Fans of South Park are reeling after the latest episode featured an explicitsex scene between U.S. President DonaldTrump and Vice President JDVance.
The episode, titled ‘Sora Not Sorry,’ aired Wednesday night and immediately sparked mixed reactions across social media.
Season 28, Episode 3 of the Comedy Central series pushed boundaries even by South Park standards.
- South Park's Season 28, Episode 3 features a graphic sex scene between Trump and VP JD Vance that shocked and divided fans online.
- The episode includes Trump and Vance bonding in a White House hot tub before a passionate, explicit scene set to Foreigner's ballad.
- Viewers found the scene traumatizing yet hilarious, with many expressing shock and some joking about needing therapy afterward.
South Park’s latest episode features a graphic and explicit sex scene between Trump and Vance
Image credits: Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images
The scene in question shows Trump and Vance naked and in bed together.
Vance leans over and asks Trump, “What about Satan?” with whom Trump had conceived a love child earlier on the show.
Vance’s character had been scheming against Trump for weeks before, working behind Trump’s back to get an abortion of Trump’s upcoming baby with Satan.
As Foreigner’s ‘I Want to Know What Love Is’ plays in the background, the couple looks into each other’s eyes and shares a passionate kiss, which soon escalates into much more.
Image credits: Paramount
The scene takes place after Vance and Trump soak in a hot tub together at the White House.
While in the hot tub, Vance tells Trump, “Nobody feels for you the way that I do,” as instrumental music plays in the background. “Nobody, boss.”
The sequence leaves little to the imagination, with exaggerated expressions and sound effects that many viewers described as traumatizing.
At one point, Vance stares down at what had previously been described as Trump’s “teeny-tiny” penis, saying, “Oh, boss, it’s so big.”
Image credits: Paramount
“There was just so much to process this episode. Between the insane start to Sadam Trump f*****g Tattoo Vance, I think I need therapy,” one Reddit user wrote.
Another commented, “I’ve never been more disturbed by something but laughed as hard at the same time as the Vance-Trump hookup.”
A third said, “Trump and JD having sex caught me off guard an[d] had me in stitches.”
#SouthPark#s28e3#SPTWTpic.twitter.com/lZMfLXuf0Z
— Badgerclops (@beeclops2) November 13, 2025
“Watching South Park. I’m now traumatized,” a viewer posted on X. Another said, “Thanks for the nightmares I’m gonna have tonight South Park.”
The episode continues South Park’s long tradition of skewering real-world politics and public figures. The show’s creators, Trey Parker and Matt Stone, have made Trump a recurring target in recent seasons, portraying him in increasingly outrageous storylines.
In previous episodes, Trump’s lawsuits, his ties to Jeffrey Epstein, and Paramount’s willingness to settle a lawsuit were mocked.
Viewers were traumatized and disturbed after the scene, with some even joking they needed therapy
Image credits: Paramount
In one episode, Trump was shown as a loud figure with a micropenis who crawled into bed with Satan. He kept suing everybody and removing his trousers to show off his “tiny penis,” a total of five times throughout the episode.
It showed Trump walking through the desert as he undressed, fell to his knees, and rolled over to lie on his back.
Trump then looked down at this micropenis, which featured googly eyes, and said, “I’m Donald J. Trump and I endorse this message.”
Despite frequent controversy, South Park remains one of the most successful animated shows in television history.
Image credits: Paramount
Earlier this year, the show’s parent company, Paramount, renewed Parker and Stone’s massive $1.5 billion streaming deal, ensuring the series’ continuation for five more years.
Not everyone found the episode amusing.
A White House spokesperson, Taylor Rogers, criticized the show, saying, “This show hasn’t been relevant for over 20 years and is hanging on by a thread with uninspired ideas in a desperate attempt for attention.”
“President Trump has delivered on more promises in just six months than any other president in our country’s history—and no fourth-rate show can derail President Trump’s hot streak,” Rogers added.
Speaking to The New York Times a few days ago, Parker explained, “It’s like the government is just in your face everywhere you look.”
Image credits: Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images
“Whether it’s the actual government or whether it is all the podcasters and the TikToks and the YouTubes and all of that, and it’s just all political and political because it’s more than political. It’s pop culture,” he said.
The creators also said the network gives them full creative freedom. “I know with the Colbert thing and all the Trump stuff, people think certain things, but they’re letting us do whatever we want, to their credit,” Stone said.
“You know, next year will be different,” Parker said. “If there’s one thing we know, it is that our show will be a lot longer than theirs.”







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