• Loading stock data...
Sunday, March 30, 2025
Nominations Are Open for Front Office Sports Honors! Submit Now

Cult Hockey TV Hit ‘Shoresy’ Is an Industry On Screen and On Ice

Jared Keeso’s hit show has become a hit business, too, with merch, events, and more. Forces behind ‘Shoresy’ say they’re just getting started.

Craig Michaud
Exclusive

ESPN Making Erin Dolan In-Game Betting Analyst for UFL Games

Erin Dolan will provide betting news and notes during game broadcasts.
Read Now
March 28, 2025 |

One of the most talked about hockey teams of the past several years does not exist. 

The Sudbury Blueberry Bulldogs are the fictional team at the heart of the show Shoresy, which follows a patchwork crew of small-town Canadian hockey players in a self-proclaimed “senior whale shit” league, the Northern Ontario Senior Hockey Organization. (Aptly, the NOSHO.) Shoresy, constantly chirping with a dip cup in hand, is their fearless captain. Played by creator Jared Keeso, there’s no character quite like him.

At the same time, the cast, producers, and business minds behind Shoresy have also made sure the Bulldogs are as real as any sports team. Their efforts have set the tone for wild fandom—and also created a big revenue opportunity. 

The show, which releases its fourth season in the U.S. on Hulu on Feb. 26, is an offshoot of Keeso’s acclaimed Canadian comedy Letterkenny, which follows a group of “hicks,” “skids,” and hockey players in a tiny Ontario town. In Letterkenny, hockey player Shoresy is an ongoing gag character who is constantly heckling teammates in the gym or locker room, often from a bathroom stall. 

Shoresy has only a small part and remains faceless in Letterkenny—yet the spin-off production that improbably brings him to life has garnered a uniquely cult-level following. This devotion has driven Shoresy to pop off the screen and morph into an entire brand that feels even more tangible than both its parent show and sports peers like Ted Lasso.

Merch peppers the stands in any given hockey game across North America, especially the team’s sky-blue-and-brown jersey with a bulldog crunching on a hockey stick. The jerseys sell for $200 in the U.S., and Joel Baskin of the Feldman Agency, which handles live event bookings for Letterkenny and Shoresy, tells Front Office Sports he’s heard beer league teams have placed bulk orders to outfit themselves on the ice.

Craig Michaud

The biggest move for the show as a business has come from its live extension. In 2024, Shoresy went from screen to rink with the Shoresy Fall Classic: A series of real hockey games where the cast, many of whom are former players from various levels, competed against NHL alumni. 

“We always dreamed of doing live touring opportunities, taking the show on the road,” says Mark Montefiore, founder and CEO of New Metric Media, producer of Letterkenny and Shoresy. “When we got to Shoresy, it was an ongoing joke. … ‘We’ve got to do Shoresy on ice.’” They’d agreed to bring it to life, and the show’s executive producer, Kara Haflidson, suggested reaching out to the NHL. Once they heard the big idea, Montefiore says, “We were like, ‘Holy shit.’”

Haflidson’s grand ambitions were right on. The response was rabid for the five games, the first two of which were arranged with the Boston Bruins and Toronto Maple Leafs, which as Original Six teams have two of the largest alumni associations. 

The Maple Leafs organization tells FOS the roughly 7,500 tickets sold out in less than 30 hours at about $45 each, and quickly hit the secondary market for more than $200. “I’m going, ‘This is an alumni game like I’ve never seen,’” says Steven Merkley, coordinator for the Maple Leafs Alumni Association. “I’ve done 52 games with the Maple Leafs alumni. I was like, ‘This show is bigger than I ever thought possible.’”

Baskin saw secondary prices spike above $300. He says, “People were just so genuinely excited for whatever was going to happen out there without there even being much detail about what it was.”

Merkley says he has never had so many former players contact him and say, “I need to be involved in this.” Frank Simonetti, a former NHL player and president of the Boston Bruins Alumni Association, also says there was so much interest to participate in the game that the Bruins organization had to “turn people down” and “make some tough cuts.” As the alumni took the ice, Simonetti says they received “polite golf claps … when the Shoresy team was announced, one of our teammates turned and said to me, ‘It’s like Bobby Orr just skated on.’”

There was competitive hockey. There were haymakers. There were fans from thousands of miles away, jumping out of their seats to drink the Puppers beer featured on the show and meet the cast after the game. In the first two markets alone, the events each raised more than $20,000 for charity and also netted a profit for the Shoresy team.

Shoresy Fall Classic
Craig Michaud

The Fall Classics build off the success of Letterkenny Live, a touring version of Keeso’s predecessor show, from which New Metric Media has seen success across North America. But the Shoresy world presents more like a universe. 

New Metric Media and the Feldman Agency tell FOS more Fall Classics are in the offing. They say they were overwhelmed with city and venue options for the initial games and are going to seize new markets, especially after the response to the first five events, which also included Buffalo, Detroit, and Chicago. From their e-commerce, social media accounts, and streaming platforms including Crave in Canada, the Shoresy team is awash in audience data to help them pinpoint locations for the next wave. “We’re moneyballing it,” says Montefiore.

Shoresy is not done building an off-screen business. In the coming months, New Metric Media will release an arcade-style video game set in Sudbury. COO Jeff Hersh says “it’s Blades of Steel meets NBA Jam … with the chirps and the fights. It’ll be a bit over the top.” The game will first release on Steam, then the creators are hoping to roll it out to Nintendo Switch, Playstation, and Xbox. Baskin—who calls the show “the perfect marriage between art and commerce”—nods at more to come, too.

“When you see the Bulldogs logo, it’s ‘work hard, push through.’ That really resonates with a lot of people,” says Montefiore. “When they see the logo, they want to be part of that. Sure, the catchphrases are hilarious, but it’s deeper than that. I think people really see themselves in both those worlds [of Letterkenny and Shoresy]. … The more specific it becomes, the broader it actually gets.”

“Jared and the producers just really tapped hockey culture and the hockey fanatics,” says Baskin. He says slang from the shows, like “dirty dangles” for top-tier stickhandling, has shown up on SportsCenter. “There’s never been a drama-comedy show that captures the eyes and ears of the hockey world. This one has set the bar in doing so.” 

As the new episodes, which focus on a debaucherous offseason, premiere, the cult is only spreading. At 4 Nations Face-Off in Montréal, a fan in line at the retail outpost sported a Shoresy logo beanie. And a couple of months earlier, on a shoulder-to-shoulder escalator in Madison Square Garden, Rangers fans descended to the exits after a loss against the Blackhawks. In the sea of red, white, and royal blue, one fan stood out in sky-blue and brown. Another person couldn’t help calling out to her, pointing to the bulldog logo. They exchanged a knowing nod.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Columbia, SC - February 16, 2025 - Colonial Life Arena: Rebecca Lobo and Ryan Ruocco during a regular season game.

Inside Ryan Ruocco’s Rapid Rise to ESPN’s Top Voice of Women’s Hoops

The top voice became “quickly addicted” to calling the women’s game.

Duke Keeps ACC Alive in March Madness

Duke will represent the ACC in the Elite Eight in both tournaments.
TCU Horned Frogs guard Hailey Van Lith (10) celebrates as she heads to the locker room after winning the NCAA Playoff Regional semi-final game against Notre Dame at Legacy Arena in Birmingham Alabama, March 29, 2025.

Hailey Van Lith Is an Early Success Story of Unrestricted Transfer Portal

She becomes first player to reach the Elite Eight with three teams.
Mar 27, 2025; Newark, NJ, USA; Alabama Crimson Tide guard Chris Youngblood (8) and the Alabama Crimson Tide bench celebrate during the second half against the Brigham Young Cougars during an East Regional semifinal of the 2025 NCAA tournament at Prudential Center.

How Alabama Became College Basketball’s Newest Juggernaut

The Crimson Tide have found success rivaling their historic football program.

Featured Today

Kendall Coyne Schofield

Kendall Coyne Schofield Wants More for the Next Wave of Mom-Athletes

The Walter Cup–winning Frost captain says small changes mean “everything.”
Dec 21, 2024; Hartford, Connecticut, USA; UConn Huskies guard Paige Bueckers (5) looks to pass the ball against USC Trojans guard JuJu Watkins (12) in the first half at XL Center.
March 23, 2025

‘More Value to Be Had’: Were Women’s March Madness Media Rights Undersold?

Could the NCAA have gotten millions more in its latest TV deal?
Mar 20, 2025; Lexington, KY, USA; Creighton Bluejays forward Jasen Green (0) dunks the ball during the second half against the Louisville Cardinals in the first round of the NCAA Tournament at Rupp Arena
March 22, 2025

Basketball-Only Schools Could See Power Surge After House Settlement Approval 

Football teams might monopolize the revenue-sharing dollars at power conference schools.
Mar 15, 2025; New York, NY, USA; St. John's Red Storm guard RJ Luis Jr. (12) after hitting a three-point basket against the Creighton Bluejays in the second half at Madison Square Garden.
March 20, 2025

Perfect Storm: St. John’s Biggest Fans Can’t Bet on the School

In the No. 1 sports betting market, the Red Storm are off-limits.
exclusive

ESPN Making Erin Dolan In-Game Betting Analyst for UFL Games

Erin Dolan will provide betting news and notes during game broadcasts.
March 26, 2025

Yankees RSN Faces Comcast Blackout Threat Ahead of Opening Day

The Yankees-led RSN and the No. 2 U.S. cable carrier clash again.
Both teams line the field during the singing of the national anthem prior to the start of the opening day game between the NY Yankees and Milwaukee Brewers at Yankee Stadium on Thursday, March 27, 2025.
March 27, 2025

Yankees RSN, Comcast Reach Last-Minute Extension in Ongoing Dispute

The two sides will keep negotiating as large-scale issues remain unresolved.
Sponsored

How UBS Crafts Impactful Partnerships Across Sports, Arts, and Culture

As UBS continues to expand its impressive array of sports and entertainment partnerships, the company solidifies its position as a leader in wealth management.
Jan 13, 2025; Glendale, AZ, USA; Minnesota Vikings quarterback Sam Darnold (14) is pursued by Los Angeles Rams linebacker Jared Verse (8) during an NFC wild card game at State Farm Stadium.
March 26, 2025

RFK-Threatened Pharma Ad Ban Wouldn’t Hurt NFL Broadcasters

It wouldn’t be the first effort to restrict drug ads.
Apr 5, 2024; Bronx, New York, USA; General view of Yankee Stadium before an opening day game between the New York Yankees and the Toronto Blue Jays.
March 25, 2025

Could ESPN Have a Future With MLB? Network Hints at Renegotiation

The Disney-owned network signals a willingness to renegotiate.
March 25, 2025

March Madness TV Ratings Surge to 32-Year High Despite No Cinderellas

Games so far have averaged 9.4 million viewers.
March 24, 2025

No Cinderella, No Problem: Why Sweet 16 Could Draw Huge Ratings

There are only four conferences represented in the men’s Sweet 16.