'Yellowstone' actor Forrie J. Smith on why America needs to rediscover its cowboy culture



Fans of "Yellowstone" recently said goodbye to Yellowstone Dutton Ranch patriarch John Dutton — yet another one of the shocking twists that make Taylor Sheridan's series so compelling.

But none of the larger-than-life drama would work if "Yellowstone" didn't get the details right. The show's operatic plots of murder and double-dealing take place against a quietly authentic depiction of the ranching life.

'When you start messing with my children, my animals — you crossed a line.'

One of the people to thank for that is actor Forrie J. Smith, who brings his background as an honest-to-God cowboy to his portrayal of fan favorite character Lloyd Pierce, Yellowstone Dutton Ranch's oldest ranch hand.

Smith didn't exactly audition for his role, he tells Glenn Beck during a recent sit-down on "The Glenn Beck Podcast."

Roping his way into 'Yellowstone'

He was working as a the head animal wrangler on Sheridan's 2016 movie "Hell or High Water" when somebody moved his truck. "I didn't know who it was," Smith recounts. "I rode up, roped him, and pulled him out the door."

It turned out to be the guy who'd hired him — the livestock wrangler. Fortunately Sheridan saw it Smith's way. Not only did he refuse to let Smith be fired, he told him he had a part for him in a modern Western he was writing.

Promises like that, of course, are a dime a dozen in Hollywood, but Sheridan turned out to be "a man of his word," says Smith.

Smith grew up on his grandparents' cattle ranch in Montana City, Montana, and began competing in rodeos when he was 8. Along with schoolwork and basketball, helping out on the ranch was part of his daily routine. He saw firsthand how tough the business could be.

Once, after hearing his grandfather worry that he wouldn't even break even that year, the 16-year-old Smith asked him: Why keep ranching?

"He looks at me," says Smith, "[and said,] 'Well, son, we're helping feed America. We're helping feed our country."

And that's kind of the cowboy culture, right?" continues Smith. "We're helping feed our country. We're maintaining the grass and rotating our pastures to keep up everything."

Smith dives deep into the ethos of “cowboy culture.” He shares with Beck a nugget of etiquette that may surprise city folk: why a cowboy takes off his hat before a meal.

It’s not just about appearances; it’s a gesture of respect for the hands that prepared the food and the land that provided it. This respect — for people, animals, and the land — is central to Smith's worldview and is something he feels America desperately needs to rediscover.

But Smith’s respect for tradition doesn’t mean he shies away from hard conversations. When it comes to issues affecting American values and communities, he’s unfiltered: “When you start messing with my children, my animals — you crossed a line,” he tells Beck.

From there, they discuss a range of topics, from social media’s role in creating echo chambers to concerns about public schools pushing agendas that don’t sit well with traditional American families.

At the heart of it all is the cowboy code.

A no-nonsense perspective

Smith talks openly about the struggles he faces as a rancher, recounting his experience on his ranch near the U.S.-Mexico border, where he once had to confront illegal aliens disrupting his property. He provides a raw look at what many ranchers deal with every day, and Smith doesn’t sugarcoat the realities of an open border.

The conversation also touches on America’s beef industry, a topic Forrie is passionate about. As a lifelong cowboy, he’s dismayed by the decline in quality and the growing reliance on foreign meat.

Smith also has little patience for "greenies" who try to lecture people who have been stewarding the land for generations.

He points out the environmental hypocrisy, mentioning how 60 million buffalo once roamed the plains without creating a “climate crisis.” It’s refreshing, a reminder of the practical knowledge farmers and ranchers have always held about their land.

Resurgence of the American cowboy

"Yellowstone" has brought cowboy culture back into the limelight, and Smith sees it as a chance to remind Americans of their roots. In an age when traditional values are often attacked, Smith represents quiet, resilient strength — one rooted in family, hard work, and love for the land.

Smith's stories aren’t just anecdotes; they’re calls to action. He talks about neighborly values that feel increasingly rare, recounting how communities once pulled together in hard times.

Beck and Smith agree: America has lost much of this spirit, but it isn’t too late to bring it back. Smith's life proves that we don’t need big government to build strong communities — just good neighbors and a sense of responsibility.

Standing up, even when it’s hard

Throughout the conversation, Smith emphasizes the importance of standing up for what’s right, even when it’s uncomfortable.

He hasn’t been shy about speaking his mind, even if it means standing alone.

From refusing to comply with Hollywood’s COVID mandates to staying true to his cowboy roots, Smith embodies a level of conviction that’s rare in his industry. As he tells Beck, he knows that when things go south, it won’t be the wealthy elites who know how to survive — it’ll be men like him, who can “survive with a knife.”

Watch Beck's full interview with Smith below:

Make America ‘Cowboy’ Again: ‘Yellowstone’ star wants Americans to get out and VOTE



A true cowboy takes his hat off before dinner, in honor of the meal before him and the people who have provided it.

Forrie J. Smith from the hit show “Yellowstone” is one of these true blue cowboys with deep rancher roots, and he has some serious wisdom to impart to Glenn Beck of “The Glenn Beck Podcast” — as well as the rest of the country.

When Smith was a kid, he helped his grandfather take care of their cattle. However, he wasn’t so sure what the point of it all was.

“He looks at me with, ‘Well, son, we’re helping feed America. We’re helping feed our country,’ and that’s kind of the cowboy culture right there,” he tells Glenn. “We’re helping feed our country, we’re maintaining the grass and rotating our pasture to keep everything right.”


While there’s no doubt there’s an incredibly important purpose to the jobs of ranchers and farmers, the government has repeatedly attempted to hurt them through absurd rules and regulations — and it’s only getting worse.

“Another thing, Glenn, that really gets me is the cow farts,” Smith says. “We used to have 60 million buffalo and no telling how many elk running across the plains.”

“And they were farting animals,” Glenn laughs, though he notes that bison aren’t just good for farts. “There are no pure bison except in Yellowstone, and it’s my understanding that they sometimes thin the herd, and they just kill them instead of giving them to ranches so we can have pure-bred buffalo. The only pure buffalo or bison is owned by the government.”

“All of these people going hungry,” Smith says, disturbed. “It’s about one of the best meats you can eat.”

Not only is the government cracking down on meat born, raised, and butchered in the United States, but more of our meat is now coming from outside the country.

“30% of our beef now comes out of Brazil,” Smith explains. “We don’t know what has been done to it, you know, what did they inject in it before it got butchered, how are they butchering it, we have no clue.”

But it’s not just the agriculture industry that has Smith worried.

“I’m really scared of what’s going to happen after the election,” he tells Glenn. “I get around the country a lot more than I used to, and I’m meeting a lot of people and I talk to them about voting. And they’re like, ‘I ain't voting any more; I’m just buying more bullets.’”

“That’s one of the things that’s wrong with this country right now, is people don’t stand up. We just keep getting along,” he continues, adding, “I just want to spread that feeling: ‘Hey, we’re Americans.'”

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Wednesday Western: The top Western social media accounts



Social media has played an interesting role in the revival of Western cinema. I’ve compiled a list of social media accounts dedicated to Westerns.

This article doesn’t include blogs, podcasts, websites, or magazines. I’m currently working on an article for each, so definitely let me know any of these that I need to know about in the comments section, or send me an email.

The following list is by no means comprehensive. And at first glance, it may seem like a random assortment. The accounts vary in audience size, output, and content organization. They employ different media and delivery methods. Some are public; some require you to answer a questionnaire. Each of them is unique.

What unites them is a frontier spirit, a liveliness.

Official John Wayne - Instagram

It's no secret that I'm a huge fan of The Duke.

The official John Wayne Instagram page is probably my favorite Western social media account. The X account is also solid. But the Instagram account is far better.

It delivers the perfect number and flow of posts. And the descriptions, titles, and photos are all flawlessly assembled. I’d be shocked if it weren’t run by social media or marketing/PR professionals.

This is the proper handling of the John Wayne legacy. The people in charge of maintaining it make sure that the Duke’s legacy is truly an experience. All of it is interconnected through John Wayne Enterprises: the John Wayne Museum, the John Wayne Cancer Foundation, the John Wayne Grit Series, among others.

You can buy John Wayne cookbooks and a collection of cocktail recipes, coffee, ornamental cups and top-class clothing — all of which will appear in this series in exciting ways.

All of these converge at the Instagram account.

It’s comforting to see a passionate group of people devoted to the upkeep of the Duke’s invaluable legacy.

If all that weren’t good enough, they just launched a collaboration with Broken Bow Country, a friend of the Wednesday Western series, as captured in this profile.

Broken Bow Country: Meet the 17-year-old behind a viral Western clothing brandwww.theblaze.com

In fact, during our interview, we connected on the Duke and our admiration for the official John Wayne account.

Scrolling through this account, it feels like you’re reading a biography of the Duke, told in vignettes and accompanied by pictures, music, and video.

Some of the posts are simply gorgeous. They provide a holistic view of the Duke, a man unlike any other. They offer great commentary on various Wayne films and media appearances. They help you understand who John Wayne was behind the legend, as in this post about his prolific love of chess.

Other times, it’s playful, as with the incredibly creative inclusion of holidays, like this recent celebration of National Sunglasses Day.

The posts hit every emotion as we navigate John Wayne’s love life and comforts and disappointments and truest victories.

And America, you become closer to this great country. Just check out this 4th of July post. And, man, how about this one? Who else deserves to be the biggest movie star of all time?

Just Westerns - YouTube

Just Westerns is an entrepreneurial feat animated by one man’s love for Westerns. He has mastered the possibilities that YouTube offers.

And that narrator’s voice: That’s Marc Reynard, the Englishman in charge of Just Westerns, the unofficial home of Westerns on YouTube.

This dude is undoubtedly one of us.

He examines the genre from creative and at times surprising angles, like this video about the fate of “The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly 2.” You read that right: There was supposed to be a sequel.

His videos are smooth, well produced, well crafted, well written, sharp, fun, lovely, informative.

He also does something that I wish we had more of: He hypes upcoming and anticipated Westerns and compiles year-end lists and legitimizes the artistic merit of video games: “20 Best Western Video Games.” He also covers Wednesday Western favorite "Old Henry" (2021)

We need more of all of this. Best of all, you can feel his passion.

My only complaint is that the channel has only 30 videos. I went through them all at a steady clip.

But even this turns out to be further proof that you’re getting content that is authentically wholesome. Marc addresses it in his YouTube bio: “Please bear with me, I am a solo creator without the resources or manpower that larger channels typically have, so I am unfortunately unable to upload as regularly as I like, especially as I am committed to prioritizing quality over quantity.”

Take your time, brother. Personally, I think it's worth the wait.

r/Westerns - Reddit

Reddit can be a nasty place, especially if your politics are anything to the right of Bernie Sanders. And you can’t avoid the ideological slapfests, either. Leftist goons stir it up in every subreddit, constantly, and they’re almost always combative, even in the subreddits devoted to woodwork or kittens.

The Westerns subreddit is a clear exception. It’s a community. It feels like the town square of a dust-ridden Western town.

Check out this thread about “For a Few Dollars More.”

The mixed-media format of Reddit allows for a variety of sources: pictures, movies, trailers, interviews, text-only, even gifs. It might be the most versatile resource on this list.

It’s a great place for recommendations and commentary. Unlike much of the rest of Reddit, which is disproportionately loaded with young white liberal men, there’s an even spread of people of all ages.

These Redditors routinely swap personal stories about the various movies and actors. Some of their stories are poignant and evocative.

Back to the Old Western - Facebook

Facebook is a great place for Western fans. Instagram is too image-centered to accommodate text, and it doesn’t support links. Meanwhile, the microblogging experience of X is limited in its scope and impatient in its daunting pace — the temperament and vibe of Westerns don’t do well in such a frantic environment.

Facebook circumnavigates all of this, finally able to beat all the much lighter apps. For once, it finds an advantage to its cluttered user interface.

This bulk allows users to upload and share every type of content. No limitations. It’s the only platform capable of this, besides Reddit, but I’m not about to equate the megalith Facebook with the niche subreddit.

Besides, Facebook outperforms Reddit anyway. Its Pages function allows for an immersive blogging experience, run by moderators and admins who are passionate about their content and free to run their operation without much interference, right down to the parameters of the group’s privacy.

Back to the old western | Charles Bronson as Chino in classic western film 'The Valdez Horses' in 1973 | Facebookwww.facebook.com

Back to the Old Western is the perfect example of these principles. It is active, with a constant flow of posts, often aggregated from fan pages — the Duke and Sam Elliot, mostly.

The comments sections are fairly quiet, but most of the time people add substance or passion to the movie or actor being celebrated.

Chatter isn’t as important as it is on Reddit. The admins really know their stuff, offering a healthy range of mainstream Westerns, cult classics, and oddities, like this post celebrating Brigitte Bardot and Claudia Cardinale for their roles in “The Legend of Frenchie King” (1971), a wild little movie that will get its Wednesday Western spotlight in due time.

A Word on Westerns - YouTube

BLAZING SADDLES! The fart scene changed my life, says Burton Gilliam A WORD ON WESTERNSwww.youtube.com

I made a point to place Just Westerns higher up than A Word on Westerns, because Just Westerns is the passion project of an ordinary guy who loves Westerns, while A Word on Westerns is a proper television series. An exceedingly good one, with just as much passion and gusto.

It’s a fantastic channel. A Word on Westerns is sort of like a Western-only version of TMC, which is a thrilling reality. That’s the dream.

The channel features entire movies, each with a brief but thorough introduction by Rob Word, a double feature as part of the segment Word’s Wayback.

These are mostly 1930s and 1940s Westerns.

YouTube is an oddity on this list, because so many of the major Western channels exclusively post full movies. What a joy it is to find a rare Western on YouTube. But these channels lack the commentary and artistry that characterize the two YouTube channels I’ve included on this list.

A Word on Westerns blends the rustic ease of the Old West with the hypersonic immediacy of our infinite now. You can also access lectures, speeches, and clever projects like this "Gunsmoke" mash-up.

Smartest of all, it makes good use of the Shorts function on YouTube, will brief clips about various topics, from Robert Mitchum to stories of mutilation.

Western Podcast - X

The Western Podcast X page is small but mighty, with some impressive followers and praise from True West magazine.

Have you seen #HorizonAmericanSaga yet? If so, share your thoughts with us! We'll record a full podcast episode about the film in two weeks when Andrew is back from his vacation in Europe. In the meantime, here's Matt's highly positive take on Kevin Costner's latest Western epic. https://t.co/baVzZE4vPK
— @WesternPodcast (@WesternPodcast) June 28, 2024

It’s an offshoot of the marvelous podcast hosted by our friend Western apostle Andrew Patrick Nelson and the excellent Matthew Chernov, a screenwriter and a journalist with bylines in Variety, Entertainment Weekly, IMBd.com. Yahoo News, and about a hundred other outlets. His insight thrives with the joy of curiosity.

Andrew's Instagram account will keep you up to date with his media appearances and projects, with the occasional infusion of Hair Metal.

These boys are the real deal. Andrew just began his new job as chief curator of Western Spirit, Scottsdale's Museum of the West. Before that, he taught film history. As a professor at the University of Utah, Andrew guided his students through the badlands full of robbers and coyotes, only to unmask the villains hiding behind all their props and plywood scenery.

Why Millennials & Zoomers Should Watch Westerns | Andrew Patrick Nelson | Alignwww.youtube.com

Both of them are impressively smart with a tenderness for beauty, but not at the cost of a good story or a complicated hero.

They take their time with content, even tweets, but this adds to the reverence of their decision-making process. If you haven't taken the dive into their work already, do it.They have a gift for revealing the beautiful, intricate paradoxes of Western movies. They speak with screenwriters, historians, authors, journalists, musicians, directors, costume designers, and more.

They tell stories. They examine personal reactions to various films. They navigate themes of universality and timelessness within the motion of transcendence, while also exposing the flimsiness of any given cultural era.

Is Stagecoach the best movie ever made? Interview with Andrew Patrick Nelsonwww.youtube.com

They have a gift for discerning the role of Western movies in relation to our unexplained world, differentiating these fictions from their context and influence. But also, more impressively, they succeed in witnessing the presence of our entire universe in one tiny section of cinema history.

Both of them have helped yours truly at many points along our journey so far. They have guided me through the desert more than once.

Kevin Costner and Modern West - X

Kevin Costner & MW (@modernwest) on X

Kevin Costner & MW (@modernwest) on Xx.com

Kevin Costner is this era’s Clint Eastwood. He fights to keep the Western in public view, devoting himself to projects animated by passion, even if his wallet takes a hit. The victory is worth the risk.

He has ushered in a new era for the genre. His success with "Yellowstone" and its Western universe of shows has accelerated the Western’s resurgence. But it’s more than that. We're also witnessing a flourishing of the Western as an ethos, a style, a mode of thought, an approach to life.

So did you realize that Kevin Costner has a country band? Founded in 2007, Kevin Costner and Modern West deliver rowdy songs written for the culturally forgotten people of America. The band's history is tinged with tragedy.

The Kevin Costner and Modern West account is technically the band’s, but it posts tons of Costner content, all hand-picked and polished by a team of social media professionals.

Best Cowboy Movies Forever - Facebook

Best cowboy movies forever | Alan Ladd, Jean Arthur, and Van Heflin in "Shane" (1953) | Facebookwww.facebook.com

There are several variations on the “Western” + “Forever” title, but I’m going with Best Cowboy Movies Forever. I enjoy the way the account profiles various actors, like this post about Lee Van Cleef.

It also includes Westerns from every different era. This is important. It’s good to hop around in this way. I’m partial to the 1939-1960 era of the genre, so I can plant myself in that time exclusively if I’m not careful.

The page rarely ventures into the current scene. But this isn’t a problem. It’s important to offer due reverence to the originators.

Old West - Actors, Films, and Legends - Facebook

www.facebook.com

Old West zooms in so that we get a portrait view of an incredible variety of Western actors, films, and legends, like this post devoted to Myron Halle or this homage to Elsa Martinelli. I value any source that prioritizes the lesser-known figures in the genre. Because, as we all know, the Western genre is overflowing with stories, entire generations of actors, producers, directors, screenwriters — you name it — whose fascinating tales deserve to be recounted.

As much as I love the giants of the genre, I derive incredible joy from learning about these forgotten figures.

Passion for Western Movies - Instagram

Passion for Western Movies makes great use of Instagram’s Reels format.

The account does a lot of this kind of multi-movie post, offering a list of movies connected by timeframe or theme.

Passion for Western Movies lives up to its name, able to glide around the history of the Western genre, seemingly without partiality. It also features lesser-known movies, like this post about "The Hunting Party," which features Gene Hackman.

Broken Bow Country - Instagram

I’m a bit biased on this one, because I think Colton is an absolute legend, but Broken Bow Country is perfect for this list.

The Western experience you get is fairly rough around the edges, in a distinctly modern way. But modernity never wins against Broken Bow Country.

It’s unique for many reasons but primarily because, in addition to its Western ethos, it is a clothing retailer and printmaker. No other creator on our list offers this level of art and style.

Then you’ve got the lore, the storytelling that comes with his posts, the war hymns of country-Western rebels and the toll their rebellion often took on their lives.

The past month has been wild for Colton. Early in July, he landed a collaboration with John Wayne Enterprises. The T-shirts are fantastic. In fact, I’m wearing one of them in the cover photo for Wednesday Western.

Then, a gunman on a sloped roof tried to murder former President Donald Trump, who was days away from officially accepting his party’s nomination.

In the panicky hours that followed, many people succumbed to their emotions, others to their resolve. I won’t pretend to have remained cool.

But Colton did. Following the Trump assassination attempt, he designed a T-shirt honoring one of the most American moments in human history, as Trump rose with his fist in the air. And he donated all of the money to a charity for Corey Comperatore, the man who died shielding his family from one of the gunman’s bullets.

This was a controversial move. He even faced the nasty comments about how the shooter shouldn’t have missed or that the deaths of the victims were “completely deserved.”

He lost a few thousand followers, but he describes it as “inconsequential when you think about the people that it's helping to support.”

In a press release, he said, “This has nothing to do with politics, I was incredibly moved by what happened and I wanted to use my platform to do something that extended beyond the controversy and the arguing.”

Lancer TV Blog - Facebook

Last and certainly not least, Lancer TV Blog on Facebook. It is run by a friend of mine, an avid supporter of Wednesday Western.

Unlike every other entry included on this list, Lancer TV Blog focuses entirely on one show, a show that hardly anyone knows. This reversal in focus is good for a movie lover’s mental sharpness.

I’m working on a deep dive into "Lancer," so I won’t say too much.

Beyond the merits of the show and its cast, "Lancer" is an underdog story still in the middle stages, badgered by uncertainty. Because the show hasn’t had a reboot, despite success throughout its two (long) seasons on CBS. So it’s not an issue of merit; the show deserves a second wind. It would very likely expand its audience.

But none of that matters for the art trapped in the murk of a waiting area, a zone of uncertainty. And the gifted athlete eventually starts to wobble. Filmstock degrades. All technology collapses. Call it the inevitable disintegration of a lively body, in this case a body of art.

Even the most perfect masterpieces eventually crumble. But what if that happens to be your masterpiece? What if it’s your tiny heaven, all tangled up in red tape? Life has enough of this disintegration as it is. Our entertainment needs to be clean, enjoyable, and easily accessible. Or so claims the majority.

Well, thank God for the passionate workers of cultural excavation. They dig and fight. They protect, sustain, and preserve. Without them, life would be less beautiful. Without them, our society would be weaker and tamer and less able to see a way out.

"Lancer" episodes run an hour. This extended run time fundamentally changes the character and depth of a TV show. It’s amazing what an episode can accomplish in one hour that it simply can’t in 30 minutes.

What you’ll find, as you scroll through the posts on the Lancer Facebook page, is purity. This fandom rewards people with a tiny kingdom, a crafted world they can always turn to. That experience should rile up every single person.

There’s a fidelity to their affection that is heartwarming. The Lancer TV Blog connects you to this incredibly pure relation. It’s just there, like sand across the winds of time.

WATCH: Lara Trump tells Sara Gonzales how she plans to win elections as RNC chair



Lara Trump, Donald Trump’s daughter-in-law, recently announced her plans to run as the new co-chair for the Republican National Committee in the wake of Ronna McDaniel’s announcement that she’d be stepping down.

Now, Laura joins Sara Gonzales to discuss her plans for rebuilding and rebranding the Republican Party.

“This is a position for which I never imagined I'd run, but I also never imagined our country would be in such a bad spot,” she says. “We really have a must-win election on November 5, and the reality is you cannot win a presidential election without the Republican National Committee.”

She goes on to explain how the key to success will be “changing our approach” when it comes to elections.

“As conservatives ... we want paper ballots; we want voter ID everywhere, but we don't live in that day right now, and the way we get to that spot is electing president Donald Trump, taking back the Senate, and expanding our lead in the House so we can actually make those substantive changes,” she tells Sara.

For now, she says, “we need to make sure that early voting is something we are talking about as conservatives. The first day early voting starts in your state ... get out and vote; then you take someone with you every day up until Election Day to vote” so that the party has “banked votes” and avoids “going into Election Day at a deficit.”

Further, we need “trained poll-watchers ... who can physically handle the ballots” and “count how many ballots are coming into a location and how many are going out, so we don't have miraculous suitcases full of ballots showing up after or on Election Day.”

Perhaps, more than anything, “we need to re-establish trust in this entity — the RNC,” Lara says.

As a Trump family member, Lara says she’ll “be watching every penny and ensuring it goes to causes we care about.”

She also intends to “check out every vendor that the RNC is using” as well as “all of the staff there.”

When Sara asked if she would be open to working with Scott Presler, Lara said, “I think Scott Presler is amazing. What he’s done for voter registration is incredible,” adding that she hopes to “put him in charge of our legal ballot-harvesting operation.”

“[Democrats] have the whole media apparatus behind them,” she explained, adding that it’s “basically their marketing arm.”

“We know that they've been slippery in elections before ... and it's not going to be their first rodeo, so, we've got to play the game even better,” which is why she “loves the idea of Scott Presler.”

To hear more, watch the clip below.


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Naval officer who decapitated Iowa demon statue charged with HATE CRIME?



Former Mississippi political candidate and naval officer Michael Cassidy is facing felony hate crime charges for decapitating a satanic statue in Iowa.

The co-founder of the Satanic Temple that put the statue up claimed putting the statue in a public forum was an expression of religious freedom. Cassidy drove to Iowa to see it for himself and felt so strongly that it shouldn’t be there that he proceeded to destroy the statue.

In the charges against Cassidy, prosecutors cited a violation of individual rights under Iowa’s hate crime statute. In addition, they say evidence suggests Cassidy destroyed the statue due to the victim’s religion.

“I fail to see the victim here,” Sara Gonzales says. “Is the victim the statue? The victim is the person who created this beautiful statue that nobody wanted?”

The creators of the statue are claiming the cost to replace it is between $750 and $1,500.

“Our dark gods are cheap these days,” Chad Prather jokes.

Though he’s facing legal repercussions, Cassidy is now being hailed as a hero by many on the right — and the proof is in the GiveSendGo campaign that has raised over $105,000 for his legal defense.

While Gonzales is happy he’s being helped, she doesn’t find it comforting that Cassidy now has to take on the law.

“It’s just depressing because it’s like, well, they finally stood up and did something and what are the thanks? That they get thrown into prison? Who the hell is going to stand up next time?” Gonzales says.


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‘Justified: City Primeval’ Is Worse Than Bad. It’s Boring.

The drab sequel to 'Justified' completely misses the point.

'Left for greener pastures together': Professional rodeo cowboy and his horse killed by lightning strike



A professional rodeo athlete and his horse were killed by a lightning strike in a rural area of Nebraska.

Terrel Vineyard, 27, was on horseback checking on cattle north of Oshkosh shortly after 2 p.m. on June 21, the Garden County Attorney’s Office said in a statement to KNOP-TV.

Vineyard, a married father of three, was pronounced dead by first responders at the scene.

An autopsy confirmed that Vineyard died from a lightning strike, the attorney’s office said.

Vineyard's horse, named Dose, was also killed by the lightning strike.

Vineyard was a professional calf and team roper who qualified for the World Series of Team Roping in Las Vegas on three occasions.

Mike Kammerer, president of the Wyoming Rodeo Association, told the Cowboy State Daily, "Our thoughts and prayers and condolences for the families from the Wyoming Rodeo Association. That just hits close to home, because the one thing about rodeo families is they’re all pretty tightknit."

Vineyard leaves behind his wife, Stacey, and three young daughters.

He was buried on Tuesday in Nebraska.

A GoFundMe campaign was launched to financially assist the Vineyard family.

"Terrel had many horses along the way but always had a main mount during each phase of his life. Terrel purchased Dose a few years ago as a roping prospect. Terrel and Dose left for greener pastures together – Terrel with his rope in hand," the fundraising campaign stated.

Vineyard and his wife got married earlier this year, according to the GoFundMe listing.

Stacey Vineyard wrote on Facebook, “June 27th, 2023 we laid our husband, son, and brother to rest. It has been truly humbling to receive the love that has been shown for Terrel and all of us."

Mourners brought horses to Terrel's funeral service.

"The Vineyard family wants to thank everyone for what they have done for us the last week and moving forward. Helping us prepare for Terrel’s service and making sure we are also taken care of," the widow said. "Thank you to those who graciously contributed to the girls' memorial account and to those who have made meals for us. It has been truly humbling to receive the love that has been shown for Terrel and all of us."

The National Lightning Safety Council said Vineyard's death was the sixth U.S. fatality from lightning in 2023. There were 19 lightning-caused fatalities in 2022.

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From John Wayne To John Wick, American Cinema Loves The Noble Outlaw

Moviegoers consistently appreciate characters like John Wick, the noble outlaw, the cowboy in a bulletproof Armani suit.