Waterloo Region Record

Branching out

Trailer Park Boys add eatery, bars to business empire

- Brett Bundale

HALIFAX — The Trailer Park Boys, Nova Scotia’s supposedly dopey mockumenta­ry stars, are amassing a business empire spanning an online comedy network, production studio, beverage deals, marijuana branding and now a landmark Halifax restaurant and bar complex.

The entreprene­urial acumen of Mike Smith, Robb Wells and John Paul Tremblay — Bubbles, Ricky and Julian — belies the dimwitted campy characters that have attained cult status and prompted Netflix to pick up the franchise, now filming Season 12.

Following the launch of Liquormen’s Ol’ Dirty Canadian Whisky two years ago, the boys recently released a new beer, Freedom 35 lager, in partnershi­p with Toronto’s North American Craft, or NAC Importers Inc., and have also teamed up with Organigram Inc. of New Brunswick to sell branded marijuana products once legal weed kicks in.

Now the East Coasters’ Swear Net Holdings, the firm behind the online entertainm­ent subscripti­on network SwearNet, is venturing into brick and mortar business.

Along with Gary Howsam, producer of the hit television show, and Halifax bar owner Brad Hartlin, the Trailer Park Boys have bought up the Halifax landmark Economy Shoe Shop Cafe and Bar from local businessma­n Victor Syperek.

The business partners also acquired the former Seahorse Tavern space, a live-music venue, and brokered the joint ownership of the Toothy Moose cabaret, previously coowned by Smith (Bubbles) and Hartlin.

Through Swear Net Holdings, the three actors and Howsam own 75 per cent of the three venues, while Hartlin owns 25 per cent.

Together, they now control over 18,000 square feet of prime bar and restaurant real estate in downtown Halifax across from the Nova Centre, a $500-million hotel, office and convention centre complex slated to open later this year.

“Right now it sucks that it’s under constructi­on and the street is closed,” said Smith, better known as Bubbles, the character that sports thick, Coke-bottle glasses and plaid shirts. “But when it’s done we’re going to have a permanent patio. It will be the premier location in downtown Halifax.”

Hartlin said the team is investing up to $2 million into overhaulin­g the entertainm­ent complex, with a big lump of cash going into a brand new Shoe Shop kitchen and renovation­s to the decor.

While the Shoe Shop has a fresh coat of paint and some new lighting, the eatery has kept the same “vibe,” with its stained glass, large artificial tree and mural, he said.

“It’s a symbol of Halifax,” said Hartlin,

who played hockey in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League for two years and eventually opened a sports memorabili­a store and Bubba Ray’s sports bar. “With its big diamond sign ... it’s really an iconic landmark.”

There are still subtle hints superfans of “Trailer Park Boys” will appreciate though, like Freedom 35 beer on tap and possibly a Julian rum and Coke on the drink menu.

But the downstairs live music venue will take on more of a distinctiv­e laid back, Sunnyvale Trailer Park atmosphere, Smith said.

The Toothy Moose, meanwhile, has run its course.

The fun-meets-trashy cabaret will become an upscale lounge called The Lab, Smith said.

“The Toothy Moose has had a kind of a down-and-dirty country bar feel and we wanted to do sort of the opposite, more of a high-end L.A. lounge kind of thing,” Smith said. “It’s going to be painted out all white with a lot of colour-changing LED lights, very moody, with bubbling beakers and staff in lab coats.”

The five business partners are staying mum on how much they shelled out for the Economy Shoe Shop name and restaurant, as well as the former Seahorse Tavern space.

“We started a mile apart,” Hartlin said of negotiatio­ns with Syperek. “Then some others came to the table that were interested in the space and that drove costs up.

“It took about two years from the initial conversati­on. But we eventually closed the deal April 1.”

For the Trailer Park Boys, the bars and restaurant come after years of translatin­g the television show’s popular brand into business deals and merchandiz­ing.

The online merch store includes the usual smattering of sweaters, shirts, ball caps and key chains as well as the more unique swearing badge set of buttons, bobblehead­s and stickers.

But the boys have been branching out, snapping up two buildings in an industrial park across the harbour in Dartmouth for production.

“In some ways we feel like we’re just getting rolling,” Smith said. “We’re constantly biting off more than we can chew, but then we make it work and we make it fun.”

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 ?? CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The Trailer Park Boys, John Paul Tremblay, as Julian, left, Mike Smith, as Bubbles, centre, and Robb Wells, as Ricky, in 2008.
CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO The Trailer Park Boys, John Paul Tremblay, as Julian, left, Mike Smith, as Bubbles, centre, and Robb Wells, as Ricky, in 2008.

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