Chad Feehan will leave Dutton Ranch after its first season, creating a leadership change for the latest Yellowstone extension less than a month before the Beth-and-Rip spinoff premieres May 15. Feehan created the series and served as showrunner and executive producer, but he will not return in that role if Paramount+ orders a second season. No replacement has been announced.
The decision follows completion of the nine-episode first season, which will open with two episodes on Paramount+ and Paramount Network before shifting to a weekly release. Reports have linked the split to dissatisfaction among key creative figures, including Taylor Sheridan, executive producer David Glasser and stars Kelly Reilly and Cole Hauser, who also hold executive producer credits. One account said Reilly and Hauser clashed with Feehan during production, though the studio has not laid out a public account of the dispute.
Dutton Ranch follows Beth Dutton and Rip Wheeler after the events of Yellowstone, moving the couple from Montana into a harsher South Texas setting. The official logline places them against a rival ranch willing to defend its power at any cost. Finn Little returns as Carter, with Annette Bening, Ed Harris, Jai Courtney, Marc Menchaca, Juan Pablo Raba, Natalie Alyn Lind and J.R. Villarreal joining the cast.
Feehan’s exit carries extra weight because he came into the project with Sheridan-world experience. He previously created Lawmen: Bass Reeves, a Paramount+ western executive produced by Sheridan and led by David Oyelowo. His departure also lands during a busy and sometimes turbulent period for Sheridan’s television empire, which now stretches across Yellowstone, 1923, 1883, Marshals, The Madison, Tulsa King, Landman and other projects.
The franchise remains one of Paramount’s most valuable scripted assets. Chris McCarthy, head of Showtime and MTV Entertainment Studios, said in 2023 that Yellowstone had grown from a U.S. cable hit into a global franchise with “over 100 million fans around the world.” That scale makes Dutton Ranch a major test: the series must carry two of the flagship drama’s most popular characters while moving forward under a changed creative structure.





















































