leads a tourist group around his Tegridy Farms marijuana farm, showing how it has grown and expanded. As Eric Cartman complains to Stan Marsh about the changes in the farm, Randy notes that his orders have decreased. When he visits Stephen Stotch to personally deliver some marijuana, he discovers that Stephen and others in South Park have started to grow their own marijuana, and Randy promises to take action. Stan is forced by Randy to plead to the South Park city council to ban private marijuana farms, but the council rejects the suggestion, and Randy is angered to the point where he completely denounces all of South Park. Later, Randy is visited by representatives from MedMen and they agree to work together. Randy's partner Towelie is upset that Randy has decided to sell out to corporations and leaves in disgust. Cartman witnesses a group of ICE agents arresting Stephen's Hispanic worker and separating him from his family, and he is intrigued by the idea that ICE has the ability to separate families seemingly at will via an anonymous tip. Cartman makes a threatening call to Kyle Broflovski just as ICE agents raid the Broflovski home and split the family while Cartman happily watches. When Kyle arrives at an ICE detention center and the staff discover that he is Jewish, they realize that they must get Kyle out as soon as possible or risk being viewed as racist. As the ICE agents apologize to Kyle, he asks about the status of the other children in the camp, and warns them that the stress and anxiety on the children could lead to the possibility of one of them becoming a Mexican Joker. The agents begin to overreact to this and wonder which child in their camp is the Mexican Joker. Later, a new bus of children arrives at the camp, with Cartman among them. Cartman realizes that the detention center may remind Kyle of Nazi concentration camps and claims to feel sorry for his actions, as Kyle devises a plan to have everyone escape. A series of explosions throughout South Park destroys all of the private marijuana fields and the police immediately suspect Mexican Joker for the crime. Kyle has all of the detention center children fashion their aluminum foil blankets into yarmulkes to make them appear Jewish, in an attempt to get the agents to release them all, but the lead ICE agent goes crazy, believing he is in a flashback to the origin of Mexican Joker. He shoots and kills the other ICE agents and runs off in a panic. Randy celebrates the restored sales of Tegridy Farms products.
Reception
Chris Longo with Den of Geek rated the episode 2 out of 5 stars, summarizing his review thus: "I feel like the wholesomeness of Tegridy has been ripped away from me. With all the bad in the worldright now, why couldn't we just keep our Tegridy? Sigh. I don't have much hope for where this arc is going, but I'm a masochist and I'll be back next week." John Hugar with The A.V. Club gave the episode a grade of "C+" and stated in his review "the episode ultimately tries to do too much at once, and feels awkward and disjointed. In previous serialized seasons, the show eased its way into each thread, often introducing them one episode at a time before resolving them all during the final stretch." Laura Bradley of Vanity Fair gave a more positive critique of the episode, stating "There is a rare spark of life in this premiere—of quiet, at-times-snarky conviction. This is South Park, so don't expect a feel-good moment or an earnest lecture anytime soon—but it does seem that at last, South Park has found a way to do righteous anger its own way." Alyse Wax of Collider gave both some positive and negative comments in her review, and stated "Not a lot has changed with the show, other than it seems less outrageous nowadays. The social commentary has lost some of its bite as current events become closer to comedy. But this season, the social commentary is off to a better start than the last few seasons."