Tom Green turned his 150-acre Ontario farm into a celebrity talk show set
The MTV prankster moved home to Canada, married, learned to ride, and built a show where Tony Hawk skates a ramp in the pasture and a mule named Fanny gets a credit.

Spearson Cruz
June 30, 2026The guy who once put a dead animal scene in his parents' bed for an MTV bit now wakes up to feed a 1,500-pound mule. That is not a premise for a sketch. That is Tom Green's actual Tuesday, and he is filming all of it.
Green, the Ottawa comedian who turned "The Tom Green Show" into a late-'90s chaos machine before spending the 2000s in Hollywood, moved back to Canada in 2021 and bought 150 acres in an Ontario valley. The farmhouse on it dates to 1857. He summed up the whole operation to Toronto Life with the flat pride of a man who has weighed the animal: "My mule, Fanny, is 1,500 pounds."
The farm is now a TV set
On May 29, Crave launched "The Tom Green Farm," a 10-episode talk show shot entirely on his property. No desk, no couch, no studio audience. Just Green walking famous people past the hay bales and the livestock and asking them things. Two new episodes drop every Friday.
The guest list is both the joke and the draw. Tony Hawk and Kevin Staab turn up in the premiere, for which Green's crew built a 12-foot vert ramp in the middle of a pasture. Episode two hands drag superstar Priyanka a tractor and a tarot deck (she gives Green his first-ever reading), and Michael Cera swings by from a nearby set where, per the Crave announcement, he is directing a film starring Pamela Anderson and Steve Coogan. Across the season Crave lists Dan Aykroyd, Jay Baruchel, DeadMau5, Chantal Kreviazuk, Jessie Reyez, Kurt Vile, Steven Page, George Stroumboulopoulos, "Heartland" star Amber Marshall, hockey analyst Paul "Biz Nasty" Bissonnette, and Survivorman Les Stroud, among others.
His parents are in it, which is the part that will land hardest for anyone who watched the original. Mary Jane and Richard Green, who spent the MTV years as the targets of their son's pranks, now get to needle him back on camera. Mary Jane also co-writes and produces the show. There is a companion podcast too, "The Tom Green Farmcast," on iHeartRadio Canada, recorded in a solar-powered studio Green built in the barn loft.
The animals get billing
The four-legged regulars: Fanny the mule, Kiah the donkey, and horses Alora and Aria. Green married his wife Amanda in October 2025, and a good chunk of the season is ordinary farm-couple business, like a long campaign to renovate a dated kitchen and the weaning of a young foal. He has gone full horse guy over the run, learning to ride.
He never actually vanished
"The Tom Green Farm" is the latest entry in a busy stretch, not a comeback. In 2025 Green put out three Prime Video projects: the career retrospective "This Is the Tom Green Documentary," the unscripted "Tom Green Country," and a stand-up special called "I Got a Mule!" He also played Randy Bennett on the Crave comedy "The Trades," a turn that earned him a 2026 Canadian Screen Award nomination for best guest performance in a comedy. The farm show is the first title out of a development deal he signed with Bell Media.
And he keeps leaving the farm to tour
For a recluse, Green books a lot of road dates. His Stompin' Comedy Tour runs roughly 30 cities across Canada into 2026, with a western leg hitting Alberta and British Columbia in January (Medicine Hat on January 20, Vancouver on January 23) and stops stretching into the spring. The set is stand-up, stories from the career, and a few original songs. So the reclusive-farmer bit has clear limits, which is itself a very Tom Green way for the reclusive-farmer bit to go.
Sources (4)
- Crave Original THE TOM GREEN FARM Delivers Big Stars & Rural Charm in New Talk Show, May 29www.bellmedia.ca
- My mule, Fanny, is 1,500 pounds: Tom Green is a farmer nowtorontolife.com
- Where to see Tom Green in Alberta for his 2026 Canadian tourcuriocity.com
- Tom Green Plots Canadian Stompin' Comedy Tourexclaim.ca