Based on this $1.25 per acre, and Beth later saying the Reservation paid them $1.1 million, the Yellowstone Ranch is 880,000 acres. Kayce said East Camp is 5,000 acres, so he kept less than 0.6% of the Ranch. And $1.25 in 1883 is worth $39.05 today, so if you adjust Kayce's offer for inflation, it would be $34.36 million for the whole ranch. Which the Reservation could afford, so I'm surprised Beth didn't suggest offering them that.
What would the sales tax be for $34.36 million? Because it was my understanding that the sales tax was the big obstacle to selling, along with making sure their debts got paid.
No. This is assuming that the land is commerically worth, on today's real estate market, 39.05 plus inflation an acre.... it's not. We know that because just a year or two ago Market Equities offered John Dutton 500 million dollars for his ranch. That's what its worth, bare minimum. I assume you are saying they should've gotten 35 mill in this deal, with the spirit of the 1.25 idea but with modern money? The whole deal is symbolic. Either the tribe buys it back for what it was "stolen" for or the entire thing is pointless. Also, adding forever caveats of East Camp and never developing it also impact the value of the deal. The idea that Kasey would make them this offer, then pull out a calculator and start talking about inflation and interest is a joke. Also, I kind of doubt the Res could easily just eat 35 million like that... sure they've got the casino, but those don't make as much as you'd think they do. Especially in less populated states.
Taylor Sheridan wrote yellowstone into the ground after he lost a pissing contest with Costner. Sheridan got butthurt, and took it out on the viewers by writing a pisspoor ending to a GREAT show.
I just found a huge plothole in the show. John, Spencer and James come across the Indian chief looking to inter his elder. Spencer is about six. John is about 10. That leaves a question as to how did James die the first year if he’s still alive five years later to run into that chief. Taylor Sheridan made a huge mistake there.
I mean, that what happens when the lead actor leaves the project before completion. I’m not surprised if Sheridan had to do a quick rewrite to compensate
I love Rainwater’s “are you for real?” expression 😅
What a great solution!
Based on this $1.25 per acre, and Beth later saying the Reservation paid them $1.1 million, the Yellowstone Ranch is 880,000 acres.
Kayce said East Camp is 5,000 acres, so he kept less than 0.6% of the Ranch.
And $1.25 in 1883 is worth $39.05 today, so if you adjust Kayce's offer for inflation, it would be $34.36 million for the whole ranch.
Which the Reservation could afford, so I'm surprised Beth didn't suggest offering them that.
What would the sales tax be for $34.36 million? Because it was my understanding that the sales tax was the big obstacle to selling, along with making sure their debts got paid.
No. This is assuming that the land is commerically worth, on today's real estate market, 39.05 plus inflation an acre.... it's not. We know that because just a year or two ago Market Equities offered John Dutton 500 million dollars for his ranch. That's what its worth, bare minimum. I assume you are saying they should've gotten 35 mill in this deal, with the spirit of the 1.25 idea but with modern money?
The whole deal is symbolic. Either the tribe buys it back for what it was "stolen" for or the entire thing is pointless. Also, adding forever caveats of East Camp and never developing it also impact the value of the deal. The idea that Kasey would make them this offer, then pull out a calculator and start talking about inflation and interest is a joke.
Also, I kind of doubt the Res could easily just eat 35 million like that... sure they've got the casino, but those don't make as much as you'd think they do. Especially in less populated states.
Taylor Sheridan wrote yellowstone into the ground after he lost a pissing contest with Costner. Sheridan got butthurt, and took it out on the viewers by writing a pisspoor ending to a GREAT show.
1883 pretty much told us the end.
Which was obvious, but everyone's theory was that Tate will take it since he's native. I'm glad they went this route instead
Should have played the whole scene
I just found a huge plothole in the show. John, Spencer and James come across the Indian chief looking to inter his elder. Spencer is about six. John is about 10. That leaves a question as to how did James die the first year if he’s still alive five years later to run into that chief. Taylor Sheridan made a huge mistake there.
of course theres cringe tiktok music over this
your music addition does not improve this clip .
Whaaaaawhaaaaa baby
@@devindenault4255 hes right
Maybe not, but at least we can hear the dialogue
Agreed, but I think he does it to avoid copyright
Monica was a poorly developed charactor
It's actually a dog shit ending. Made me hate the series
agreed. It was complete ass
I mean, that what happens when the lead actor leaves the project before completion. I’m not surprised if Sheridan had to do a quick rewrite to compensate