Spoiler alert for 1883 and Yellowstone Season 5, Episode 13, “Give the World Away”
Taylor Sheridan may have already revealed how the hit Neo-Western show will end, and yellow stone Season 5, Episode 13 only made the Dutton Ranch prophecy more likely. Before Beth (Kelly Reilly), Kayce (Luke Grimes), and even John Dutton III (Kevin Costner) lived at Yellowstone Ranch, their ancestors took a trip northwest from Texas to Montana in search of a better life. THE Yellow Stone from 1883 The story follows James (Tim McGraw) and Margaret (Faith Hill) Dutton as they travel across the plains to Montana in covered wagons with their children, Elsa (Isabel May) and John (Audie Rick).
After Elsa 1883 Fate ends the Duttons' journey, James meets an Elder Raven named Spotted Eagle (Graham Greene), who tells him he can settle in Paradise Valley, an old Raven hunting area. However, he tells James that in seven generations, his people will rise up and take the land back, to which the Duttons respond that they can have it. Families like the Duttons who settled in the western United States contributed to the displacement of indigenous communities in the United States. However, the yellow stone the prophecy suggests that the Dutton family tree will return the land to its people.
Kayce's Yellowstone Season 5 Episode 13 Plan Backs Dutton Ranch's End Prophecy
Kayce asks about selling something for $1 on “Give the World Away”
yellow stone Season 5, Episode 13 supports the theory that the Duttons will return the ranch to Montana's indigenous population. While Beth auctions off everything on the ranch to buy more time for her brothers, Kayce comes up with a plan to save the ranch. He suggests that his plan could include giving away the ranch, as suggested by the episode title, “Give the World Away.” Kayce asks Beth a hypothetical question about how much something would cost if it was donated. Although episode 13 doesn't reveal what Kayce is planning, Beth understands and seems to agree.
Beth questions her brother's plan but only asks who, suggesting that the ranch actually goes to someone else and that Kayce has a candidate in mind.
Node yellow stone penultimate ending, Kayce is investigating the logistics of selling the ranch for practically nothing, asking Beth what would happen if he bought his $300,000 car for $1. When Beth asks her younger brother who he plans to sell it to, he smiles and tells her to give him a day to be sure. Beth questions her brother's plan but only asks who, suggesting that the ranch actually goes to someone else and that Kayce has a candidate in mind. Beth even gives the plan her seal of approval by kissing her brother's cheek.
Why the Dutton Ranch prophecy is the best way to end Yellowstone
The 1883 Yellowstone Ranch Prophecy Is a Fitting and Inspiring End
By giving the ranch to the Broken Rock tribe, Kayce may return his family's land to Montana natives and fulfill the yellow stone prophecy. Kayce could grant the land to tribal chairman Thomas Rainwater (Gil Birmingham), and Kayce's tribal chairman “counting blow” threat in yellow stone proves that the younger Dutton has formed a powerful alliance with Mo Brings Plenty and fully supports the Broken Rock tribe. yellow stone Season 5, part 2 also shows that Kayce is ready to walk away from the ranch and the danger of protecting it, choosing his family over the Dutton legacy.
1883The prophecy is the best way to end yellow stone Season 5 because it would reinforce the show's Native American population within a genre that traditionally misrepresents the native populations it includes in its Western stories. For decades, Hollywood has misrepresented Native American culture and customs in the media, but empowering representations like those in Sheridan's works help reverse ignorant misconceptions. The largest piece of land in Montana returned to its people would be the icing on the Sheridan neo-Western cake, strengthening the tribal community and sparking conversations about how it should have been theirs to begin with.