Sterlin Harjo says the opening minutes of his new FX series connect directly to the world of Reservation Dogs, and the link happened by chance. In the first scene of The Lowdown, Ethan Hawke’s Tulsa bookseller-journalist passes a young woman on the street; Harjo confirms the passerby is Paulina Alexis, who played Willie Jack, and adds that the cameo was improvised when the actor texted that she was unexpectedly in town. He also states the shows share a universe, a playful “Sterlin-universe” that lets familiar faces nod to each other without disrupting new stories.
The Lowdown follows Lee Raybon, a dogged reporter modeled in part on Tulsa truth-tellers, and it extends Harjo’s Oklahoma project from Reservation Dogs’ rural vantage to an urban one. Ahead of launch, Harjo described the series as a love letter to Tulsa that embraces its beauty and its shadows, framing the city’s history and present-day power structures as fuel for a contemporary noir. That focus situates the cameo as tone-setting texture rather than franchise building: a quick glance that signals continuity of place, community, and humor while the new show pursues its own mystery.
Harjo has long threaded collaboration and serendipity through his productions, and the premiere’s sidewalk moment underscores how his ensemble frequently overlaps across projects. Hawke previously appeared on Reservation Dogs, and here he leads an eight-episode story pitched between pulp and reportage, with conspiracies, political ambition, and Tulsa’s cultural memory shaping the stakes. State officials marked the series’ Oklahoma production footprint this week, highlighting the return of a creative team that has become closely tied to the region’s screen identity.
Early responses cast The Lowdown as a distinct work that still bears Harjo’s signature: eccentric side characters, laconic humor, and a grounded sense of place. The unplanned cameo lands as an Easter egg for Reservation Dogs viewers and a simple human beat for newcomers, reinforcing Harjo’s stated aim to tell interconnected stories rooted in the same soil without requiring prior homework.















































