‘Marshals’ Actor Mo Brings Plenty Breaks Down the Native Stories in the ‘Yellowstone’ Spin-Off


Marshals is the first network TV series to expand the Yellowstone canon, airing new episodes each week on CBS on Sundays, and streaming the following day on Paramount Plus. The show follows Kayce Dutton (Luke Grimes), who aims to start a new life by joining the US Marshals. He may be driven to enforce justice in his hometown, but demons from his past haunt him as he moves forward with this new endeavor.

Grimes is one of a few faces familiar to audiences, as he starred in Taylor Sheridan’s flagship series. Bridging the story universe beneath the veneer of a weekly crime procedural are Native American actors Gil Birmingham, who plays Chief Thomas Rainwater; Mo Brings Plenty, who plays his right-hand man, Mo; and Brecken Merrill, who plays Kayce’s son, Tate Dutton.

Throughout the first few episodes, a throughline narrative about the people of the Broken Rock reservation — the tainted water on their property, and the mining company seeking access to the land — has added familiar stakes to the series. This conflict acts as a bridge to the Yellowstone story and propels things into high-stakes territory.

What do I mean by that? Well, instead of waxing poetic about what I think this fictional storyline may represent to those who live on a reservation, I got firsthand insight from someone with a strong connection to Yellowstone, the Marshals and Native American heritage: Mo Brings Plenty.

Mo is part of the Oglala Lakota Nation and served as the American Indian Affairs coordinator on Yellowstone — a role he continues today on Marshals. He joined me on Zoom to discuss the series, how it relates to the real challenges his community faces daily and why Native representation matters — even when it’s in a CBS procedural.

Production still from Marshals showing Mo Brings Plenty and Gil Birmingham talking outside.

Mo Brings Plenty and Gil Birmingham star in Marshals.

Sonja Flemming/CBS

How has the relationship between Mo, Rainwater and Kayce Dutton evolved from the beginning of Yellowstone to where we are now? Is it safe to say that they’re all pretty much, whether it’s spoken or not, on the same page with how they are viewing this conflict?
Brings Plenty: The relationship between the Duttons and the reservation dates back to 1883. Kayce married a woman from the Broken Rock Reservation. That was Monica. In that marriage, and them having a child together, and now, with Monica’s absence because of her passing due to cancer, Kayce feels he has to step in and fill that void now for his son. And so our relationship and bond have become even stronger, especially with Rainwater adopting Kayce, taking him in as a brother.

Mo and Casey have always been seen as warriors. So they always had that brotherhood. They have an unspoken language, and they know it. Kayce still runs his cows there in East camp. And so, when it comes to the water, there was a scene where Rainwater had a moment on Kayce’s porch, was offered some water, and he said, “One day that’s going to be worse than moonshine.” I think it was just about protection, again, of a vital source that all humans and life need.

Let’s talk about the water. The conflict between the Broken Rock reservation and the mining company isn’t going away. And this is all happening while people have gotten sick and died due to chemicals in the drinking water. How does this storyline convey the struggles and reality of life on the res?
Brings Plenty: What it means is this: There are already health issues on a reservation, and our health care system is pretty overwhelmed. We don’t have services that help assist us in prevention. Everything is OK. We have an ER room that’s always open, and so it’s always after the fact. It’s an environmental issue pertaining to us as people. 

We, as a reservation, do get federal funding, but you’re only given so many dollars a year, and what you do with those dollars matters, and they count. If you have other health issues that are now affecting people, such as drinking water, how are we going to get another source of water? How can another source provide good water for the people? But we didn’t have the funds to do that. And so that’s why the standoff happened, and why it’s something that’s near and dear to Kayce’s heart and mind as well. 

Production still from Marshals showing Brecken Merrill holding up a picture of Kelsey Asbille in a crowd of protestors.

Brecken Merrill stars in Marshals.

Sonja Flemming/CBS

It’s no secret that Native and Indigenous stories are pretty lacking on network TV. Considering that Marshals is a CBS show, what do you want to bring to the series to honor Yellowstone and your heritage?
What I hope to bring is the fact that we are very much just like everyone else in society, you know? And we have our goods, our ups and our downs. We are ranchers. We’re very much part of the Western heritage as well. I have a ranch right now, and we have cows and horses. When people think about a cowboy, they don’t usually think of anything outside of a Caucasian individual. But you know, we come in all different shapes, sizes and races. I grew up on a reservation, and I worked as a ranch hand, rode horses pretty much my whole life and thought I could ride and be a rodeo cowboy, as well. We’re still a part of that.

From that perspective, what are you hoping the CBS audience will take away specifically from the Broken Rock storyline within Marshals?
The Broken Rock Reservation is a made-up reservation, but we’ve incorporated a lot of the culture into it. Not every tribe speaks the same language, not every tribe does the same thing. Our ceremonies are different. Our processes of grieving and loss are different. And even for me, I wear two braids every single day of my life because that’s part of my cultural identity, and it’s a way to honor the life-givers, which we call women: our mothers, our grandmothers and our sisters. So you have many different tribes in this country, and we all do things differently. There are only a very few things that are universal.

Like water.
That’s right, absolutely. That’s where it comes back to. It’s such a big thing for me because we’re taxpayers, too. We pay taxes just like everyone else, so these different [government] departments should be able to step up and do something for us as well, help us out when we need it. 





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Recent Reviews


In Cody v. Jill Acquisition LLC, No. 25-937 (S.D. Cal. June 30, 2025), the Southern District of California declined to enforce a retail site’s terms of use and compel arbitration, holding that the plaintiff, who used guest checkout to place an online order at the retail clothing site, did not have adequate notice of the terms and the arbitration clause. This case should serve as a wake-up call for online entities to reexamine electronic contracting processes. It exemplifies how, even if a website’s visual design and its placement of the hyperlinked Terms of Use during user checkout are comparable to other presentations that have been deemed enforceable, a court could still decline to enforce online terms if the context of the transaction is not the typical e-commerce transaction between a registered customer and a retail site. In this case, the court found that by checking out as a guest without creating an account, the user was less likely to expect a continuing relationship and, therefore, the site’s notice and presentation of the terms below the “Place Order” button were not conspicuous enough in this instance to bind the plaintiff.

The plaintiff in Cody filed a putative class action complaint over the site’s pricing policies for alleged violations of the California Business and Professions Code and the Consumer Legal Remedies Act. The defendant moved to compel arbitration, arguing the plaintiff had agreed to the site’s terms of use that contained a “Binding Arbitration Agreement and Class Action Waiver” when plaintiff clicked the “Place Order” button and completed her purchase from the defendant’s website.

Generally speaking, a contract will be enforceable based on an inquiry notice if: (1) the website provides reasonably conspicuous notice of the terms; and (2) the consumer takes some action, such as clicking a button, that unambiguously manifests assent to those terms. When evaluating whether there was an agreement to arbitrate, the court in Cody first considered the visual design of the webpages and found that the visual aspect of the notice was satisfied by the defendant’s website layout. As the court stated, the relevant criteria for evaluating whether the visual elements provide conspicuous notice are whether the advisal is displayed prominently enough that the court can assume a reasonably prudent Internet user would have seen it. Elements such as a “clear and legible” notice on the order page and a hyperlink placed directly above or below an action button formatted in bright, contrasting color and readable font within a relatively uncluttered web page have been favorably cited by courts in past cases.

The court here found the visual design to be adequate because of factors such as the underlined blue hyperlink to the terms of use and its location directly below the “Place Order” button. [See below image from the court opinion of the final contracting screen ].

Although the court recognized that the “design of the website alone might support concluding that the notice would be reasonably conspicuous,” it went on to consider the full context of the guest checkout transaction at issue in Cody.  Here, the court distinguished it from those types of transactions where a user might anticipate “some sort of continuing relationship.” The court emphasized that when considering the notice requirement, the visual design of the website must be examined within that context. As it stated: “This means that courts should expect that a reasonable internet user is more vigilant in looking for contractual terms when the context of the transaction reasonably implies a contractual relationship.” To the court, when a user “simply purchases goods or avails herself of a one-time discount offer,” there is less reason for her to expect a continued relationship beyond the purchase. 

In the case at hand, the court considered plaintiff’s decision to check out as a guest as one where the user did not anticipate a continuing relationship, and compared it with other traditional e-commerce transactions involving registered users where the Ninth Circuit previously found that such context would put a user on inquiry notice that a purchase on the company’s website constituted an agreement to its terms.

“Generally speaking, courts are more likely to conclude that a user anticipating ‘some sort of continuing relationship’ would expect to be bound by terms, whereas a user ‘who simply purchases goods or avails herself of a one-time discount offer’ would be less likely to form such an expectation.”

“This context distinguishes this case from those in which the Ninth Circuit has found that the context of the transaction would put a user on inquiry notice that use of a company’s website or services constituted an agreement to its terms and conditions, including an arbitration provision.”

Thus, despite the adequacy of its visual aspects on the J. Jill site, the court found that proper notice was not sufficiently conspicuous in this case because of the guest checkout context of the transaction (“The context of the transaction therefore weighs against concluding that Plaintiff was sufficiently aware that, by placing an order through jjill.com, she would be entering into an agreement including an arbitration provision”).  

In another recent case, Chabolla v. ClassPass, Inc., 129 F.3d 1147 (9th Cir. 2025), the Ninth Circuit affirmed a lower court’s ruling that declined to send a proposed class action to arbitration. In the ClassPass case, the plaintiff signed up for a trial period for ClassPass, a service that sells subscription packages for access to various gyms and fitness studios, but later took issue when subscription charges resumed after gyms reopened following the COVID-19 pandemic. The contracting process in this case involved several signup screens. [An image from the court opinion of the final screen appears below].

In this case, the court’s decision was a flip, of sorts, of the Cody case, with the Ninth Circuit finding the visual presentation of the terms lacking, even though the context of the transaction would seemingly put the user on notice of an ongoing relationship that would contemplate the user agreeing to site terms. The appeals court found that while a trial subscription opportunity may not indicate an anticipation of an ongoing relationship in all instances, the context neither weighs in favor of nor against the notice requirement. This is because, as the court noted, the other aspects of the context – such as how the purchase is described as a “plan” or a “membership” and how the benefit of ClassPass is to gain access to gyms and fitness studios – conjure the idea of a continuing relationship. Nonetheless, the court ultimately decided that a reasonably prudent internet user would not be deemed to have unambiguously manifested assent to the terms by working her way through ClassPass’s multi-page website checkout process.

Taken together, these two recent decisions show that courts – at least those within the Ninth Circuit – are considering the actual context in which these internet transactions occur when deciding whether an online entity’s contracting and checkout process binds the user to the terms. While visual presentation and web flow design remains important for e-commerce sites, the above two court decisions show that context also matters.

We have previously highlighted the importance of web design in determining if a service’s terms are deemed enforceable. Now, companies might take a second look at their own user registration and e-commerce purchase processes to ensure they offer reasonably conspicuous notice of the existence of contract terms and obtain the user’s manifestation of assent to those terms in all contexts and types of transactions, including those transactions where guest or expedited checkout is used.

Contexts that indicate transient relationships, such as guest checkout or a trial opportunity, may mean that even an ordinary presentation of terms in the form of a hyperlink to the terms located beneath a “Place Order” button – a presentation that is used regularly by many sites – might need to be bolstered, in some cases, to provide the user additional notice that he or she is entering into a transaction that mandates acceptance of contractual terms. As the Cody court commented: “[T]he onus must be on website owners to put users on notice of the terms to which they wish to bind consumers.” Ultimately, the above court decisions accentuate the need for counsel to be involved in the decisions underlying the design and wording of online contracting processes and presentation of terms so entities can attain adequate user notice and assent that would satisfy even the most exacting scrutiny for any type of transaction.



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