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Bock et Biche is the sixth and final episode of Season 5 of Letterkenny.

Synopsis[]

The Hicks and Hockey Players travel to Quebec for Anik’s pre-wedding party.

Cold Open[]

You were sippin' suds with your buds the other day…” — Wayne

The Hicks are drinking at the bar at the Ukrainian Centre. Daryl asks to be honest for a second—a sentence opener they dislike, one among several, because it suggests dishonesty heretofore—and admits that he originally thought craft beer was craft beard, since the brewers sported beards. Dan states that the preferred term is lumbersexuals.

Dan dislikes their punny beer names. Katy suggests they should use animal names, Daryl that they should include "berry," but Wayne disagrees with all of them, saying it should include a cozy word like toque or mittens, or if you want to double down on it, something about the outdoors. Katy says they should use suggestive names, like "Slip-it-in Cider," startling Wayne.

Let's get this gal a fuckin' Puppers. — Wayne


Plot Summary[]

The Hicks, joined by McMurray, Tyson, and Joint Boy, have a shot at the Ukrainian Centre when Wayne gets a call from Jean-Guy. Les Hiques ask him to defend a "bock et biche" against degens from Laval. The Rookie, joining them at the bar, asks what they are talking about; JB explains that a stag-and-doe / Jack-and-Jill / drink-and-dance / turn-and-stomp / buck-and-doe is a pre-wedding party thrown by the best man and maid of honor to raise money for the wedding itself. Wayne informs everyone that the party is for Anik, making Daryl groan with regret.

Katy asks who's driving, as everyone present is hammered. Reilly and Jonesy show up just then; she invites them to the "swing-and-sway," and they enthusiastically accept, and drafted into driving. McMurray is reluctant, however, knowing that some at the party will dislike them for being English.

See? The French is causing separation separatism right here, right now! — McMurray

But Wayne replies that when a friend asks for help, you help him, and that's all there is to it, and the group heads out.

They drive over the border and meet their French counterparts at the Salon d'Agriculture, and exchange jokes about the musicians on the playlist for the evening. Anik comes out of the building and tells Darry they have All-anus Morisette in the queue. McMurray interrupts to introduce himself as Jean McMurray; they have a discussion about names.

Jean-Claude, Anik's fiancé, joins along with Jean-Lance; he declares no one in Quebec wants a bock et biche. Jean-Guy explains that since he and Anik were raised in Hawkesbury, they enjoy the tradition. Anik reports that she was not allowed to invite English family to the wedding, and so she demanded this party so that they could be included. Jean-Guy adds that his English friends would help when the degens from Laval showed; Jean-Claude hates degens, and McMurray is happy to hear it.

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No girlfriend?

The group heads into the party and Wayne gets their tickets, speaking in French with the old man selling them. The old man asks him whether he has brought a woman with him. Wayne hesitates, and the old man volunteers that despite his age he has a great deal of sex with girls. The reason he wants to know is that his niece is beautiful but has had poor luck with love, and he wants to introduce them. Jean-Claude overhears the conversation.

Anik invites Jean-Claude to the table where the Letterkenny folks are sitting, but he declines; they do a shot of sortilège (maple syrup whisky) without him. Dan turns the conversation to work; Jean-Pierre works at Jean Coutu, and Jean-Carl works at a Titty Bank, as far as the English can tell. Both the French and the English repeat "Titty Bank" repeatedly, without understanding. While they discuss, Anik and Daryl talk privately, and Anik says that she is unhappy, but was happy to see him. The others, meanwhile, finally realize that Jean-Carl works at TD Bank.

Yaah, titty bank. — Jean-Carl

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McMurray's entrance

The table rumbles, signifying the arrival of the degens from Laval. Katy bursts into the men's washroom to fetch McMurray, who is at the urinal. He stops to apologize for not washing his hands, and she pushes him out the door. Outside, the fight is already raging as Anik and Katy watch. Anik is impressed with Daryl.

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Happy dance

Back inside, the group does shots and dances to celebrate their victory, while Anik argues with Jean-Claude. Jean-Claude and Jean-Lance storm out, and Daryl sees Anik remove her engagement ring. He walks over to talk to her, and she says she has called off the wedding and that she is in love with him. They dance rapturously as the others in the group pair off with other partygoers.

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Wayne, McMurray, Joint Boy, and Tyson return to the table and do many shots together. In the doorway, Wayne sights the old man's niece (Marie-Fred); she smiles as he points him out to her. Jean-Lance returns with his logger friends, this time to scrap with the Letterkenny men and with Jean-Guy's group. As the fight rages all around, Wayne walks through the crowd towards Marie-Fred, captivated by her. Jean-Claude enters and wraps a jacket around her shoulders.

Quotes[]

  • Dan: You know, craft beers doesn't really bother me. But it's the clever wordplay that goes into the naming of it that I finds hard to swallow, like "So Hoppy Together" or "Barley Breathing." Now why don't you just calls it what it is: it's fuckin' beer?
  • Wayne: No, Darry. Darry, no. No, Dan. Dan, no. No, Katy. Katy, no.
  • McMurray: Separatism is alive and well in Quebec right now, mon freres.
    Daryl: Well, they just had the referendum damn near yesterday.
    McMurray: Mmm.
    Dan: If by "yesterday" you means a quarter of centuries ago, then yeah, I can backs that.
    Daryl: I said, "It feels like."
    Dan: No, you didn't.
    Daryl: Did, too.
    Dan: Nos, you didn't.
    Daryl: Did too.
    Dan: Did not.
    McMurray: See? The French is causing separation separatism right here, right now!
  • Reilly: I'm Jean C. Reilly
    Jonesy: I'm Jean Bones Jonesy

Callbacks and Running Gags[]

Cultural References[]

  • The stag-and-doe party (or Jack-and-Jill, or wedding social, or shag, or various other names) is a tradition peculiar to Canada, and most common in Ontario and Manitoba. It is not an engagement party, nor a combination of a stag night/bachelor party and hen night/bachelorette party, but a party thrown specifically to raise money for the couple, to cover wedding expenses or pay off debts.
  • Tension between French and English Canadians is a recurring theme of Canadian history and culture, with deep historical resentments even leading in extreme cases to political violence. A referendum for Quebec's independence was held in 1995, with the "No" side achieving victory with only 50.58 percent.
  • Hawkesbury, Ontario, where Jean-Guy and Anik grew up, is situated near the Ontario-Quebec border about halfway between Ottawa and Montreal. Although Ontario is an English province overall, almost 90 percent of the population of Hawkesbury is French-speaking, and it is often ranked among the most bilingual towns in the country.
  • Reilly introduces himself as "Jean C Reilly," a reference to American actor John C. Reilly. Jonesy introduces himself as "Jean Bones Jonesy," a reference to American MMA fighter Jon "Bones" Jones.
  • Jean Coutu is a Quebec-based drugstore chain.

Trivia[]

  • The Skids do not appear at all in this episode. Even rarer, no scenes in this episode take place anywhere on the farm.
  • This is the first appearance of the unnamed Letterkenny Shamrocks Rookie, played by Daniel Lepage, since the last episode of Season 1, A Fuss in the Back Bush. He is credited as "Young Dude."
  • Salon d'Agriculture is a sight gag for English-speakers. In Quebec French, salon can indeed mean meeting room, but a salon de l'agriculture would a farm show rather than an agricultural hall.
  • Although it was established in Les Hiques that the French hicks drink Puppers, they do not drink it at the bock et biche. Instead, all drink bottles of La Mort du Chien, literally meaning "The death of the dog," and the title of a poem by Victor Hugo. The label feature a cartoon depicting a fleur-de-lis-capped stained glass window of a St. Bernard wearing a toque.
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Guy & Bruce

  • The whisky served, called "Guy & Bruce," has a label very similar to that of Letterkenny staple Gus N' Bru, though instead of two dogs, Guy & Bruce are two cats.

Music[]

According to Tunefind, the following songs are featured in this episode:

  • Un Musicien Parmi Tant d'Autres by Harmonium (final scene)
  • I Wanna Go by Summer Heart (Anik in slow-motion heading outside)
  • Your Sick Blooms by The Hunches (the scrap with the degens)
  • Aujourd'hui ma vie c'est d'la marde by Lisa LeBlanc (crossing the border into * Quebec)

Appearances[]

Locations[]

Gallery[]

→ See 18 images from Bock et Biche at Images from Bock et Biche.

External Links[]

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