NEWS
đź’ĄBREAKING: “GO F*CK YOURSELVES” — South Park writer torches Trump allies after legal threats over satirical website In a culture-war dust-up powered entirely by pettiness and punchlines, South Park writer Toby Morton has reportedly sent Trump’s orbit into a tailspin — not with protests or lawsuits, but with a domain name and razor-sharp satire. After Trump allies floated the idea of slapping his name on the Kennedy Center, Morton quietly bought TrumpKennedyCenter.o.r.g and turned it into a deadpan parody so close to reality it barely needed exaggeration. The site skewers authoritarian vanity with surgical precision — and, unsurprisingly, drew legal threats from humor-averse lawyers. Morton’s reply didn’t mince words… Full story in comments 👇 #Trump #BreakingNews
💥 BREAKING: “GO F*CK YOURSELVES” — South Park Writer Torches Trump Allies After Legal Threats Over Satirical Website
What began as a petty culture-war stunt has exploded into a full-blown free-speech showdown — and this time, the loudest weapon wasn’t a rally, a lawsuit, or a press conference. It was a URL.
In a moment that perfectly captures the absurdity of modern American politics, South Park writer Toby Morton has reportedly sent Donald Trump’s allies into a rage spiral using nothing more than satire, timing, and a brutally well-chosen domain name.
A Vanity Project Meets a Satirist
The spark was a rumor that Trump allies were exploring the idea of attaching Trump’s name to the Kennedy Center, one of America’s most revered cultural institutions. To critics, the move symbolized everything they despise about Trump-era politics: personal branding, institutional capture, and a total disregard for tradition.
Morton didn’t tweet.
He didn’t organize a protest.
He didn’t call a lawyer.
Instead, he quietly bought TrumpKennedyCenter.org.
And then he went to work.
Satire So Accurate It Barely Needed Exaggeration
The website that appeared was a masterclass in deadpan parody. No cartoonish insults. No wild claims. Just a cold, eerily plausible presentation that mirrored the authoritarian vanity critics say defines Trump’s political style.
The joke wasn’t loud — and that was the point.
Visitors reportedly struggled to tell where satire ended and reality began. The site mocked the idea of branding a national cultural landmark with a political figure’s name by simply… treating it as normal. And that subtlety made it devastating.
In other words: the satire hit too close to home.
Enter the Lawyers
Unsurprisingly, Trump-aligned operatives didn’t laugh.
Instead, legal threats allegedly followed — the familiar playbook of intimidation often used to chill criticism when mockery proves more damaging than opposition. The argument wasn’t that the site was false, but that it was unacceptable.
That’s when Morton responded.
“Go F*ck Yourselves”
Morton’s reported reply was short, unfiltered, and unmistakable:
“Go f*ck yourselves.”
No apology.
No backpedaling.
No takedown.
Just a blunt rejection of the idea that powerful political figures — or their lawyers — get to decide where satire ends.
Why This Moment Matters
This isn’t just another internet prank. It’s a snapshot of a larger battle playing out across American culture:
Satire vs. Power
Free speech vs. intimidation
Institutions vs.
personal branding
For decades, South Park has survived precisely because it refuses to treat powerful people as sacred. Morton’s stunt follows that same DNA — using humor not to distract, but to expose.
Legal threats may scare journalists.
They may silence small creators.
But satire? Satire has always been harder to kill.
.
The Irony Is the Point
The most uncomfortable truth for Trump’s allies may be this:
The parody worked because it was believable.
And that’s what made it dangerous.
