According to Marshals showrunner Spencer Hudnut, Glasser opened one of their initial conversations about spin-offs by asking, 'Would you rather watch a spin-off about Kayce Dutton or Beth Dutton?' Because he's David Glasser, he, of course, will have both shows on the air.
When I read the scripts, I was really blown away by them. I am a fan of Taylor, and I think his writing is fantastic. To me, this just had a certain poetry to it. It was creating imagery of this place in my mind before I had even seen where it would take place. It was beautiful and lyrical.
After a terrible family tragedy, she learns that it's less about the place, specifically, and more about the idea to never take anything for granted. The Madison has your answer-though it's not so straightforward. Starring Michelle Pfeiffer and Kurt Russell, the latest series from Sheridan surprisingly begins by treating the state much like any Lifetime Christmas movie would.
It may have taken viewers a while to feel this fresh sense of buyer's remorse, but many of the problems with Landman, Season 2 are the same as with Landman, Season 1-they just feel less novel, and thus more grating, now. You can say what you want about Sheridan being a self-satisfied, boringly anti-woke writer of liberal, urban, and educated characters, and a spottily misogynistic writer of female characters-and this season has its doozies in each category.
AMC Dark Winds, based on the Leaphorn and Chee novels by Tony Hillerman, is the 1970s-set story of Lieutenant Joe Leaphorn (Zahn McClarnon), a Navajo Nation police officer, and his sidekicks Bernadette Manuelito (Jessica Matten) and Jim Chee (Kiowa Gordon.) Over the first three seasons, we've seen them face off against crooked mining magnates, zealous cults, and border patrol conspiracies. (You can catch up on the first three seasons on Netflix.)