

Welcome to Letterkenny, Canada. A small rural town (population 5,000) in Ontario, its inhabitants largely consist of hicks (farmers), skids (stoners) and (ice) hockey players. We follow siblings Wayne and Katy who own and run a small farm and produce stand and get to see Letterkenny's problems.
Where to Watch Letterkenny
12 Seasons
Letterkenny Ratings & Reviews
- Darth PhyveNovember 25, 2025If you lived in Ontario...then you know these people.
- CallumOctober 14, 2025⭐⭐⭐⭐ (out of 5) Letterkenny – Fast talk, fistfights, and forty-seven flavours of déjà vu. “Letterkenny” is unapologetically Canadian — loud, quick-witted, and just a little absurd. The humour leans closer to American than British: punchy, in-your-face, and rapid-fire enough that you’ll sometimes laugh before you even process the line. It’s a world of small-town characters, endless wordplay, and more fistfights than most action series. Honestly, about 70% of the episodes end with someone getting punched, kicked, or at least shoved into a fence. At its heart, the show’s about friends, family, and sticking up for your people — even when that means brawling over something stupid. The cast is great, and the chemistry feels real, but the jokes are heavily recycled. You’ll hear the same gags, same rhythms, and sometimes even the same setups across multiple seasons. By season six, I needed a breather; by season twelve, I was watching just to finish the set. And that’s the biggest issue — it literally ends where it began. The final scene mirrors the first, and no one’s really changed. It’s comfort food television, not fine dining: familiar, funny, and fun in small doses. Worth a laugh and a good night in, but don’t binge too hard — even the best poutine gets cold if you have too much at once.



































