Deadline Hollywood last week announced a new series featuring life in Jackson has been greenlighted by Amazon Prime Studios.
The project is the latest collaboration between Amy B. Harris (âSex and the City,â âThe Carrie Diariesâ) and Jason Reilly (âJane the Virginâ, âPuppy Loveâ).
Little is known about the drama other than its working title: âTeton.â
The idea for the series came from Grammy-nominated country musician Cameron Duddy, who plays bass for the country group Midland and has connections to the area..
No Dud
Duddy is no stranger to Jackson. He was married in Jackson in 2013 at the palatial estate of Connie Stevens. Heâs the stepson of actress Joely Fisher and stepgrandson of actress Connie Stevens, who owned a home in Jackson for decades.
Duddy also is comfortable behind the camera. His father, Christopher Duddy, is a noted cinematographer.
Duddy has concentrated mainly on music videos. He directed Mark Ronsonâs âUptown Funkâ and Bruno Marsâ â24K Magic.â Heâs also worked with OneRepublic, Fifth Harmony and other artists.
Duddy is probably best known for his work in front of the camera and on stage as the bassist for Midland. The Texas trio rose to fame behind their breakout single âDrinkinâ Problemâ in 2017. Follow-up hits âMake a Littleâ and âMr. Lonelyâ solidified the group as country musicâs rising stars. Duddy directed all the groupâs videos.
Trivia question for hardcore fans: Midland actually formed as a result of Duddyâs impromptu jam with lead singer Mark Wystrach at Duddyâs wedding. The two hit it off so well musically they quickly formed a band a year later.
TVs Heavy Hitters Involved
According to the Deadline exclusive, Teton is the co-creation of Harris and Reilly. Both will serve as writers and showrunners (a more involved type of executive producer).
Amazon aired Harrisâ âThe Wildsâ most recently for a two-year run. This will be the studioâs first partnership with her production company, A.B. Baby Productions.
Reilly worked with Harris as a director on âFetchingâ and âThe Carrie Diaries.â His other directing credits include âJane the Virginâ and âTwo Broke Girls.âÂ
Duddyâs insight into Jackson life undoubtedly provided a catalyst for the showâs premise. His involvement, other than executive producer and contributing writer, remains to be seen.
Amazon is reportedly fast-tracking the project. Shows have been sketched out and partially written, though no casting has been done.
Powder Plot Thickens
The showâs premise will highlight the juxtaposition of life in Teton County, Wyoming, using the ever-widening income disparity between the have-everythings and the have-nots in tiny Jackson as a jumping-off point.
The upstairs-downstairs drama concept was made popular by television shows like âUpstairs, Downstairsâ and âDownton Abbey,â where viewers enjoyed a look into the contrasting lives of downstairs servants and upstairs elite.
In Teton, show producers intend to use the ski bum community â known locally as âskidsâ â as the couch-surfing powder hounds they are.
The tightknit mountain community in Jackson is eccentric, lovable and forever bordering broke. Pitting that stereotype against uberwealthy third-home owners should easily provide plenty of fodder for an eight-episode run.
According to Deadlineâs coverage, the series will follow Kick Taylor, a ski racing legend, who returns to her hometown of Jackson to recoup from an emotional meltdown suffered while competing worldwide. Taylor returns home to deal with her motherâs death, and the family and friends she left behind in her pursuit of gold.Â
âThere will be epic skiing, envy-inducing real estate, apres ski cocktails, cozy nights around a fire, a moose encounter or two and high stakes drama as Kick reckons with whether it is possible to âgo big AND go home,ââ Deadline reported.

Hollywood In The Hole
Certainly, there is expectation that the show will have wide audience appeal outside of Wyoming, where Jackson remains a chic brand still undiscovered by many.
Jackson already sees more than 3 million visitors a year as tourists pass through the gateway town on their way to Yellowstone National Park during the summer, and jet in during the winter for an unrivaled ski destination experience.
But donât count on famed Wyoming author C.J. Box to be setting his DVR device to record.
âI canât wait to not watch this,â The New York Times bestselling author of more than 30 books tweeted April 27.
Box has dabbled in the small screen as well, serving as executive producer on ABCâs âBig Sky,â which is based on his Cassie Dewell novels, as well as a series following the popular Joe Pickett serie, airing on Paramount TV.
Jackson has been the setting for numerous film and television projects. âShane,â âAny Which Way You Canâ and âThe Big Trailâ pop to mind as big screen classics. Parts of âDjango Unchainedâ and âRocky IVâ were also filmed in the Jackson Hole area.
The short-lived television series âThen Came Bronson" was shot in Jackson during the summer of 1969.
More recent TV appearances include the âModern Familyâ season opener for Season 3 back in 2011. That was shot at Lost Creek dude ranch.
HBOâs post-apocalyptic thriller âThe Last of Usâ wrapped its first season run with the main characters returning home to Jackson, though the sixth episode did not shoot on location.





