Die Hippie, Die

"Die Hippie, Die" is the second episode of the ninth season of South Park.

Synopsis
Cartman runs a "pest control" service to try and rid the town of hippies, a foe he has feared and hated for most of the series, mainly because all they do is smoke pot and smell bad

Plot
Cartman runs a "pest control" service to try and rid the town of hippies, a foe he has feared and hated for most of the series, mainly because all they do is smoke pot and smell bad. Having studied hippies in his quest to eradicate them, Cartman deduces that the hippies are about to start a music festival in South Park. His attempts to warn the town council are futile, and he is arrested soon afterwards for imprisoning 63 captured hippies in his basement.

The town of South Park is soon invaded by the largest population of hippies in the history of man, and the music festival threatens to destroy the town. They manage to convert Stan, Kyle and Kenny to their cause with talks of corporate evils, and the trio get caught up in the massive hippie crowd, who spend their time listening to jam band music and doing drugs.

Cartman pleads with the mayor to stop the festival, but it turns out that the mayor was the one who permitted the music festival in the first place. After seeing the chaos that the hippies are creating, however, the mayor is ridden with guilt and shoots herself in the head (she survives and appears later in the strategy room when Cartman is enacting his plan). The rest of the town then pleads with Cartman to rid the town of the hippies. Cartman eventually agrees to help, but only after Randy promises to offer a Tonka radio controlled bulldozer, as well as Kyle's mother assuring that Kyle would never have one and instead have to watch Cartman having fun with the bulldozer.

Meanwhile, Stan, Kyle, and Kenny realize that the hippies are doing nothing to oppose the corporations that they have demonized and that their idea of a perfect society is the same as the currently existing one. They try to leave but the crowd is 7 miles in radius and Stan's efforts to talk sense into the hippies only make matters worse. In the end, Cartman, with the help of a scientist (Randy Marsh), an engineer (Linda Stotch), and "a black man to sacrifice himself in case anything goes wrong" (Chef), builds a giant drill (a reference to the movie The Core) -- the "Hippie Digger" -- to bore through the hippie crowd (effectively killing the hippies getting in its way). His plan is to upload a Slayer CD, because "hippies can't stand death metal". The plan works and the hippie crowd starts to disassemble, saving South Park, after which Cartman spots Kyle, and Kyle is forced to watch Cartman having fun with his Tonka bulldozer in the school parking lot.

Trivia

 * When Cartman plays the Slayer song, we can see he has other music on his computer like "Muhhhrtallicaz - Ride The Thunder" and "Motorface - Death From Behind" which are obviously spoofs of Metallica's Ride the Lightning and Motörhead's Ace of Spades, other famous metal bands.
 * Originally, this episode was meant to be a parody of A&E's Dog the Bounty Hunter, but the creators decided that not enough people had seen the show to understand the references. The parody of the show was later implemented into the season 10 episode, Miss Teacher Bangs a Boy.
 * This episode marks the last time Isaac Hayes recorded new dialogue for his character Chef, before Hayes quit the show in March 2006.

Cultural references

 * The term "little Eichmanns," which the neo-hippies often use in the episode, is a reference to the controversy over a Ward Churchill article titled On the Justice of Roosting Chickens. In the piece, Churchill referred to the people who worked at the World Trade Center in New York City as "little Eichmanns." Even though the piece was over three years old, it was just being discovered and discussed by the mainstream media shortly before this episode aired. Churchill was a professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder, which is near South Park and is where the show's co-creators [[Trey Parker and Matt Stone first met.
 * The scenes involving the plan constructed by Cartman to use a drill to reach the center of the music festival is a parody on the film style of the Bruckheimer/Bay producer/director team, including The Core and Armageddon.
 * having to drill to save the town (world)
 * the mayor (government) wanting to nuke as soon as the drilling was put to a halt
 * Chef (Lev) climbing outside the Drill (Virgil) to restore power as well as the music and the astronaut suits.
 * At the beginning of the episode Cartman's hippy-busting gear resembles the gear worn by the characters in Ghostbusters.
 * The drill machine featured in the episode bears strong resemblance to the Gotengo warship from the Japanese movies Atragon, The War in Space, and Godzilla: Final Wars.
 * The drill crew's red suits and the scene where they board the drill is a spoof of astronauts boarding the Space Shuttle in the movie Armageddon.
 * The red car driven by the "college know-it-all" hippies closely resembles the facelifted 6th generation Honda Accord.
 * The car has a Parodies of the ichthys symbol on it.
 * Kyle wears a Che Guevara t-shirt.
 * The scene where Cartman warns the City Council of the incoming danger of the hippies is a spoof of [[The Day After Tomorrow, which South Park parodied more heavily in the episode "Two Days Before the Day After Tomorrow".
 * The song that Cartman plays is Slayer's "Raining Blood", from their Reign in Blood album.