Though "Trailer Park Boys" never achieved massive mainstream success, the Canadian show has built a loyal cult following since first coming on the air in 2001. The original series lasted for seven seasons until 2007, with a 2008 special "Say Goodnight to the Bad Guys" serving as a de facto epilogue. Then, the boys bought the rights to the show in 2013, and in 2014 new seasons started airing exclusively on Netflix. The show stayed on Netflix for five seasons, finally ending in 2018 by transitioning to "Trailer Park Boys: The Animated Series."
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Undoubtedly, one of the funniest episodes in "Trailer Park Boys" history is Episode 3 of Season 3, "If I can't Smoke and Swear, I' F*****." The episode mainly revolves around Ricky LaFleur, Julian, and Bubbles masterminding a scheme where they steal gas and resell it in the park. There is also a hilarious subplot involving Ricky and his young daughter Trinity, with Ricky trying to get her to quit smoking and take a nicotine patch.
One of the trademarks of the original "Trailer Park Boys" series was the fantastic season finales, and the final episode of Season 4, "Workin' Man," was definitely one of the best. It mixes together everything that made the series amazing: The guys growing dope, Jim Lahey going berserk to try and catch Ricky, a massive police showdown, and everyone going to jail in the end.
The next entry to our list is again one of the weaker episodes in the series, the Season 9 debut "Why the F*** Is My Trailer Pink?" The guys are fresh out of jail and headed back to the trailer park, only to discover that it's now a retirement community for the elderly run by a reunited Jim and Barbara Lahey.
Another one of the top season finales in "Trailer Park Boys" was the Season 5 ending "The S*** Blizzard." In the episode, Julian, Ricky LaFleur, and Bubbles find themselves in a huge gun battle with rival drug dealer Cyrus and his accomplices Dennis and Terry. Earlier in the season, the boys had stolen Cyrus, Dennis, and Terry's hash and gotten them sent to jail, but after Randy bails them out, they head back to Sunnyvale to confront Julian, Ricky, and Bubbles. This all leads to a shootout between the boys and Cyrus, Dennis, and Terry that ends with Corey, Trevor, and Ricky all getting shot.
A perfect example of why the Netflix iteration of "Trailer Park Boys" was so unpopular is Episode 4 from Season 9, "George Green: Industrial C*** Inhaler." At this point in Season 9, Ricky LaFleur's daughter Trinity has had her own daughter, mistakenly named Motel, and Ricky, Julian, and Bubbles are trying to gather everything they need to give the baby a place to stay. Due to Ricky being kicked out of Sunnyvale, the family cannot live there, making them scramble to find a home.
Season 4 was a treasure trove of hilarity from the "Trailer Park Boys," and Episode 5 "Conky" was certainly no exception. This is the episode that introduced the character of Conky to the series, as a ventriloquist dummy that Bubbles used to have as a child. Despite being one of the least-liked characters in the series, his inaugural episode is one of the greats. Conky is rediscovered when Julian, Bubbles, and Ricky LaFleur dig him up to accompany Bubbles to the dentist. Bubbles has never gone to the dentist without Conky and makes his friends rescue Conky from a swamp to make him more comfortable.
If you thought a guest star list including Snoop Dogg, Tom Arnold, and Doug Benson would make for a strong episode, think again. Episode 7 of Season 10, "Up In Smoke We Go," was truly the episode when the series "jumped the shark" and went completely off the rails. In the prior episode, the boys had already stretched things pretty far when Bubbles managed to hack into "Jimmy Kimmel Live," which leads to the disaster that is "Up In Smoke We Go."
It's probably not surprising at this point, but the next episode on our list is another doozie from Season 10: It's Episode 9, "Thugged Out Gangsta S***." The episode's main issues are the convoluted plot, poor guest star roles, and weakness of the entire storyline. Tom Arnold, Doug Benson, and Snoop Dogg all once again guest-star, and both Benson and Arnold's characters are decidedly terrible.
While "Trailer Park Boys" has at times struggled to smoothly integrate celebrity guest stars into their episodes, they did a phenomenal job in Episode 5 of Season 3, "Closer to the Heart," which features Alex Lifeson from the Canadian rock band Rush. In the episode, Julian, Ricky LaFleur, and Bubbles are trying to scrounge up money to buy Rush tickets, but Jim Lahey foils their plans by buying all of the tickets and refusing to sell them. This leads the boys to don garbage-bag suits and sneak into the venue through the sewers, making it in but without any clothes.
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