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Jake & Malachy Doyle (The Republic of Doyle)

Created by Allan Hawco, Perry Chafe & Malcolm MacRury

“Why are you such an arse, Jake Doyle?”
— the eternal question

At last! The Rock gets some P.I. love!

MALACHY and JAKE DOYLE are a father-and-son team of P.I.s working St. John’s, Newfoundland in Republic of Doyle, an endearingly quirky television show that consistently delivered the private eye goods.

Now, steady–it hails from Canada. Or more specifically, Newfoundland, that storm-tossed hardscrabble outlier province of fishermen, loggers, wisecrackers, bushwhackers, drinkers, winkers, yarn-spinners, musicians, actors, brawlers, trawlers and artists. This is about as far as you can get from Hollywood and still be in North America.

Jake, the son, is played by the show’s creator/writer and one of its executive producers, Allan Hawco. He and his long-suffering father (played by Irish stage vet Sean McGinley), are both ex-cops, and they run the agency out of Malachy’s home — when they’re not taking verbal pot shots at each other.

Jake’s the eternal rowdyman–an affable rogue and failed prodigal, the rough-around-the-edges son with a good heart and a dreadfully bad sense of restraint (or timing) when it comes to women. And that includes his (possibly) crazy ex-wife Nikki and attractive Constable Leslie Bennet of the Newfoundland Constabulary. Meanwhile, Mal is a by-the-books sort of guy; an old-fashioned law-and-order man trying to come to terms with a world (and a son) he doesn’t quite understand.

It helps that Hawco is an avowed fan of the genre. There are loud echoes of such beloved seventies P.I. TV fare as The Rockford Files and Magnum P.I., and the connections are more than reinforced by the old-school Pontiac GTO that Jake drives, the occasional references to other P.I. shows from that era, and even the choice of guest stars. (I mean, big extra points for Stuart Margolin, of Rockford fame).

The producers and writers worked hard at getting St. John’s right, and pretty much nail it, from the gorgeous scenery and the Celtic-adjacent soundtrack and theme song (courtesy of Great Big Sea) to the pub culture and the crayon box clapboards.

“We wanted the story lines to flow naturally out of the city. We wanted it to be believable and no one could say ‘that would never happen in St. John’s… It’s a fun show, without making a charicature out of the city. It has a sense of humour about itself,” Hawco told CBC News.

As for the father-son relationship, Hawco says “They’re very hard on each other and pretty cutting,” he said. “But it’s always clear that Malachy is looking out for his son, and Jake would do anything for his father.”

Except, maybe, find a nice girl and settle down. Or pay for the next round at The Duke, their local.

Of course, this being a CBC production, there’s a healthy dollop of family drama woven (injected?) into the show, as the fractious Doyle clan–including Rose Doyle (Malachy’s wife), Tinny Doyle (his granddaughter) and Des Courtney, their sk8r boi apprentice–argues and bangs heads but ultimately stand up for each other, helped along by a refreshing saltiness in the language and a casual earthiness to the male/female relationships that despite the family trappings, this ain’t no kids’ show.

Hey, did ya hear the one about the Newfie who…

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Report respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith. Thanks, Keith.

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