Where to Watch 

The Great North

 Online

The Great North

description

"The Great North" is an animated television series that premiered in 2021. It follows the adventures of the Tobin family as they live in the fictional Alaskan town of "Loulou." The show primarily focuses on the family's daughter, Judy, and her desire to become a musher and participate in the town's annual dogsled race.

Throughout the series, the Tobin family faces a variety of challenges, including Judy's struggles to convince her father to let her race and their encounters with the town's eccentric residents. The show also features themes of friendship, family, and self-discovery.

"The Great North" has been praised for its humor, heartwarming moments, and representation of Alaskan culture. The show features a diverse cast of characters, including a Native Alaskan character voiced by an Indigenous actor. Overall, "The Great North" is an entertaining and wholesome show for viewers of all ages.

Got a "Not available in your region" message?

No worries. Get a true residential US IP address and watch any title even if you are not in the USA!

Episodes

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
No items found.
Author
Zahra Almailady

Zahra Almailady is a wife and mom first but she discovered a passion for cinema and after graduating from UCLA School of Theater, Film, and Television she dove into cinematography. Now Zahra writes movie reviews just for fun ad really enjoys it. Zahra loves reading, cooking,  and windsurfing. She lives in New Zealand, with her husband two sons, and four cats.

share this article

you might also like

American Dad!

2021
Animation & Cartoons
Either the CIA is just not that cool and relevant anymore, or Seth Macfarlane and associates are still mining the mother lode of 1970s humour as they develop episodes of "American Dad!" for Sunday nights on Fox. Television historians claim animated series have replaced sit-coms as television's principal source of informed social commentary; and "The Simpsons" have replaced "All in the Family" as the nation's premier satire, the weekly litmus test of American values and expectations. "American Dad!" shows little sign of aspiring to that lofty standing. Most episodes set the standard simply at "amusing." CIA agent and uber-patriot Stan Smith, the "American Dad!" anchors a predictably diverse, dysfunctional just-beyond-the-beltway family. Francine, his wife, appears to atone for her wild youth by remaining vacant, mostly boring in contemporary life. Hayley, Stan's college-aged radical daughter, naturally acts-out all the standard forms of late adolescent rebellion and family insurgency. And Steve, not surprisingly, enters puberty eager to live-up to Dad's expectations but congenitally incapable of coming even close. Holding its own in Fox's Sunday night animated line-up, "American Dad!" has improved in its several seasons on the air. Translation: "American Dad!" has evolved from "mediocre" to "not bad" as it has outgrown its abject dependence on cliches and stereotypes, freshened its subject matter and treatment, and drawn sharper edges on its characters. Still, the premises for "American Dad!" showed promise in 1973; in the new millennium, they seem a little tired.