After the Yellowstone season 4 premiere rescued each Dutton from death—John, Kayce, and Beth all surviving their respective attacks—episode 2 opens with the aftermath. Kayce follows him. They two then discuss retaliation plans. Kayce informs John that Beth is still eying Jamie as the culprit behind the attack, but he then defends Jamie, reasoning Jamie is still attempting to save the Yellowstone from total development takeover.
We then find Jamie surveying a new piece of land near the Yellowstone with his biological father Garrett Randall. At the development site for the airfield—which Market Equities had managed to secure in season 3, hoping to build vacation homes servicing the local ski slopes and attracting international wealth—diggers find human and animal remains. Ellis informs her there will be delays as archeological research will likely take place.
Caroline, already anticipating legal action from Rainwater over the development, asks to meet with him. She then asks Ellis about the Dutton attack, which Ellis claims is separate from their development. So far, we cannot rule out Market Equities as the funders of the attack. Back at the ranch, John Dutton is making business moves of his own, hoping to partner with Texas horse trader and mogul Travis Wheatley.
Country Living Shop. Shopping Guides. United States. Type keyword s to search. Today's Top Stories. Makeover Takeover: Colonial Comeback. Treat Your Family to Homemade Cupcakes. Powerful Yellowstone Quotes. I mean, obviously, when he writes, I think he's very open to things.
It almost writes itself. He doesn't know what's necessarily going to make it on the page, but he has an overall kind of epic beginning, middle, and end for all the characters, and in the world of Yellowstone.
I questioned him because I needed to know why Beth was so—it was more than just not liking her. There's something else. There's something really at the core of it, something really painful. This isn't just sibling rivalry.
Taylor told me. He told me what it was. I've always known since Season One pretty much what that was. When people were hating on Beth going, "She's awful to Jamie.
I love that he uses flashbacks and their history. He doesn't give it to you all at the beginning. There's more to come. There's way more to come.
You think that's it, there's a lot more history. There's lots of ghosts in this show. I was also going to ask you about the discussion of indigenous women going missing. What Yellowstone does, in my opinion, so well is they present it, but they don't just dump the entire bucket. It's just a little bit at a time. I think that makes it resonate so much more. Thank you for bringing that up. It's something that when I do interviews for the show, people don't really touch on.
Especially not with me, but it's something that is one of my, the things that I'm so proud of to be part of this show. I think for a long time they just assumed this was a show about cowboys and rednecks and, "This is our land. He has a deep history with that personally in his life. Obviously if you've seen his other films like Wind River , this is a theme in his work that he's so passionate about. For him to draw attention to that, and to put that into the living room of so many Americans who don't necessarily want to look at that part of our history, it's uncomfortable.
But I'm so glad that he is. I feel like it's without being preachy, I think it's really, a really important thing to know about. But I do like the fact that there is not that self-righteousness in our show.
If we get into that area, I'm not really interested. I'm interested in complicated and messy and human, and the sort of things that we all can, "How can we find these characters so sort of enthralling and intriguing when they're kind of so bad?
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