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The Book of Mormon, by Matt Stone and Trey Parker

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  • #31
    Originally posted by smokymountainrain View Post
    I'm still trying to figure out what this "toolkit" is. When I was a missionary I tried to teach people about the Gospel of Jesus Christ and when I wasn't doing that, I was doing my best to serve the people with whom I was living. I didn't have a toolkit that I was aware of.

    I'm having a hard time figuring out how this isn't a good thing. Sure, it doesn't solve all the problems in Africa, but what will or has? Service and a good message seems to be about as effective as anything else a 19 year old punk could do for a struggling people.

    Parker and Stone come off as fools with this based on what I've seen.
    I think their target audience is the person that sees the humorous side of organized religion. I don't think they are attacking service and humanitarian efforts, per se, but some of the folly of Christianity as a huge corporate wheel.

    You are right that a show dedicated to mocking service in third world countries would probably go over like a lead balloon.

    I think it might be a really funny show. There are certainly many aspects of LDS culture that can appear funny to outsiders....or even insiders.
    Fitter. Happier. More Productive.

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    • #32
      Originally posted by smokymountainrain View Post
      I'm still trying to figure out what this "toolkit" is. When I was a missionary I tried to teach people about the Gospel of Jesus Christ and when I wasn't doing that, I was doing my best to serve the people with whom I was living. I didn't have a toolkit that I was aware of.

      I'm having a hard time figuring out how this isn't a good thing. Sure, it doesn't solve all the problems in Africa, but what will or has? Service and a good message seems to be about as effective as anything else a 19 year old punk could do for a struggling people.

      Parker and Stone come off as fools with this based on what I've seen.
      This is entertainment.

      Who bases their religious opinions on a musical or a cartoon? Sure the cartoon is a reflection of the creators opinions, but again, they are using their opinions for entertainment.

      Who bases their political opnions on the "Daily Show" or the "Colbert Report" or Fox News(oops)?

      These guys make a living off of mocking. It's their schtick. You know what it is before you pick it up.

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      • #33
        As on of the few, perhaps the only, people who served in Africa I have found this thread very entertaining.

        Sent from my PC36100 using Tapatalk

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        • #34
          LOL! I found this quote by John Dehlin:

          “I’m super excited,” Dehlin, the founder of Mormon Stories podcasts, told FOX411. “I think this is our Mormon moment. The Jews had ‘Fiddler [on the Roof] ‘and the Catholics had ‘Sound of Music’ and now we have this.”
          And then there is this quote from good ol' Danny Peterson:

          “The general reaction is ‘sigh’, ‘more of this’,” Peterson, who teaches Islamic Studies and Arabic at the Mormon University in Utah told FOX411. “We’re sort of accustomed to being made to look like idiots or villains so it is nothing new. You wouldn’t do this to Jews, you wouldn’t do this to blacks, but we’re still legit to kick around.”
          The rest of the story can be found HERE. It talks about the different kinds of anticipation coming from different subcultures within the church.

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          • #35
            Aren't these the guys that wrote Orgazmo? (or whatever it was called?)

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            • #36
              And Basketball.

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              • #37
                Originally posted by Shaka View Post
                And Baseketball.

                fify
                "I'm anti, can't no government handle a commando / Your man don't want it, Trump's a bitch! I'll make his whole brand go under,"

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                • #38
                  Originally posted by Commando View Post
                  fify
                  Thanks. I'm the worst proofreader ever.

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                  • #39
                    Originally posted by Shaka View Post
                    And Basketball.
                    and obviously South Park
                    Dyslexics are teople poo...

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                    • #40
                      Matt Stone, Trey Parker and Bobby Lopez are all trying to take a stab at their personal fascinations with Mormonism, the center of their forthcoming Broadway musical “The Book of Mormon.”

                      “They’re just so damn nice,” Parker says admiringly of Mormons. “They’re like, ‘You made that “Orgasmo” movie? I didn’t like that, but I appreciate that you did it.’ It’s like, Wow, I wanna feel like you dude...”

                      “It absolutely rekindles your faith to see the miracle that all these people believe in is shit,” Lopez says, laughing.

                      “It’s hard to find that fault line with them. If you go, ‘Look, I don’t respect what you believe…’ but there’s no fault line…”

                      Park holds his hand to his shaking head. “They’re just so damn nice.”

                      Parker, Stone and “Avenue Q” co-writer/composer Lopez were on hand at a rehearsal studio in Times Square last night (Jan. 31), to preview the first few numbers of “The Book of Mormon” for a couple dozen New York journalists.

                      This won’t be the first foray into musicals for the “South Park” creators – who’ve endeavored similarly with “Cannibal” and the “South Park Musical – The Movie” – but Stone calls this “reverent to the artform” while it tips its hat to stage productions from “Music Man” to the “Lion King.”

                      “The Book of Mormon” starts with a brief explanation of the religion’s American founding, to the compulsory missions of its 19-year-old followers, with a tight ensemble opener that puts the “hell” in “hello.” Enter Elder Price and Elder Cunningham (fresh-faced Broadway alum Andrew Rannells and sloppy nerdfest Josh Gad, respectively), an odd couple who have been paired up on their two-year journey to the beautiful budding valleys of… Uganda.

                      “He has AIDS… she has AIDS…” sings the duo’s overseas caretaker, pointing, in a upbeat African song that loosely resembles “Hakuna Matata” but boasts foreign lyrics that roughly translate into “Fuck You, God.” It’s sung shortly after Cunningham and Price’s suitcases have been stolen by local thugs and a dead donkey is dragged through their path. It ends enthusiastically with a dancing exit and the word “cunt.”

                      [More after the jump...]

                      In just a short, 20-minute preview, “The Book of Mormon” is a little unorthodox, patently offensive and despite the dire straits, very very funny.

                      The trio juggled which nation to set the story in, from Somalia, Haiti or even post-Katrina New Orleans, just somewhere “very different from Salt Lake City.”

                      “Like, Did God forget this place?” Parker explains, adding that nothing challenges one’s belief system like “the worst stuff on Earth.” Though the team is still hammering out kinks in the writing, they do plan on including the story of Joseph Smith and a moment when the two characters have their moment to “sell” their religion to their Ugandan town’s masses.

                      But, “It’s also really all about these two guys, like a marriage. They have a big breakup, like any romantic Broadway musical. You’re like, Oh no, are they gonna get back together?” Parker says. "We never came at this like, Let's do some Mormon bashing, because I’ve liked every Mormon I’ve ever met."

                      "I consider myself an atheist that admires and likes religion... [The musical] isn’t merely anti-religion, it's how religion affects people, how and why they adopt it," Stone adds.

                      Fans and thick-skinned Broadway adventurers can check out “The Book of Mormon” starting on opening nigh, March 24, at the Eugene O’Neill Theatre in Manhattan. Previews begin Feb. 24.
                      http://www.hitfix.com/blogs/immacula...mormon-musical
                      So Russell...what do you love about music? To begin with, everything.

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                      • #41
                        The church sends out a scathing press release concerning this musical:

                        http://beta-newsroom.lds.org/article...oadway-musical

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                        • #42
                          Originally posted by LiveCoug View Post
                          The church sends out a scathing press release concerning this musical:

                          http://beta-newsroom.lds.org/article...oadway-musical
                          I think that's a great response. I'm impressed.
                          "In conclusion, let me give a shout-out to dirty sex. What a great thing it is" - Northwestcoug
                          "And you people wonder why you've had extermination orders issued against you." - landpoke
                          "Can't . . . let . . . foolish statements . . . by . . . BYU fans . . . go . . . unanswered . . . ." - LA Ute

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                          • #43
                            Originally posted by LiveCoug View Post
                            The church sends out a scathing press release concerning this musical:

                            http://beta-newsroom.lds.org/article...oadway-musical
                            Didn't really seem all that scathing. In fact, I'm not sure it ever mentioned the new play. Took on Big Love though.

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                            • #44
                              Originally posted by Shaka View Post
                              Didn't really seem all that scathing. In fact, I'm not sure it ever mentioned the new play. Took on Big Love though.
                              Grapevine?

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                              • #45
                                Originally posted by LiveCoug View Post
                                Grapevine?
                                Lol. Maybe I missed something in the link.

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