The Lowdown is an eight-part neo-noir series set in Tulsa and produced by Ethan Hawke. Hawke plays the show's protagonist, a scruffy investigative journalist named Lee Raybon. Raybon fancies himself a "Truthstorian"-- that is, a sort of muckraking historian committed to uncovering the uncomfortable truths about Tulsa and its environs. He writes for a life-style periodical, a bit like the granddaddy of all such 'zines, The Village Voice. At one time, these sorts of publications supported a diverse population of columnists, muckraking journalists, city-hall reporters, and sex advice writers. The Lowdown is dated in that these periodicals have all gone the way of the dinosaurs, rendered extinct by the internet -- even the redoubtable Village Voice is a mere shadow of its former self. Accordingly, the program requires an initial suspension of disbelief -- the series' politics and milieu make The Lowdown feel like its set in the late seventies or early eighties, but, in fact, I think, it's supposed to be contemporary. The show's somewhat archaic (and obsolete) ambience is considerably heightened by its soundtrack, featuring slightly sinister tunes by J.J. Cale as well as some country-western songs by David Alan Coe and the like. The series has a hip, outlaw perspective -- it's full of references to Faulkner, Tulsa's own Joe Brainard (a famous gay painter and writer), Larry Clarke (who made Kids in Tulsa), and the pulp crime writer, Jim Thompson. It's the kind of show rife with allusions that flatters the viewer by making him or her feel like a hipster "in the know" as to the local "home-cooking" that the program presents. The faded disreputable neighborhoods in Tulsa, under the shadow of the downtown skyscrapers built by oil companies, are vividly rendered and the program has a funky improvised feeling. One of the producers, Sterling Harjo, is known for another show set in Oklahoma, Reservation Dogs, and the cast is enlivened by a number of Native American actors, some of whom are very funny -- the late Graham Greene, a renowned Indian actor, has a small cameo in one of the episodes. There are a number of effective Black character actors in the show -- in fact, Lee Raybon, the hero, has a black sidekick and aspects of series invoke the buddy comedies on the seventies and eighties as well.
The plot is predictable and many of the shows genre conventions are completely stereotypical. The crusading "Truthstorian" comes equipped with an attractive and sassy ex-wife and perky, feisty teenage daughter. (The girl helps her father solve the crime or explicate the corrupt situation that the program shows us.) There is a big Black man with an eyepatch who seems to be hosting a perpetual smoky barbecue party with backroom where deals get done. Kyle McLaughlin is excellent as a seemingly corrupt politician who is running for governor of the State and entangled with a network of White supremacists and skin-head Nazis. The politician's brother, a gay cowboy, has been found dead. Raybon knows the man slightly -- he once came into Raybon's used bookstore and, in a dreamlike scene, states the show's premise: "There is only one plot: Things aren't what they seem." citing Jim Thompson, the crime writer. Investigating the gay cowboy's death, Raybon stumbles into a complicated conspiracy which has to do with eliminating the cowboy (the bad guys have staged his death as a suicide) so as to implement a real estate transaction involving land stolen from the Osage Indians. (Raybon who is quick with allusions describes the plot as being like Chinatown,) Raybon encounters various crooked corporate executives and religious fanatics -- the episodes are full of memorable eccentric characters. About every two shows, the bad guys warn Raybon to stop snooping around and give him a beating to impress the point on him. But Raybon is indefatigable and ultimately publishes an essay uncovering the plot. There are some refreshingly unexpected twists in the last episode which imparts to the whole thing a mood of low-key, comic ebullience -- there are some violent scenes and one gruesome sequence in which a man is tarred and feathered (sustaining terrible burns) but the show doesn't get too dire and the tone remains reasonably light-hearted. The ending features a wedding and one of the main characters, shown to be a villain, weepily performing the song "Luckenbach, Texas" in a Tulsa dive bar -- the woman can't sing but performs the entire song.
The show is shaggy and digresses frequently. The digressions which have boozy, blurry, dream quality and are the best things in the show. The program treats us to extended sequences in which people just get drunk and converse without moving the plot forward at all; there's an extended seduction in which the characters slowly get drunk enough to fall into bed together. These idiosyncratic parts of The Lowdown are where the show really shines -- it's unhurried, charming, and atmospheric; watching these scenes the viewer feels enveloped in a haze of cannabis smoke or half-drunk on good bourbon. The progam's glory is its cast: Jeanne Tripplehorn plays the adulterous wife of the poor dead cowboy (a part played effectively by the soft-spoken Tim Blake Nelson); Tracy Letts, who is the palest of all pale faces, plays a corporate assassin and Peter Dinklage appears in one show as a berserker used book shop owner who was previously in business with Raybon. There are many Native American actors who are very funny. In the last episode, some key scenes are shot in the Philbrook Museum of Art in Tulsa with its weird melange of solomonic, twisted columns and Spanish Mission style colonnades. The wedding at the end takes place in the Philbrook's impressive ornamental gardens. (The Philbrook Museum is located in the mansion once owned by the Philips Petroleum mogul, Wade Philips.)
The Low Down is an excellent series and I recommend it enthusiastically.