

He has, across almost every single interaction, made things hand-wringingly cringe, yet, somehow he and the rest of the crew come away from it looking like loveable halfwits. With the show now into its third season, Stath and his constant awkwardness has managed to spark a feud with a neighbouring letting agency, knock up a staff member, hook up with his sister’s obsessive best friend, struggle to take over his father’s business, and let approximately zero flats.

It follows Stath, and the rest of the mostly inept staff at his dad’s letting agency, as they screw up their jobs, mess up their lives and fail at all of their relationships.Īll of this is led by Stath, played by the show’s creator Jamie Demetriou, who you might recognise as the buck-toothed creep from Fleabag, and his sister Sophie, played by Demetriou’s real-life sister Natasia, who plays Nadja on the equally excellent What We Do in the Shadows. Across three seasons, Stath Lets Flats has proven itself to be one of the funniest, smartest and straight-up weirdest shows on television. In Aotearoa, Stath Let’s Flat is nowhere to be seen. If you want to see it, legally speaking, I’m sorry to report that you can’t. “The world,” that is, if it’s one of those spinning atlases that leaves little ol’ New Zealand well off the map.

Welcome to the crazed, unhinged, awkward and often unintelligible world of Stath Lets Flats, the Brit-com that’s taken the world by storm.
