Pc Bro

2015Catchphrase / character memesemi-active

Also known as: You PC Bro · PC Principal · PC Frat Bros

PC Bro is a 2015 South Park character meme from "Stunning and Brave," featuring fraternity brothers who greet others with "You PC bro?" while mocking performative political correctness.

PC Bro is a catchphrase and character meme from the animated series South Park, originating from the Season 19 premiere "Stunning and Brave," which aired on September 16, 20152. The meme satirizes political correctness culture by depicting aggressive fraternity brothers who enforce social justice through intimidation, with the signature greeting "You PC bro?" quickly spreading across Reddit, YouTube, and social media as a shorthand for mocking performative political correctness3.

TL;DR

PC Bro is a catchphrase and character meme from the animated series South Park, originating from the Season 19 premiere "Stunning and Brave," which aired on September 16, 2015.

Overview

PC Bro is shorthand for "politically correct bro," a concept invented for South Park's 19th season3. The meme centers on a group of aggressive, Oakley-wearing fraternity brothers who are fanatically devoted to enforcing political correctness through physical violence and social shaming. Their leader, PC Principal, is installed as the new administrator of South Park Elementary and immediately begins punishing anyone who fails to meet his standards of progressive language2.

The humor comes from the deliberate contradiction: the PC Bros look and act like stereotypical frat guys, complete with heavy drinking, working out, and chest-bumping, but their cause is radical political correctness. They love "beer, working out, and that feeling you get when you rhetorically defend a marginalized community from systems of oppression"1. The catchphrase "You PC bro?" functions as a loyalty test, with Bros using it to identify fellow travelers in any social setting.

The character PC Principal and his fraternity of social justice warriors debuted in "Stunning and Brave," the first episode of South Park's 19th season, written and directed by Trey Parker2. The episode aired on Comedy Central on September 16, 2015, and primarily parodied the growing culture of online political correctness and outrage, with a secondary subplot about Tom Brady and the Deflategate scandal2.

In the episode's plot, the school's previous principal is fired after a student makes an offensive joke, and PC Principal is hired to make the school "more progressive"2. When Kyle Broflovski says Caitlyn Jenner is not a hero, he receives two weeks' detention. The conflict escalates when a group of violent, politically correct college men form a fraternity house with PC Principal, bonding over their shared commitment to policing language2. The episode ends with the boys concluding that "political correctness is not going away any time soon"2.

Origin & Background

Platform
Comedy Central (TV broadcast), Reddit / YouTube (viral spread)
Key People
Trey Parker, Matt Stone
Date
2015
Year
2015

The character PC Principal and his fraternity of social justice warriors debuted in "Stunning and Brave," the first episode of South Park's 19th season, written and directed by Trey Parker. The episode aired on Comedy Central on September 16, 2015, and primarily parodied the growing culture of online political correctness and outrage, with a secondary subplot about Tom Brady and the Deflategate scandal.

In the episode's plot, the school's previous principal is fired after a student makes an offensive joke, and PC Principal is hired to make the school "more progressive". When Kyle Broflovski says Caitlyn Jenner is not a hero, he receives two weeks' detention. The conflict escalates when a group of violent, politically correct college men form a fraternity house with PC Principal, bonding over their shared commitment to policing language. The episode ends with the boys concluding that "political correctness is not going away any time soon".

How It Spread

The meme moved fast. On September 17, 2015, one day after the episode aired, BroBible published an article praising the comparison of social justice warriors to fraternity brothers, calling it "perfect" and noting how the show compared "obnoxious SJWs of the world to overzealous, white, Oakley-rocking frat Bros who scream about checking your privilege".

By September 19, a Reddit user named dudeomfgstfux posted a PC Master Race-themed GIF titled "You PC Bro?" to the /r/southpark subreddit, crossing the meme over with the existing PC gaming community joke. YouTube clips from the episode spread quickly, with one of the earliest being a fraternity chant scene uploaded by the channel SocialJustice 123 on September 17.

The phrase "You PC bro?" became a quick-draw response across social media, used whenever someone was perceived as being excessively politically correct or policing others' language. The meme's reach extended throughout Season 19, as PC Principal became a recurring character and the PC fraternity served as a running gag across multiple episodes.

How to Use This Meme

The PC Bro meme typically works in a few ways:

1

The catchphrase approach: Drop "You PC bro?" as a response when someone corrects language or enforces social norms in an aggressive or performative way.

2

The image macro: Screenshots of PC Principal or the PC Bros from the show, often paired with quotes about checking privilege, microaggressions, or safe spaces.

3

The comparison: Apply the PC Bro template to any situation where someone is being vocally politically correct while behaving in ways that contradict their stated values.

Cultural Impact

The episode drew significant critical attention. IGN's Max Nicholson gave it a 7.8 out of 10, praising its "scathing wit". Entertainment Weekly's Jonathon Dornbush wrote that the show "points the finger at the faults of everyone else on both sides of the PC argument". The A.V. Club's Dan Caffrey gave it a B−, noting that while "equating the increasing mob mentality of the PC police with a hell-raising frat is funny at first, the comparison ultimately ends up being blunt, repetitive, and one-sided".

Trey Parker received an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance for his work in the episode. BroBible connected the episode to broader cultural commentary, comparing it to Trevor Noah's observations about the "outrage economy" and Bill Burr's experience being criticized online for jokes about Caitlyn Jenner.

PC Principal outlived his expected one-season arc and became a permanent character on South Park, appearing in subsequent seasons. The character's longevity gave the meme staying power beyond the initial 2015 wave, as new episodes periodically refreshed the format with updated cultural references.

Fun Facts

The PC Bros' fraternity house is a parody of real Greek life culture, complete with hazing rituals, heavy drinking, and a pledge process, all in service of enforcing progressive language.

BroBible pointed out the irony that "Oakley-rocking frat Bros are a group of humanity many SJWs tend to despise," making the comparison an extra layer of satire.

The episode title "Stunning and Brave" references the exact words used to describe Caitlyn Jenner during her 2015 ESPY Awards speech, which the episode directly clips in its final moments.

The subplot about Tom Brady and Deflategate included a dream sequence where Cartman embodies Brady, Roger Goodell, and Bill Belichick all at once.

Derivatives & Variations

PC Master Race crossover:

A Reddit GIF blended the "You PC bro?" catchphrase with the existing PC gaming "PC Master Race" meme, playing on the shared "PC" abbreviation[3].

PC Principal reaction images:

Screenshots of PC Principal screaming at students became standalone reaction images used outside the South Park context[3].

Fraternity chant remixes:

The PC Bros' social justice chant scene from the episode was clipped and shared as a standalone video on YouTube[3].

Frequently Asked Questions

Pc Bro

2015Catchphrase / character memesemi-active

Also known as: You PC Bro · PC Principal · PC Frat Bros

PC Bro is a 2015 South Park character meme from "Stunning and Brave," featuring fraternity brothers who greet others with "You PC bro?" while mocking performative political correctness.

PC Bro is a catchphrase and character meme from the animated series South Park, originating from the Season 19 premiere "Stunning and Brave," which aired on September 16, 2015. The meme satirizes political correctness culture by depicting aggressive fraternity brothers who enforce social justice through intimidation, with the signature greeting "You PC bro?" quickly spreading across Reddit, YouTube, and social media as a shorthand for mocking performative political correctness.

TL;DR

PC Bro is a catchphrase and character meme from the animated series South Park, originating from the Season 19 premiere "Stunning and Brave," which aired on September 16, 2015.

Overview

PC Bro is shorthand for "politically correct bro," a concept invented for South Park's 19th season. The meme centers on a group of aggressive, Oakley-wearing fraternity brothers who are fanatically devoted to enforcing political correctness through physical violence and social shaming. Their leader, PC Principal, is installed as the new administrator of South Park Elementary and immediately begins punishing anyone who fails to meet his standards of progressive language.

The humor comes from the deliberate contradiction: the PC Bros look and act like stereotypical frat guys, complete with heavy drinking, working out, and chest-bumping, but their cause is radical political correctness. They love "beer, working out, and that feeling you get when you rhetorically defend a marginalized community from systems of oppression". The catchphrase "You PC bro?" functions as a loyalty test, with Bros using it to identify fellow travelers in any social setting.

The character PC Principal and his fraternity of social justice warriors debuted in "Stunning and Brave," the first episode of South Park's 19th season, written and directed by Trey Parker. The episode aired on Comedy Central on September 16, 2015, and primarily parodied the growing culture of online political correctness and outrage, with a secondary subplot about Tom Brady and the Deflategate scandal.

In the episode's plot, the school's previous principal is fired after a student makes an offensive joke, and PC Principal is hired to make the school "more progressive". When Kyle Broflovski says Caitlyn Jenner is not a hero, he receives two weeks' detention. The conflict escalates when a group of violent, politically correct college men form a fraternity house with PC Principal, bonding over their shared commitment to policing language. The episode ends with the boys concluding that "political correctness is not going away any time soon".

Origin & Background

Platform
Comedy Central (TV broadcast), Reddit / YouTube (viral spread)
Key People
Trey Parker, Matt Stone
Date
2015
Year
2015

The character PC Principal and his fraternity of social justice warriors debuted in "Stunning and Brave," the first episode of South Park's 19th season, written and directed by Trey Parker. The episode aired on Comedy Central on September 16, 2015, and primarily parodied the growing culture of online political correctness and outrage, with a secondary subplot about Tom Brady and the Deflategate scandal.

In the episode's plot, the school's previous principal is fired after a student makes an offensive joke, and PC Principal is hired to make the school "more progressive". When Kyle Broflovski says Caitlyn Jenner is not a hero, he receives two weeks' detention. The conflict escalates when a group of violent, politically correct college men form a fraternity house with PC Principal, bonding over their shared commitment to policing language. The episode ends with the boys concluding that "political correctness is not going away any time soon".

How It Spread

The meme moved fast. On September 17, 2015, one day after the episode aired, BroBible published an article praising the comparison of social justice warriors to fraternity brothers, calling it "perfect" and noting how the show compared "obnoxious SJWs of the world to overzealous, white, Oakley-rocking frat Bros who scream about checking your privilege".

By September 19, a Reddit user named dudeomfgstfux posted a PC Master Race-themed GIF titled "You PC Bro?" to the /r/southpark subreddit, crossing the meme over with the existing PC gaming community joke. YouTube clips from the episode spread quickly, with one of the earliest being a fraternity chant scene uploaded by the channel SocialJustice 123 on September 17.

The phrase "You PC bro?" became a quick-draw response across social media, used whenever someone was perceived as being excessively politically correct or policing others' language. The meme's reach extended throughout Season 19, as PC Principal became a recurring character and the PC fraternity served as a running gag across multiple episodes.

How to Use This Meme

The PC Bro meme typically works in a few ways:

1

The catchphrase approach: Drop "You PC bro?" as a response when someone corrects language or enforces social norms in an aggressive or performative way.

2

The image macro: Screenshots of PC Principal or the PC Bros from the show, often paired with quotes about checking privilege, microaggressions, or safe spaces.

3

The comparison: Apply the PC Bro template to any situation where someone is being vocally politically correct while behaving in ways that contradict their stated values.

Cultural Impact

The episode drew significant critical attention. IGN's Max Nicholson gave it a 7.8 out of 10, praising its "scathing wit". Entertainment Weekly's Jonathon Dornbush wrote that the show "points the finger at the faults of everyone else on both sides of the PC argument". The A.V. Club's Dan Caffrey gave it a B−, noting that while "equating the increasing mob mentality of the PC police with a hell-raising frat is funny at first, the comparison ultimately ends up being blunt, repetitive, and one-sided".

Trey Parker received an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance for his work in the episode. BroBible connected the episode to broader cultural commentary, comparing it to Trevor Noah's observations about the "outrage economy" and Bill Burr's experience being criticized online for jokes about Caitlyn Jenner.

PC Principal outlived his expected one-season arc and became a permanent character on South Park, appearing in subsequent seasons. The character's longevity gave the meme staying power beyond the initial 2015 wave, as new episodes periodically refreshed the format with updated cultural references.

Fun Facts

The PC Bros' fraternity house is a parody of real Greek life culture, complete with hazing rituals, heavy drinking, and a pledge process, all in service of enforcing progressive language.

BroBible pointed out the irony that "Oakley-rocking frat Bros are a group of humanity many SJWs tend to despise," making the comparison an extra layer of satire.

The episode title "Stunning and Brave" references the exact words used to describe Caitlyn Jenner during her 2015 ESPY Awards speech, which the episode directly clips in its final moments.

The subplot about Tom Brady and Deflategate included a dream sequence where Cartman embodies Brady, Roger Goodell, and Bill Belichick all at once.

Derivatives & Variations

PC Master Race crossover:

A Reddit GIF blended the "You PC bro?" catchphrase with the existing PC gaming "PC Master Race" meme, playing on the shared "PC" abbreviation[3].

PC Principal reaction images:

Screenshots of PC Principal screaming at students became standalone reaction images used outside the South Park context[3].

Fraternity chant remixes:

The PC Bros' social justice chant scene from the episode was clipped and shared as a standalone video on YouTube[3].

Frequently Asked Questions