I believe they were both “born in the covenant” and left later. They get soo much right on Mormonism.
I would not be surprised to learn that they both served on mission, but I don’t know.
Neither of them have ever been Mormons, but one of them dated a Mormon girl in…was it high school or more around college? I can’t even remember which one was in that relationship, but I do know it was a pretty serious relationship and he engaged with their faith and practice at a deep level. And he did enjoy family game night and the general family togetherness, for what that’s worth.
They also took a field trip to Salt Lake City and just talked to a bunch of people. In Salt Lake City, it’s not hard to find people who have a mission or two in their back pocket, and the way they came at it wasn’t really a full-on personal attack- they do respect Mormons as people, they’ve liked nearly every Mormon they’ve ever met, and when they go talk to Mormons it’s nothing at all like when Bill Maher talks to people about their religious beliefs. This should not be confused with Religulous, is what I’m saying.
I cherry-picked a couple of quotes that start to show where Trey Parker is coming from:
[SIGN]“I have religious friends, and they’re like, ‘Well, if you look, it’s proven.’ And you’re like, ‘No, it’s not proven.’ Don’t try to tell me that you can prove this stuff. Just say ‘I believe it,’ and I’m down with you. Don’t mix the two together. Because you can’t logically say, ‘We know that Jews came from Jerusalem and settled in America and turned into Native Americans.’ That just doesn’t make any sense. But at the same time, if you say, ‘I believe this,’ I say, ‘OK. Cool, man.’ Because at the end of the day, we all have certain beliefs and deeply held things that probably don’t make a lot of sense to anybody else…
We love the goofiness of Mormon stories. Some of them are incredulous, and we loved almost all the Mormons that we had ever met. So this was sort of this conundrum that we like to talk about — we think what they believe is really, really ridiculous, and yet they seem like pretty happy people.”[/SIGN]
Foul language and inappropriate stuff aside (not that it’s without consequence, of course)- if you focus on their general assessment of Mormons, there’s the incredulity that comes along with a fairly in-depth understanding of their beliefs which most of us lack, and then you also have a certain level of respect and affinity for Mormons as people while still addressing how ridiculous some of their beliefs are in a way that seems to have worked out fairly well. You put this in front of a general public that doesn’t understand Mormons well at all and still has to figure out how to interact with it, and the general premise that went into the play as a whole is something that could have gone badly but in the end turned out to be successful, meaningful, and generally a positive thing that has quite a bit of value.