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  • - What's up?

  • Are we already?

  • We're rolling, better stop talking about

  • all my emotional trauma.

  • This could be like a Dr. Drew, you know what I mean?

  • Where you call in and talk about your problems.

  • Except I'm utterly unqualified to help with anything.

  • Flip that mug around, flip that mug around.

  • Getting a signal from the producers that they like me,

  • they really like me.

  • I'm drunk with power.

  • Oh boy!

  • (rock music)

  • Hey, my name is Jefferson White.

  • I play Jimmy on the Paramount Network's "Yellowstone".

  • "Welcome to the Yellowstone" Episode 10.

  • Holy cow.

  • The end, the finale in some ways.

  • The exciting conclusion of season one of

  • "Welcome to the Yellowstone".

  • We'll see if there's any cliffhangers.

  • We'll see who lives and who dies in Episode 10

  • of "Welcome to the Yellowstone".

  • It's literally just me so, here's hoping I don't die.

  • What do you think guys?

  • Am I gonna make it?

  • Am I gonna make it through season one of

  • "Welcome to the Yellowstone"?

  • Is Breia gonna make it?

  • - [Breia] Definitely not.

  • - Definitely not? Dang! (laughs)

  • No, you're writing this puppy, you've got self,

  • you're in control of your own destiny.

  • - [Breia] Perhaps.

  • - What a rare opportunity

  • to be in control of your own destiny.

  • You know, so many of us are beholden to larger powers,

  • big shifting seismic plates.

  • - [Breia] I'm beholden to ViacomCBS.

  • - Me too, big time.

  • So we'll just ask our corporate daddy.

  • - [Breia] Our corporate daddy (laughs)?

  • - Do we make it?

  • Do we make it through?

  • I hope so.

  • The real point I'm trying to make here is

  • thank you guys so much for tuning in with us so far.

  • Thank you for your questions, for your comments,

  • for everything.

  • It's because of you that we're here making this,

  • and we're so, so grateful.

  • It's so fun for us to do.

  • We've been having a great time figuring it out,

  • working it out together along with you,

  • talking to you, answering your questions,

  • listen to your voicemails.

  • We've had an amazing time doing this show.

  • So thank you very, very much.

  • We're just really grateful for this opportunity.

  • And it's because of you.

  • It's because the fans of "Yellowstone" demand more.

  • They always want more.

  • They're always just taking and taking and taking

  • and they want more, which is great because

  • all I know how to do is give, got no boundaries.

  • Just take whatever you want.

  • You can have it.

  • Does anyone want the shirt off my back?

  • It's yours.

  • So every episode of "Welcome to the Yellowstone"

  • we've been going through and doing a recap

  • of an episode of "Yellowstone".

  • The first season of "Yellowstone" Has got nine episodes.

  • This is our 10th episode of "Welcome to the Yellowstone"

  • so we thought what we might do is just talk about

  • the season as a whole.

  • Do a quick five-minute recap of season one of "Yellowstone".

  • And that's crazy.

  • We've been doing five-minute recaps of each episode.

  • You think we can do nine episodes in five minutes?

  • - [Breia] No, but I think we should try.

  • - Hell yeah.

  • You know you don't believe in me?

  • - [Breia] I do believe in you.

  • I've believed in you this whole season

  • and what did you do in episode nine?

  • - I did it, I made it, I did it, wow.

  • I finally pulled it off.

  • Your belief in me was finally justified.

  • So many people have believed in me

  • and been so kind to me my whole life

  • and I've just let them down over and over again.

  • But not this time.

  • Not today, baby.

  • Here we go "Yellowstone" season one in five minutes.

  • John Dutton, Livestock Commissioner

  • and the owner of the largest cattle ranch

  • in the United States.

  • Massive ranch called the Yellowstone.

  • He's got a bunch of kids.

  • He's got Beth Dutton, his daughter.

  • She's a very powerful financial assassin.

  • She works in Mergers and Acquisitions

  • at a company called Schwartz & Meyer.

  • He's got Jamie Dutton and his son who's a lawyer.

  • He's a sort of law assassin, lawssassin.

  • And then he's got his youngest son, Kayce,

  • who is a badass cowboy

  • who has a very contentious relationship with his father

  • and his legacy.

  • And then there's also Lee Dutton,

  • but he dies in episode one.

  • So sorry Lee, we don't have time to talk about you

  • and all your amazing qualities.

  • This has already been too much time spent on that.

  • Kayce lives with his wife, Monica and their son, Tate

  • on a reservation called the Broken Rock Indian Reservation.

  • The chieftain of that reservation is Thomas Rainwater,

  • who is a new up and coming chief

  • and one of the big "antagonists" of the season.

  • But as we'll come to learn over the season,

  • he's much more complicated than that.

  • He's not just a bad guy or a good guy, nobody is.

  • These are rich, complex characters.

  • Then you got Dan Jenkins, very powerful land developer,

  • wealthy, ambitious, creative,

  • another one of these sort of complicated antagonists/

  • anti-heroes.

  • So you got John Dutton, Rainwater and Dan Jenkins,

  • three powerful people with different ideas

  • of what the future should be, what progress means,

  • whether progress is good or bad.

  • And over the course of season one,

  • they're sort of jockeying for control of

  • the political landscape but also the landscape landscape

  • of this Montana massive cattle ranch.

  • Rip Wheeler, one of those folks that

  • don't have time to go back and fix it,

  • you're gonna have to fix that in post.

  • Rip Wheeler works for John Dutton.

  • He's powerful right-hand man, big tough cowboy guy.

  • I, Jimmy Hurdstrom, less tough, less big, less cowboy guy,

  • but also works for John Dutton.

  • So they're similar in that way.

  • And over the course of this first season,

  • the tensions between John Dutton and Thomas Rainwater

  • are exacerbated by these cows that

  • wander off of John Dutton's land and onto Rainwater's land,

  • that sets the stage for a bunch of conflict.

  • It's gonna go back and forth between those two.

  • And also Dan Jenkins is trying to build

  • a massive development right up against the edge

  • of the Yellowstone,

  • and that really exacerbates tensions between DJ and JD.

  • Also over the course of the first season,

  • Kayce's marriage collapses as Kayce and Monica,

  • they both have complicated loyalties

  • to two different ideas of family.

  • To the Monica's identity on the res

  • and Kayce's identity in his family, his nuclear family

  • and Tate, their son.

  • It's a Romeo and Juliet situation.

  • They've been pulled in two directions,

  • by the end of the first season, they get pulled apart

  • and Kayce moves back in to the ranch.

  • Also, Jamie Dutton, very sort of ambitious political figure

  • wants to be the Attorney General of Montana.

  • His dad at first sets him up.

  • And then there's a massive conflict between

  • Jamie and his father

  • because Jamie didn't respond to his father's call,

  • didn't return his father's calls.

  • Don't do that, call your parents.

  • Jamie and his father have this huge rift.

  • So then Jamie and John Dutton,

  • are set up as on opposite sides of this very

  • tense brewing political conflict

  • that's also gonna threaten the Yellowstone

  • and John Dutton's legacy.

  • Beth Dutton has been, the entire time,

  • her main target is Dan Jenkins.

  • She's been assigned to Dan Jenkins' duty

  • and she's ripping up his life from the inside out.

  • His personal life, his professional life, his creative life,

  • probably she's really been tearing him up.

  • That's been her duty.

  • But we also learned that she's got a deep sadness

  • and a very complicated relationship with her brother Jamie,

  • and with her father, because of the loss of her mother,

  • all of their mother, Evelyn Dutton,

  • John's wife who passed about 20 years ago.

  • Which was a formative tragedy in this family.

  • So the whole first season,

  • John Dutton is trying to protect the ranch,

  • the Yellowstone,

  • this land that is his family's legacy,

  • but he's also trying to protect his family.

  • He's trying to protect his kids, his literal family.

  • And over the course of the season,

  • this tension becomes apparent

  • that sometimes those things are mutually exclusive.

  • Sometimes, fighting for the good of the ranch

  • isn't necessarily fighting for the good of Jamie.

  • Sometimes fighting to protect the land

  • is at odds with what Kayce feels loyalty to.

  • So that tension between

  • the responsibility to the land itself

  • and that responsibility to his family

  • becomes increasingly exacerbated

  • over the course of the first season.

  • And by the end of the first season,

  • John Dutton is further than ever from his son, Jamie.

  • And he feels further than ever from a secure, safe future

  • for his ranch and his legacy.

  • And also Jimmy falls off a horse a bunch of times.

  • - [Breia] You did it.

  • - I mean, did I?

  • - [Breia] You did.

  • - There's entire plots that we didn't get to.

  • - [Breia] Well, obviously but you had five minutes.

  • - Yeah, here's some other characters.

  • You got your Colby, you got your Ryan, you got your Mo,

  • you got your Walker, there's a million.

  • You got your Governor Perry, you got your Christina,

  • you got your Sarah Nguyen.

  • There's a million other things

  • that we didn't even get to talk about at all.

  • - [Breia] Well, we did in episodes one through nine.

  • - That's true.

  • This was an overview of some themes, some big themes.

  • - [Breia] So you gotta go back and watch all those.

  • - You gotta go back and watch all those

  • to get the details, to go back in and chop up

  • each of those episodes one by one.

  • So that's "Yellowstone" season one.

  • Those of us that are in the know,

  • who've seen "Yellowstone" season two is available on DVD

  • at your local stores.

  • Go to your local DVD store.

  • The first season really sets up all these conflicts

  • that erupt in the second season.

  • So the conflict between Jamie and John Dutton,

  • the conflict between Kayce and Monica,

  • between Rip and Kayce, between Jamie and Beth,

  • between Beth and her father.

  • The first season lays this incredibly complicated

  • series of landmines for John Dutton to navigate

  • and then over and over again, he steps on them (laughs),

  • in trying to do what's right,

  • In trying to protect his family.

  • So it's a very complicated, very rich, very

  • multifaceted season of television.

  • And rewatching it knowing what I know about season two,

  • and knowing what I know about season three, spoiler alert,

  • is that it's an incredible beginning to a journey that

  • the producers have told me explicitly

  • will last at least 12 seasons.

  • - [Breia] From your mouth, to God's ears.

  • - From my mouth to God's ears.

  • And when I say God, I mean ViacomCBS.

  • The only God I believe in.

  • - [Breia] So why don't we talk about some season one MVPs?

  • - Season one MVPs.

  • Oh man, it's so hard to choose.

  • Just kidding, it's Kayce.

  • Kayce is my favorite character.

  • And the first season, maybe Kayce changes the most

  • over the course of the first season.

  • Of all the characters, Kayce and Jamie, fuck, dang.

  • There's this recurring motif in the show about

  • progress, or about halting progress about stopping progress.

  • Jamie says to Christina, his campaign manager

  • as he sets up to run for Attorney General.

  • He says, "My goal is the opposite of change."

  • And what I think is fascinating is

  • over the course of this first season

  • while they fight so hard not to change,

  • all these people change so much.

  • Their desire to stay the same and to protect what's theirs

  • means that even as that stays the same,

  • they are warped, and changed, and sort of broken

  • in some ways, in that effort to protect what's theirs.

  • So Kayce over the course of the first season

  • goes on this huge journey.

  • He goes from caring most about his relationship with

  • Monica and Tate.

  • He still cares about it, but loses that relationship

  • and moves back onto the ranch,

  • something that I'm sure he swore to himself he'd never do.

  • And everything that he's fighting to protect

  • over the course of the first season he loses,

  • even as he's fighting so hard to stay the same,

  • to just maintain, everything changes.

  • And as he grabs handfuls of his legacy to try to hold on to,

  • it just slips through his fingers over and over again.

  • Which I think we all have to contend with in our lives.

  • Just when you find something that you like or you love

  • or you value or you want to keep,

  • you gotta acknowledge that that's always changing

  • and shifting and you're always changing and shifting,

  • and there's nothing you can do to

  • lock yourself in the sands of time.

  • No matter how deep you dig,

  • no matter how deep you lay in that fence pole to use,

  • a "Yellowstone" Season Two metaphor.

  • No matter how deep you bury it, the sands will shift around

  • and that fucker will get dug up.

  • Get dug up real quick.

  • - [Breia] So what about some season one awards?

  • - Season one awards.

  • Toughest cowboy, Jimmy Hurdstrom.

  • Tallest actor, Jefferson White.

  • Smartest person, Jefferson White.

  • - [Breia] I have a suggestion.

  • - Yeah.

  • - [Breia] Most humble.

  • - Most humble, Jefferson White.

  • (laughing)

  • No guys.

  • Most improved, most improved horse rider, inarguably,

  • Jefferson White.

  • Everything else it's a lie.

  • Your toughest cowboy, you got your Rip Wheelers,

  • you got your Lloyds, you got your John Duttons,

  • you got your Kayces.

  • They're all so tough.

  • It's so hard.

  • What are awards really about?

  • This kind of thing isn't about competition,

  • it's a community.

  • It's not a competition, it's a community.

  • It's so hard to say what it means to be the best.

  • Am I the best?

  • At some things.

  • I think I ate more hot dogs than anybody else on set.

  • In some circles, in some contexts,

  • eating a lot of hot dogs is celebrated.

  • - [Breia] It's true on the 4th of July.

  • - There are people who make whole careers

  • out of eating a lot of hot dogs.

  • I ate as many hot dogs.

  • But over the course of the five months

  • that it took us to shoot the first season.

  • But I ate an almost herculean number of hotdogs.

  • - Care to venture a guess?

  • How many?

  • - How many hot dogs I had during the filming of season one?

  • Oh boy, every time we did a night shoot,

  • there's something about those night shoots

  • where your body just gets confused and just,

  • you ate dinner at 8:00 p.m. and then it's 2:00 a.m.

  • What are you gonna do?

  • You're gonna eat a bunch of hot dogs

  • is the answer to that question.

  • So I probably ate 60 to 80 hot dogs

  • over the course of season one of "Yellowstone".

  • And I'm fine.

  • (laughing)

  • You shouldn't eat as many hot dogs as I did

  • during "Yellowstone" season one.

  • Then we're gonna talk,

  • let's take a second to do some top moments, top moments.

  • Let's talk about some top moments for each of the Duttons.

  • Let's just dig into it.

  • Me personally and this is gonna say again,

  • that my views, the views represented here are just my views.

  • They don't represent anyone else.

  • This is just what I think as a fan of the show.

  • So I wanna recognize the subjectivity of this

  • 'cause everybody's got their favorite moments.

  • Boy, my favorite John Dutton moment.

  • He's on the porch with Kayce, when Kayce finally comes home.

  • Episode 108 or 109.

  • He has this beautiful scene with Kayce where he says,

  • "Look, all you ever tried to do was protect you.

  • "It's all I ever, I didn't know what the fuck to do.

  • "I was trying to protect you, I was doing this for you."

  • It's this beautiful scene between the two of them.

  • And it feels like the first time these guys are talking.

  • We've seen them dance around each other

  • for an entire season.

  • And we know that there's this trauma in their past,

  • we know that they are two strong-headed men

  • who don't necessarily solve their problems with words

  • very often.

  • So this moment of them trying to talk,

  • trying to connect and not necessarily succeeding,

  • not necessarily understanding each other.

  • That's my favorite John Dutton moment of season one.

  • My favorite Kayce moment.

  • Also the same scene.

  • No, there's a lot of, Kayce's my favorite character.

  • So there's a lot of really great Kayce moments.

  • Also, I love Kayce trying to navigate.

  • There's the sequence in the hospital when Monica

  • had a concussion and is in the hospital.

  • And I love it so much.

  • Tate sort of freaks out,

  • and these nurses are trying to restrain Tate.

  • And in that moment,

  • it just is such a clear distillation of Kayce's code.

  • Is Kayce walks into that room and just punches

  • a nurse in the face just immediately.

  • He just like instinctually, instantly

  • fights to protect his son under any circumstances,

  • against any odds, Kayce goes to bat for his family.

  • And I think that's incredible.

  • I think that's an incredible just distillation of Kayce's

  • system of ethics.

  • Is that he walks into that room

  • and he's gonna fight everybody.

  • He's gonna fight anyone who touches his kid.

  • He's gonna fight it.

  • He doesn't ask them, "Hey man, what's going on?"

  • He doesn't think for a second that Tate might be wrong.

  • He walks into that room and bam, which is also a problem.

  • Which is also a problem that comes back to haunt him

  • over and over again.

  • That as soon as he sees something that he thinks is wrong,

  • as soon as something rubs against his system of ethics,

  • he just fights.

  • And it haunts him throughout the entire first season.

  • That van with the kidnappers as soon as he sees that,

  • he doesn't think, he doesn't call the police,

  • he doesn't stop to ask himself, "Wait a second,

  • "should I get involved in this?"

  • When he sees something he thinks is wrong, he fights.

  • And I think that's a perfect distillation

  • of who Kayce is as a character.

  • Favorite Jamie moment, season one.

  • Jamie and Christina in 109, I believe it is.

  • When John Dutton has told Jamie

  • that he's not gonna support his bid for state office.

  • And Jamie's with Christina trying to decide

  • if he's still gonna go against his dad,

  • maybe for the first time in his life.

  • His whole life, he's been a good soldier,

  • his whole life he's put his needs second to his dad's needs

  • and the ranch's needs.

  • And I fucking love that moment for Jamie

  • when he decides that he has the line in there.

  • "To protect my father's legacy,

  • "I have to kill the man or I have to destroy the man."

  • This idea that he is, for the first time contending

  • with his like personal agency in this

  • and he's taking responsibility for his own actions

  • instead of constantly just being a good soldier

  • and serving the will of John Dutton in "Yellowstone".

  • Favorite Beth moment.

  • Season one.

  • Fuck there's like five, Beth and Jamie in the car.

  • Beth and Dan Jenkins at the tough cowboy bar.

  • Beth and Rip in the car when they go out

  • to watch the wolves eat elk.

  • That scene is so incredible.

  • Beth getting back up on that horse over and over again

  • with the sort of memories of her mother haunting her

  • and talking to Walker.

  • I think it's gotta be Beth and Jamie in the car though.

  • Dang, that scene's incredible.

  • Those actors are both so good,

  • and those characters are also both so complicated.

  • Over the course of the first season,

  • I feel like on an episode to episode basis,

  • I find myself hating Beth and loving Beth.

  • I'm so like, "Why is she so angry?

  • "Why does she seem so mean?"

  • But then over and over again, you learn why

  • and you come to understand the

  • incredibly complicated tapestry

  • that is Beth's given circumstances.

  • And then Kelly is so good at

  • so fully living in all of those contradictions.

  • Kelly lives in Beth's contradictions so beautifully

  • in that uncomfortable space between good and evil,

  • so nimbly, really amazing.

  • Rip Wheeler, best moment of the season.

  • Out in that park with Beth in the car,

  • when he says, "Everything you are, everything you love,

  • "it's all gonna die.

  • "It's all going."

  • Rip's deep wisdom even as he's a guy who

  • solves problems with his hands and

  • he's so deeply wise too because he's lived such a long life

  • in so few years.

  • He's so wise beyond his years.

  • And his mentor, John Dutton,

  • he's learned this worldview from John Dutton.

  • And also through this life of violence that he's lived.

  • He's got this incredible wisdom.

  • Amazing.

  • Favorite Jimmy moment, season one.

  • He gets that hat in the bunkhouse.

  • It's just like, I think maybe the first time

  • Jimmy really smiles.

  • I think Jimmy's had an incredibly difficult life.

  • He's getting this intervention.

  • Rip got it when he was 12,

  • Jimmy's getting it when he's like 25.

  • And Rip went through some awful fucking appalling shit.

  • But at a younger age, someone stepped in to save him,

  • and Jimmy like this is coming.

  • Jimmy's lived a life where he's learned

  • that he's not worth anything.

  • He's been taught over and over again

  • that he's a piece of shit,

  • and that nobody's ever gonna fucking believe in him

  • or trust him or care about him.

  • And he's internalized that,

  • so I think it's hard for him to fucking care about himself

  • or believe in himself or trust himself.

  • And that moment when the other wranglers give him that hat.

  • I think it's maybe the first time that he

  • dares to believe that he can be something more.

  • I think he goes through the motions

  • in an almost animal way.

  • He gets knocked over, he gets back up.

  • It's just instinctual.

  • He's just a fucking animal who

  • has had to fight his whole life for survival.

  • And just instinctually gets back up

  • and instinctually gets back on the horse

  • and just follows orders

  • and just goes where he's told in that moment

  • that the other wranglers give him the hat.

  • I think he, for the first time believes that

  • he has a future.

  • And that he has some worth somewhere in the world.

  • And then to extrapolate that to the next 15 seasons,

  • 17 seasons?

  • - [Breia] At least.

  • - At least.

  • This is the start of a journey where Jimmy

  • asked himself what he wants for the first time.

  • For the first time in his life, I think,

  • which I think is really beautiful.

  • Dang Jimmy, dang, yeah, dang.

  • - [Breia] So why don't we go to some voicemails?

  • - Breia, why don't we go to some voicemails?

  • - [Breia] I think that's a great idea.

  • - Thank you, that's my own personal idea I had.

  • Episode 10.

  • All right, so we put on,

  • we put on Instagram, a phone number to call,

  • asked you to share some of your favorite

  • season one moment, some questions

  • just to talk about the show.

  • I haven't heard these before,

  • thank you so much for calling in.

  • Let's give them a listen.

  • - Hey Jimmy, I just wanted to let you know

  • I think you're a wonderful actor.

  • And my favorite part is where you're dragged after you rode the calf,

  • and also when you had only about 60 more head to go.

  • My name is Kay Gaston, telephone number (beep).

  • Keep doing what you're doing bud,

  • and the world will be yours.

  • - That's so kind of you, thank you so much.

  • Getting pulled behind that calf.

  • That's one of these amazing experiences as an actor,

  • but you don't really have to fake very much

  • because I was really on the ground.

  • I was really holding on to that saddle.

  • They did it with a four-wheeler

  • so the calf didn't have to do it take over take

  • and they just dragged me behind a four-wheeler

  • holding on to that saddle.

  • And I went, "Aah!"

  • It's acting, "Aah! Eeh!"

  • It was very scary.

  • I made it.

  • I was pulling dust out of parts of my body that

  • I didn't know had space for dust to be in there.

  • Bellybutton dust, pull some dust out of my eyelids.

  • It was a dusty day.

  • That was a dusty day.

  • Boy, what a fun scene.

  • Thank you for calling.

  • - Hey, this is Jefferson White, my Instagram account is

  • @_JeffersonWhite.

  • Hey, Jefferson.

  • I just want to say because sometimes it's hard.

  • Sometimes it's easier to give each other credit

  • to show your friends that you love them,

  • to show the family that you love them,

  • than it is to show yourself.

  • So I just want to say that I think you're doing a great job

  • and I think you have a lot to be proud of,

  • and just stick in there, buddy.

  • Okay, talk to you soon, bye.

  • - Dang.

  • Thanks past Jeff.

  • I did this, they left that voicemail inbox open

  • and I called like five times at 2:00 in the morning

  • and left a bunch of messages for myself.

  • So thanks past Jeff.

  • I think you're doing okay too.

  • Well, you know, good job.

  • Let's listen to another one.

  • - [Missy] Hey Jefferson, my name is Missy Jordan.

  • I live in Maine, I'm a huge "Yellowstone" fan.

  • I even surprised my husband last fall with a trip to Montana

  • so we can take in the sights for our fifth anniversary.

  • Love the show, love watching

  • the Bunkhouse Boys on YouTube with you guys.

  • Would love to take part in Welcome to Yellowstone.

  • My social handle is @Nova, N-O-V-A 5263, thanks.

  • - Missy, holy cow, you just did.

  • You just took part in "Welcome to the Yellowstone".

  • Thank you so much, that rocks.

  • How was the trip?

  • Was it fun?

  • What's it like being married?

  • Does it rule?

  • Do you feel like a sense of permanence for once?

  • Did you feel like there's like an anchor,

  • you sort of understand why everything?

  • 'Cause you got a sense of permanence there.

  • Bet that rocks.

  • How's Maine?

  • I know you can't answer.

  • That's a question for the room.

  • How's Maine?

  • - [Breia] I've never been to Maine.

  • - Never been either.

  • I'd really like to.

  • Has anyone here been to Maine?

  • Maine is not that far guys, we don't have an excuse

  • to not have been there.

  • They got lobsters up there.

  • Lobsters are fucking weird.

  • Lobsters are just huge bugs, and for some reason

  • we decided they're not gross, they're delicious.

  • Have you seen a lobster?

  • They're fucking weird, they're just big bugs.

  • We'll start calling them what they are,

  • call them what they are.

  • Either call lobsters huge bugs or call bugs, tiny lobsters.

  • If you're afraid of bugs, just think of them

  • as tiny lobsters in various shapes and colors.

  • Bugs are amazing.

  • You know this about bugs, they're amazing,

  • they're incredible.

  • - [Breia] Do you consider all crustaceans to be bugs?

  • - Yeah, huge bugs.

  • - [Breia] Interesting.

  • - I also consider people to be big crustaceans.

  • It's like a whole hierarchy.

  • - [Breia] Hierarchy?

  • - Hierarchy.

  • (Breia laughing)

  • Am I saying that dumb?

  • Hierarchy.

  • (Breia laughing)

  • Hierarchy, usually everybody's just hierarchy.

  • - [Breia] I don't know now.

  • - I know, I don't say it out loud very often

  • because I'm not very aware, I'm not very class-conscience.

  • Class-conscious.

  • - [Breia] I think we got another voicemail.

  • - Let's listen to another voicemail, how about that?

  • - [Ryan] Hey, Jimmy (laughs).

  • This is Ryan McLeod and

  • my favorite moment on season one would have to be

  • when Rip actually takes up for you with the big guy that

  • starts bullying you around

  • and you fighting there by the barn

  • and then Rip comes around there and just finishes him off.

  • I absolutely love that scene.

  • See, social handle?

  • My Instagram is CowboyRyan007.

  • And yeah, love to be featured.

  • Thank you, have a great one.

  • - Yeah, thanks Ryan.

  • You're featured man.

  • Fuck yeah, that rocks dude, thanks for calling.

  • That was the same as a blast.

  • Thanks for saying Rip finishes off Fred.

  • Because yeah, Jimmy gets a couple hits there.

  • I feel like it's easy to think of that scene as

  • Fred just bulldozing Jimmy.

  • But Jimmy gets some hits in.

  • There's a few punches there.

  • I really liked that part of it.

  • Jimmy does land a few shots.

  • They're not great, they don't have a lot of,

  • when you punch you don't just wanna punch with your arm,

  • you wanna punch with your whole body.

  • You wanna get your whole body weight behind that.

  • Jimmy gets a couple little arm jabs in.

  • Hey, let's do some questions from Instagram Breia.

  • - [Breia] All right, let's do it.

  • Here's a question from 2 b me is one of a kind.

  • How's the weather?

  • (laughs) That's literally the question, yeah.

  • - That's amazing.

  • It's in New York, it's pretty shitty there,

  • it's raining a little bit.

  • The weather out in Utah Montana is fucking beautiful.

  • Utah is all seasons all the time.

  • Like at night it's always crisp, and cool, and beautiful,

  • and like 50, and you get to wear light jackets

  • which is my personal favorite kind of garment to wear.

  • And then in the day it gets up to 85 it's like summer

  • it's beautiful.

  • You can go biking.

  • Utah's an incredible state.

  • If you haven't been to Utah, go check it out.

  • Salt Lake City, Park City, it's a beautiful beautiful state.

  • The weather's incredible.

  • The weather in New York, not so good.

  • - [Breia] Kym Huitt wants to know

  • what your favorite thing is about your character.

  • - What's my favorite thing about Jimmy?

  • I love about Jimmy,

  • that he is like a learner.

  • He is very tenacious,

  • and he didn't know how to do any of this shit

  • when he started.

  • And he just fucking learns.

  • He just like, whatever he puts his head to,

  • he tries to figure out and he's just like a sponge.

  • I think this lifestyle is so new to him that he's just

  • like a sponge just trying to soak up lessons from everybody.

  • And I love that about him

  • because that's also how I feel on set.

  • This experience is also new to me.

  • That's a point at which Jimmy and I really intersect

  • is that we're both kind of fighting to learn

  • how to survive in this world that's very foreign to us.

  • I also think Jimmy's hair is badass,

  • my favorite thing about Jimmy, he's fucking hot.

  • Look at that guy, dang!

  • My favorite thing about Jimmy, his great normal beard.

  • That's a regular beard for a 30-year-old guy to have.

  • - [Breia] Susanne Hobbs wants to know

  • if you've ever been to Australia before.

  • - I never have been Australia, I'd love to go.

  • I have some friends who are Australian,

  • it seems like a beautiful, beautiful place.

  • It's so far away.

  • It's so far away and I hate flying so much.

  • But that's a bad reason, I got to go, I just got to go.

  • I think my whole life I've said to myself,

  • I'll travel once I make it or like

  • I'll travel once I'm like, secure and stable.

  • But I don't know if I'm ever gonna feel that way.

  • So maybe it's time to start traveling

  • and having those experiences.

  • Have you been to Australia, Breia?

  • - [Breia] I haven't, I also don't like to fly really.

  • - Me neither.

  • Yeah, and so you I need a job in Australia

  • and then I'll go to Australia.

  • A lot of times I only travel 'cause I get a job somewhere.

  • So like I've only been to Europe for work,

  • for "The Alienist" on TNT,

  • Utah and Montana, I get to travel there 'cause of

  • "Yellowstone".

  • New Mexico, LA, like these are all places

  • that I only travel 'cause I work.

  • So if you're listening and you're

  • an important powerful person,

  • can I have a job in Australia please?

  • Please?

  • - [Breia] Huckleberry48 wants to know if

  • you think you'll ever own your own horse one day.

  • - Wow, I don't know.

  • It'd be nice.

  • In New York, not gonna happen big time.

  • I'm too big for New York so a horse, that's a large thing.

  • It wouldn't be fair to the horse.

  • Is how I feel about dogs too, like in New York.

  • And then not to say that anyone in here who has a dog

  • that lives in New York shouldn't if you're listening.

  • You shouldn't I just like,

  • I'd feel bad for the horse out here, you know.

  • It'd just be cooped up all day.

  • That would be a bad lifestyle for a horse.

  • Maybe somewhere else.

  • I have a friend who worked on a show with horses,

  • and then when the show stopped,

  • she adopted some of the horses from the show

  • that she had worked with.

  • They were like a little older.

  • And she has cared for them now their whole lives.

  • I think that's really beautiful,

  • and that's a really beautiful relationship with a horse.

  • 'Cause it's like you don't really own, it's like an animal,

  • you don't really own an animal,

  • like you have a responsibility to it,

  • you have a kinship and camaraderie with it.

  • - [Breia] Do you have a name in your back pocket

  • for your future horse?

  • - Yeah, Dr. Horse.

  • - [Breia] Dr. Horse?

  • - What do you think?

  • - That really got Frank (laughs).

  • I've been trying to get Frank all day

  • and now he really jumped onto Dr. Horse.

  • Well, because I had a doctor who was a horse.

  • So, it's like a name, it's an honor of him.

  • Just kidding to all my real doctors.

  • I've had lots of really great real doctors,

  • That weren't horses at all, wink.

  • - [Breia] This is a question from Btack88.

  • What was it like working with Kevin Costner on day one

  • versus what is it like working with Kevin Costner now,

  • three seasons in?

  • - It's exactly the same.

  • I'm still terrified.

  • He's the nicest guy in the world but my own insecurity won't

  • let me think of him as anything other than Kevin Costner.

  • I mean, I've learned so much from him over that time,

  • and he's so generous, and kind, and thoughtful,

  • and considerate, and that's incredible, but it's hard to.

  • It's a skill I'm gonna have to develop at some point

  • in my life.

  • Is to learn how to give myself permission

  • to share space with people that are so talented.

  • - [Breia] And our last question is from Megan Anderson.

  • She wants to know if you've learned anything new about

  • yourself since you started working on "Yellowstone".

  • - Wow, I've learned a ton of new stuff about myself.

  • That's a very thoughtful question, thanks, Megan.

  • I've learned a lot about myself

  • since I started working on "Yellowstone".

  • About me as an actor, but also just me as a person.

  • It's the experience of being on shooting on location,

  • in a hotel room, like living in a hotel room

  • for five months a year, has taught me a lot about myself.

  • The opportunity to push myself

  • and be challenged by so many new and skills

  • and new opportunities that are utterly different for me

  • has really taught me a lot about myself,

  • sort of how I learn and then what I can't do.

  • I've learned my own limitations in a lot of ways.

  • I've learned that I'm not really a young man anymore.

  • Because boy, used to be like, I felt invincible.

  • I don't feel invincible anymore.

  • My butt has some scars on it that are never gonna heal.

  • I learned that about myself.

  • I learned about my own mortality,

  • which is one of the themes of the show, too.

  • Yeah, I've learned a ton about myself, like,

  • who I am as an actor, but also as a person.

  • So thanks, Megan.

  • It's a very personal question,

  • it's a very personal question to drop on me

  • in the middle of this fun recording session.

  • So like, okay, but it is a very thoughtful question,

  • but it's very personal.

  • I mean, I wanna talk about that with my therapist,

  • not with the internet.

  • Guys, thank you so much for watching

  • "Welcome to the Yellowstone".

  • We've had so much fun making it.

  • It's been such a blast to just hang out with our friends

  • and talk about "Yellowstone",

  • to read your questions and comments

  • and to just talk about the show that we love, that I love.

  • I'm a huge fan of this show,

  • so it's just such a blast to hang out and talk about it.

  • And thank you.

  • We only get to do this because of you.

  • Like we only get to do this because of your engagement,

  • and your questions, and your curiosity,

  • and your interest, and everything.

  • What I can't wait for is how many times

  • people are gonna correct me 'cause I'm sure I fuck stuff up.

  • I'm sure I got details wrong,

  • and I can't wait to hear from you.

  • If you wanna see more Welcome to the Yellowstone,

  • you want more content of all shapes and sizes,

  • you gotta follow us on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter.

  • You gotta follow the Paramount Network on YouTube.

  • You gotta follow our TikTok,

  • Boodoo Boodoo boodoo boodoo boodoo boop

  • But that was like way too much like Doug,

  • you cannot use that.

  • That is definitely copyrighted in some way.

  • Let's do a melancholy TikTok.

  • Da Donna Donna, Donna, Donna nana nana na

  • Da Donna Donna, Donna, Donna nana nana na

  • Donna, Donna nana nana

  • Dat dat dat nana na

  • Donna nana na nana

  • I feel like that could be my whole thing, dramatic TikToks.

  • No one's using that platform for drama.

  • What's the opposite of welcome?

  • Get out of the Yellowstone.

  • (laughing)

  • Right, it's the end of...

  • (in foreign language),

  • goodbye, see you next time.

  • (in foreign language)

  • it's been such a blast.

  • Thanks for tuning in.

  • And we'll see you soon.

  • Bye.

  • (rock music)

- What's up?

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