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  • - Hey Teeter!

  • You're with the herd tonight.

  • Colby, you stay with her too.

  • - Do you think Colby and Teeter,

  • Ceeter (dings)

  • or Tolby? (dings)

  • Ceeter? (dings)

  • Or Tolby? (dings) - Oh sorry, I thought there

  • was a question.

  • - Yeah sorry. (talking over each other)

  • (upbeat rock music)

  • - Uh oh. - Who enters?

  • (laughing) - Oh my goodness,

  • what's going on?

  • (grunts)

  • (laughing)

  • (groans)

  • - [Jen] Yeah it's good, so good.

  • - Every girl that I know in Hollywood read

  • for this role, every girl that I know.

  • And everyone wants to know your story.

  • 'Cause you're the big winner.

  • - You mean how did I do it?

  • - (laughs) Yeah, how did you do it?

  • - I think I am Teeter.

  • Deep down.

  • I think so.

  • I think I'm a feral, (beeps) kicking, little weirdo.

  • - She's a hand.

  • - I really do, but how I did is they called me in

  • and I was super nervous.

  • I didn't think I was gonna get it at all

  • and I thought I tanked the audition.

  • You saw it, I did not apparently.

  • But I thought I tanked it so hard,

  • I kept having the casting associate read the scene again.

  • Just do it again, which is also a big audition no-no for any

  • actors who are watching. (laughing)

  • Don't ask them to read it again.

  • And then I was so mad that I had messed it up,

  • that I sort of checked out of my body and on the way out,

  • you know, they're like, (ominous music)

  • "Goodbye, thank you very much."

  • I somehow was back home (crow calls)

  • with my family and I said, "Goodbye, I love you too."

  • (all laugh)

  • I walked out and I called my manager.

  • I'm like, "I'm quitting."

  • I was like, "I told the casting associate I loved her."

  • I was like, "I tanked."

  • I was like, "I gotta become like a hooker

  • "or a writer after this, man. (laughing)

  • "No more acting."

  • - There's about four to six different personalities

  • living in there, accents.

  • You are a chameleon, you are brilliant actor.

  • I always get on you about your English.

  • - Well that's 'cause there's really only one accent for you,

  • and as I said, any English person who's in here,

  • and it's a bit harder with the gum, isn't it?

  • - I just love it.

  • - I know, but it makes you get

  • all jiggly inside, doesn't it?

  • - It does.

  • - I know. - Jeez.

  • - I feel real feelings

  • of love. - This is what we get

  • all the time, this is what makes Jen so amazing.

  • - That's so nice.

  • - It's what makes you guys love me

  • and what made my mom send me

  • to camp every summer. (laughs)

  • She was just like, "Get her the (beeps) out of the house."

  • You look like a plucked mother (chicken clucks) chicken.

  • Buck, buck, buck, buck, buck, buckee!

  • (dramatic slam)

  • - I think initially, that all of your character

  • is identified as I read it through the dialogue

  • and specifically the way that the words are written,

  • and that you get how this person talks.

  • So then we're gonna try to read some

  • and see if we even know what the hell they say.

  • - I don't know, I always almost knew

  • what she was saying all the time.

  • Watch this prove to be wrong and I'm just full of (beeps),

  • but I really felt like I understood what she was saying.

  • - When you said it, I thought we did.

  • Reading it is different for us,

  • who don't live in the character.

  • For instance, just at first glance it looks

  • like it's written in German.

  • (all laugh) I will tell you.

  • - Right.

  • - (laughs) Wanna back rub?

  • Wanna give me one? - Is it R-E-W-B?

  • - E-W-B.

  • - E-W-B.

  • - B-E-K-K-R-E-W-B

  • - R-E-W-B, that's what I thought.

  • You wanna back rub?

  • - I don't, thanks.

  • - You wanna give me one?

  • Let's just take a moment

  • for Taylor. - That's creating

  • your character, no.

  • - Yeah, people, they were like,

  • "How did you come up with the way she spoke?"

  • And I was like, "I basically just read exactly..."

  • (laughs) - What he wrote.

  • - "What he wrote."

  • - What's your name?

  • - Teeter.

  • - Is it Teeter or Tater?

  • How do you say it?

  • - It's Tee-ter.

  • - What's that?

  • - One more time?

  • - Tee-ter.

  • - Tee-ter.

  • - Tee-ter.

  • - [Jen] Teeter.

  • - Your name Peter?

  • - [All] Teeter, Teeter, Teeter, Teeter, Teeter, Teeter.

  • - What's that?

  • - You gotta keep the tongue forward on the teeth.

  • - Teeter.

  • - That's gibberish.

  • - [Jen] What do you have?

  • - They're all deeply foul.

  • - Everything.

  • - Do I look like my (beeps) name is Peter,

  • you skunk haired mother (beeps)?

  • (laughs)

  • - Do I look like my name is Peter,

  • you skunk haired mother (horse snorts)

  • - She just called me a mother (laughs).

  • (laughing) - That's pretty good.

  • - Skunk haired?

  • - That's 'cause that's the color of his hair.

  • - Understood that didn't ya, ya bow legged bastard.

  • - I love that line.

  • - You understood that, didn't ya, you bow legged bastard.

  • (whooshes)

  • - Thanks for coming and just

  • being awesome. - Spending time with us.

  • - I missed you guys.

  • (upbeat rock music)

  • You know, you're smarter than you look.

  • Not sayin' much, but you are.

  • - Well you're as smart as you look.

  • And that's sayin' a heap.

  • (dramatic slam)

  • - What do you guys think about the progression

  • or relationship between Beth and Rip?

  • We've been waiting for it, it's been a long game.

  • - I stan Beth and Rip, #BEP, #RITH.

  • Those are primo hashtags.

  • (funky music)

  • (laughs)

  • They're my OTP, huge fan of Beth and Rip.

  • It's an amazing opportunity to see a softer side

  • of both of them, 'cause they're both hard (beeps)

  • in such a different way.

  • Like Rip will throw you off the tallest building

  • in Montana, like four stories.

  • (talking over each other) You might survive.

  • (laughs)

  • (grunts)

  • (thuds)

  • In the first season, the first time we see them

  • sort of as a couple is hard and is angry,

  • and it's clear that they are both (laughs) sort of,

  • they both bring so much anger to that equation.

  • - (pants) You ruin it every time.

  • - And then by the third season,

  • that relationship has progressed,

  • I think more than any other relationship on the show.

  • We're in real time, watching them connect in a deeper way

  • and watching them let their barriers down.

  • - Yeah.

  • - You can hold her damn hand, Rip.

  • - Thank you, Daddy.

  • - If you were to date from the outside, a person like Rip,

  • and what he does, there's no way for you

  • to ever be able to understand what he does.

  • - You wanna fight somebody, you come fight me.

  • I'll fight you all God damn day!

  • - And the same with Beth, because

  • of the extremes that she goes through.

  • - I ruin careers for a living.

  • - So there's always a part of them

  • that would always have to be cut off

  • from the person that they would be with.

  • Them together, they don't have to worry about that.

  • - We can do whatever we want.

  • - Baby, you've been doing whatever you want

  • your whole damn life.

  • - I think it's really beautiful.

  • I think the audience is gonna have this opportunity

  • to see this amazing side of Rip

  • and the cooking and the attentiveness.

  • He does have this capacity to love deeply.

  • - First we're gonna dance.

  • - Most shows would try to put that entire cycle

  • into one season very easily, and it's kind of cheap.

  • We've lengthened it through three

  • and it opens up so much more time

  • for all that complexity to come through.

  • And to take that much time is a risk,

  • you know? - Yeah.

  • - But when it works, it is everything.

  • It's truly the most interesting relationship,

  • I think, on the show.

  • - We're well past playing hard to get,

  • don't you think, Beth?

  • - You and me...

  • We're never past playing hard to get, baby.

  • (beeps)

  • - We'll take this outfit to town,

  • we're gonna go watch Jimmy rodeo, okay?

  • (dramatic slam)

  • - I think for the first time in his life,

  • Jimmy feels like a part of something.

  • He feels like a family.

  • (clapping and exclaiming)

  • The end of season two,

  • Jimmy's family really shows up for him.

  • How much does it cost to enter?

  • - Couple hundred.

  • But you win a few grand.

  • - I don't have a couple hundred to spare.

  • - I'll spot you.

  • - They help him sort of deal with his past life,

  • they help him sort of close that chapter.

  • - I'm gonna show you how to get rid of problems

  • so they don't become new problems, you hear me?

  • - In season three, Jimmy finally starts to feel at home

  • and finally starts to feel like a part of a community.

  • What's wrong?

  • - Not a thing.

  • - And then also finally starts to find some personal sense

  • of identity in rodeoing.

  • - No (beeps).

  • - Where did that come about?

  • Because it seemed like something that Jimmy

  • did not wanna get on a horse at all, season one.

  • Looked terrified every time he was on a horse.

  • - I don't know nothing about horses!

  • - Now you're getting a crash course, Jimmy.

  • - Should I pet him?

  • - It originally started, if I remember correctly,

  • because you wanted the money, you needed money.

  • - Yeah, it was born of necessity.

  • - So then, what was that change, where did that come from?

  • - [Jefferson] He needed to, to pay his debts.

  • And then it was the first time in his life

  • that anyone ever told him he was good at something (laughs)

  • or celebrated him, so I think he started

  • to feel really proud of that and

  • to sort of derive a sense of identity from that.

  • And then by the time we find him in season three,

  • he's continued on that path and he's sort

  • of coming into himself more and more.

  • Finally got enough to get my pro card, so.

  • Tonight's the first rodeo that counts toward my standings.

  • And then in season three, when he goes to the rodeo

  • and his whole family shows up, basically.

  • Everyone comes to watch him rodeo.

  • I think that's a really beautiful moment for Jimmy.

  • - Yeah, I'm sorry, you weren't there that day.

  • You had to stay with Teeter.

  • - We're gonna go get cleaned up, go into town.

  • You have a great night, buddy.

  • - I know it 'cause you just said everybody.

  • I just wanna clarify, it wasn't actually everybody.

  • - Okay, I was willing to let it go, 'cause I was like,

  • "Oh wow, no one's gonna say anything."

  • - I just think accuracy is important.

  • - I want both of you just to drop dead right

  • in front of me, right now, that would be a dream.

  • - The audience super cares about context.

  • - Words matter.

  • - True, words do matter.

  • - Sun was setting, Eden was riding around

  • in the thing with the flag and our boy, our little Jimmy.

  • - Woo! (cheering)

  • - Yeah, it was cool, sorry.

  • I just, I mean you were there in spirit.

  • - [Denim] And now you have this love interest.

  • (kisses)

  • - Good luck.

  • - Yeah, yeah, it's wild, it's like John Dutton came

  • to watch Jimmy rodeo and he forgets all about it

  • as soon as Mia shows up.

  • You ever have a girl look at you

  • and your whole world just stops?

  • - Every Saturday night, now come on, focus.

  • - Mia, in a lot of ways,

  • represents this entire other...

  • way of life.

  • This is something that's totally new to Jimmy

  • and is so exciting for Jimmy to see this whole other world

  • of possibility, it's like an incredible gift

  • to have Mia played by Eden Brolin,

  • because she's an incredibly gifted and talented

  • and generous actor, but she's also has such a strong sense

  • of personal identity outside of this show.

  • She's so fully herself.

  • - Can't believe I kissed you!

  • I'm not that forward.

  • - And that makes Mia so fully herself

  • and so fully independent of the ranch lifestyle

  • and of the Duttons.

  • And yeah, Jimmy sort of falls so head over heels for Mia

  • that he, then, of course is devastatingly injured,

  • (laughs) as a result of it.

  • (crowds cheers)

  • No, no, no, no, no!

  • His life is suddenly in real jeopardy

  • in a really unique way. - Yeah, 'cause if he can't

  • heal properly, then you have no use to be on the ranch,

  • and then there goes your family. (talking over each other)

  • - Dutton says that line exactly.

  • - You break an arm chasing buckles,

  • it's hard to...

  • It's hard to stay on any man's payroll.

  • - Play at your own risk. - No use.

  • - No use.

  • - So Jimmy immediately puts his family

  • and that whole lifestyle at risk for Mia.

  • - Ain't gonna say nothin'?

  • - Yeah, I didn't really plan this out past walking up here.

  • (upbeat rock music)

- Hey Teeter!

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