Hi! You’re very kind, but
no, I’ve never studied psychology or anything. I just really love South Park and I think about the characters a lot. Too
much, probably. And nonsense, I love your Matt and Trey analyses!
Stan and Kyle are my two
favorite characters so of course I’ll discuss them and their friendship. I
think these two complement each other very well and balance each other out.
Normally, they’re attached at the hip, but these Super Best Friends have had an
argument or two (or three or four). They’ve fought or betrayed or called each
other out on five different occasions, if my memory serves: “Prehistoric Ice
Man,” “Mystery of the Urinal Deuce,” “Crack Baby Athletic Association,” “You’re
Getting Old/Ass Burgers,” and “Butterballs.”
The first two episodes
are pretty useless in terms of analysis and characterization. “Prehistoric Ice
Man” is the episode where Stan and Kyle have their first real fight. However,
this is early South Park and the boys haven’t developed their distinct
personalities yet. During season 2, Stan and Kyle are pretty much the same kid,
which means the fight doesn’t add any merit to their friendship. “Mystery of
the Urinal Deuce” is also an exception because Stan betrays Kyle to protect
himself from getting in trouble for crapping in the urinal. I don’t think he
intends to target Kyle in any way, but Kyle gets caught up in the plot and
won’t stop digging, in that Kyle way of his. Stan sort of has his back against
the wall here and pulls a gun on his friend to save himself. That doesn’t make
it okay, but it’s certainly understandable, and clear Stan didn’t do so because
of any malice towards Kyle.
Now things get a little
more interesting. I’ll compare “Crack Baby Athletic Association” and
“Butterballs” because they’re very similar in the way Stan and Kyle disagree.
“CBAA” has Kyle agreeing with Cartman and acting immorally so he seeks
validation from Stan. He rants and raves in Stan’s ear about why what he’s
doing is okay when he’s really trying to convince himself. He seeks Stan’s
acceptance because Stan is the closest thing to himself he can find. If Stan
says its fine, he can quit feeling guilty. However, Stan says “You sound like
Cartman” and stares deadpan the rest of the time because that’s all he has to say. He knows Kyle enough to be
aware that comparing him to Cartman is the ultimate insult and this comment
will cause him to sort himself out.
On the flipside, Stan’s
ego gets the best of him again in
“Butterballs” and Kyle is the only one who tries to make him see that. He
points out that the anti-bullying video is more about Stan helping himself than
helping victims of bullying and repeatedly tells him to be careful he doesn’t
wind up jacking it in San Diego. This sequence is played for laughs, but it shows
just how intuitive Kyle is. He knows about the history of Stan’s big head and
correctly predicts what will happen if it goes too far because he’s seen all
this before. He knows Stan insanely well and is smart enough to see patterns in
his best friend’s behavior that will spell trouble so he warns him because he
cares.
Now, before the next
segment, I want to say that I adore Kyle. He’s a good character, probably the
best person on the show morality wise, but…not
a super great friend. Stan has his issues, but he is a way better friend than
Kyle. I couldn’t analyze Stan and Kyle’s friendship without ranting a bit about
Kyle’s abandonment of Stan in “You’re Getting Old” and “Ass Burgers.” I’m still
furious at Kyle for how quickly he turns his back on Stan during his
depression. Kyle doesn’t even try to help
Stan in his time of need, which is particularly frustrating if you look at how
often Stan goes out of his way for Kyle. He schemes to get Cartman’s kidney to
save Kyle’s life in “Cherokee Hair Tampon,” writes a hit song so Kyle can return
to South Park in “Smug Alert,” and investigates the girls’ list to help Kyle’s
self-esteem in “The List.” I don’t even think those are all the instances where Stan sticks his neck out for Kyle. And
then, after all that, Kyle suddenly decides “I don’t care to be in this
friendship anymore” the minute Stan needs him? That’s pretty shitty, but I
think it makes sense if you look at Kyle’s character.
Kyle certainly has
relationships with the people in his life and cares about their well-being, but
his #1 concern is the right thing. If
he sees someone being wronged, he will intervene, even if that person is
Cartman and even if the wrongdoer is someone he loves. He is able to look at a situation
objectively and figure out the right course of action. This mentality is what
makes Kyle so great, but it’s also what contributes to his self-righteousness. I
think, in Kyle’s mind, he thinks the right thing to do is cut Stan loose. Stan’s
depression is sad, but it’s also a huge bummer to be around and he feels Stan
is harming his friends without meaning to.
Meanwhile, Stan uses his
heart rather than his head in decision-making. Often, he will only get involved
in a cause if it affects him personally. He leads a charge to protect whales
and dolphins because he loves
animals, encourages people to drive Hybrids and save the planet because his best friend moved away, and campaigns
for gay rights because his dog is
gay. This sounds a little more selfish and, I guess it is, but most of us are
guilty of it. However, Stan’s heart pushes him to protect his loved ones (i.e.
Kyle) past the point when others would have given up.
Part of this is because
Stan is extremely group-oriented. He needs a support system and clings to them
no matter the situation. In “Raisins,” when he becomes goth he latches on to a
new group of friends that share his values. In “You’re Getting Old,” Stan
claims that the only thing that isn’t
shitty to him are his friends. Kyle is a little more independent in that he can
probably survive without being part of a clique. However, I think this is where
the difference lies: Stan needs a friend group, but Kyle needs Stan
specifically. Looking back at all the times Stan has saved Kyle’s ass, it makes
me think that no matter how outgoing or badass Kyle is, he really needs Stan. Who else is going to
confront a fraud psychic to convince him not to go to Jewish boarding school? Not
Cartman or Kenny.
So there you have it.
This was long as hell, but I wanted to get all my thoughts on the page.
Basically Kyle is the head and Stan is the heart and neither can operate
without the other. It’s what makes them such an iconic duo and a strong team.
Maybe you can take this and write an analysis on how this compares to Matt and
Trey’s friendship. I hope I answered your question to your satisfaction!
The way I see it, it’s true what you said that the characters were still kind of looking for their final form in the early seasons but by now they’re pretty solid. While I think that the characters of the show themselves are quite well defined, believable and logical, sometimes the writers end up having to take some liberties to serve the story, even if it doesn’t seem to be completely justified from the character continuity point of view. I’m never a big fan of when that happens, because to me the best approach is always (which is what I’m sure Trey and Matt also prefer and are more proud of) to start from “How would this character react to this/ What would this character do in this situation?” rather than “What do we need to happen in the story next?”
I think that some of the potholes in the boys relationship are explained more by half baked story writing than well thought out character development, but I think you did a great job in outlining it all! Especially the heart vs the brain thing. I would love to do what you suggested and expand this whole thing to apply to Matt and Trey’s relation/ friendship but unfortunately I don’t really have the brain power for it now (because I would have to dig pretty deep, lol) but I think that in general the heart & the brain thing applies to Trey and Matt perfectly too.