Tags / Canadian

"Canadian"

4 BuzzVerdicts across TV Shows (3), Books (1)

Schitt's Creek

4.3

2015 · 6 Seasons · CBC / Pop TV · Comedy

Schitt's Creek asks for patience and rewards it with one of the most satisfying character journeys in modern comedy. The Rose family starts as a group of shallow, entitled people you'd cross the street to avoid, and by the finale they've become characters you're devastated to leave behind. That transformation is the show's greatest trick, and it works because the writing earns every emotional beat through humor rather than sentimentality. The first season is a hurdle that loses some viewers, and the comedy never reaches the joke density of faster-paced sitcoms. But what it does instead, building a world where acceptance is the default and growth happens through connection, is rarer and more valuable than another show competing for laughs per minute.

Letterkenny

4.0

2016 · 12 Seasons · Crave / Hulu · Comedy

Twelve seasons of rapid-fire wordplay, small-town Canadian life, and characters so deeply committed to their bit that the bit becomes something close to art. Letterkenny's best episodes are unlike anything else in comedy television, powered by a writing style that treats dialogue as a competitive sport and a cast that delivers it with flawless timing. The show lost some momentum in its middle seasons when the formula started showing its seams, but it found its way back for a strong finish. For anyone willing to tune their ear to the rhythm and accept that plot is secondary to conversation, this is one of the sharpest comedies of the past decade.

Trailer Park Boys

3.8

2001 · 12 Seasons · Showcase / Netflix · Comedy / Mockumentary

Trailer Park Boys produced some of the funniest, most quotable comedy in Canadian television history during its original Showcase run. Its mockumentary format, improvised feel, and the trio of Ricky, Julian, and Bubbles created something that felt completely genuine in its absurdity. Netflix's revival kept the characters alive but lost the creator and much of the sharpness that made the early seasons special, trading simple, effective storytelling for increasingly convoluted plots. At its best, this show is worth seeking out without question. Knowing when to stop watching is the real challenge.

The System Apocalypse: Life in the North

3.5

2017 · Tao Wong · 270 pages · Fantasy / LitRPG

The System Apocalypse: Life in the North brings LitRPG mechanics to an apocalypse scenario set in the Canadian wilderness, where the Earth is integrated into a galactic game system that transforms reality into a level-based survival challenge. The setting distinguishes it from dungeon-focused LitRPG, and the survival elements feel authentic when the protagonist is navigating real geography against transformed wildlife. The writing is functional but dry, the protagonist is competent without being interesting, and the early chapters focus heavily on system tutorials that slow the narrative.