SPSN Sends to All-Time Highs After South Park Instagram Shill
Summary
• A new South Park Halloween episode mocked crypto culture through a storyline about the kids launching a memecoin scam called SPSN.
• The plot featured hype tactics, FOMO marketing, and a rug pull plan linked to White House crypto corruption jokes.
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The latest South Park Halloween special aired on October 31, 2025, and immediately sparked attention in crypto circles. The episode followed Stan, Kyle, Cartman, and Kenny as they got trapped in a haunted retirement home and decided to create a fake memecoin to escape. They named it SPSN and marketed it with lines like “This isn’t about a coin; it’s about a movement.”
The story showed a crypto advisor guiding the kids through classic hype and rug-pull tactics, driving FOMO, registering as an MSB to look legitimate, and joking about exploiting White House crypto corruption. The satire portrayed memecoins as chaotic, fast-moving schemes that mirror real crypto behavior.
Autism Capital posted the clip from the episode saying the depiction was “really accurate,” which drew over 183K views.
South Park’s official X account recently changed its profile picture to Kenny holding a sign that reads “SOUTH PARK SUCKS NOW.”
On November 9, the official South Park Instagram account posted a video of Stan checking his phone and seeing that 756,000 people had joined their “South Park Sucks Now” community. He then announced it was time for phase two and introduced a “South Park Sucks Now” crypto coin. After people noticed this video, SPSN coin rallied from $1M market cap to $7.6M.
South Park Sucks Now (SPSN), launched on November 1 and peaked at $8.2M within five hours.
