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Taylor Sheridan's Narrative Universe · A Masterclass
The Sheridan Method

Strip the Plot Bare, Let Characters Drive Everything

Taylor Sheridan is the most commercially dominant screenwriter-showrunner working today, with over 100 hours of produced television built on a deceptively simple creative philosophy.

Taylor Sheridan bought Final Draft software at age 40 after a failed 17-year acting career and wrote his first screenplay overnight. That screenplay would become Sicario, earning him an Oscar nomination and launching one of the most prolific careers in modern entertainment.

His body of work spans the drug war borderlands to Montana ranches to oil fields, but every project shares the same creative DNA: absurdly simple plots that serve as vehicles for complex character psychology, an allergy to exposition, and a commitment to visual storytelling over dialogue.

"I have absolutely no idea how to do this," Sheridan has said about screenwriting, "but I have a 20-year education on how NOT to do it." His acting career watching lazy dialogue and plot-driven television gave him a visceral rejection of conventional storytelling.

The result: His films earned 7 Oscar nominations including Best Picture and Best Original Screenplay. His television empire generates the top five most-watched originals on Paramount+. Yet he has received zero major Emmy nominations, revealing a fascinating critic-audience paradox that makes his work essential study material.

Film Trilogy

Hell or High Water (2016)

Sheridan's finest screenplay. Written in three weeks, no outline, no rewrites. Four Oscar nominations including Best Picture. 97% on Rotten Tomatoes. The final porch conversation between Toby and Marcus is a masterclass in dialogue—every theme encapsulated in the double meaning of one word: "peace."
Film Trilogy

Sicario (2015)

The most structurally sophisticated screenplay in Sheridan's catalog. Directed by Denis Villeneuve, shot by Roger Deakins. Central innovation: separating the main character (Kate Macer) from the protagonist function (Alejandro). The audience knows exactly what Kate knows, when she knows it.
Film Trilogy

Wind River (2017)

Sheridan's directorial debut and most personal film. Set on Wyoming's Wind River Reservation, investigating the death of a young Native woman. The ending title card transforms it from thriller to social statement: "While missing person statistics exist for every demographic, none exist for Native American women."

Yellowstone (2018–2024)

53 episodes across five seasons. Originally pitched as "The Godfather in Montana." Series finale drew 11.4 million viewers. Beth Dutton arguably television's most discussed female character. The pilot episode functions as a 90-minute feature film and exceptional teaching text.

1883 (2021–2022)

Conceived as "a 10-hour movie with an ending." Journey/odyssey structure with devastating conclusion: Elsa Dutton's death establishes the Yellowstone Ranch on her grave. Highest IMDb rating (8.7/10) of any Sheridan television series. Widely considered his finest TV work.

Mayor of Kingstown (2021–present)

Mike McLusky as crisis manager in Michigan town where "the business is incarceration." Seven prisons, 20,000 inmates. Most extreme audience-over-critics pattern: 82% audience vs 65% critical aggregate. Sheridan's most direct institutional critique.

Landman (2024–present)

Adapted from Texas Monthly podcast about Permian Basin oil industry. Debuted to 14.9 million households—most-watched Paramount+ original of all time. Billy Bob Thornton as Tommy Norris, crisis manager for oil company M-Tex. Most didactic work in Sheridan's catalog.

Simple Plots, Complex Characters

Sheridan deliberately seeks "absurdly simple plots"—a bank robbery, a murder investigation, a family defending land. The narrative can then focus entirely on character psychology and moral texture. Stories driven by characters, not characters driven by plot.

The Allergy to Exposition

Characters never say hello, goodbye, yes, or no—there's always a more interesting way that reveals character. No camera angles in scripts, only what the camera sees and audience hears. Large stretches with minimal dialogue. Information withheld rather than revealed.

Landscape as Character

Every Sheridan project places setting in co-starring role. In Wind River, actors occupy one-third of frame so two-thirds remain landscape. Each geography functions as both setting and thesis statement. Color palette systematic: earth tones match landscape, color signals hope, red represents violence.

The Failed-Father Archetype

Unifying thread across all work: fathers facing failure. Alejandro failed through naïveté. Toby failed through inability to provide. Cory failed through inability to protect. John Dutton, Jacob Dutton, Mike McLusky, Tommy Norris—all navigate fatherhood anxiety and institutional inadequacy.

Stakes-Driven Storytelling

Most-discussed moments—S3 triple cliffhanger in Yellowstone, Beth's sterilization reveal, series finale—all feature irreversible consequences. Stakes-driven storytelling drives audience engagement more than any other single factor. Containment succeeds where sprawl struggles.

The Critic-Audience Paradox

Films enjoy strong alignment (Hell or High Water: 97% critics / 88% audience). TV shows demonstrate disconnection (Yellowstone S1: 58% critics / 83% audience). Zero major Emmy nominations despite dominating viewership. Commercial success, critical acclaim, and awards operate on separate logics.

Beyond the Fiction: Discussion, Research & Meaning

Using Sheridan’s work as a lens—not as answer—to ask how the world works, how it once worked, and whether human nature and systems have changed.

Deep Dive: Taylor Sheridan’s Monopoly on Violence

A Deep Dive applying Weber, Arendt, Patrick Wolfe, and Girard to Sheridan’s work—the same curriculum as this page, in conversation form.

Read full transcript

Discussion Questions

  • When John Dutton says the ranch is “the only thing that’s never betrayed me,” what does that imply about institutions, family, and land as sources of meaning? Is loyalty to place a form of meaning-making, or a refusal of the modern?
  • Sheridan’s “American Dream = violent acquisition” appears in 1883 (settlement), Hell or High Water (banks, robbery), Landman (mineral rights). Where do we draw the line between “building” and “taking”? Who got to define that line historically, and who does now?
  • Wind River’s closing card reframes the film from whodunit to systemic failure. When does a story become a demand for different institutions rather than better individuals? Can institutions be “redeemed,” or only replaced?
  • Mayor of Kingstown presents a town where incarceration is the economy. How do we compare that to company towns, resource colonies, and places where one system defines survival? What would “exit” look like—and who gets to exit?
  • Beth Dutton’s ruthlessness is treated as competence, not breakdown. Does that reflect a shift in what we accept from powerful women, or a reversion to older archetypes (queen, matriarch, avenger)? Have expectations of “likability” actually changed?

Thought-Provoking Ideas

  • Grief as permanent. Sheridan’s characters don’t “get over” loss; they operate inside it. That aligns with contemporary grief theory (continuing bonds, no fixed stages). Is “closure” a cultural script we’ve imposed, and do his stories get closer to how people actually live with loss?
  • Failed fathers as system, not accident. If every protagonist is failing as patriarch, is the failure in the person or in the role? What if “father” in these worlds is structurally impossible—expected to provide order, land, and safety in systems designed to make that unreachable?
  • Landscape as antagonist. In Wind River, 1883, Yellowstone, the land is indifferent or hostile. That’s premodern in one sense (nature as force) and very modern in another (climate, extraction, borders). Does “land as character” in Sheridan point to a renewed sense that geography still dictates fate?
  • Loyalty over law. When personal code consistently outweighs institutional code, we’re in the territory of civic vs. tribal morality. Is that a timeless tension, or does it spike when institutions are perceived as corrupt or distant? Compare to historical moments when “law” lost legitimacy.

Prompts for Further Research

Trace the legal and economic history of the land under the Yellowstone Ranch: treaties, allotment, water rights, conservation easements. How does that history compare to what the show dramatizes? Where does “legitimate” ownership begin and end?

Compare Wind River’s depiction of federal jurisdiction and missing Native women to real jurisdictional gaps (tribal vs. federal vs. state), MMIW data, and policy proposals. What would “institutional fix” look like, and why might Sheridan avoid showing it?

Map the prison-industrial complex in a single state (e.g., Michigan): who profits, who is employed, what towns depend on incarceration. Use Mayor of Kingstown as a narrative frame—where does the show exaggerate, and where does it understate?

Study the Permian Basin and mineral rights: forced pooling, lease language, “ignorant” landowners. Use Landman as entry point. How much of Tommy’s world is accurate, and does accuracy change how we judge the “American Dream” in that industry?

Compare Sheridan’s “working-class protagonist” to earlier waves (Depression-era cinema, 1970s New Hollywood). What’s consistent (survival, moral compromise, institutional distrust) and what’s new (platform, audience, tone)?

History Applied to Modern Times

  • Frontier and property. 1883 and Yellowstone rest on land taken by force and then “legitimized” by law and time. Compare to enclosure, colonization, and modern resource grabs. Does “how the West was won” differ in kind from how mineral rights or data are “won” today, or only in scale and visibility?
  • Institutions that can’t be fixed. Wind River and Mayor of Kingstown suggest that bad outcomes are structural, not just bad actors. Look at reform movements (police, prisons, federal-tribal relations): when did “reform” work, and when did it preserve the system? What would “non-reformist reform” look like in these worlds?
  • Violence and consequence. Sheridan’s violence breeds more violence; there’s no clean win. Compare to narratives of just war, righteous revenge, or redemptive violence in other eras. Is “violence has consequence” a modern sensibility or a recurring minority view that his work amplifies?
  • Economic class as fate. His characters are shaped by class—rancher, prisoner, oilman, agent. Compare to 19th-century naturalism (Zola, Dreiser) or mid-20th-century realism. Do we still believe class is destiny, or do we prefer to think it’s choice? What does Sheridan assume?

How the World Works—Now and in the Past

Sheridan’s work implies theses: that wealth often rests on prior violence; that institutions absorb and deflect change; that loyalty and land can substitute for meaning when law and progress feel hollow; that grief and moral compromise are enduring, not solvable. Those aren’t proven—they’re offered as plausible pictures of how power and meaning operate.

  • Where do those pictures match current scholarship (e.g., on property, incarceration, federal-tribal relations, resource extraction)? Where do they simplify or moralize?
  • In what periods have “institutions are corrupt beyond redemption” and “loyalty over law” been dominant popular beliefs? Are we in one of those periods, or does his work help create that mood?
  • If his worlds feel “true,” is that because they reflect how the world works, or because they reflect how we’ve learned to expect the world to work from story?

Have People Changed?

Sheridan’s characters are driven by family, land, survival, loyalty, grief, and moral compromise. Those motives are ancient. The systems (banks, federal jurisdiction, prisons, oil) are modern. The tension is deliberate: same human material, new structures.

  • Do we see “human nature” as constant (same desires, fears, tribalism) while only circumstances change? Or do we think modernity has altered what people want and how they justify it?
  • His failed fathers and ruthless women could be read as archetypes (timeless) or as reactions to specific conditions (declining patriarchy, economic precarity). Which reading is more useful for understanding the work—and for understanding our moment?
  • If audiences find meaning in these stories—in loyalty, place, and cost—does that suggest that meaning-making itself is stable, and only the packaging (western, crime, oil) is new?

In Search of Meaning: Human Nature and Systems

Graduate-level use of this material goes beyond craft: it treats the fiction as a set of claims and questions about meaning, human nature, and systems.

  • Meaning. Sheridan’s characters often find meaning in obligation (family, crew, land), not in happiness or progress. Compare to philosophical and religious traditions that tie meaning to duty, sacrifice, or place. Is “meaning through loyalty” a viable answer to nihilism or a retreat from it?
  • Human nature. Are his people fundamentally self-interested, tribal, and prone to violence—or are they shaped by systems that reward those traits? The work doesn’t settle this; it stages the tension. Use it to clarify your own assumptions about fixity vs. plasticity of human nature.
  • Systems. His institutions don’t heal; they persist. That’s a systems view: change the actor, the structure remains. Compare to theories of institutional change (path dependence, critical junctures, revolution vs. reform). When does his pessimism align with evidence, and when does it foreclose hope we might want to keep?

This section is not a conclusion. It’s an invitation: use the craft and the stories as a curriculum for asking how the world works, how it might have worked, and what we want to do with the answers.

Scholarly & Theoretical Anchors

To deepen discussion, connect Sheridan’s themes to established lines of thought—without forcing the fiction to “illustrate” a theory.

  • Violence and legitimacy. Max Weber’s claim that the state holds a “monopoly on the legitimate use of physical force” helps frame Sicario and Mayor of Kingstown: when do Sheridan’s protagonists operate inside that monopoly, and when do they replace or defy it? Where does “legitimate” break down, and who decides?
  • Violence vs. power. Hannah Arendt distinguished violence (instrumental, consuming) from power (collective, generative). Sheridan’s violence rarely builds lasting power; it spends it. Use Arendt to ask whether his stories assume violence is the only language left when institutions fail, or whether they leave room for nonviolent power.
  • Settler colonialism and property. Patrick Wolfe and others argue that settler colonialism is a structure, not an event—land is continuously “made empty” and then made property. 1883 and Yellowstone don’t have to endorse that frame to be read through it: whose death or displacement makes the ranch possible, and how does law later sanctify it?
  • Moral luck and compromise. Bernard Williams and others ask how much of “who we are” depends on circumstances we didn’t choose. Sheridan’s characters are shaped by class, place, and institutional failure. Does that make their compromises forgivable, inevitable, or merely intelligible? Philosophy of moral luck sharpens the question.
  • Scapegoating and mimetic desire. René Girard’s work on collective violence and the scapegoat mechanism offers a lens for Sicario (who is “the enemy,” and who benefits from that designation?) and for frontier narratives (who bears the blame for settlement, and how is violence redirected?).

Why This Resonates Now

Reception context matters. Sheridan’s dominance coincides with specific conditions—use them to ask what audiences are seeking, and what the work supplies.

  • Institutional distrust. Post-2008 financial crisis, pandemic, and political upheaval have eroded trust in banks, federal agencies, and “experts.” Stories where institutions are corrupt beyond individual redemption don’t have to persuade; they confirm. Is that validation or trap?
  • Rural and “left behind” America. Yellowstone and 1883 center people and places often absent from prestige TV. For some viewers, the ranch and the journey are recognition—not nostalgia. For others, they’re fantasy. Who gets to see themselves in this frame, and what does that say about who’s been missing from the frame?
  • Precarity and moral compromise. Hell or High Water and Landman turn on economic survival: banks, mineral rights, “the system” that took first. When real wages stagnate and safety nets feel thin, “good people doing bad things to survive” isn’t abstract. Does Sheridan normalize compromise or expose it?
  • Code and belonging. Loyalty to family, crew, or place offers a clear source of meaning when career, nation, or progress feel hollow. The appeal of “personal code over law” may be partly romantic—and partly a response to perceived moral confusion or institutional hypocrisy. Compare to other moments when “honor” and “code” surged in popular culture.
  • Streaming and audience. His shows are among the most-watched on Paramount+ but under-recognized by awards. That split (mass audience, niche critical embrace) is itself a datum: what do “we” (critics, educators) miss when we privilege certain kinds of complexity or politics?

Limits, Critiques & Blind Spots

Productive critique sharpens use of the work. These aren’t dismissals—they’re angles for testing how far Sheridan’s lens reaches.

  • Native presence and agency. Wind River centers a white outsider (Cory) and a Native collaborator (Ben); the dead Native woman is the occasion for the story. Settler narratives often make Indigenous people victims or helpers, not architects of their own political and moral world. What would a story look like that started from tribal sovereignty, MMIW activism, or Native refusal of the “rescue” plot? Use the film to teach the difference between “raising awareness” and ceding narrative authority.
  • Labor and collective action. Sheridan’s working-class protagonists are usually lone operators, families, or crews—not unions, movements, or class solidarity. When does “survive within the system” obscure “change the system”? Compare to stories (or history) where collective action, not individual code, drives change.
  • Gender beyond “ruthless woman.” Beth Dutton and similar characters expand what women are “allowed” to do on screen—but ruthlessness as the price of agency can also narrow: must power look like violence? What’s missing when the only alternative to victim is weapon?
  • Race and empire. Sicario’s border, 1883’s trail, Yellowstone’s ranch: who is “American,” who is “other,” and who pays the cost of order? The work doesn’t ignore these questions, but it often stages them through white protagonists. How would the same institutions look from the perspective of those excluded or targeted?
  • Hope and agency. If institutions can’t be redeemed and violence has no clean win, what’s left? Sheridan’s pessimism can feel honest—or like a foreclosure of possibility. When is “no redemption” a caution, and when is it a choice that itself has political effects?

Paired Readings & Syllabus Hooks

Concrete pairings for seminars or self-study. Use the fiction as the primary text; these sharpen the questions.

  • Property and frontier: Patrick Wolfe, “Settler Colonialism and the Elimination of the Native”; Frederick Jackson Turner, “The Significance of the Frontier in American History” (then critique it). With 1883 and Yellowstone: what does “frontier” mean, and who is eliminated?
  • Incarceration: Michelle Alexander, The New Jim Crow; Ruth Wilson Gilmore, Golden Gulag. With Mayor of Kingstown: where does the show align with structural critique, and where does it still center the fixer?
  • MMIW and jurisdiction: Report and advocacy from the Urban Indian Health Institute, National Congress of American Indians, or MMIW task forces; legal scholarship on tribal jurisdiction and the Violence Against Women Act. With Wind River: what would “institutional fix” require, and why isn’t it in the film?
  • Violence and the state: Max Weber, “Politics as a Vocation”; Hannah Arendt, On Violence. With Sicario: who has “legitimacy,” and when does the audience’s sympathy track with or against it?
  • Moral compromise and luck: Bernard Williams, “Moral Luck”; Judith Shklar, Ordinary Vices. With Hell or High Water or Yellowstone: are we judging characters or circumstances?
  • Genre and tradition: Cormac McCarthy, Blood Meridian or No Country for Old Men; Sam Peckinpah’s The Wild Bunch; Sergio Leone’s dollars trilogy. How does Sheridan inherit, revise, or refuse the western and the neo-western?