Taylor Sheridan’s New Yellowstone Series Twist Will Rewrite Beth & Rip After 8 Years
Dutton Ranch episode 3 revealed that Beth and Rip’s herd of black angus cattle was infected with foot-and-mouth disease. Their only recourse is culling their entire herd, which was as devastating for viewers to watch as it was for Beth and Rip on the show. Without cows, there basically is no Dutton Ranch, and Beth and Rip are now in a crisis.
In an interview with ScreenRant‘s Liam Crowley about Dutton Ranch episode 4, Natalie Alyn Lind hints that the remaining episodes of Dutton Ranch season 1 will contain a “twist” that is “something that’s never been seen in the Yellowstone universe.” As a fan of the Yellowstone franchise, Lind promises Dutton Ranch will show its characters in “a very different light.” Read Natalie’s quote below:
ScreenRant: What are you most excited for fans to see in the back half of Dutton Ranch season 1?
Natalie Lind: Where the direction of the series goes, I don’t think that people are going to expect. I genuinely mean that. I think that so many people say that in the press in a way. Like, “Oh, I want you to watch. I think it’s going to be unexpected.” But I genuinely, as a fan of the original Yellowstone franchise and as a fan of Beth and Rip and all of these characters that people have known for so long, the twist that the season takes is something that’s never been seen in the Yellowstone universe. I think it’s really going to surprise people. And you’re going to see these characters in a way that you haven’t seen them before, and you’re going to see our characters in a very different light as well. I think that is very vague, but you’ll understand what I mean when you see it. I just can’t say too much. I’m going to have to hold my tongue on that.
Natalie Alyn Lind also delves into the many mysteries surrounding her character, Oreana Lynn Jackson. Lind reveals that Oreana is actually older than Carter (Finn Little), and explains what motivates the rebellious granddaughter of 10-Petals Ranch matriarch, Beulah Jackson (Annette Bening). Read Natalie’s quotes below:
ScreenRant: In 104, one of the lines a character speaks to Oreana at the end is, “If you want freedom, then stop acting like a child.” I think back to various moments that she’s had in this episode, and there is a lot of what feels like teenage rebellion. Sneaking around with a boy at his house, rolling the joint, stealing the truck back. These moments feel less calculated and more stereotypical teenage rebellious nature. What is your perspective on where Oreana is right now? Is she being a rebellious youth or is there a bigger plan at play?
Natalie Lind: I think that there’s a bigger plan at play. It’s really interesting, just seeing the different tactics that she takes to feel seen. Obviously, everything that she does is with intention. She is not somebody that is dumb. Something that I feel is very interesting about my character, specifically, is that she graduated at the top of her class from a very prestigious college. She’s actually older than Carter as well. My character’s supposed to be 23 or 24, and I think that Carter’s character is supposed to be 19. So her little teenage phase right now, she’s not actually even a teenager. I think that she’s doing all of this in a way for attention and love that I feel like, in the Jacksons, is kind of hard to get. We’re all just trying to be there for each other as family members, but we’re so dysfunctional that I think that with so much happening, she wants to feel seen, and she makes it very known when she walks into a room, but everything that she does, she’s manipulative, but it’s all intentional.
I think it comes from a very genuine place of honestly being heartbroken for so many things that have happened in her life. I think that people are going to be very interested to see where this rebellious attitude is taken and where it all stemmed from. You start figuring out different parts, and you have a better understanding of the character. It was really important for me from the beginning. It’s so easy to play it like a bitchy character that just walks into a room, but if there’s no intention behind it, then the character’s dislikable, and it’s a really hard line to just play and figure out why people do what they do. And later on in the season, you’re going to start having a much better understanding of why Oreana is the way that she is.
Oreana and Carter’s burgeoning relationship seems to echo Beth and Rip when they were teenagers, as seen in flashbacks throughout Yellowstone‘s five seasons. Oreana behaves and acts out from a place of being “heartbroken” about various aspects of her past that Dutton Ranch has yet to reveal, although one of them has to be her troubled and violent father, Rob-Will Jackson (Jai Courtney).
Beulah intends for Oreana to inherit control of the 10-Petals Ranch one day, but this is a future Oreana rejects since she doesn’t want to become like her grandmother. It’s surprising to hear that Oreana is a college graduate because she does act like a teenager, although, as Natalie Lind points out, Oreana does what she does as a desperate attempt to feel “seen.”
The full picture of the 10-Petals Ranch is slowly coming into focus, but the cowboys it employs, and close friends like Everett McKinney (Ed Harris), have spoken about the dysfunction within the Jackson family. Beulah Jackson’s clan has dark secrets, but like the Duttons and the Yellowstone Ranch in Montana, the Jacksons must have done their share of terrible things to hold onto their 190-year-old ranch.





