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"Goobacks"
South Park episode
Episode no.Season 8
Episode 7
Directed byTrey Parker
Written byTrey Parker
Production code806
Original air dateApril 28, 2004 (2004-04-28)
Episode chronology
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"Goobacks" is the seventh episode of the eighth season of the animated television series South Park. The 118th overall episode of the series, it originally aired on Comedy Central in the United States on April 28, 2004. In production order it is the season's sixth episode.

In the episode, people from a poverty-stricken future year of 3045 travel back in time to find work, via a recently discovered time portal. When the boys try to earn some extra money, the time-traveling immigrants are willing to do the same work for next to nothing, causing the boys to lose their jobs. This affects the town's economy and the employment of the original occupants.

"Goobacks" serves as a satire of illegal immigration, and mocks both sides of the debate concerning it.[1] The episode is widely-remembered as the origin of the catchphrase "They took our jobs!".[2][3]

Plot

[edit]

Early in the morning, a mysterious man appears in South Park, entering from some kind of portal. Unfamiliar with his surroundings, he is hit lightly by a car. After shovelling snow, Stan, Kyle, Cartman and Kenny watch a report on CNN about the mysterious arrival. The mysterious person, who has come from over a thousand years in the future, is looking for work because of the overpopulation and poverty in his time, and he learns that the money that he earns in the 21st century will be enough to feed his family in 3045. Soon enough, large numbers of immigrants begin to come through the portal. The future people are described by CNN as "a hairless, uniform mix of all races" with the same skin color, while their language is a guttural mixture of all world languages; also, the immigrants are referred to as "Goobacks" due to having some kind of goo on them after exiting the portal (a satire of the modern slur "wetbacks" referring to Mexican immigrants), and also because they "go back" in time to the present. As the boys return to offer to shovel snow again the next day, they find that the newly arrived time-immigrants have shoveled all driveways on the street for very low pay. As the immigrants are willing to accept jobs for that kind of pay, the original workers throughout South Park are replaced, thus resulting in massive unemployment throughout the town.

At a meeting to discuss their concern with the Goobacks, construction worker Darryl Weathers complains that they have worked hard to get their pay high enough to make a living, but now are being ousted by the time-immigrants. The other workers voice their own complaints, with each sentence finishing off with an increasingly slurred and garbled exclamation of "They took our jobs!", which later becomes their slogan. Later at that meeting, Weathers has the audience suggest ideas for stopping the immigrants from arriving at the town. One man suggests everyone start stripping and engaging in a gay orgy; Weathers likes the idea, as it is the only way to stop the immigrants from coming because homosexual couples cannot spawn offspring. The protesters reluctantly agree, with the exception of Jimbo Kern, and begin the orgy.

Meanwhile, Stan's father Randy—despite initially being sympathetic to the Goobacks—loses his job to a Gooback and becomes the spokesperson of the protesters. Randy is interviewed by CNN while still naked. Next to him is a very embarrassed and disturbed Stan, who explains that he understands that the immigrants are living in poverty and they are just trying to get by but realizes that poor societies often hurt other societies instead of helping them. He suggests that the people of the present should try to make the future better so the immigrants will not need to come. The entire town begins to recycle, install solar and wind power devices, plant trees, give to the poor, etc., hoping to cause the Goobacks to disappear. Although the townspeople's efforts are successful and the Goobacks begin to fade away, the boys observe that the work is "gayer than all the men getting in a big pile and having sex with each other". Stan apologizes, and the men happily resume their orgy.

Home media

[edit]

"Goobacks", along with the thirteen other episodes from South Park's eighth season, was released on a three-disc DVD set in the United States on August 29, 2006. The set includes brief audio commentaries by series co-creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone for each episode.[4]

References

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from Grokipedia
"Goobacks" is the seventh episode of the eighth season of the animated series , originally broadcast on , 2004. The episode portrays fictional time-displaced humans from a dystopian future who emerge from a world ravaged by unspecified catastrophes leading to widespread poverty. These migrants traverse backward through unstable time portals to the contemporary town of , where they readily accept hazardous, low-wage manual labor such as ditch-digging at rates like five cents per hour. Upon arrival, their bodies are encrusted with a gelatinous residue from the temporal transit, prompting locals—exemplified by character —to derogatorily label them "goobacks," a term evoking phonetic distortions mimicking non-native speech patterns. This influx precipitates economic friction, as goobacks undercut prevailing wages and dominate entry-level positions, fueling resident outrage manifested in chants of "They took our jobs!"—a phrase originating in the and later memed in discussions of labor competition. The narrative escalates with organized protests devolving into , followed by a counter-strategy among South Park's adults to cease reproduction entirely, reasoning that preventing future generations would erase the goobacks' origin timeline. Created by and , the episode employs this premise to lampoon immigration-related grievances, highlighting causal links between wage suppression and displacement without endorsing partisan narratives.

Production and Release

Development and Writing

The "Goobacks" episode was written and directed solely by , with production credits shared among Parker, , , and Frank C. Agnone II. It premiered on on April 28, 2004, as the seventh installment of South Park's eighth season. Parker's conception drew from escalating U.S. debates in the early 2000s, particularly anxieties over job losses in and manual labor sectors amid rising inflows of low-wage workers. The time-travel premise amplified real economic displacement concerns, portraying future migrants accepting substandard pay—mirroring documented patterns where increased labor supply in low-skill markets correlates with 3-5% wage reductions for native high-school dropouts, per econometric studies of the era. This setup critiqued underlying incentives: depressed wages attracting migrants rather than inherent malice, while exaggerating nativist backlash to expose its incoherence. In scripting, Parker balanced ridicule of protectionist hysteria—epitomized by the episode's signature "they took er jerbs!" chant—with jabs at permissive responses that ignore supply-driven wage dynamics. Stone contributed to the equal-opportunity satire hallmark of their collaboration, avoiding partisan endorsement by lampooning both anti-immigrant protests and idealized defenses, grounded in observable causal links between labor mobility and market outcomes rather than ideological platitudes. The writing process, typical of South Park's rapid turnaround, prioritized visceral parody over nuanced policy, using absurdity to underscore how unaddressed economic fundamentals fuel migration pressures.

Animation and Broadcast Details

The "Goobacks" episode employed South Park's established computer animation technique, which digitally emulates a cut-paper style for characters and backgrounds to enable rapid production. Consistent with the series' workflow, the episode was completed in approximately six days, encompassing scripting, voice recording, animation, and editing. It premiered on on April 28, 2004, with a standard runtime of 22 minutes. Voice work relied on the core cast, including and for multiple roles, alongside regulars like and , without notable guest appearances. The airing aligned with escalating U.S. policy debates on in the early 2000s, paralleling labor market data showing growth in low-wage immigrant employment; for example, between 2000 and 2005, unauthorized immigrants constituted about 10% of low-wage workers and 25% of low-skilled workers. This period saw documented increases in immigrant entry into sectors with job competition for native low-skilled labor.

Episode Synopsis

Plot Summary

In the episode, a time portal opens on Interstate 285, allowing a from the year 3045 to arrive in present-day seeking employment due to severe and economic hardship in the future. The traveler, covered in residue from the portal, is struck by a passing but survives and is hospitalized. Subsequently, more individuals from the future emerge through the portal, accepting low-wage or no-wage jobs such as snow shoveling, displacing local workers. The boys—Stan, Kyle, Cartman, and —attempt to earn money by shoveling driveways for $15 each but find their services undercut by the future arrivals, who perform the work for mere scraps of food. Stan coins the term "Goobacks" to describe them, combining "goo" from the portal residue with their backward . Townspeople, led by Daryl Weathers, convene a rally to protest the job losses, chanting "They took our jobs!" repeatedly. Weathers proposes preventing the dystopian future by halting reproduction, suggesting residents adopt homosexuality to avoid having children. Hippies arrive to counter-protest the anti-Gooback demonstration, decrying it as intolerant. Schools begin teaching "Futurespeak," the evolved language of the arrivals, frustrating students like the boys who struggle to communicate, even at a burger restaurant staffed by Goobacks. Randy Marsh hires a Gooback housekeeper for 10 cents per hour, prompting family tension. Escalation leads the unemployed men to travel to "Little Future," the Gooback enclave, where they form a massive, public pile of homosexual intercourse intended to erase the future through non-procreative sex, drawing national media coverage. Stan intervenes, arguing that improving the present environment could avert the future crisis. The townsfolk shift to eco-friendly practices, such as planting trees and recycling, causing the Goobacks to vanish as their timeline presumably alters. However, the men briefly reconsider resuming the pile before the episode concludes without full resolution.

Key Characters and Roles

and , seeking part-time work, initially offer snow-shoveling services door-to-door before applying for positions at a local site on , 2004, but both efforts fail as Goobacks accept wages as low as a dollar per day, displacing them and highlighting the competitive disadvantage faced by locals. Kyle later challenges Eric Cartman's self-serving tactics during the escalating job crisis, underscoring tensions among the group. Eric Cartman participates in the snow-shoveling venture with his friends but shifts focus to capitalizing on the anti-Gooback sentiment, adopting a exaggerated accent to echo the rally's chants of "They took 'er jerbs!" in a bid for attention and alignment with the aggrieved workers. Weathers, foreman of the construction workers' union, spearheads the formation of a group against the Goobacks, rallying displaced employees with impassioned speeches about lost livelihoods and leading the signature chant "They took 'er jerbs!" to mobilize opposition. Hippie counter-protesters arrive to defend the Goobacks, disrupting the rally by promoting ideals of job irrelevance and communal resource sharing, framing employment as secondary to broader social harmony.

Satirical Themes

Critique of Immigration Economics

In the "Goobacks" episode, future immigrants flood the labor market, willingly accepting wages substantially below minimum levels—often depicted as mere fractions of prevailing rates—which prompts employers to replace native workers en masse, resulting in widespread unemployment among South Park residents. This narrative illustrates the basic supply-and-demand dynamics of labor markets, where a sudden surge in low-wage competitors erodes and for incumbents unwilling or unable to match those bids. Empirical research supports this portrayal: George Borjas' analysis of the 1980 , involving 125,000 low-skilled Cuban entrants into Miami's workforce, estimated wage reductions of 10-30% for comparable native workers in the ensuing years, attributing the effect to intensified competition in low-skill sectors. Similarly, a synthesis by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine reviewed multiple U.S. studies from 1980-2000, finding immigration associated with 0-5% wage depression for low-skilled natives, with stronger negatives in high-immigration locales. The episode further emphasizes that native workers' refusal to undercut Gooback bids reflects realistic constraints on labor mobility and reservation wages, rather than mere unwillingness to adapt, leading to persistent displacement without evident reallocation to higher-value roles. This aligns with causal evidence from econometric models showing 's substitution effects: low-skilled inflows reduce native probabilities by 1-3 percentage points per 10% immigrant share increase in affected markets, as natives face both erosion and reduced job postings. Borjas' broader framework quantifies that post-1980 U.S. immigration waves, disproportionately low-skilled, have lowered native wages by 3-5% overall, with fiscal costs (e.g., welfare usage) exacerbating net losses for taxpayers in similar income brackets. UK data echoes this, with low-wage native workers experiencing employment drops of up to 2% from Eastern European inflows post-2004 EU expansion. Contrasting pro-immigration claims of aggregate economic expansion—often citing GDP boosts from cheaper labor—the episode's focus on tangible community joblessness debunks the notion of seamless benefits diffusion, portraying instead localized scarcity where gains accrue primarily to capital owners via cost savings. While some analyses, like those from the , acknowledge distributional harms to low-skilled natives (wage hits of 3-5% in certain models), they note minimal average effects due to skill complementarities elsewhere; however, Borjas critiques such findings for underweighting spatial and short-term dislocations evident in the episode's scenario. This mechanism holds irrespective of immigrants' temporal origin, as unrestricted supply shocks prioritize employer profits over worker welfare, yielding no proportional uplift for displaced groups absent policy interventions like wage floors or selection criteria.

Mockery of Political Responses

In the , the townspeople's nativist backlash manifests as frenzied mobs chanting the slurred "They took er jerbs!" in response to Goobacks displacing local workers from low-skill jobs, depicting this outrage as emotionally charged and susceptible to mob hysteria while underscoring a legitimate basis in sudden among non-college-educated residents. This portrayal ridicules the demagogic amplification of grievances into xenophobic violence, such as improvised explosive devices targeting Gooback camps, yet validates the underlying causal reality of labor market competition eroding livelihoods for those least equipped to adapt. Countering this, the episode mocks pro-immigration advocates through characters like the aggressively defensive Hippie Douche, who insists on unrestricted entry for the time travelers and proposes that Americans compete by mastering their cryptic, forward-evolved dialect—a parodying demands for in reverse. This absolutist stance, echoed by other townsfolk urging natives to "evolve" rather than restrict inflows, satirizes moral posturing that dismisses economic displacement in favor of unyielding humanitarianism, akin to real-world defenses prioritizing migrant rights over verifiable native wage stagnation. Both reactions are lampooned for evading the episode's core premise: migration driven by a self-inflicted future apocalypse of and , which demands addressing present behaviors like unchecked and environmental neglect rather than reactive expulsion or accommodation. The absurdity peaks when proposed solutions, such as voluntary curbs promoted by a celebrity panel, devolve into , exposing policy incoherence on all fronts—nativists fixated on symptoms without curbing the timeline's origins, and defenders enabling endless influxes without mitigating causal drivers. This balanced derision critiques ideological entrenchment, where neither side grapples with the deterministic link between current actions and migratory pressures.

Broader Social Commentary

The episode's portrayal of an anti-natalist backlash, where residents rally to "stop having sex" to avert the future spawning the migrants, lampoons desperate, irrational responses to existential threats posed by demographic imbalances. Public campaigns decry intercourse as the root cause, leading to when men convene for "safe sex" sessions that erupt into uncontrolled orgies, revealing the impracticality of overriding biological imperatives through fiat. This sequence critiques how fear of downstream consequences prompts societies to target symptoms—like —over causal drivers such as resource scarcity and incentive structures that fuel expansion and displacement. Internal societal fractures emerge as lower-wage workers, exemplified by characters like Randy Marsh who loses construction employment, confront job erosion from migrants accepting pay as low as five dollars daily for grueling tasks. Meanwhile, the implies employers' complicity in exploiting this undercutting of labor costs, fostering resentment among natives while higher-status households sustain advantages from affordable services. Such dynamics expose normalized patterns where invites cheap inflows that preserve elite gains at the expense of proletarian stability, without employers facing equivalent backlash. By framing migration via time portals from a depleted 3045, the premise allegorizes unrelenting transnational pressures akin to modern disparities in development, where prosperity gradients propel movement beyond policy controls. This setup dismisses fantasies of total insulation—portrayed as futile against "unstoppable" arrivals—as well as visions of cost-free openness, highlighting instead the persistent frictions of human flows driven by survival imperatives over ideological constructs.

Reception and Analysis

Initial Critical Reviews

The "Goobacks" episode, aired on April 28, 2004, elicited mixed but predominantly positive responses from early viewers, who commended its biting satire on and job displacement while critiquing the perceived unevenness in its resolution. User reviews on emphasized the episode's humor in lampooning nativist complaints through the recurring "they took our jobs!" chant, alongside mockery of the future immigrants' willingness to accept low wages, though some noted the plot's abrupt shift to as a weak narrative pivot. These contemporaneous reactions highlighted the episode's timeliness, coinciding with heightened U.S. debates over border security and economic impacts of migrant labor in the early . Professional critiques from the period were sparse, with episode-specific coverage largely absent in major outlets, reflecting South Park's status as a cable comedy less scrutinized weekly than prestige dramas. Retrospective assessments of season 8, including IGN's 2006 DVD review, praised the overall arc for delivering "excellent" that rebounded from prior inconsistencies, implicitly endorsing "Goobacks" as part of a stronger ensemble tackling social issues. The episode's reception underscored South Park's hallmark of dual-sided ridicule, targeting both protectionist backlash and unchecked labor influx, though some early commentators viewed the ending's absurdity as diluting the economic critique. Viewership data for the episode remains undocumented in public Nielsen reports, but the season maintained solid cable performance consistent with South Park's mid-2000s averages of 3-5 million viewers per episode. Aggregated user scores, such as 's 8.3/10 from 3,787 ratings, affirm enduring appreciation for the provocative content amid limited formal critical discourse.

Viewer and Cultural Debates

The "Goobacks" episode elicited divided viewer responses shortly after its April 28, 2004, airing, with audiences debating whether its depiction of future immigrants displacing present-day workers validated legitimate economic anxieties or merely caricatured nativist sentiments. Right-leaning interpreters frequently praised the episode for highlighting job competition dynamics, viewing the townspeople's outrage as a prescient reflection of real-world labor market pressures on low-skilled natives, a perspective reinforced by later analyses portraying South Park's satire as embedding a subtle conservative critique of unrestricted immigration despite apparent even-handedness. Left-leaning critics, however, condemned the narrative for fostering by prioritizing economic fears over compassionate integration, arguing it trivialized efforts and conflated factual displacement with irrational prejudice. Such objections often emanated from sources inclined to dismiss wage suppression evidence, though has documented modest negative impacts on low-skilled native wages from influxes, with elasticities around -0.2 for a 10% migrant increase. Defenders countered that the episode's equal derision of hippie-led counter-protests and virtue-signaling precluded a purely xenophobic reading, instead exposing causal realities of supply-driven depression while lampooning unproductive ideological posturing on both flanks. Early online forums, such as those on Home Theater Forum and enthusiast boards in late April 2004, featured users grappling with this balance, questioning if the effectively pierced mainstream narratives downplaying immigrant labor's competitive edge or inadvertently reinforced amid rising national tensions. These discussions underscored a broader cultural rift, where progressive outlets emphasized inclusivity biases and conservative-leaning ones stressed verifiable over politically favored optimism.

Cultural Legacy and Impact

Origin of "They Took Our Jobs!" Meme

The phrase "They took our jobs!" was coined in the episode "Goobacks," which premiered on April 28, 2004, during a scene where character Daryl Weathers leads a rally against future immigrants competing for local employment. The exclamation encapsulated immediate economic grievances, portraying displaced workers' frustration through repetitive, devolving outbursts that highlighted perceived direct substitution in the labor market. Within days of the episode's airing, the phrase entered online vernacular, evidenced by an Urban Dictionary submission on April 29, 2004, attributing its origin to the South Park context and defining it as a satirical nod to xenophobic reactions against job competition. This marked the onset of its memetic spread, primarily via early forums and macros repurposing clips to symbolize tangible displacement anxieties rather than abstract debates. Initial proliferation occurred in skeptic-leaning online communities post-2004, where users deployed it to rebut claims that posed negligible threats to native , often referencing labor statistics indicating heightened . For instance, from the 2000-2005 period showed native-born workers exiting occupations like labor at rates correlating with immigrant inflows, with foreign-born shares in climbing from under 15% in 2004 amid sector-specific native shortfalls. Such usage grounded the meme in empirical patterns of labor surplus, distinguishing it from unfocused economic gripes by invoking causal dynamics like increased supply depressing opportunities for low-skilled natives.

Influence on Immigration Discourse

The "Goobacks" depicted future overwhelming the labor market by accepting substandard , satirizing the resultant displacement of native workers—a dynamic empirically linked to suppression in low-skilled sectors. Economist estimated that U.S. from 1980 to 2000 reduced for native high school dropouts by 8.9%, with broader effects including a 3-5% depression for comparable skill groups due to increased labor supply. This aligns with supply-demand principles, where influxes of lower- competitors erode for incumbents, a causal mechanism often underrepresented in mainstream analyses favoring aggregate growth metrics over distributional costs. During the 2015-2016 U.S. presidential primaries, as debates intensified over border security and job protection under candidate , the episode's themes resurfaced in commentary on economic anxieties driving restrictionist sentiments. Media outlets referenced its portrayal of labor competition to contextualize public frustration with policies perceived as prioritizing cheap labor over native employment, contrasting sanitized portrayals that emphasize immigrant contributions while sidelining native wage data from sources like Borjas' longitudinal studies. Such invocations amplified scrutiny of unaddressed fiscal burdens, including estimates of net costs exceeding $300 billion annually from low-skilled when accounting for welfare usage and reduced tax contributions. The episode's critique resonated in pushback against institutional narratives, particularly in right-leaning outlets and policy circles, where it validated voter concerns over disincentives for workforce participation among natives facing undercut wages. Borjas' findings, critiquing consensus models that underweight native substitution effects, underscored the episode's intuitive challenge to orthodoxy, influencing sentiments toward enforcement measures like expanded border barriers proposed amid 2000s-2010s surges. This cultural reinforcement highlighted discrepancies between empirical labor economics and media-academic framings, which Borjas attributed to methodological biases favoring immigrant-centric data over comprehensive native impact assessments.

Availability and Media Releases

Home Video and Streaming

The "Goobacks" episode is included in the South Park: The Complete Eighth Season DVD set, released on March 21, 2006, in the United States by (formerly distributed by Rhino). A Blu-ray edition of the same season set followed on December 19, 2017, featuring uncensored versions of all episodes with audio commentaries and bonus features, but no episode-specific standalone releases exist. Digitally, the episode has streamed on platforms including Max until its removal on August 5, 2025, amid shifting licensing agreements. As of October 2025, it is available for streaming on Paramount+, which holds primary rights for all seasons following a deal extension, though temporary delistings occurred in July 2025 due to contract disputes with creators and . Uncensored streams preserve the original broadcast content without network edits. No themed compilations isolating immigration-related episodes, such as "Goobacks," have been issued in formats.

References

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