Fact vs. fiction: What Montana livestock investigators actually do, beyond 'Yellowstone'
NOV 14, 202429 MIN
Fact vs. fiction: What Montana livestock investigators actually do, beyond 'Yellowstone'
NOV 14, 202429 MIN
Description
<p dir="ltr">Snow-dusted peaks towered in the background, cows lowed in the expansive rangeland and cowboys on horseback moved heifers and steers off trailers.</p>
<p dir="ltr">There wasn’t a film camera in sight, but it sure looked, sounded and felt like a scene straight out of the hit television show "Yellowstone.”</p>
<p dir="ltr">And Wes Seward certainly looked the part donning his black cowboy hat and worn-in cowboy boots, with a gun holstered on his hip. </p>
<p dir="ltr">But Seward isn’t an actor pretending he’s an agent of the show’s fictional Montana Livestock Association. He is a district livestock investigator for the very real Montana Department of Livestock, a state agency with a history that reaches back to before the state’s formation and a mandate to ensure law and order within the state’s expansive ranching industry. </p>
<p dir="ltr">"Yellowstone" hasn’t just borrowed from Seward’s reality, though.</p>
<p dir="ltr">It has changed it, bringing in more people, more animals, more money and more pressure on livestock producers who already face long days and long odds to make a living and to keep Montana’s ranching tradition alive.</p>
<p dir="ltr">With me today is Ted McDermott a reporter with Lee Enterprises’ Public Service Journalism who recently reported on the world of livestock police and the effects of the TV show on life in Montana.</p>
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