Three petty felons have a documentary made about their life in a trailer park.Three petty felons have a documentary made about their life in a trailer park.Three petty felons have a documentary made about their life in a trailer park.
- Awards
- 4 wins & 22 nominations
Browse episodes
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIn the episode 'Fuckin' Way She Goes' Ray explains that the trailer he purchased with Tammy had just been paid off affer a 35 year mortgage. A trailer of that size in the year 1970 cost around 4500 dollars at a high estimate. On a 35 year mortgage the payment per month would have been roughly 11 dollars.
- GoofsSarah's tattoos change every season.
- Crazy creditsThroughout the seventh season, the following disclaimer was at the beginning: PATRICK SWAYZE HAS NO ASSOCIATION WITH THIS PROGRAM AND HAS NOT AUTHORIZED ANY USE OF HIS NAME IN THIS PROGRAM
- Alternate versionsEpisodes airing in the United States have all the profanity bleeped out (averaging sometimes up to four swear words per minute).
- ConnectionsEdited from Bubbles (2009)
Featured review
When I first left a review of this show I was fairly unimpressed with it. However, since then I've forced myself to watched the entire Seasons 1-3 and I have to say it: man, was I wrong.
It grows on you. If you can get over the bad acting and the political incorrectness you'll find one hell of a show. As another reviewer said it's not an accurate reflection of life in a Nova Scotia trailer park: more like if you took the weirdest members of every trailer park in NS and put them together to dumb it up.
Some of the funnier aspects I've found have been Ricky's constant mispronunciations (there are at least then in every episode), Mr Lahey's constant sh*t analogies, and, of course, Bubbles, who makes even the bad episodes worth watching.
If you give it a chance you won't have a single favourite episode; more like a collection of favorite moments pulled from each ep. Whether it's J-Roc's identity crisis ("I hate to admit it ... I'm white"), Bubbles' dragging a drunken Ricky home in the back of his go-cart, or the visit from the hysterically creepy Bible Pimp, there'll be at least something that makes you giggle whenever you think of it.
All that said, BBC America can look forward to a few letters of mixed reactions, and Comedy Central can start kicking themselves for not being the first to snatch it up.
It grows on you. If you can get over the bad acting and the political incorrectness you'll find one hell of a show. As another reviewer said it's not an accurate reflection of life in a Nova Scotia trailer park: more like if you took the weirdest members of every trailer park in NS and put them together to dumb it up.
Some of the funnier aspects I've found have been Ricky's constant mispronunciations (there are at least then in every episode), Mr Lahey's constant sh*t analogies, and, of course, Bubbles, who makes even the bad episodes worth watching.
If you give it a chance you won't have a single favourite episode; more like a collection of favorite moments pulled from each ep. Whether it's J-Roc's identity crisis ("I hate to admit it ... I'm white"), Bubbles' dragging a drunken Ricky home in the back of his go-cart, or the visit from the hysterically creepy Bible Pimp, there'll be at least something that makes you giggle whenever you think of it.
All that said, BBC America can look forward to a few letters of mixed reactions, and Comedy Central can start kicking themselves for not being the first to snatch it up.
- wonderland_ahead
- Jan 20, 2004
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- 拖車公園男孩
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime30 minutes
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content