Yellowstone Season 6 Release Date and Review of Season 5
Yellowstone has become one of the most popular TV shows since it came out in 2018. In fact, it is the most watched cable show on TV, with 9.3 million people watching the season four finale on the night it aired.
Fans of Yellowstone are already hoping for a sixth season, even though the fifth season doesn’t start until November 13, 2022.
Yellowstone is a very popular show, so it’s likely that season five won’t be the last one.
Will There Be a Sixth Season of Yellowstone?
There is no official word yet about whether or not there will be the sixth season of Yellowstone. Cole Hauser told People Magazine, though, that season five is not the last. Hauser, who plays the tough but likable Rip Wheeler, said that they are already working on season six.
Hauser said that Sheridan didn’t go to the season 5 premiere of Yellowstone in New York City because he is busy writing the next season. He says that the story of the Dutton family will not end with season five.
Release Date for Yellowstone Season 6

There is no official word on when season 6 of Yellowstone will come out. Season 5 will have two parts, so it’s likely that season 6 won’t come out until late 2023 or sometime in 2024.
The rest of the first half of the season will come out every Sunday after that. The second half of the season, on the other hand, hasn’t come out yet.
Many people think that the second half of season 5 will come out in the spring or summer of 2023. When season six starts will probably depend a lot on when the second half of the season comes out.
Usually, each season comes out about a year after the last. The fourth season was supposed to come out in June 2021, but COVID pushed it back to November 2021. Every season before this one had its first episode in June.
Cole Hauser’s Reflections on Yellowstone’s Future
Cole Hauser has a lot of hopes for Yellowstone’s future. Even though we don’t know what will happen to Rip, the Dutton’s story is not over yet.
“I know that the show has a lot of great talent, and that goes all the way down to the crew, the directors, and Taylor’s writing. Everyone really wants to make the best thing they can. Most of the time, if that’s the case, you’ll have… “Of course, no one would have thought it would do what it has done,” Hauser told People Magazine.
Rip also tells people that even though Beth and Rip are married, their relationship doesn’t change much in season five.
Even though some fans are worried about Rip’s future, he has said some things that make them feel better.
Even though Hauser hasn’t read any online fan theories, his mom keeps up with what fans are saying. “My mom told me a few of them, and I told her, ‘Mom, I kill. Don’t worry about it,'” Hauser said on Today.
Review of Season 5 of “Yellowstone”
This is what John Dutton (Kevin Costner), the new governor of Montana, is thinking about at the start of the fifth season of “Yellowstone” (Sundays, 8 p.m. EST/PST, out of four) on the Paramount Network. Taylor Sheridan, who made “Yellowstone” and its two spinoffs, “1883” and “1923,” is probably thinking about it, too. He is now the master of his own little TV universe, just like John is the master of his not-so-little piece of Montana land. Sheridan and the man he made are both at the top of their games, but they could both fall.

“Yellowstone” is the most popular show on TV, even though streaming has taken over and Hollywood is going through a lot of change. In its fifth season, it is still one of the most reliable shows to watch. It is a mix of soapy melodrama, violence, romance, and beautiful mountain views that is unique to Sheridan and keeps people wanting more. But it’s hard not to think about when the Western, which is getting old, should end.
Season 5 is more of the same. It fixes some of the plot problems from the fourth season and gives the audience what they want: John against the world, daughter Beth (Kelly Reilly) against adopted son Jamie (Wes Bentley), and son Kayce (Luke Grimes) and his wife Monica (Kelsey Asbille) against their very bad luck.
Sunday’s first episode starts on election night when John easily wins the governor’s race, which he only ran for to get back at Jamie. He now has to do a lot of things he doesn’t care about. As a rancher, it makes sense that when John wears a suit for his job as governor, he almost always wears a black tie, like he’s at a funeral.
Beth, on the other hand, is thrilled about her father’s new job and the perks that come with it (being cruel to her brother, more money and power). Her marriage to Rip, a ranch hand played by Cole Hauser, was a bit hasty, but it’s going well, at least as far as their dysfunctional relationship can go. Kayce, the youngest Dutton has a family with Monica, who is pregnant, and a job with the agency that keeps livestock in check.
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There are, of course, always forces trying to take the Duttons down and take their land away. In the first two episodes that were available for review, rich Caroline Warner (Jacki Weaver) and fixer Sarah Atwood were introduced as two of the main bad guys (Dawn Olivieri).
Even though “Yellowstone” is still like a nice steak dinner in terms of entertainment—always good, always predictable, and not much need to change the formula—there is a hint that things are getting stale in Season 5. There are new characters and problems, but they feel a little too much like things that have happened in past seasons. There is the bossy female executive and the rich outsider, and the same Dutton family members keep ending up in the hospital.