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How To Watch Every Taylor Sheridan TV Show

Find out how you can watch every Taylor Sheridan show.

How to watch most Taylor Sheridan TV shows is quite simple

Action, melodrama, drawling dialogue: Welcome to the Taylor Sheridan universe (aka the Sheridan-verse). After hitting it big with “Yellowstone,” the New White Tyler Perry, as I like to call him, has been a busy boy, with 15 TV shows either currently streaming or shooting as of writing.

You can stream every one of Taylor Sheridan’s TV shows on Paramount+ except for one very important one that I had to track down. I’ve been steadily bingeing all of the Sheridan-verse, so I’ll also weigh in with my takes on his hits and misses.

Scroll down to see how to watch every Sheridan-produced, -directed, and -written TV show.

“Dutton Ranch” (2026)

Premiering May 15, 2026, on Paramount+, “Dutton Ranch” follows “Yellowstone” favorites Beth (Kelly Reilly) and Rip (Cole Hauser) down Texas way to a new ranch with a whole new set of rivalries and problems.

If that weren’t enough to pique your interest, Oscar-nominated actors Ed Harris (“The Abyss”) and Annette Bening (“Nyad”) anchor the cast.

This Sheridan joint shows all the promise of being another rootin’-tootin’ good time, but I’ll let you know after I binge it.

“Marshals” (2026)

Part hardboiled procedural and part action-adventure romp, CBS’s “Marshals” is the penultimate Sheridan-approved “Yellowstone” spinoff.

The team here at CableTV.com had been dogging on “Marshals” for months before I binged it, so I was surprised how much I enjoyed its pacing and characters.

That said, if you’re expecting the level of prestige sex and violence that made “Yellowstone” a raw, runaway hit, you might find “Marshals” lacking.

You can catch the first season of “Marshals” as it airs Sundays on CBS, with new episodes streaming the next day on Paramount+.

“The Madison” (2026)

Already renewed for a third season, “The Madison” follows a New York City matriarch (Michelle Pfeiffer) as she pieces together the inner life of her deceased husband (Kurt Russell) by way of his family cabin in Montana.

“The Madison” is Sheridan-style high melodrama at its zenith, with a little fishing porn à la “A River Runs Through It” sprinkled in.

Unfortunately, while Pfeiffer and Matthew Fox deliver emotionally valent performances, the rest of the cast has a hard time keeping up, not to mention that some of the red-pill writing chafes at times as well, IMO.

You can stream “The Madison” on Paramount+.

“5-Star” (2025)

While I haven’t seen “5-Star” yet, the Sheridan-produced docuseries about elite college football recruits looks fascinating.

The premise is simple: Follow four five-star recruits through the ups and downs of their freshman year.

Judging by the trailer, it looks like the documentary crew got exceptional access to future stars like Bryce Underwood (Michigan) and Dakorien Moore (Oregon).

You can stream “5-Star” on Paramount+.

“The Road” (2025)

Another confession: I haven’t yet watched “The Road,” the Taylor Sheridan-produced reality TV competition starring country mega-stars Keith Urban and Blake Shelton.

Take “The Voice” and mix in a tamer version of “Road Rules” and a sanguine version of “Austin City Limits,” and you’ve got “The Road.”

Maybe I’m an easy target, but the trailer did sell me on it. I mean, Urban still looks like a Vegas magician, but Shelton is a helluva charmer.

You can stream Season 1 of “The Road” on Paramount+.

“Landman” (2024–present)

I’m excited that “Landman” was renewed for a third season, not just because Billy Bob Thornton and Sam Elliott star in dream roles, but because we get to see more of Ali Larter wildin’ out as an ex-ex-wife on a mission to celebrate Taco Tuesday around the family dinner table.

Ostensibly, “Landman” is a story about land and what lies below it (aka oil, duh). Despite all its roughneck bluster, the show nails the intergenerational family traumas of boom-and-bust economies.

I also think that if you haven’t seen “Yellowstone” yet, “Landman” is an excellent entry point into the Sheridan-verse.

You can stream “Landman” on Paramount+.

“Lawmen: Bass Reeves” (2024)

“Lawmen: Bass Reeves” ditches the shroud of fictional families and legacy sagas for a mini-series biopic of historical figure Bass Reeves.

David Oyelowo stars as the titular Reeves and doesn’t pull any punches in his portrayal of a family man becoming the first Black U.S. Marshal west of the Mississippi.

Although we’ve yet to get another mini-series in the Lawmen anthology as was promised, “Lawmen: Bass Reeves” is worth a watch if only to see a bunch of racists bite the dust.

You can stream “Lawmen: Bass Reeves” on Paramount+.

“Lioness” (2023–present)

For my money, “Lioness” (aka “Special Ops: Lioness”) is Sheridan’s most kickass production. And if the title didn’t give it away, Zoe Saldaña and her female colleagues do most of the ass kickin’.

Okay, so maybe some of the plot points, such as open warfare in a sovereign nation and key U.S. ally like Mexico, stretch the imagination. But the thrills are worth it.

I recommend bingeing “Lioness” alongside non-Yellowstone action-fueled shows like “Mayor of Kingstown” and “Tulsa King.”

You can stream “Lioness” on Paramount+.

“1923” (2022–2025)

Of the two extent “Yellowstone” prequels, I think “1923” hits the hardest because of its stacked cast.

The limited series clocks in at a brisk two seasons and takes the audience from the southern reaches of Africa to the northern edges of the U.S. So, yeah, the mise-en-scène is epic.

On a personal note, I didn’t think Harrison Ford could make his gruffness even gruffer, but he does in “1923.” That and a prairie-dress-wearing Helen Mirren wielding a shotgun makes it well worth bingeing.

You can stream “1923” on Paramount+.

“Tulsa King” (2022–present)

I’ll be the first to admit that on paper, “Tulsa King” sounds terrible, but I’ll also be the first to admit that I really like “Tulsa King.”

Basically, a mafioso fresh outta the clink (Sylvester Stallone) gets relegated by the five families to a small, hickish city (i.e., Tulsa). While said mafioso rises to prominence in record time, terrifying hillbilly rivals come out of the woodwork to challenge his newly won throne.

Of course, Sly Stallone nails the laconic yet menacing gangster transplant (aka the titular Tulsa King), but you also get to enjoy comedy stalwart Martin Starr playing a stoned dispensary manager. For those reasons, I’ll overlook the cheesy acting of most of the other supporting characters.

Again, you can stream “Tulsa King” on Paramount+.

“Mayor of Kingstown” (2021–2025)

Why is the color saturation so blue on “Mayor of Kingstown”? We get it, Kingstown is where dreams, gangsters, and cops go to die.

That said, even the most skeptical critic can recognize the appeal of “Mayor of Kingstown,” which features Jeremy Renner attempting to keep the town from self-destructing through unofficial and extrajudicial means.

The rose-colored copaganda of other Sheridan productions is totally left for dead in Kingstown’s streets and prison, which makes for a more nuanced and, hence, satisfying watch.

You can stream “Mayor of Kingstown” on Paramount+.

“1883” (2021–2022)

Spoiler alert: If you were left wondering after binge-watching “Yellowstone” how the Dutton clan got so much land, sorry, but “1883” still doesn’t quite answer that question.

What the show does depict is the Duttons’ grueling journey along the Oregon Trail from their southern roots to the doorsteps of their future Montana fiefdom.

Again, of the two “Yellowstone” prequels, if you had to skip one, this would be it — mostly because the stunt casting of IRL celebrity power couple Faith Hill and Tim McGraw falls a little flat. (Sam Elliott can’t even rescue this failed TV expedition.)

You can stream “1883” on Paramount+.

“The Last Cowboy” (2019–present)

When I first sat down to write this piece, I thought I had seen the entirety of Taylor Sheridan’s TV shows. Little did I know that now I have three docuseries, including “The Last Cowboy,” to get through.

And I’ll be honest, six seasons of rodeo competitions might actually be too much for even me to watch.

That said, critics and fans seem to really dig it, so I might have to binge it when I get through my current TV backlog.

You can stream all six seasons of “The Last Cowboy” on Paramount+.

“Yellowstone” (2018–2024)

Like most of you, I’m sure, the chatter around “Yellowstone” was probably the first time I heard Taylor Sheridan’s name. (After I looked him up, I did recognize him from his “Sons of Anarchy” stint as Deputy Chief David Hale.)

Paramount Network and its now-defunct parent corporation, ViacomCBS, stumbled onto something with the breakout hit: rural America’s version of prestige television.

But you already know that. What you’re probably looking for is how to stream “Yellowstone,” right? Well, you can stream “Yellowstone” on Paramou … er, Peacock.

Yep, in a classic shoot-yourself-in-the-foot moment, Paramount sold the streaming rights of its surprise hit to rival media conglomerate NBCUniversal. Oopsy whoopsy.

Taylor Sheridan shows in production

“Frisco King” (2027)

Samuel L. Jackson as a hitman on the lam in a “Tulsa King” spinoff? Say less. Oh, and Taylor Sheridan is slated to write all of the episodes for all you Sheri-Stans. That’s what Taylor Sheridan fans call themselves, right?

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