Without giving too much away, the series centers on John Dutton (played by Kevin Costner), a seventh-generation cattleman trying to save the largest privately owned ranch in the country from an encroaching army of developers, Native Americans, and artisanal ice cream shops. It’s like a parasite: Devour this region and then move to the next.” “Our country’s model has been: When full up here, go that way and reinvent yourself. Sheridan hopes it will deliver the “John Ford experience to television, now that even my cousin who works two jobs has a giant flat-screen.” This summer brings the release of Sicario: Day of the Soldado (June 29) and the premiere of Yellowstone (June 20), a ten-hour drama made for the Paramount Network. He has since established himself as a writer-director and creative force with Sicario, Hell or High Water, and Wind River, a thematic trilogy exploring the new American West. Seven years ago, Sheridan was a forty-one-year-old struggling actor living in a dingy Hollywood apartment with his wife, Nicole their young son, Gus and a few hundred silverfish. Sheridan pulled his white hat over his Irish brow, grabbed the reins, and whispered softly to his favorite bay. It was a gloomy morning at Jake Ream’s ranch in Palmyra, Utah, about sixty miles and a century removed from the ski lifts and limos of Park City. Or rather, Taylor Sheridan straddled a sleek quarter horse named Rosie and I held fast to Mr.
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