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LOVE LETTER TO TULSA

Los Angeles Times

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August 24, 2025

'Reservation Dogs' creator Sterlin Harjo gives us the 'Lowdown' on his new crime show with Ethan Hawke

- LORRAINE ALI

LOVE LETTER TO TULSA

STERLIN HARJO PERFECTED the “art of the hang” with the co-creation of his first TV series, “Reservation Dogs.” The FX drama followed a group of Indigenous teens living on a fictional Oklahoma reservation, turning their everyday routine into high art — and is one of the best shows of the 2020s. Now, Harjo, 45, is tackling another type of genre: crime.

“The Lowdown,” premiering Sept. 23 with two episodes on FX, follows self-proclaimed “truthstorian” Lee Raybon (Ethan Hawke) on a mission to unearth buried truths about Tulsa’s problematic history while exposing present-day corruption. He's a disheveled figure who drives around town in a tattered van and lives above the rare bookstore that he also happens to own. But when his latest exposé for a local publication calls into question a prominent Tulsa family, his investigation takes him on a dangerous road from the city’s seedy underbelly to its highest corridors of power. “'Rez Dogs' was my love letter to rural Oklahoma and where I grew up. 'The Lowdown' is my love letter to Tulsa, where I currently live,” says Harjo, who produces, writes and directs the new series. “You see the beauty and the darkness. You see everything.”

The eight-episode drama, best described as Tulsa noir, also stars Oklahoma expats Tim Blake Nelson, Jeanne Tripplehorn and Tracy Letts as well as Keith David. Appearances by “Rez Dog” alumni include Kaniehtiio Horn (a.k.a. the Deer Lady).

Harjo, who is a citizen of the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma and is of Muscogee descent, spoke with The Times about his love for Oklahoma, the challenges of following a celebrated show like “Reservation Dogs” and how “The Lowdown” is loosely based on his own experience working with a guerrilla journalist.

“Rez Dogs” was such an exceptional series that garnered critical acclaim across all four seasons. With “The Lowdown,” was it hard to not compete with that previous success?

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