The world was a different place in early 2001 -- but even back then, George W. Bush was a public figure ripe for lampooning. That was what inspired South Park creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker to create That's My Bush!, a series that parodied the classic sitcom genre format at least as much as the Commander-in-Chief himself.
Each episode posed a new challenge to the country's President, whether it was in balancing the volatile issues of the day or his equally demanding personal life at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
All the stock sitcom characters were there: the good-hearted wife (Laura), the moody co-worker (the more-goofy-than-nefarious Karl Rove), the impatient housekeeper (Maggie), even a wacky neighbor (Larry). But the zany situations George dealt with -- abortion, capital punishment, euthanasia and drug policy reform -- were unlike any experienced by the likes of Jack Tripper. Eight episodes of mayhem ensued in the classic tale of a hapless U.S. president trying to make good.