SPOILER ALERT: This article discusses general themes from the first five seasons of “Yellowstone.”
The heart of “Yellowstone” is the Dutton family’s work protecting, preserving and making money from their namesake ranch. With the current impasse in producing scripted shows because of the ongoing writers and actors strikes, CBS is bolstering its fall schedule by rerunning “Yellowstone,” the Taylor Sheridan-created saga that’s been a massive hit on Paramount Network since its 2018 premiere.
To commemorate the show’s broadcast network premiere on Sept. 17, Variety spoke with Jessie Jarvis, a third-generation Idaho rancher who documents her Western lifestyle on her blog and Instagram, in order to get her view of what’s realistic in the show, and what’s over the top.
Jarvis lives and works alongside her husband, parents and one other employee, raising and selling cattle on a remote ranch 75 miles north of the Nevada border. She’s a big “Yellowstone” fan, but, in a testament to its accuracy, she notes that she has a different relationship to it compared to escapist fare, like the “Real Housewives” franchise.
“When I sit down to watch TV at night, I want to watch something that is relaxing, where I can turn my brain off after work,” she says. “And ‘Yellowstone’ isn’t necessarily that for me, because it reminds me of my problems. In a way, it’s kind of like I’m watching my life all over again.”
In her own words, Jarvis details the most realistic elements of the series below — as well as a few things that only happen on TV.
Family farming (and family drama)
The Dutton family has a lot of family dysfunction: 97% of ranching operations in the United States are family owned, so family business issues are definitely a challenge. I wouldn’t say that our family is dysfunctional by any means, but when you’re working with your spouse and your parents every day, or your children every day, there can be a lot of tension — especially on ranching operations, or farms where you live as well. You own a business, and you live on the business. There’s not an opportunity to really turn it off, versus if you own a hardware store, you shut the lights down, you lock the doors and you come home. So holidays can be a struggle for people. But the family dysfunction is much more dramatic on screen.
Land encroachment
One thing we’ve seen a lot throughout the seasons is there’s a lot of expansion or encroachment on the Yellowstone Ranch. That is something that a lot of rural areas are facing, with more people due to the growing population. COVID has also played a part in people wanting to get out of the city. They want to move to smaller towns. Well, small towns can’t hold them anymore, so they’re buying up land. But there’s that struggle with needing to feed a growing population. We need the resources that we have, but then how are we also going to house a growing population when those homes are going to take over resources? That’s something rural America is definitely facing.
State government has a big focus on ranching
In Idaho, our governor is a rancher and comes from a long-standing ranching family. They were in the sheep industry, and in the cattle industry. There are a lot of ranchers who are in our State House and Senate, too. We also have really strong organizations like Idaho Cattle Association, for instance. They are an organization of ranching families. They probably have close to 1,000 members, and they have really strong relationships with our state legislature — people who are in office, and also on the federal level. So we when we do have issues in the industry, they are addressed pretty quickly.