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Sterlin Harjo, of Reservation Dogs fame, is back with another unique and critically acclaimed series, this one starring Ethan Hawke as a folksy citizen journalist (or “truthstorian,” as he prefers), based loosely on the real-life activist best known for uncovering new details about the 1921 Black Wall Street massacre in Tulsa. Joined by Keith David’s Marty (and a genuinely impressive supporting cast), Hawke’s Lee Raybon has a relentless need to explore the dark corners of his community and its history, and unfailing ability to find trouble in the process. There are crime drama and neo-noir elements, but blended with a loose, sometimes quirky tone and an interest in the histories of Tulsa’s various and interconnected communities. It’s one other streaming’s buzziest, best-reviewed shows which is, of course, not necessarily enough to warrant a renewal these days. We’re still waiting on word of a second season.
You can stream The Lowdown on Hulu or buy episodes from Prime Video and Apple TV.
Sharp Objects (2018)
Based on the Gillian Flynn novel, Amy Adams stars here as Camille Preaker, a troubled reporter with substance abuse issues who’s only recently been released from a psychiatric hospital. I’m not sure what step of recovery this is, but Camille returns to her hometown of Wind Gap, Missouri in order to investigate the murder of one girl and the apparently related disappearance of another—all under the watchful, extremely critical eye of her socialite mother, Adora (Patricia Clarkson). The tone here is quite a bit darker than that of The Lowdown, but there’s still the sense of buried secrets and lies in a small, southern (-esque) town. Stream Sharp Objects on HBO Max or buy episodes from Prime Video and Apple TV.
Bodkin (2024)
A slightly better tonal match for Lowdown—at least in that it allows for a bit of humor to penetrate its world—Bodkin takes us to the title’s rather quirky Irish coastal town. Will Forte plays Gilbert Power, an American podcaster who arrives to investigate the cold case of three people who went missing during a Samhain celebration three decades prior. He’s soon joined by Dove Maloney (Siobhán Cullen), a Dublin-born journalist who’d been living in London, and aspiring journalist Emmy Sizergh (Robyn Cara). It’s very nearly a satire of the genre, with an engaging mystery at its heart nonetheless. Stream Bodkin on Netflix.
When They See Us (2019)
Where The Lowdown includes peaks at real history, Ava DuVerney’s docudrama puts a laser-focus on the 1989 Central Park jogger case—Trisha Meili was assaulted and raped in the park, leading to the convictions of five Black teenagers based largely on circumstantial evidence and coerced confessions. The show follows Kevin Richardson (Asante Blackk), Antron McCray (Caleel Harris), Yusef Salaam (Ethan Herisse), Korey Wise (Jharrel Jerome), and Raymond Santana (Marquis Rodriguez) from conviction into adulthood, and to the five ultimately being exonerated by DNA evidence and the real attacker’s confession. It’s a more serious story of the importance of uncovering buried truths, all the more relevant given that the President has continued to call for the death penalty for the five exonerated men, raising the issue as recently as 2024. Stream When They See Us on Netflix.
Fargo (2014 – 2024)
This season-by-season anthology crime drama finds us in the Midwest, mostly, blending crime drama, small town secrets, and healthy heaps of dark humor. The quirky characters in the shifting cast are sometimes lovable, sometimes reprehensible, but they’re consistently compelling in the style of the (fictional, at least) residents of Tulsa. Stream Fargo on Hulu or buy episodes from Prime Video.
Sons of Anarchy (2008 – 2014)
Charlie Hunnam leads an impressive ensemble cast here (including Katey Sagal and Ron Perlman) in the story of an outlaw motorcycle club in the fictional Charming, California. Hunnam’s Jax Teller leads the club, coming to question himself and his beliefs even as he tries to hold the club together and protect his Central Valley community. Though the drama is frequently Shakespearean, and the Cali setting is far removed from Tulsa, there’s still the sense of a tight-knit community that’s alternately strengthened and threatened by internal conflict. Stream Sons of Anarchy on Hulu or buy episodes from Prime Video and Apple TV.
Reservation Dogs (2021 – 2023)
I couldn’t go another moment without recommending Lowdown creator Sterlin Harjo’s previous masterpiece, the unjustly short-lived Reservation Dogs (co-created with Taika Waititi). This one gets a ton of credit for its North American Indigenous representation (characters and cast, as well as behind the scenes), and it’s a great show for it—a true dramedy that manages to bring both solid laughs and moments of heartbreak. It deals with issues and emotions common to rural teenagers who dream of going elsewhere, yet specific to these Oklahoma Rez teenagers. Each of the show’s three seasons is better than the one prior. Stream Reservation Dogs on Hulu.
Mare of Easttown (2021)
Kate Winslet picked up an Emmy for her performance as thoroughly troubled Mare Sheehan, a local hero in her days as a high school basketball champ, but with a reputation that’s rapidly losing its luster. As a police detective, she’s been unable to solve the case of a missing girl even as she’s confronted with a recently murdered teenage mother. Stream Mare of Easttown on HBO Max or buy episodes from Prime Video and Apple TV.
Watchmen (2019)
This criminally underrated adaptation/continuation of the graphic novel is perhaps a bit of a stretch here, but bear with me: There are key connections. Set in an alternate Tulsa, Oklahoma, in a world where super-powered vigilantes exist and have been outlawed, the series starts, dramatically, with the massacre of Tulsa’s Black Wall Street by white residents in 1921. Regina King plays Angela Abar, a modern cop whose grandparents were killed during the 1921 attacks, an event that echoes through both our own history and that of the characters in the series. Not only is the setting appropriate to that of The Lowdown, as is the theme of history impacting the present, there’s also a link to the events of 1921: The Lowdown‘s Lee Raybon is based, loosely, on the life of folk historian Lee Roy Chapman, most famous for uncovering the direct organizing role of Tulsa’s founder in the massacre. Stream Watchmen on HBO Max or buy episodes from Prime Video and Apple TV.
Echo (2024)
While the Tulsa of The Lowdown has a nearly small-town vibe, Echo takes us to Tamaha—a couple of hours south, but home to only a couple of hundred people and built on Choctaw land (the show was actually filmed in Georgia, so do with that what you will). Alaqua Cox plays Maya Lopez in this Marvel miniseries, a deaf former criminal and Chahta returning to her hometown and trying, with mixed results, to escape her past as an enforcer for Wilson Fisk (Vincent D’Onofrio). A drama of crime and redemption, Echo finds Maya reconnecting with her current family as well as her ancestral past, each episode beginning with a flashback that takes us from the pre-historic origins of the Nation through centuries of growth and conflict, ultimately linking that history to Maya’s own childhood. Stream Echo on Disney+.
Rutherford Falls (2020 – 2022)
Writer and producer Sierra Teller Ornelas joins Ed Helms and Michael Schur here, with Helms playing Nathan Rutherford, a descendent of a guy whose statue has a prominent spot in the title town. His best friend is Reagan Wells (Jana Schmieding), who runs the local cultural center for the (fictional) Minishonka tribe. The two are on completely different sides of the big issues that arise when the mayor wants to take down the old statue (mostly because it’s in a bad spot and cars keep running into it), but work to maintain their friendship anyway. it’s a sitcom, but, like The Lowdown, isn’t afraid to have complicated conversations about American Indigenous history, buoyed here by the record number of Indigenous writers on staff, including Ornelas herself. Stream Rutherford Falls on Peacock or buy episodes from Prime Video and Apple TV.
Only Murders in the Building (2021 – )
At first blush, Only Murders looks like a tonal mismatch, but it and Lowdown have enough in common to warrant a mention here. In Murders, three (initially) amateur podcasters come together in order to solve a murder in their Upper West Side apartment building. Each subsequent seasons sees a new murder (or murders), but in each instance our citizen journalists (Selena Gomez, Martin Short, and Steve Martin) are forced to dig deep into the histories of the individuals whom they’re investigating, either as victims or suspects, uncovering hidden stories and secrets that span decades. It’s often quite a bit sillier than our subject, but, as with Lowdown, the show’s quirky characters are aways a solid hang. Stream Only Murders in the Building on Hulu.
Dark Winds (2022 – )
Heading a bit west of Lowdown‘s Oklahoma setting, Dark Winds, adapted from a series of books by Tony Hillerman, takes up back to the 1970s and the Four Corners region of the American Southwest (where Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona meet). Zahn McClarnon, Kiowa Gordon, and Jessica Matten lead the largely Native American cast as three Navajo Tribal Police officers brought together when a bank robbery on the border of the Navajo nation becomes entangled with the deaths of two Native residents. The show blends hardboiled crime and police procedural elements, but stands out for its exploration of the fraught history and relationships between these neighboring, interwoven communities. Stream Dark Winds on Netflix or buy episodes from Prime Video and Apple TV.
