On paper, Letterkenny seems like exactly the kind of show that pretty much no one would care about. Itâs a very Canadian ensemble-based sitcom about the happenings of a rural town and its population â or as the showâs opening slide explains, âThere are 5000 people in Letterkenny. These are their problems.â Itâs full of ridiculous characters, bodily humor, a dictionaryâs worth of slang (some real, some made-up), and running jokes thatâll appear several times in an episode or two, and then disappear for seasons at a time before a random callback. In other words, itâs a perfect storm to be an extremely niche thing that would get some attention on YouTube, garner comparisons to Trailer Park Boys, and then promptly be forgotten.
But thatâs not what happened.
After debuting as âLetterkenny Problemsâ on YouTube in 2013, Letterkenny became the first original series commissioned by Canadian streaming service Crave in 2016. While the then-brand-new network boosted the showâs audience throughout Canada and earned it a few awards at the Canadian Screen Awards, it wasnât until Hulu picked it up in 2018 that the series helmed by (and starring) Jared Keeso and Jacob Tierney really started getting attention on a global scale.
Since the COVID-19 pandemic glued everyone to their favorite streaming services, itâs been almost impossible to miss Letterkenny in several pockets of the internet. YouTube is full of fan theories, compilations (both official and unofficial) and memorable scenes. Spend an hour on pretty much any social media platform and someone will make a Letterkenny reference, whether you understand it or not. And thatâs not even including the 220,000 degens from upcountry who fill the showâs subreddit.
âI checked the Letterkenny Reddit recently and itâs fucking wild,â Andrew Herr, who plays hockey player Jonesy, told SPIN.
âOh, I donât check thoseâŚâ Tyler Johnston (who portrays Stewart, leader of the drug-fueled âskidsâ) added.
âI canât,â Michelle Mylett, whom fans know as Letterkennyâs queen bee, Katy, confirmed. âItâs too scary. I went on it once, and I was horrified.â
But even if avoiding Reddit is probably better for everyoneâs sanity, the cast canât deny what an insane boost their dedicated fan base has given the show in recent years. Hell, how many other low-budget web series turn into one of the most popular shows on Hulu and a touring live performance that sells out all across North America?
With Letterkennyâs 10th season premiering this past weekend on Christmas (and the day after on Hulu), SPIN sat down on a video call with Mylett, Johnston and Herr â along with some additional contributions from Herrâs real-life and TV partner in crime, Dylan Playfair (Reilly).
SPIN: With so many people discovering Letterkenny during the pandemic, have you noticed a boost in popularity in the last couple of years?
Michelle Mylett: I think being on Hulu, we got the American audience, and there are way more Americans than there are Canadians, so it changed the audience. It changed our internet presence and social media interactions. I think that really pushed us more into the mainstream. I know itâs still kind of a cult-y show, but at the same time, Iâm surprised by a lot of the people who know it. Iâll be in New York or something and like a suit person [Johnston interjects âA shirt-tucker!â] will start talking about it and Iâm like âWhy are you watching Letterkenny?â Itâs surprising, but itâs cool because itâs reached a lot of different people. When youâre making a rural show, you know itâll hit small town people, but the fact that itâs extended much further past that is really cool.
Tyler Johnston: Like Michelle mentioned, the internet presence grows without us doing anything. You wake up every morning and youâre getting more followers even if youâre not posting. People are still tweeting and Instagram posting about the show telling us how they rewatch it with their uncle every time thereâs a new season coming out. I think the pandemic certainly allowed people to just really lean into it and binge watch our show. Now weâve got like 70 episodes, so thereâs a lot to watch.
Dylan Playfair: Weâve all spent time living in the US and Canada, and we also come from relatively small towns, so we knew the humor would translate. Canadians and Americans have more in common than people think, especially when it comes to small town existence. Mix in the time we have all spent in big cities and Jared and Jacobâs incredible abilities as writers, and we all knew it was a matter of time before the rest of the world got in on the joke. Thatâs not to say we have not been deeply humbled by the reception. Weâve been consistently blown away by the support for the show our fans have shown. I think everyone was looking for some escapism during the last few years, and I think we have the best fans in the world. Without dedicated fans supporting Letterkenny, we wouldnât be able to make the show. Ferda.
Pretty much every character on Letterkenny has really grown over the seasons, so how have your charactersâ evolutions changed how you see them?
Mylett: Katyâs just more herself. Sheâs always known exactly who she is, and thatâs only getting stronger in her. I donât know if thatâs true for Stewart, since heâs always trying on a different thing, but the Hicks are exactly who they are, and theyâre just getting more and more confident.
Johnston: Life is all about evolution, right? If youâre not growing, youâre dying. With Stewart, you could only go up after those first couple of seasons. That was his rock bottom. Itâs been nice to have a trajectory that goes up for a bit and then back down, and then up again and down again. Iâd say Stewart was the underdog for the first couple of seasons, and heâs kind of found a home in Letterkenny where heâs accepted for being⌠I donât even know what you want to call him. A clown? A vampire? The list goes on.
Andrew Herr: I think Reilly and I have kind of had a freefall, where each season weâve had a new concussion. We started off on high ground where we thought we were king shit, and now weâre kind of like lap dogs that come to peopleâs beck and call. We have these not-so-great ideas on how to regain our glory, and we usually end up not getting it. But at the end of the day, itâs still gym, girls and hockey, and we never give up. Weâve had our moments where all of a sudden weâre goal-scorers. We had a moment where we were broken up for a little bit and we realized how much we need each other. I always joke that Reilly and Jonesy didnât have fathers and that we were connected straight out of the womb, so weâve just been each otherâs role models.
Playfair: A huge part of Reillyâs growth lies in the development of his relationship with Jonesy. We have each otherâs backs, and when things have gotten tough for us in the show â like when Katy chooses Reilly over Jonesy â thereâs serious reflection on whatâs important in life. We realize our family is one another, and no one can come between family â which I guess is a bit of a metaphor for the entire show. At its heart â regardless of the language, fart jokes, wheeling, sniping and cellying â weâre a family. This tone was set very early on in the series, and I think a great example of it pops up many times in one of my favorite episodes, âSupersoft Birthday.â That episode captures the love within the town of Letterkenny, and itâs one that always gives me the warm fuzzies.
What do you think it is about Letterkenny that makes it so relatable even for an audience well outside of Canada?
Johnston: I think one thing about Letterkenny is that they try to be inclusive of every person in every walk of life, and we make fun of everybody. Thereâs not really one person or one group of people whoâs a punching bag because we punch at everybody. And I think people can relate to the characters, even if they just change them for their region â like a hockey player for a baseball player or a football player or a lacrosse player or a synchronized swimmer. Itâs cool seeing Europe and different areas like that become attracted to the show. âHerrsyâ and I were at a bar in Edinburgh like four years ago and some guys stopped us to ask if we were the guys from Letterkenny. It was one of those moments where you donât think youâre going to be in Scotland and some guyâs going to know what weâre doing back in Sudbury, Ontario. I joke all the time about how weâre on this rocket ship and Iâm just holding on as tight as I can for as long as I can. Maybe weâll meet Elon Musk up there.
Mylett: I feel like people from other places look at it and theyâre like âWhat are these weird Canadians up to?â I think not a lot of people really have an understanding of Canada. It sounds like this silly made-up place to a lot of people, and then they see Letterkenny and theyâre just fascinated. Then they think thatâs how we operate at all times, which is also really funny.
Herr: I think thereâs a lot of clever little lessons in a lot of the episodes. Like usually if thereâs a bully, the bully always gets beaten down by everyone teamed up together. At the end of the day, everyone loves each other in Letterkenny, and itâs really genuine. So I think people also really gravitate towards that as well. Also, itâs just a bunch of crazy kooky characters that keep coming in every season.
Playfair: Laughter is bilingual. Some humor is culturally specific, but I think thereâs a common thread that connects anyone who has ever been to or lived in a small town. Itâs for anyone who has a friend, or group of friends, where you feel comfortable being yourself and can discuss complex ideas, like scrap etiquette â a Donnybrook â flatulence etiquette, or how to justly protect the members of your society without committing an unintentional faux pas â such as âHow do we beat up the degens who have been intolerant of our LGBTQ friends without being intolerant of the degens who deserve to be beat up on account of them saying some intolerant things about our friends who happen to be LGBTQ?â Itâs the way in which we tackle complex social commentary with extreme love and respect for all while making it very funny and inclusive.
A lot of you were friends before Letterkenny started, and I think that genuine friendship really shows even when youâre filming. What was that like to build the show on those existing bonds?
Playfair: Some of my favorite memories â as well as the funniest banter Iâve ever had â have been with the cast of Letterkenny. Jared â âCap,â as we affectionately call him â was the captain of our menâs league team, which included myself, Andrew, Nate Dales, Tyler, and Jamie LaPointe [who plays a recurring character known only as The Ginger, who may or may not have fucked an ostrich]. We had a lot of great laughs together, and many of them have since made their way into the show in some form. Thereâs a chemistry that canât be faked. [Herr and I] were very close friends before the show, and weâve grown closer over the past 10 seasons.
Herr: I didnât think a whole lot of doing the YouTube video at first. I knew there was some buzz around it, but I was still in university and kind of just living day-to-day and wasnât thinking too far in advance. But yeah, Dylan and I used to be roommates, we worked on a movie beforehand, and itâs actually crazy how many similarities we have. We even had the same mark in grade 11 math â we both just passed with a 50% â so thereâs a lot of crazy similarities.
Mylett: Please include that tidbit.
Herr: You should make that the headline.
Johnston: âReilly and Jonesy barely passed math. Shocker!â [Laughs.] It was a very humble web series when we started, and we didnât know what was really going on. Then Crave came in as a brand new streaming service at the time, and they asked us for six episodes. Some of us were friends before, and some of us just met for the first time, but we all were very excited to make these six episodes as fun and enjoyable as they could be. We joke that the first season was the best summer camp ever. We started with the show at its humble beginnings and watched as itâs grown into what it is now. Weâve all developed our egos now over time, but we didnât show up with them.
Herr: Definitely Tyler. Tylerâs got the biggest ego for sure.
Johnston: I was actually wanting to do this interview alone, but they kept saying that itâs for all of us.
Dylan mentioned earlier that âSupersoft Birthdayâ is one of his favorite episodes. Anyone else want to share their favorite Letterkenny episodes or moments?
Johnston: A couple of my favorite episodes over the course of time are âLes Hiquesâ with the French version of the Hicks and âLetterkenny Spelling Bee.â For my character in particular, I really enjoyed the relationship with Gae because it showed Stewart in an actual human capacity. There was some love and heartbreak, and not just him bouncing off the walls.
Mylett: The final episode of season eight, when Dierks disrespects Katie. He was promised from the start that the whole town would come after him, and that last sequence â the song, the way that itâs shot, and all of these different groups of people coming together to defend their family member â it just encapsulated what the show is about. Watching it made me emotional almostâŚ
Johnston: Me too. You donât have to say âalmost.â I cried.
Herr: I cried too.
Mylett: This sounds so cheesy, but it represented us as friends. Thereâs that level of friendship on this show that â like you said earlier â people say they can feel in the show. That friendship is genuinely there, and that scene sums up what the show is about. No bullying, no bullshit, and we will kick the shit out of you if you cross one of us.
Herr: I fully agree with everyone. I love that sequence. I love âSpelling Beeâ and âLes Hiques.â I also love seeing Tyler get pegged personally.
Johnston: Thanks, buddy⌠Wait, like with a ball?
Herr: Any EpiPen fight is probably the funniest thing Iâve ever seen in my life. I watch that on repeat a lot.
Johnston: So all of your favorite moments are when Iâm injured. Thatâs that friendship thing we were talking about.
Dylan and Andrew, you two are probably responsible for more people learning about hockey lingo than anyone else in history. Whatâs it like to see and hear so many people adopting your catchphrases from the show â particularly considering that youâre technically a second-generation hockey player, Dylan?
Playfair: Like goinâ first round first overall ferda, digginâ deep and bearing down, chuckinâ silly sauce from the bluey! Itâs lots of fun. We have our own language, and Iâm honored to share it with the world. My dad told me when I transitioned from playing hockey to acting, âHockey has given our family so much. Sports give kids the opportunity to work for a common goal in a team setting. You will use the lessons you learned playing hockey for the rest of your life. Never forget what hockey has done for you, respect the game and the game will be good to you.â I think this sentiment exists in all sports. When youâre given the chance to experience success and failure in the confines of a sports season, it proves how important the work you put in when no oneâs watching is, the practice, the belief in yourself and the understanding that youâre working towards something bigger than any one person. Thatâs a long-winded way of saying it feels like a crispy new twig â or good and fresh, like a new hockey stick.
Herr: I think itâs pretty surreal when the things weâre saying start growing like a forest fire â thatâs probably not the right terminology â but itâs just surreal. Some of the language was already in hockey culture beforehand, and Jared definitely had his finger on the pulse. Whatâs so cool about hockey is you have a team of guys, and theyâre just constantly ribbing each other constantly â making jokes, making up words and messing with the English language. I think thatâs what Jared did in a lot of ways. For me, it was just surreal to have people say the words back at you on the street or wherever you are.
Is there anything else you want to share about the new season of Letterkenny?
Mylett: I honestly feel like the scripts for the next two seasons were some of the strongest weâve seen, because COVID gave Jacob and Jared some breathing room to really get inspired and take their time. Itâs a classic Letterkenny season of jokes and swear words and silly characters and Tyler dancing. Oh, and Andrew shows his butt
Johnston: Like Michelle said, itâs the classic Letterkenny energy, but with some more treats in store, like a couple of buttcheeks.
Mylett: Definitely more butt.
Herr: I donât think Iâve ever felt quite like a piece of meat like I have with this.
Johnston: Youâre a good-looking piece of meat, buddy.
Herr: Thanks, buddy.