Call Me Fitz
Call Me Fitz is a Canadian black comedy television series created by Sheri Elwood that follows Richard "Fitz" Fitzpatrick, a charismatic but amoral used-car salesman whose self-indulgent life unravels after a car crash leads him to partner with Larry, the literal embodiment of his long-ignored conscience.[1][2] Starring Jason Priestley in the lead role, with Ernie Grunwald as Larry, the series aired on HBO Canada starting 18 September 2010 and concluded after four seasons in December 2013.[1][3] The show, produced by E1 Entertainment, Amaze Film & Television, and Big Motion Pictures, centers on Fitz's schemes at his family's struggling dealership amid family dysfunction, romantic entanglements, and ethical dilemmas exacerbated by Larry's do-gooder influence.[3] Priestley, who also directed multiple episodes and served as executive producer, drew on the character's raw, unfiltered antics to deliver a raunchy critique of moral complacency in a half-hour format praised for its sharp writing and irreverent tone.[1][4] Call Me Fitz garnered significant recognition in Canadian television, winning six Gemini Awards in 2011 for categories including best direction and writing, and later securing the Canadian Screen Award for best comedy series in 2014 along with Priestley's performance award.[5][6] Its blend of dark humor, anti-hero dynamics, and boundary-pushing content distinguished it as a standout in HBO Canada's original programming slate, appealing to audiences seeking unvarnished portrayals of human flaws.[7][8]Overview
Premise
Call Me Fitz centers on Richard "Fitz" Fitzpatrick, a cynical and amoral used-car salesman operating Fitzpatrick Motors in Halifax, Nova Scotia, whose self-serving existence is upended when he begins hallucinating his own conscience, manifested as the sanctimonious Mr. St. Clair, an insistent do-gooder who compels an unwanted business partnership.[9][10] This internal antagonist, born from a near-death experience, embodies Fitz's suppressed moral qualms and relentlessly pushes for ethical reforms in the dealership's shady operations, clashing with Fitz's preference for deception, substance abuse, and exploitative tactics to outsell rivals.[2][11] The series delves into Fitz's dysfunctional family dynamics and cutthroat business environment, where self-deception and moral ambiguity prevail amid constant battles against external "do-gooder" influences like naive employees and intrusive relatives seeking to impose redemption on his unrepentant flaws.[8] Rather than idealized personal growth, the narrative highlights Fitz's resistance to change, portraying raw human vices—such as tormenting coworkers, casual infidelity, and ruthless competition—without romanticizing or sanitizing them.[11][10] This setup underscores themes of internal conflict and the futility of forced virtue in a world driven by self-interest.[9]Genre and production style
Call Me Fitz is a half-hour dark comedy series characterized by its satirical examination of personal moral decay and societal pretensions through the lens of a flawed, self-serving protagonist. The show employs crude humor, frequent profanity, and depictions of outrageous, often graphic situations to highlight the consequences of unchecked individualism and ethical shortcuts, without resorting to overt didacticism or contrived redemptive arcs. This approach distinguishes it from more conventional sitcoms by emphasizing realistic fallout from immoral actions—such as fractured relationships and professional sabotage—rooted in the protagonist's refusal to conform to external moral pressures.[12][1] The production style features a single-camera format that supports rapid pacing, dynamic visual gags, and fluid scene transitions, allowing for a cinematic feel that amplifies the chaotic energy of the narrative. Episodes prioritize visceral, unfiltered portrayals of vice-driven decision-making, where characters' self-destructive behaviors lead to tangible repercussions, underscoring a commitment to causal chains over sentimental resolutions or collective harmony. This stylistic choice aligns with black comedy traditions, favoring empirical depictions of human flaws and their fallout over idealized or politically sanitized outcomes.[12][13]Cast and characters
Lead roles
Jason Priestley portrays Richard "Fitz" Fitzpatrick, a charismatic yet unscrupulous used-car salesman whose moral bankruptcy and self-serving cynicism define the series' anti-hero protagonist.[14][1] Fitz embodies a rejection of conventional ethics, prioritizing personal gain amid personal and professional failures, including bankruptcy and substance issues.[15] Priestley's performance marks a departure from his earlier wholesome roles, such as in Beverly Hills, 90210, toward darker comedic territory that leverages his ability to convey charm laced with sleaze.[1] Ernie Grunwald plays Larry, Fitz's manifested inner conscience, depicted as an offbeat do-gooder whose naive optimism and insistent moral guidance create ongoing conflict.[14][1] Larry functions as a literal embodiment of Fitz's suppressed ethical impulses, visible primarily to him, forcing confrontations that underscore the protagonist's adversarial stance toward imposed virtue.[8] Grunwald's portrayal earned a Best Supporting Actor award, highlighting the character's role in amplifying the show's irreverent humor through ideological friction.[16] The central dynamic between Fitz and Larry revolves around their forced "partnership," where Fitz's pragmatic self-interest repeatedly clashes with Larry's idealistic interventions, driving the narrative's comedic tension without resolution toward redemption.[1] This setup critiques external moral impositions by portraying Fitz's resistance as a core trait, emphasizing self-determination over coerced ethical conformity.[17]Supporting and guest roles
Peter MacNeill portrays Ken Fitzpatrick, the stern patriarch and father of protagonist Richard "Fitz" Fitzpatrick, appearing in 48 episodes across the series.[18] His character's rigid, domineering presence underscores intergenerational strife and the erosion of familial authority, as Ken's attempts to impose control often exacerbate the Fitzpatrick family's chaotic dynamics.[1] This portrayal amplifies themes of paternal failure, with Ken's outdated expectations clashing against Fitz's self-serving amorality, contributing to the depiction of dysfunctional kinship ties central to the narrative.[17] Donavon Stinson plays Josh McTaggart, Fitz's bumbling business partner at the used-car dealership, featured prominently in the ensemble.[18] Josh's ineptitude and loyalty to Fitz highlight operational incompetence and ethical lapses in their enterprise, fueling comedic scenarios of corporate mismanagement and interpersonal betrayal within the workplace.[1] His role reinforces the show's exploration of business dysfunction, where misguided schemes and poor judgment perpetuate a cycle of near-disasters.[17] Recurring family members further illustrate relational breakdowns, such as Tracy Dawson as Meghan Fitzpatrick, Fitz's sister, whose interactions reveal ongoing sibling rivalries and unresolved grievances.[19] Joanna Cassidy appears as Elaine Fitzpatrick, the mother, in select episodes, adding layers to parental influences and marital discord. These portrayals collectively deepen the ensemble's representation of inherited flaws and fractured bonds. Gabrielle Miller recurs as Melody Gray in eight episodes from 2012 to 2013, introducing elements of post-divorce skepticism and resistance to remedial therapies amid Fitz's personal entanglements.[18] Her character's confrontations with Fitz expose lingering resentments from past relationships, critiquing superficial fixes for deep-seated issues.[20] Notable guest appearances, such as those in later seasons, often satirize external influences on the core dysfunction, with figures parodying self-improvement fads and celebrity endorsements that fail to reform the protagonists' behaviors.[8] The series' four seasons incorporate such cameos to lampoon cultural tropes without accommodation to prevailing orthodoxies, maintaining focus on unvarnished human failings.[21]Production
Development and conception
Call Me Fitz was created by Canadian television writer Sheri Elwood, who drew inspiration from dynamics within her own family to craft the series' portrayal of dysfunctional relationships and moral ambiguity in a used-car sales environment.[4] The project was commissioned by HBO Canada as an original half-hour comedy, with production greenlit to capitalize on Jason Priestley's established screen presence following his prominent role in Beverly Hills, 90210, positioning the show as a platform for his return to lead acting amid a shift toward edgier, character-driven narratives.[15] Filming for the first season occurred in Nova Scotia's Annapolis Valley earlier in 2010, reflecting a deliberate choice for authentic East Coast Canadian settings to underscore the protagonist's gritty, unpolished world.[22] Priestley not only starred as the central anti-hero Richard "Fitz" Fitzpatrick but also assumed producing responsibilities and directed several episodes, contributing to the series' consistent dark comedic tone across its four seasons.[23] This multifaceted involvement allowed for tighter creative oversight, ensuring the humor remained raw and character-focused rather than diluted for broader appeal, aligning with Elwood's vision of a protagonist resistant to conventional moral growth.[8] The conception emphasized an unrepentant lead whose interactions with his hallucinatory conscience highlighted persistent ethical lapses, diverging from redemption-heavy arcs prevalent in contemporary sitcoms.[22]Filming and technical aspects
The series was primarily filmed on location in Nova Scotia, Canada, from 2010 to 2013, with key sites including New Minas for the central used-car dealership setting at 8965 Commercial St., which provided an authentic backdrop for portraying the economic underbelly of a struggling sales operation.[24] [25] Additional shooting occurred in Wolfville and surrounding areas to capture the provincial, blue-collar ambiance essential to the narrative's grounded realism.[25] [26] Season 4 production shifted to include studio work alongside Halifax locations, leveraging the city's facilities for interior scenes while maintaining exterior authenticity through regional lots and streets.[27] This approach minimized logistical costs by utilizing Nova Scotia's local infrastructure and talent pool, aligning with the show's emphasis on raw, unpolished visuals over high-end post-production gloss typical of larger U.S. comedies.[28] Technical execution favored practical location shooting and minimal digital intervention, with on-set adjustments handled via stand-ins to streamline lighting and sound for the chaotic, fast-paced sequences depicting the protagonist's hallucinatory episodes and absurd mishaps.[29] Budget limitations as a mid-tier Canadian cable production encouraged resourceful techniques, such as real-world props and environments, to convey causal chains of events with empirical immediacy rather than relying on extensive CGI for comedic or surreal elements.[30]Broadcast and distribution
Original airing
Call Me Fitz premiered on HBO Canada on September 19, 2010, launching its first season of 13 episodes.[31] The series aired weekly thereafter, with the season concluding in December 2010.[32] HBO Canada, a premium cable service, positioned the show as original Canadian programming aimed at mature viewers, leveraging its ad-free format to deliver content without the constraints of traditional broadcast censorship.[3] Subsequent seasons followed annually: the second premiered on September 25, 2011, also comprising 13 episodes; the third in September 2012; and the fourth in October 2013, reduced to 10 episodes.[33][3] The program concluded after this fourth season in December 2013, amid shifts in the Canadian premium TV landscape, including HBO Canada's evolving partnership with Bell Media.[32] Episodes typically ran approximately 25 to 30 minutes, formatted as half-hour slots exclusive to the network's on-demand and linear feeds.[34] As a subscriber-based service, HBO Canada aired Call Me Fitz uncut, preserving the series' explicit profanity, sexual content, and violent undertones integral to its black comedy style, without alterations required for advertiser-supported or free-to-air television.[35] This approach catered to an adult demographic disillusioned with diluted network fare, capitalizing on demand for unfiltered narratives in a market increasingly favoring premium, boundary-pushing originals.[3]International releases and availability
The series made its United States television debut on DirecTV's Audience Network on April 21, 2011, following its Canadian premiere, with subsequent seasons airing on the same channel, including the second season starting November 3, 2011.[36][37] A French broadcast deal was secured around the same period, expanding its reach in Europe.[36] International syndication remained limited, with no confirmed major television runs in markets such as the United Kingdom or Australia beyond sporadic episode airings or early digital trials; for instance, the pilot episode received a noted Australian broadcast date in July of an unspecified year post-2010.[38] As of October 2025, availability outside Canada is inconsistent and primarily confined to ad-supported streaming and video-on-demand purchases in select regions, reflecting the production's niche status without major studio amplification for global platforms. In the United States, all seasons can be streamed for free with advertisements on The Roku Channel and Tubi, or purchased digitally via Fandango at Home (from $13.99 per season) and Google Play Movies (from $14.99 per season).[39][40][41] In the United Kingdom and Australia, no streaming options are currently available across major services, with JustWatch confirming the title's absence after scanning over 1,400 platforms in each market.[42][43] No revivals, reboots, or expanded syndication efforts have materialized by 2025, leaving post-broadcast access reliant on these fragmented digital outlets rather than comprehensive international licensing.[39]Episodes
Season 1 (2010)
Season 1 of Call Me Fitz comprises 13 episodes that originally aired weekly on HBO Canada from September 19 to December 12, 2010.[32] The season establishes the central premise by depicting Richard "Fitz" Fitzpatrick, a charismatic yet unscrupulous used-car salesman managing his family's struggling dealership, Fitzpatrick Motors, whose consequence-free existence of deceit and excess is upended by a vehicular accident.[1] This incident precipitates the physical manifestation of his conscience in the form of Larry, an idealistic do-gooder who insists on partnering with Fitz to enforce ethical reforms, thereby thrusting the protagonist into ongoing confrontations between his ingrained self-interest and imposed moral rectitude.[44] The narrative arc centers on the dealership's financial precarity, exacerbated by Fitz's schemes and familial dysfunction, including revelations about inheritance and paternal legacies that intensify business threats.[45] Fitz's vehement opposition to Larry's influence underscores the season's satirical examination of self-improvement paradigms, portraying such interventions as futile against deeply rooted character defects, as evidenced by Fitz's repeated relapses into manipulation despite Larry's persistent advocacy for honesty and accountability.[8] Family dynamics further complicate the setup, with secrets emerging that challenge Fitz's autonomy and expose vulnerabilities in the Fitzpatrick enterprise, laying groundwork for the series' exploration of enduring personal failings over superficial transformations.[10]| No. overall | No. in season | Title | Original air date |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 | The Pilot | September 19, 2010[32] |
| 2 | 2 | Loco | September 19, 2010[46] |
| 3 | 3 | Mama | September 26, 2010[46] |
| 4 | 4 | A Wife's Prerogative | October 3, 2010[47] |
| 5 | 5 | The Back End | October 10, 2010[47] |
| 6 | 6 | Going Down Syndrome | October 17, 2010[47] |
| 7 | 7 | The Diving Bell and the Barbara | October 24, 2010[47] |
| 8 | 8 | Up in the Air | October 31, 2010[45] |
| 9 | 9 | Bastards | November 7, 2010[32] |
| 10 | 10 | Dog's Breakfast | November 14, 2010[32] |
| 11 | 11 | Charlie's School | November 21, 2010[32] |
| 12 | 12 | Honesty, Integrity, and Low Mileage: Part 1 | November 28, 2010[45] |
| 13 | 13 | Honesty, Integrity, and Low Mileage: Part 2 | December 12, 2010[32] |
Season 2 (2011)
The second season of Call Me Fitz consists of 13 half-hour episodes, premiering on HBO Canada with a double-episode broadcast on September 25, 2011, followed by weekly Sunday airings concluding on December 18, 2011.[32][48] The structure builds on the first season's foundation, extending the serialized arcs of Fitz's personal chaos and dealership operations into more intricate conflicts, with each episode typically centering on a self-contained scheme amid ongoing threats to his lifestyle and business.[49] Business intrigue at Fitzpatrick Motors escalates prominently, featuring direct competitor aggressions such as a sniper's siege on the premises, which Larry attributes to Fitz's withheld syphilis diagnosis and broader recklessness.[50] These external pressures compound internal dealership tensions, including Fitz's ruthless tactics to undercut rivals, exemplified by stooping to deceptive lows for sales dominance.[49] Family interventions heighten the personal stakes, as Larry mobilizes the Fitzpatrick relatives—including Fitz's father during hospitalization and mother in relational meddling—to confront his substance abuse and ethical lapses through structured confrontations.[51] The season introduces shifting alliances and betrayals, such as entanglements with a manipulative new office manager and ominous prophecies disrupting operations, forcing Fitz into opportunistic partnerships that often implode. Fitz's pragmatic dodges of therapeutic mandates—embodied by Larry's insistent "healing" efforts—and legal repercussions, like police inquiries into burials or hits, underscore the series' portrayal of institutional futility against individual expediency unbound by remorse.[52] Jason Priestley, in addition to leading as Fitz, directed several episodes, contributing to a tightened pace that amplifies the raw, profane exchanges central to the black comedy's tone.[53]Season 3 (2012)
The third season of Call Me Fitz comprises 13 episodes and premiered on HBO Canada on September 23, 2012.[54] It escalates the protagonist Richard "Fitz" Fitzpatrick's confrontations with familial and personal consequences, as his used-car dealership faces threats from internal betrayals and external rivals, prompting schemes to reclaim control.[55] Central to the season's narrative are inheritance disputes within the Fitzpatrick family, including the discovery of a purported lost fortune that Larry, Fitz's hallucinatory conscience, leverages to rally relatives for intervention amid Fitz's mounting crises.[56] These conflicts intersect with Fitz's unexpected political bid for city council, satirizing entitlement through his manipulative campaigns, such as leveraging personal scandals and false claims of paternity to derail opponents.[57] The revelation of Ali's pregnancy with Fitz's child further intensifies the psychological toll, exposing the limits of his consequence-evading lifestyle without prompting genuine reform.[58] Interactions between Fitz and Larry exhibit amplified absurdity, with the conscience figure actively thwarting Fitz's mayoral excesses—like instituting "Blowjob Tuesdays"—to underscore the accumulating repercussions of habitual vice and self-deception, often through exaggerated pseudo-psychological rationalizations.[59] This portrayal critiques superficial entitlement and therapeutic pretensions, portraying unchecked moral failings as inevitably self-undermining rather than redeemable via external validation.Season 4 (2013)
The fourth and final season of Call Me Fitz comprised 10 episodes, airing weekly on Mondays from October 7 to December 9, 2013, primarily on The Movie Network (TMN) in Canada, with the series finale presented as an extended hour-long episode on December 2.[60][61] This season escalated the protagonist Richard "Fitz" Fitzpatrick's personal chaos, centering on his reluctant adaptation to fatherhood after discovering a son, while pursuing high-stakes scams involving family inheritance and dealership survival, culminating in fragmented alliances rather than resolution.[62]| Episode | Title | Original air date |
|---|---|---|
| 4x01 | Alice Doesn't Live Here, Anymore | October 7, 2013 |
| 4x02 | Baby's First Brothel | October 14, 2013 |
| 4x03 | Raising What's-His-Name | October 21, 2013 |
| 4x04 | Pulling a Polanski | October 28, 2013 |
| 4x05 | It's All Fun and Games Until... | November 4, 2013 |
| 4x06 | The Wild and the Innocent | November 11, 2013 |
| 4x07 | Up in Smoke | November 18, 2013 |
| 4x08 | Curse of the Were-Rabbit | November 25, 2013 |
| 4x09 | Fitz & the F.F. Squad | December 2, 2013 |
| 4x10 | The Ghost of Christmas Past | December 9, 2013 |