Corner Gas is the only gas station for in any direction (according to season one, episode one “Ruby Reborn” and season one, episode two "Tax Man"). Brent Leroy (Brent Butt) is the proprietor of the station and Wanda (Nancy Robertson) works at the station’s convenience store as a retail assistant. An adjoining coffee shop (The Ruby) is owned by Lacey Burrows (Gabrielle Miller), who inherited it from her Aunt Ruby.
The show became an instant hit and has never gone below the million-viewer mark. Corner Gas has been the recipient of six Gemini awards, and has been nominated about 70 times for various awards.
The series was created by Canadian comedian Brent Butt, who came up with the idea for the series after wondering what his life would be like if he had not pursued stand-up comedy (he would still be in a small town in Saskatchewan pumping gas). With the exception of the first season finale and second season premiere episodes, which are linked, most other Corner Gas episodes are stand-alone storylines that can be viewed in virtually any order, though occasional incidental references to previous episodes can be found.
Brent Butt originally developed the story line for CTV and The Comedy Network (TCN). The show brings together coffee shop humour within a community. The characters are archetypal. They have the personality of friends and family which international viewers can relate to. The show focuses on the lifestyle of small town folk. Though set in some small town in Saskatchewan it is not about Saskatchewan or Canada. It is about the day to day interactions of the residents.
Corner Gas is promoted by CTV as the network’s “first original narrative comedy series." While it is not, in fact, the first Canadian-produced sitcom ever aired on CTV, having been preceded by The Trouble with Tracy, Snow Job, Excuse My French and Check It Out!, it is the first CTV sitcom in which the network itself has held a primary production role, rather than acting solely as a holder of broadcast rights, and the first to postdate the network's late-1990s corporate restructuring from a cooperative of its affiliated stations into a conventional corporation. Corner Gas can also be verifiably called the most successful of these shows.
Corner Gas is filmed entirely on location in Saskatchewan. The inside scenes (Ruby Cafe interior, Police Department, Oscar and Emma's house, etc.) are filmed at Canada/Saskatchewan Production Studios in Regina. All of the outdoor scenes and all scenes that take place in the gas station are filmed in Rouleau, Saskatchewan. Rouleau is a small town on the highway between Moose Jaw and Weyburn. The grain elevator has been repainted to read “Dog River” instead of “Rouleau.” Corner Gas is produced by Prairie Pants Productions in association with CTV. Also Regina, Saskatchewan, is known as the "City" in Corner Gas.
The first episode of Corner Gas aired on January 22, 2004, and attracted 1.5 million viewers. It became an instant hit and has never gone below the million-viewer mark. The first season consisted of 13 episodes. Less than two months after the first episode aired, CTV renewed it for a second season of 18 episodes.
Brent’s main co-writers are This Hour has 22 Minutes writers Mark Farrell, Paul Mather, Kevin White, and Andrew Carr.
As broadcast of the fourth season finale approached, there was a flurry of news reports suggesting that the series was coming to an unexpected end, based upon televised promotions for the episode, leaked plot details, and wording of a CTV press release issued on March 6, 2007 that implied that the series finale would air on March 12, 2007. Two segments of production footage with timecode circulated on YouTube also seemed to indicate a series finale as imminent despite the show’s continued success in Canada and recent U.S. sale. On March 7, 2007, CTV clarified its press release, stating it was a season finale, and on March 13, 2007, CTV confirmed an order for a 19-episode fifth season, that premiered on September 24, 2007.
On April 10, 2008, as production of the sixth season began, Brent Butt announced via a press release that he and his production company, Prairie Pants, have decided to conclude production of the series after the sixth season, with the final episodes airing in the spring of 2009. Butt said the decision to end the series while still a popular offering on CTV was "a very difficult decision ... and one I felt I had to make. (CTV) made it clear that they were keen to do more seasons ... I wanted to exit gracefully, on top of our game."
Corner Gas is known for attracting notable Canadian actors and politicians, including a former Governor-General and two Prime Ministers, to appear either as guest stars or in gag cameos. Sometimes the celebrities have made the trip to the Rouleau or Regina sets to film their appearances, while at other times the scenes were filmed in the applicable locations. (For example, scenes involving cast members of Canadian Idol and Canada AM were filmed at the respective programs’ studios.)
The series includes cameo appearances by a large number of Canadian celebrities, including two sitting prime ministers, Paul Martin and Stephen Harper, the only fictional sitcom (as opposed to sketch comedy series) in which sitting prime ministers have appeared. The sitting premier of Saskatchewan, Lorne Calvert, also appeared in an episode, as has former Governor-General Adrienne Clarkson. Canadian television personality Ben Mulroney, son of former Prime Minister Brian Mulroney has also appeared on Corner Gas.
During the first season Kevin McDonald of Kids in the Hall plays Marvin Drey, a Canada Customs and Revenue Agency agent in episode 1-02 The Taxman. The same episode films Dan Matheson, a news anchor for CTV, appears as himself. Julie Stewart, in the filming of the episode 1-05 Grad ’68, plays a paint store clerk (parodying her role in Cold Squad). Comedian Mike Wilmot plays Carl Vawn, Brent’s snobby cousin, and actor Dale Wilson appears dressed as in his well known “Glad Man” attire for the episode 1-08 Cousin Carl. Colin Mochrie, a prolific Canadian comedy actor best known for his work in Whose Line Is It Anyway?, makes a cameo appearance as part of a joke about how he seems to turn up on every Canadian TV show. Colin appeared in 1-10 Comedy Night. Pamela Wallin, former CBC newscaster and later Canadian Consul General, a native of Wadena, Saskatchewan, plays herself. Canadian Idol judges Sass Jordan, Zack Werner, Jake Gold, and Farley Flex appear as themselves rating Brent’s rendition of “(There’d Be No Rain in Dog River) If I Could Squeegee the Sky” in the episode 1-11 Hook, Line and Sinker. TSN sportscaster (and U8TV: The Lofters alumnus) Jennifer Hedger and her SportsCentre colleague Darren Dutchyshen appear as themselves during the episode 1-12 Face Off.
The second season also attracted notable personalities. Episode 2-02 Wedding Card films Hockey star Darryl Sittler as himself. 2-06 Poor Brent has an appearance by Lloyd Robertson, long-time CTV National News anchor, playing himself. Canadian and world champion curlers Randy Ferbey and Dave Nedohin (both of whom curl for Alberta) appear as themselves, are looked to for advice during the hotly-contested Dog River curling championship, the Clavet Cup in episode 2-11 Hurry Hard. Episode 2-12 An American in Saskatchewan features Mark McKinney, a veteran of both Kids in the Hall and Saturday Night Live McKinney plays Bill, an American who came to Dog River by accident. Saskatchewan-born musician Colin James appears as a local musician (although it is implied that Colin James’ character really is Colin James) who performs an audition in Brent’s garage. The rock group The Tragically Hip appear as “local kids” who practise in Brent’s garage. The Tragically Hip play a rough version of "It Can't Be Nashville Every Night" off their In Between Evolution album. Both The Tragically Hip and Colin James are filmed on episode 2-15 Rock On!.
Ben Mulroney, host of TV shows Canadian Idol and eTalk Daily and the son of former Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, parodies himself during the third season episode 3-03 Dog River Vice. 3-07 Fun Run films then Prime Minister Paul Martin as himself. This is the first time a sitting Prime Minister has appeared on a sitcom (although sitting Prime Ministers have appeared on sketch comedy shows like Royal Canadian Air Farce, and other political satire programs like This Hour Has 22 Minutes). Singer Jann Arden appears as herself in 3-07 Fun Run. Noted actress Shirley Douglas (mother of Kiefer Sutherland, and daughter of Tommy Douglas former Premier of Saskatchewan) plays a woman with the hots for Oscar. Shirley Douglas is featured in 3-08 Trees a Crowd. Then-federal finance minister Ralph Goodale appears as a Ruby Café customer in 3-09 Picture Perfect. (The episode aired the same day Goodale filed a “mini-budget” in the House of Commons.) Lorne Calvert, premier of Saskatchewan, appears as himself. He appears three times—twice to poke fun at Sweden and once to almost get hit by a thrown newspaper during the appropriately named 3-12 Ruby Newsday. Vicki Gabereau appears as herself during a fantasy sequence in the same episode. Prior to the debut of Corner Gas, the cast had appeared on Gabereau’s CTV talk show, during which Brent Butt promised to get the talk show host a guest appearance. 3-13 Merry Gasmas films This Hour has 22 Minutes anchor Gavin Crawford appears as a worker in the Calgary International Airport. He would always call cities their airport names (YYC, YEG) which confused Lacey horribly. In the same episode Dan Redican from The Frantics, and more recently Puppets Who Kill, makes an appearance as a worker in the Regina International Airport. He repeatedly says “made that call.” Comedy Inc. star Roman Danylo makes a cameo as a passenger sitting next to Lacey on a plane from Alberta to Vancouver. He claims to be a “cat doctor,” and not a veterinarian. He manages to out-chat Lacey while talking about cats during the same episode, 3-13 Merry Gasmas. Ken Read, also known as “The Crazy Canuck,” is a champion alpine skier and member of the Canadian Olympic Association. During episode 3-16 Physical Credit, Read receives a browbeating from Oscar (which first aired the day after closing ceremonies of the 2006 Winter Olympics).
Olympic medal winner Cindy Klassen makes a cameo appearance in the fourth season episode 4-02 Dog River Dave. The show 4-05 Demolition features Former Governor-General Adrienne Clarkson appears, taking a sledgehammer to an old barn. Mike Holmes, the star of Holmes on Homes, helps to fix Oscar’s bathroom. Wanda states that she had formerly dated the Holmes character in the episode 4-06 Jail House. CTV CEO Ivan Fecan makes a cameo appearance during the episode 4-08 Blog River. 4-19 Gopher It featured Current Prime Minister Stephen Harper as himself. Canada AM co-anchors Seamus O’Regan and Beverly Thomson appear, playing themselves. Unlike most cameos, O’Regan and Thomson appear extensively in this episode to parody their on-screen image. CTV National News reporter Rosemary Thompson appears, playing herself in a scrum with the Prime Minister at the gas station.
During the fifth season three episodes bring in notable personalities. 5-16 Coming Distractions Duane "Dog" Chapman and Beth Smith from Dog the Bounty Hunter appear to arrest Brent on a trivial charge during a fantasy sequence. In the episode 5-18 Bed and Brake Fast hockey player Travis Moen makes a cameo appearance with the Stanley Cup and during season 5-19 Final Countdown actor Kiefer Sutherland makes a cameo appearance.
The town’s name is an homage to series creator Brent Butt’s hometown of Tisdale, Saskatchewan, through which the Doghide River flows. However, in the show itself, the second season episode “Rock On!” revealed that the town was named after a great uncle of Lacey’s who drowned a dozen dogs in the river. She discovered this trivia while researching information for a history plaque. In order to play down this unsavoury branch of her family tree, Lacey instead used a story that Karen made up—that pioneers somehow got hold of a hot air balloon, got an aerial view of the town site, and noticed that the creek formed a shape similar to that of a dog’s leg. “Block Party” revealed that the town was founded in 1905, and its founder was a Mr. Harald Main after whom Main Street was named (it was renamed “Centennial Street” in 2005, the origin of the name being forgotten); Main also constructed Dog River’s first building, a wooden shack that would later be burned down by Hank Yarbo a century later in order to maintain the accuracy of his Lego scale model of the town (he ran out of blocks and could not make a replica of the shack).
A real-life Regina tour operator regularly takes busloads of tourists to Rouleau to visit “Dog River.” Visitors can tour the on-location sets of Corner Gas, including the service station. Many components of Dog River are, in fact, real attributes of Rouleau, notably the combined liquor and insurance store.
The town has its own newspaper, The Dog River Howler (usually just called “The Howler”), to which almost everybody has contributed at one point or another. Its headlines are usually rife with inaccurate, sensationalist reporting. An example of exaggeration can be seen in “Hero Sandwich,” in which a proposal to install traffic lights at a four-way intersection prompts the headline “Crosswalk HELL—Mayor Insane.” An example of simply untrue reporting can be seen in the first episode, in which a headline reads “Moose Jaw Gets NBA Franchise.” The paper is also rife with misspellings, for example in the third season that “Hank is phycic.” or in the fourth season that "Local cop catches barely thief."
The "Police Department", consisting of two officers, keeps the peace in Dog River, though most of the time their duties consist of shooting pests at farms and using their radar guns to clock the flying speed of sparrows at .
In “The Littlest Yarbo,” a short-lived Fire Department consisting of two firefighters, David and Carol (both showing remarkable similarities to Davis and Karen, respectively), was established by the mayor when the volunteer fire chief decided to sleep in as opposed to respond to a fire. The volunteer system was reestablished after Hank, Davis, and Oscar lit an uncontrollable leaf fire and the fire department did not respond as they were chasing a stray dog (the same one Hank thought to be “The Littlest Hobo”). Fitzy saw Davis in the aftermath as the only first responder there and gave him the new title of Chief, Volunteer Fire Department.
The Dog River Police have two police cars, both 1994 Ford Crown Victorias. With the exception of the first episode and "Dark Circles," the police use only one of them. (In actual production, only one police car is on the Corner Gas set, and represents both cars.)
The residents of Dog River have a pathological dislike of the residents of Wullerton, a neighbouring town, to the point that they spit on the ground whenever the rival town is mentioned (they are so used to it they sometimes do not realise it when they spit). Ironically, the people of Wullerton may not hate Dog River, as seen in the fourth season’s finale (however, this was only part of Hank’s fantasy sequence, and may not accurately reflect Wullerton’s actual sentiment towards Dog River). The reason for this has yet to be explained. Publicity for the second season indicated that the season finale would reveal the reason for the spitting; however, the episode as broadcast did not actually do so. It should be noted that this practice of looking down on neighbouring towns is common in many prairie communities, primarily those in Saskatchewan and Alberta. There is a real existing rivalry between Tisdale, Saskatchewan (where series creator Brent Butt is from) and Melfort, Saskatchewan. Other examples include the rivalries between Yorkton, Saskatchewan and Melville, Saskatchewan, and Weyburn, Saskatchewan and Estevan, Saskatchewan.
Thunderface has suffered from relative anonymity due to confusion with their name (as well as the fact that they’ve only had one gig since 1986). They have been referred to as “Rumblepuss,” “Thunderbread,” “Thunderchunks,” and “Wonderface,” among other names. Their sound is described as similar to “a small animal caught in some kind of machinery,” and their sole gig since 1986 was booked due to the humorous nature of their poor performance. The only song they’ve been heard to play is “Capital Cash” by Fast Exit, a band that Brent Butt played guitar in before he got into comedy.
Corner Gas is the only current top-20 Canadian show in all of Canada (other than hockey)—the rest being American imports—Corner Gas debuted in January 2004, outperforming all U.S. sitcoms in the territory among adults 25-54.
Since 2004, production of this series coincides with that of another CTV program, Robson Arms in which Gabrielle Miller and Fred Ewanuick also co-star. Miller also had a recurring role in the series Alienated in 2004, giving her the rare distinction of playing major roles in three unrelated television series during the same calendar year (although Robson Arms wasn’t broadcast until 2005). As of fall 2007, two seasons of Robson Arms featuring Miller and Ewanuick have been produced and released to DVD.
Fred Ewanuick appeared as Hank on the Royal Canadian Air Farce’s 300th episode in a spoof of Corner Gas, in which Yasir (Carlo Rota) and Sarah (Sheila McCarthy) from CBC’s Little Mosque on the Prairie bought the gas station and fired Brent. Hank then debated with them the location of Mercy (the Saskatchewan town where Little Mosque takes place) in relation to Dog River.
The second-season episode “Hero Sandwich” establishes that the events of the first season and the first half of the second season take place over the course of 10 months. Midway through the second season, CTV moved the series from Tuesday to Monday when American Idol returned on Fox (which CTV rebroadcasts), ending up competing with The Rick Mercer Report, on CBC. The third season episode “Dog River Vice” includes a joke that pokes fun at CTV’s rescheduling of the show. In the “Rock On!” episode, from season two, “Capital Cash,” the song performed by Thunderface, was written by Brent Butt. Butt was in a band called Fast Exit as a guitarist before he got into comedy, and they are mentioned in the episode as the band that originally did the song. In the episode “Mosquito Time” there is one split screen shot of several characters trying a homemade mosquito repellent recipe (lemon dish soap). The split screen shot is similar to those from the Fox series 24 which played on CTV’s rival station Global during the same Monday evening timeslot as Corner Gas.
During the third season the series occasionally breaks the fourth wall. For example, in “Physical Credit” Wanda and Brent are talking about films with poor production values when a boom microphone (in use recording the scene) intentionally drops into the shot and hits Wanda on the head. To promote the “Merry Gasmas” episode in 2005, Brent Butt recorded “ Christmas in Dog River” with Craig Northey. In the episode “Trees a Crowd,” Hank can be seen reading issue #18 of The Walking Dead inside the tree house while Brent is trying to convince him to leave.
In the fourth season “Dog River Dave” episode, a fictional radio station from Regina, CJKL “The Jackal,” was featured. An actual CJKL-FM exists in Kirkland Lake, Ontario. The name “Jackal” is most likely a reference to the real Regina station CFWF-FM, "The Wolf". In the “The Good Old Table Hockey Game” episode, homage is paid to the 1972 Summit Series between Canada and the then USSR. The title of the episode is an homage to lyrics in “The Hockey Song” by Stompin’ Tom Connors.
The fifth season "Classical Gas" was accidentally broadcast by The Comedy Network on December 15, 2007, a full month before it was supposed to first air on CTV. "The Accidental Cleanist" was accidentally broadcast by The Comedy Network on March 29, 2008, two weeks before it was supposed to first air on CTV.
The first season finale “I Love Lacey” takes place during the Grey Cup in November, the third season episode “Merry Gasmas” takes place at Christmas time, the fourth season episode "Hair Comes the Judge" takes place in August, and the fifth season episode "No Time Like the Presents" takes place in July. These are the only four episodes (to date) to clearly indicate a time frame for when they take place, although the season two finale “Harvest Dance” presumably takes place in the fall, and “The Brent Effect” takes place soon after “I Love Lacey.” Neither “I Love Lacey” nor “Brent Effect” shows any signs of it being early winter, despite taking place in November. “Block Party” explicitly takes place sometime in 2005 as it makes references to Saskatchewan’s centennial celebrations that year, although the episode itself wasn’t broadcast until February 2006.
The fourth season began airing on CTV on September 18, 2006. On November 24, 2006, it was announced that Corner Gas will air on the American WGN America beginning September 17, 2007. In an interview with the Canadian Press published on November 24, 2006, Brent Butt revealed that there has also been talk of a motion picture being produced based upon the series, though nothing as of yet has been decided.
The six Gemini Awards include Best Comedy Program or Series—2005, 2006, and 2007; Best Ensemble Performance in a Comedy Program or Series—for the episode "Gopher It", 2007; Best Writing in a Comedy or Variety Program or Series—Mark Ferrell for the episode "Gopher It", 2007; and Best Interactive—2005. 2007 was the third consecutive year that Corner Gas won the best comedy award.
The show also has eight other Gemini Award nominations. It was nominated for an International Emmy Award in 2004.
In 2004 the show was honoured with the DGC Award win for Outstanding Team Achievement in a TV Series—Comedy. They were also nominated in 2005. Corner Gas received the WGC Award win in 2005 for Best Comedy & Variety Program. Corner Gas also lays claim to seven Leo Award wins.
Corner Gas received two awards at the 7th Canadian Comedy Awards. The awards were given for best direction and to Janet Wright achieved the award for top female performer. Corner Gas writers received an award for the episode "Comedy Night" at the 9th annual Canadian Screenwriting Awards on April 18, 2005. Writers Mark Farrell and Robert Sheridan received the The Writers Guild of Canada award April 14, 2008 for best half-hour drama series.