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There's even a hitching post so they can ride and park their horses. "Well, saddle your horse," Rip says. The two head for drinks − and most likely a new series.
In the "Yellowstone" finale, the ranch is sold to the Native American tribes who originally lived on the land seven generations ago. Mo (Mo Brings Plenty) fixes the Dutton grave markers knocked ...
And while there is certainly some room left for the stories of the remaining Duttons, with multiple spinoffs now in the works, I'm going to go ahead and call it: this was the end of Yellowstone ...
After five seasons, enough expletives to fill a dictionary and so many trips to the train station that we could get there without using GPS, Yellowstone came to a close with Sunday’s episode.
The final scene shows Beth and Rip on their new property, enjoying what their new, quiet surroundings will bring — and setting up a potential spinoff of their new life in Dillon. Yellowstone ...
Related: Yellowstone recap: The long goodbye And yet, the final scene of the series — Beth and Rip at their new ranch — was not the last thing the show shot. "We finished shooting the finale ...
“Your people are buried on that land, and so are mine. It’s sacred, and that’s how we will treat it.” Rainwater says. "So your family forever has a home here."
Yellowstone's final season has been unfolding in two disparate timelines: Before John's death and after the Dutton patriarch's tragic demise. Its third episode, titled "Three Fifty-Three ...