Top 20 Funniest Letterkenny Moments
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Welcome to WatchMojo and today we’re counting down our picks for the Top 20 Funniest Letterkenny Moments. For this list, we can confirm we’ll be looking at the funniest gags, lines, chirps, and complaints from the tiny Canadian town. Which Letterkenny moment do you think is the funniest? Pitter-patter, let’s get at her in the comments!
While picking stones in a field, Wayne reveals he saw Stewart’s horn, if you catch our drift. The Hicks are stunned by this revelation and begin a long chain of euphemisms for said horn. Wayne further explains that he passed a naked Stewart coming out of the bathroom. Curious, the others want to know its size. Wayne compares it to a tallboy can of Red Bull and few other apt comparisons. While all the word play cracks us up, the best is how happy they are for Stewart’s endowment. Katy, on the other hand, is in disbelief that his horn could be so big and she missed out on a chance to be with him.
While ice fishing in Quebec the Hick encounter their French Canadian counterparts. Daryl, who already doesn’t like the Belle Province, tells the other group to pipe down. Tensions increase when singer Celine Dion is brought up in a hostile tone. The two groups go on to trade insults despite not being able to understand each other. It’s a great bit that pokes fun at the cultural divide that exists between English and French speaking Canadians. Fans of the show who live outside of the Great White North don’t need a lesson in Canadian politics because funny is transcendental.
If you don’t like how this word sounds, you best plug your ears. While the Hicks rest after chorin’, Katy asks Daryl why he’s taking his boots off. His simple explanation is that he doesn’t want his feet marinating in his sweaty boots. He worries he could get a toenail fungus due to them being so moist. Katy states she doesn’t want to hear that word so of course the boys begin inserting it into all sorts of phrases. Fed up with their antics, she pours her beer over their heads. While we understand her frustration, we can’t blame the guys for making the moist of a funny situation.
The town’s hockey team, the Irish, have been struggling to get a win this season. Riley and Jonesy have a plan to get the W. They tell the team they have to get in their opponent's head by chirping them. At first they’re reluctant because they believe that the scoreboard does the talking. Riley and Jonesy try to teach them how to chirp and when the team gives it a try, it doesn’t go so well. Barts, Yorkie, Schultzy, Fisky and Boomtown have a set way of speaking, so seeing that combined with their poor chirps cracks us up.
After the Hicks take a shot while drinking during happy hour, Squirrely Dan wonders why they tap their glasses two times instead of three because wrestling matches end with three taps. Wayne reveals that he prefers fisticuffs to wrestling and after naming their favorite wrestler Dan says that he couldn’t come up with a good ring name. Of course, this leads to a whole slew of wordplay of possible names. Wayne grows tired of the conversation and leaves. It’s classic “Letterkenny” riffing and even though Wayne is over it he still drops some good lines.
When Squirrely Dan gets up to have a pee, he inadvertently sets himself up for a roasting from the rest of the Hicks for making dad noises. “Letterkenny” is at its best when the gang is able to riff on a theme. In addition to this, they’re also able to get in a ‘to be fair’ when Dan tries to defend himself by saying that other people besides dads make noises when standing up and sitting down. This backfires hilariously with the gang giving the impression of a dad complaining while getting up and making a dad noise.
While discussing one of the Hick’s second cousins moving to Los Angeles to become an actor, Wayne chimes in about how people from L.A .need to stop talking about tacos. Daryl adds that they also need to stop talking about hiking and that it’s just a fancy word for walking. The conversation soon turns to how people who travel to the City of Angels suddenly think that everything is better there. They even imitate how people from L.A. sound when they say the word ‘LA’. It’s a great send up of how small town folk perceive people from or who have traveled to the Californian city.
They say bad gas travels fast in a small town but racy photos travel faster. Daryl is devastated to find out that his sweetie, Anik, has a racy Instagram account. When Wayne, Dan and Katy see the photos, they let out a healthy ‘yew’. In fact, everyone in Letterkenny has that reaction once news of the account spreads. Daryl decides to drink his pain away so he heads over the MoDean’s but it’s too late. The hockey players are already and not only do they let their ‘yew’s’, they also inform Daryl that everyone in town has derived pleasure from the photos. It’s ridiculous but it encapsulates small town vibes.
Wayne’s got a bright future, or it would seem that way since he squints so much. Katy comments that he’s been squirting a lot and makes him an appointment with an optometrist. After Wayne goes, he gets a pair of prescription sunglasses. When the rest of the Hicks see him, they can’t help but roast him. The conversation soon turns to Jivin’ Pete who’s been showing up late to work. Dan mentions that Pete tried to show him a nude but because Dan’s a feminist, he refused to look. He gets called out for being ‘that guy’. While we love good word play, sometimes a simple callout is all that’s needed.
Tempers run high when residents of Letterkenny discuss what the best chip flavor of all time is in order to win a contest. It becomes clear from the beginning that different characters are projecting different fantasies onto the flavors. Things get heated really quickly a number of times and it just highlights the silliness of the debate. When Pringles are brought up, all hell breaks loose between Rosie and Stuart who take views of the chip. In the end, it’s decided that All Dressed is the best flavor when Bonnie McMurray walks in eating a bag of them. However, she probably has the best reaction to the whole situation.
In the series premiere, we are told that Wayne’s fighting ways have changed due to the influence of his now-ex girlfriend, Angie. But, with that relationship having ended, it’s just a matter of time before Wayne reclaims his crown as the toughest guy in the community of Letterkenny. First on the list of challengers is Sled Ted, so named for his love of all things snowmobiling. And this scrap has everything: a banging soundtrack, degens at the end of the laneway, slo-mo fisticuffs, and a clear victory for the leader of the Hicks. If you don’t know who the toughest guy in Letterkenny is, you’d better check yourself.
Feeling directionless in season 5, Reilly and Jonesy agree to join their old coach in leading a two-time hockey league winner. What they don’t realize is that it’s the local women’s team, the Letterkenny Shamrockettes. STheir first meeting with the team does not go smoothly, with the girls, er… ladies (women?) not being very inviting. The boys knew going in that the team had a problem with a battle for leadership. They witnessed it firsthand in this scene where the team leaders, Betty-Anne and Mary-Anne, take turns chirping about each other’s… mitts, which in this case, is not a reference to hockey equipment.
There’s no telling what subjects might come up at the “brek-fixt” table with friends, and this scene is a great example. Who but our beloved Hicks would even care if babies can be considered smart? Aunt Nancy’s considered opinion notwithstanding, Wayne is unconvinced, prompting Dan and Daryl take him on in a battle of wits. Despite Wayne’s very well thought-out and dramatized arguments, it seems as though this debate is not over. What do “you’s guys thinks?” Can babies be smart or is a baby grabbing your thumb just a baby grabbing your thumb? This hot debate may never get sorted, but it’s certainly good for a laugh.
You do not mess with tradition. If Daryl’s mom thought it was worthwhile to repeatedly embarrass him with super-soft birthday parties throughout his childhood, it only makes sense that his best buddies would continue the tradition into adulthood. What makes a birthday party super soft are things like sweet drinks with silly names, cupcake stations, and farm animals doubling as unicorns. This party would surely have been softest ever… had Joint Boy not shown up with his troupe of “surly uncles” to challenge Wayne’s title as toughest guy in Letterkenny. Nonetheless, this tradition is so strong that fans of the show sometimes have their own Super-Soft Birthday parties.
When the McMurrays invite you to a party, and that party gets weird, you might need to find a way of escaping. And to be clear, when the McMurrays are hosting… it always gets weird. And so that’s when you use The Letterkenny Leave. In this scene, things are not going smoothly at the McMurrays’ soiree, and the Hicks discuss possible methods of exiting the party. They end with the Letterkenny Leave, which entails walking through a sliding glass door after stealing a case of beer. With the situation not yet being that dire, they decide that it is best to wait to see if things escalate. But... they’ve always got this iconic exit in their back pocket if need be.
Everyone in Letterkenny would likely agree that, in a world of chirping, Shoresy is the uncrowned champion. After all, he basically exists only to make Reilly and Jonesy uncomfortable with his incessant comments about his activities with their respective mothers. The moment that we chose to immortalize on this list, however, is the time Shoresy took a break from reffing a Shamrockettes game to take a few shots of his own. No one is safe when Shoresy gets on a roll, and the chirps may not even be the best part. Check out that fancy skating. Shoresy delivers on all levels.
The people of Letterkenny don’t seem to have a clue about their Mennonite neighbors, leading to many absurd claims and theories. In this case, Daryl says that sometimes Mennonites trick unsuspecting gentlemen into impregnating their young women, in order to expand the bloodline. According to Jim Dickens, the act must be “holy,” so it is done through a hole in a sheet. Allegedly. But, when local Mennonite, Noah Dyck, asks for help on his farm, you help him, no matter what nefarious plans he might have. The Hicks offer a hand and all is well until Daryl believes he’s found evidence that supports their greatest fears. As usual, Daryl is largely mistaken, but boy can those Mennonites run!
At the end of the 8th Season, Katy finds out that her American Boyfriend, Dierks, has been stepping out on her. This leads to his season-ending, albeit off-camera, beatdown. The original spoken-word rap that opens Season 9, however, tells the story of this savage takedown. The imagery in the poem is striking, with Katy likening herself to a Ferrari and a Targaeryan from Game of Thrones. Dierks fares far worse, being called a disaster, as a reminder that her crew did indeed amass and put his arm in a cast. When Katy spits, it’s equal parts fire and truth.
The boys were “hucking the ball” around the other day, and Dan opens up about a recent date with his sweetie. Despite it being stated many times that it is impolite to kiss and tell, Dan does just that. According to Dan, his sweetie suggested that she might throw him a “curveball betwixt the sheets,” as they say. Wayne and Daryl are shocked. SThey exclude Dan from the ball hucking, even as Dan continues to describe the act, what it entailed, and even how good it felt. Could be, it really is impolite to kiss and tell, after all.
To think, it all started when some hockey players came up the produce stand the other day. The initial scene in the series serves brilliantly as an introduction to many of the tropes and jokes the series offers. It has a beautiful and confident Katy-Kat, a pair of enthusiastic-but-dumb hockey players, childishly-funny wordplay, and the Hicks regulating the entire affair. It also introduced us to such quotables as, “treasure trail,” “tilly,” and, of course, “donnybrook.” Who among us hasn’t handed out some free literature, the odd time? Who doesn’t enjoy a little tasteful backward pageantry? Welcome to Letterkenny.
#20: Stewart’s Horn
“The Native Flu”While picking stones in a field, Wayne reveals he saw Stewart’s horn, if you catch our drift. The Hicks are stunned by this revelation and begin a long chain of euphemisms for said horn. Wayne further explains that he passed a naked Stewart coming out of the bathroom. Curious, the others want to know its size. Wayne compares it to a tallboy can of Red Bull and few other apt comparisons. While all the word play cracks us up, the best is how happy they are for Stewart’s endowment. Katy, on the other hand, is in disbelief that his horn could be so big and she missed out on a chance to be with him.
#19: A Hostile Tone
“Les Hiques”While ice fishing in Quebec the Hick encounter their French Canadian counterparts. Daryl, who already doesn’t like the Belle Province, tells the other group to pipe down. Tensions increase when singer Celine Dion is brought up in a hostile tone. The two groups go on to trade insults despite not being able to understand each other. It’s a great bit that pokes fun at the cultural divide that exists between English and French speaking Canadians. Fans of the show who live outside of the Great White North don’t need a lesson in Canadian politics because funny is transcendental.
#18: Moist
“Way to a Man’s Heart”If you don’t like how this word sounds, you best plug your ears. While the Hicks rest after chorin’, Katy asks Daryl why he’s taking his boots off. His simple explanation is that he doesn’t want his feet marinating in his sweaty boots. He worries he could get a toenail fungus due to them being so moist. Katy states she doesn’t want to hear that word so of course the boys begin inserting it into all sorts of phrases. Fed up with their antics, she pours her beer over their heads. While we understand her frustration, we can’t blame the guys for making the moist of a funny situation.
#17: Learning to Chirp
“MoDeans 2”The town’s hockey team, the Irish, have been struggling to get a win this season. Riley and Jonesy have a plan to get the W. They tell the team they have to get in their opponent's head by chirping them. At first they’re reluctant because they believe that the scoreboard does the talking. Riley and Jonesy try to teach them how to chirp and when the team gives it a try, it doesn’t go so well. Barts, Yorkie, Schultzy, Fisky and Boomtown have a set way of speaking, so seeing that combined with their poor chirps cracks us up.
#16: Wrasslin’
“Ferda”After the Hicks take a shot while drinking during happy hour, Squirrely Dan wonders why they tap their glasses two times instead of three because wrestling matches end with three taps. Wayne reveals that he prefers fisticuffs to wrestling and after naming their favorite wrestler Dan says that he couldn’t come up with a good ring name. Of course, this leads to a whole slew of wordplay of possible names. Wayne grows tired of the conversation and leaves. It’s classic “Letterkenny” riffing and even though Wayne is over it he still drops some good lines.
#15: Dad Noises
“The Battle for Bonnie McMurray”When Squirrely Dan gets up to have a pee, he inadvertently sets himself up for a roasting from the rest of the Hicks for making dad noises. “Letterkenny” is at its best when the gang is able to riff on a theme. In addition to this, they’re also able to get in a ‘to be fair’ when Dan tries to defend himself by saying that other people besides dads make noises when standing up and sitting down. This backfires hilariously with the gang giving the impression of a dad complaining while getting up and making a dad noise.
#14: Everything’s Better in L.A.
“The Ol’ College Try”While discussing one of the Hick’s second cousins moving to Los Angeles to become an actor, Wayne chimes in about how people from L.A .need to stop talking about tacos. Daryl adds that they also need to stop talking about hiking and that it’s just a fancy word for walking. The conversation soon turns to how people who travel to the City of Angels suddenly think that everything is better there. They even imitate how people from L.A. sound when they say the word ‘LA’. It’s a great send up of how small town folk perceive people from or who have traveled to the Californian city.
#13: Yew
“Yew”They say bad gas travels fast in a small town but racy photos travel faster. Daryl is devastated to find out that his sweetie, Anik, has a racy Instagram account. When Wayne, Dan and Katy see the photos, they let out a healthy ‘yew’. In fact, everyone in Letterkenny has that reaction once news of the account spreads. Daryl decides to drink his pain away so he heads over the MoDean’s but it’s too late. The hockey players are already and not only do they let their ‘yew’s’, they also inform Daryl that everyone in town has derived pleasure from the photos. It’s ridiculous but it encapsulates small town vibes.
#12: Wayne’s Sunglasses & Dan Is ‘That Guy’
“Degens”Wayne’s got a bright future, or it would seem that way since he squints so much. Katy comments that he’s been squirting a lot and makes him an appointment with an optometrist. After Wayne goes, he gets a pair of prescription sunglasses. When the rest of the Hicks see him, they can’t help but roast him. The conversation soon turns to Jivin’ Pete who’s been showing up late to work. Dan mentions that Pete tried to show him a nude but because Dan’s a feminist, he refused to look. He gets called out for being ‘that guy’. While we love good word play, sometimes a simple callout is all that’s needed.
#11: The Best Chip Flavor
“Chips”Tempers run high when residents of Letterkenny discuss what the best chip flavor of all time is in order to win a contest. It becomes clear from the beginning that different characters are projecting different fantasies onto the flavors. Things get heated really quickly a number of times and it just highlights the silliness of the debate. When Pringles are brought up, all hell breaks loose between Rosie and Stuart who take views of the chip. In the end, it’s decided that All Dressed is the best flavor when Bonnie McMurray walks in eating a bag of them. However, she probably has the best reaction to the whole situation.
#10: Wayne’s First Opponent in the Toughest Guy Competition
“Super Soft Birthday"In the series premiere, we are told that Wayne’s fighting ways have changed due to the influence of his now-ex girlfriend, Angie. But, with that relationship having ended, it’s just a matter of time before Wayne reclaims his crown as the toughest guy in the community of Letterkenny. First on the list of challengers is Sled Ted, so named for his love of all things snowmobiling. And this scrap has everything: a banging soundtrack, degens at the end of the laneway, slo-mo fisticuffs, and a clear victory for the leader of the Hicks. If you don’t know who the toughest guy in Letterkenny is, you’d better check yourself.
#9: Meeting the Shamrockettes
“The Ol’ College Try”Feeling directionless in season 5, Reilly and Jonesy agree to join their old coach in leading a two-time hockey league winner. What they don’t realize is that it’s the local women’s team, the Letterkenny Shamrockettes. STheir first meeting with the team does not go smoothly, with the girls, er… ladies (women?) not being very inviting. The boys knew going in that the team had a problem with a battle for leadership. They witnessed it firsthand in this scene where the team leaders, Betty-Anne and Mary-Anne, take turns chirping about each other’s… mitts, which in this case, is not a reference to hockey equipment.
#8: Can a Baby Be Considered Smart?
“Bradley Is a Killer”There’s no telling what subjects might come up at the “brek-fixt” table with friends, and this scene is a great example. Who but our beloved Hicks would even care if babies can be considered smart? Aunt Nancy’s considered opinion notwithstanding, Wayne is unconvinced, prompting Dan and Daryl take him on in a battle of wits. Despite Wayne’s very well thought-out and dramatized arguments, it seems as though this debate is not over. What do “you’s guys thinks?” Can babies be smart or is a baby grabbing your thumb just a baby grabbing your thumb? This hot debate may never get sorted, but it’s certainly good for a laugh.
#7: Daryl’s Super Soft Birthday Party
“Super Soft Birthday”You do not mess with tradition. If Daryl’s mom thought it was worthwhile to repeatedly embarrass him with super-soft birthday parties throughout his childhood, it only makes sense that his best buddies would continue the tradition into adulthood. What makes a birthday party super soft are things like sweet drinks with silly names, cupcake stations, and farm animals doubling as unicorns. This party would surely have been softest ever… had Joint Boy not shown up with his troupe of “surly uncles” to challenge Wayne’s title as toughest guy in Letterkenny. Nonetheless, this tradition is so strong that fans of the show sometimes have their own Super-Soft Birthday parties.
#6: The Letterkenny Leave
“The Letterkenny Leave”When the McMurrays invite you to a party, and that party gets weird, you might need to find a way of escaping. And to be clear, when the McMurrays are hosting… it always gets weird. And so that’s when you use The Letterkenny Leave. In this scene, things are not going smoothly at the McMurrays’ soiree, and the Hicks discuss possible methods of exiting the party. They end with the Letterkenny Leave, which entails walking through a sliding glass door after stealing a case of beer. With the situation not yet being that dire, they decide that it is best to wait to see if things escalate. But... they’ve always got this iconic exit in their back pocket if need be.
#5: Shoresy Chirping & Reffing
“Back to Back to Back”Everyone in Letterkenny would likely agree that, in a world of chirping, Shoresy is the uncrowned champion. After all, he basically exists only to make Reilly and Jonesy uncomfortable with his incessant comments about his activities with their respective mothers. The moment that we chose to immortalize on this list, however, is the time Shoresy took a break from reffing a Shamrockettes game to take a few shots of his own. No one is safe when Shoresy gets on a roll, and the chirps may not even be the best part. Check out that fancy skating. Shoresy delivers on all levels.
#4: Daryl & the One-Eyed Sheet
“Holy Sheet”The people of Letterkenny don’t seem to have a clue about their Mennonite neighbors, leading to many absurd claims and theories. In this case, Daryl says that sometimes Mennonites trick unsuspecting gentlemen into impregnating their young women, in order to expand the bloodline. According to Jim Dickens, the act must be “holy,” so it is done through a hole in a sheet. Allegedly. But, when local Mennonite, Noah Dyck, asks for help on his farm, you help him, no matter what nefarious plans he might have. The Hicks offer a hand and all is well until Daryl believes he’s found evidence that supports their greatest fears. As usual, Daryl is largely mistaken, but boy can those Mennonites run!
#3: Katy Raps About the Takedown of Dierks
“American Buck and DoeAt the end of the 8th Season, Katy finds out that her American Boyfriend, Dierks, has been stepping out on her. This leads to his season-ending, albeit off-camera, beatdown. The original spoken-word rap that opens Season 9, however, tells the story of this savage takedown. The imagery in the poem is striking, with Katy likening herself to a Ferrari and a Targaeryan from Game of Thrones. Dierks fares far worse, being called a disaster, as a reminder that her crew did indeed amass and put his arm in a cast. When Katy spits, it’s equal parts fire and truth.
#2: Squirrely Dan’s Romantic Experience
“Relationships”The boys were “hucking the ball” around the other day, and Dan opens up about a recent date with his sweetie. Despite it being stated many times that it is impolite to kiss and tell, Dan does just that. According to Dan, his sweetie suggested that she might throw him a “curveball betwixt the sheets,” as they say. Wayne and Daryl are shocked. SThey exclude Dan from the ball hucking, even as Dan continues to describe the act, what it entailed, and even how good it felt. Could be, it really is impolite to kiss and tell, after all.
#1: Chirping at a Couple of Hockey Players
“Ain’t No Reason to Get Excited”To think, it all started when some hockey players came up the produce stand the other day. The initial scene in the series serves brilliantly as an introduction to many of the tropes and jokes the series offers. It has a beautiful and confident Katy-Kat, a pair of enthusiastic-but-dumb hockey players, childishly-funny wordplay, and the Hicks regulating the entire affair. It also introduced us to such quotables as, “treasure trail,” “tilly,” and, of course, “donnybrook.” Who among us hasn’t handed out some free literature, the odd time? Who doesn’t enjoy a little tasteful backward pageantry? Welcome to Letterkenny.
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