and held inside a prison camp, with Stan's dad talking to the boys through the fence and shouting "Avenge me!" 
* Cartman says "Mostly hippies go to farmer's markets... mostly". This is a reference to the character Newt from the movie Aliens. Cartman has spoken in this manner before in the episode "Cat Orgy". 
* The sequence where a convoy of elderly drivers are seen approaching (with Randy shouting for the boys to get off the road) references a sequence in John Carpenter's 1983 film adaption of Stephen King's 'Christine', with similar staging and music to this scene where Christine chases a victim at a slow pace before running him down. 
* When Stan's dad runs toward the four boys when the camera pans to the boys and then back to Randy, Randy is further back similar to a scene in Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
 3 Goofs
Written by BOT, on 09-24-2007 20:40
Stan's mom, Sharon, refers Grampa Marsh as "dad", even though he is actually Randy's dad. However, a few seconds later, Grampa Marsh engages in conversation with Randy, who replies with "yes dad".
 
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