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Tired of waiting for Canadian TV that actually gets it? Two Toronto creators just served up something that’ll make you laugh, cringe, and feel deeply seen: all in 30 minutes.
Baked Butter Biscuits isn’t your typical comedy series. It’s genre-bending, unapologetically Black, and refreshingly honest about what it’s like to be young, creative, and navigating a world that often doesn’t understand you. Think Atlanta meets The Boondocks, but with that distinctly Canadian flavour we’ve been missing.
Meet the Visionaries Behind the Movement
Yvano Antonio brings serious credentials to this project. The Canadian Screen Award winner for Being Black In Toronto knows how to blend cinematic realism with social impact. But here’s what makes him refreshing: he’s not here for the identity politics game:
“I’m tired of identifying as a ‘Black’ creative… I’m a creative that just so happens to be ‘Black’. I’m a Canadian Screen Award-winning director. That has nothing to do with my race. We’re all humans looking to tell stories, and I’m just a human.”
Ananse-Tony, a Ghanaian-Canadian multidisciplinary artist, brings the philosophical depth. His approach? “Make art that reflects the complexities of the human experience. Storytelling is my way of serving by making space for the voiceless communities.”
Together, they’ve created something that refuses to be boxed in: a series that’s both deeply personal and universally relatable.
What Makes This Show Different
Baked Butter Biscuits opens with Ananse and Evo pitching their chaotic short film to unimpressed executives. After a disastrous screening and a run-in with security, the trio: including their friend Jada: ends up jobless but strangely liberated.
But here’s where it gets wild. The pilot follows Ananse’s son Jeremiah, who stumbles through a dimensional portal and meets Geoffrey, an unhoused Genie. Geoffrey gifts him a “white privilege” titanium card, giving him the power to transform into an affluent white man.
Sound absurd? That’s the point. The show explores:
âś… Survival & Resistance : How young Black creatives navigate systems that misunderstand them
âś… Identity Beyond Labels : The tension between self-definition and societal expectations
âś… Found Family : The bonds that hold us together when everything falls apart
âś… The Absurdity of Everyday Life : Finding humour and meaning in chaos
Why This Series Matters Right Now
While Canadian television struggles with authentic representation, Baked Butter Biscuits doesn’t ask permission to be weird, loud, or deeply human. It’s part of a growing movement of Black Canadian creators who are redefining what our stories can look and sound like.
The show’s tagline: “You gotta risk it for the Baked Butter Biscuits”: captures that daring, risk-taking attitude. In a landscape where representation often feels like quota-filling rather than authentic storytelling, these creators are serving up something that’s both self-aware and self-assured.
“Baked Butter Biscuits is about more than laughs: it’s about survival, self-growth, and the search for meaning in madness,” explains Ananse-Tony. The series tackles race, friendship, and absurdity in spaces where Black life collides with societal expectations.
The Creative Vision That’s Changing Canadian TV
This isn’t just another comedy: it’s a cultural statement. The show draws inspiration from the surreal realism of Atlanta and the cultural reflection of The Boondocks, while maintaining its own distinct rhythm and Canadian perspective.
Humour, for these creators, is both survival and critique. It disarms audiences while slipping truth beneath the laughter, turning ordinary encounters into extraordinary revelations that expose unspoken dynamics of culture, identity, and belonging.
The pilot episode alone tackles heavy themes through a lens of dark comedy: from the opening boardroom disaster to Jeremiah’s supernatural journey with the “white privilege” card. It’s storytelling that doesn’t shy away from complexity.
A Grassroots Movement You Can Support
Here’s the real talk: Baked Butter Biscuits is a grassroots project with big ambitions. The creators have completed the pilot and are seeking community support and private investment to produce the full first episode and build momentum for the remaining five episodes.
This is what authentic, community-driven content looks like: combining sharp writing, visual artistry, and genuine voices to tell stories that matter.
The series appeals to both Black and non-Black viewers, especially young adults who appreciate social commentary, surrealism, and innovative storytelling. If you love shows that blend sharp wit with emotional depth and cultural critique, this is your next obsession.
What You Can Do Next
Baked Butter Biscuits represents a new chapter in Black Canadian storytelling: one where creators don’t need permission to be complex, funny, or deeply human. It’s about finding beauty in failure, power in resilience, and laughter in heartbreak.
This is more than entertainment: it’s a movement. Support creators who are pushing boundaries, telling authentic stories, and creating space for voices that need to be heard.
Ready to join the revolution? The pilot is available now, and these creators need your support to bring the full vision to life.
Learn more and support the show: bakedbutterbiscuits.com/tvseries
Tags: Black Canadian Creators, Canadian Comedy, Baked Butter Biscuits, Yvano Antonio, Ananse-Tony, Black Canadian Television, Toronto Creators
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