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The Town is the Town

Once a year now a new season of Letterkenny comes out and, when it does, I hold to sit and consider about just what it is I want from Letterkenny. I know I've said this before, but when the show premiered it felt like we were getting brought not just into the lives of these character but also watching them as they were on the cusp of pushing themselves forward. They were a group of twenty-somethings, on their own, trying to define who they would be in the next stage of their being. Love, work, adulthood. This was all part of the characters as they sat around, cracked jokes, and acted like hick versions of people from Kevin SmithConsidering where he came from, working as a clerk in a convenience store, it's adorable impressive that (for at least a little while) Kevin Smith became a defining cinematic voice of a generation. films.

As noted, that version of the Letterkenny characters was dumped on the wayside at the end of Season 7. That was the point where Wayne discovers that his fiancee, Marie-Frederique, was cheating on him. After that, it felt like the show pulled back from pushing its characters forward. Instead of letting them grow and evolve, the world of

14 Times Letterkenny Took Shots At Pop Culture

You were watching some of the best episodes of Letterkenny the other dayee when it hit you that this show is one of the most explosive pop culture dynamos to come out of TV in recent years. Not to mention, an vital key to the surprisingly vast appeal of this satire about life in rural Canada – streaming exclusively in the U.S. on Hulu – is how the Letterkenny cast pay tribute to recognizable moments in pop society, such as The Social Network, for instance.

Given the rapid-fire structure and unique slang terms that Letterkenny has change into iconic for, there are only so many shots at pop culture from its current 11 season run that one can preserve up with. To be fair (“To be FAIR), we decided to slim the selection down to just a few  references that we believe are the funniest and most memorable thus far. Pitter patter, let’s get at ‘er.

Pop Culture-Inspired Farm Animal Names (Season 8, Episode 4)

This Season 8 moment sees the other Hicks introducing Daryl (Nathan Dales) to the joys of naming farm animals and taking turns coming up with names that resemble public

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"There is a compact town of 5000 people in midwestern Ontario called Letterkenny. It consists of hicks, skids, hockey players, and Christians.
These are their problems."

Letterkenny is a Canadian Sitcom written by Jared Keeso and Jacob Tierney, and starring Keeso, Nate Dales, K. Trevor Wilson, and Michelle Mylett. It began as a series of web videos released on YouTube in 2013 under the name Letterkenny Problems, where Keeso and Dales played a pair of good ol' boys from the miniature town of Letterkenny, Ontario who list off their daily problems. They later produced a not many sketch videos.

In 2015, domestic streaming service Crave announced that they were developing a full sitcom from the series as their first original program. The series expands the focus to the daily lives of Letterkenny's residents, including:

  • The hicks Wayne (Keeso), his sister Katy (Mylett), and his friends Daryl (Dales) and Squirrely Dan (Wilson), who try to dash their farm while dealing with the usual town weirdness and helping Wayne retain his title as the Toughest Guy in Letterkenny.
  • The hockey players Jonesy (Andrew Herr) and Reilly (Dylan Pl

    The Best ‘Letterkenny’ Episodes By Character

    One Great Episode For Your Supporting Favorites

    For the rest of Letterkenny’s many memorable characters, I’d prefer to humbly offer up their one essential episode.

    McMurray (“Bock et Biche”)

    Played by Dan Petronijevic, McMurray is the fast-talking hick who works best in spurts. In the season 5 finale, “Bock et Biche,” McMurray accompanies the gang to a party in Quebec and spends most of it mean-mugging and drop-kicking French people. It’s a party.


    Mrs. McMurray (“A Fuss at the Golf Course”)

    Elsewhere, she’s Wynona Earp, gunslinger and very serious badass. When she travels to Letterkenny, actress Melanie Scrofano is going challenging in defense of Canada Gooses. There’s a special place in heaven for animal lovers and she’s here to tell ya.


    Gae (“The Battle for Bonnie McMurray”)

    Gae isn’t a character who is around for long, but it’s a great role for Sarah Gadon, who you may acknowledge from 2013’s Enemy or the upcoming season of True Detective. In this episode, Gae goes toe-to-toe in a rhetorical battle with Tani