When it comes to a work with a premise that is practically begging for a silver-screen adaptation, TV watchers need look no further than writer Jason Aaron and writer-artist Jason Latour’s Southern Bastards. Like Yellowstone, the series is a high-drama story that revolves around a staple of American culture.
However, rather than following the power struggles surrounding the largest cattle ranch in Montana, Southern Bastards centers on life in a small town in the American South, where football is everything and people attempt to get away with crime on a daily basis.
Why Southern Bastards Is a Small-Town Drama Built for Prestige Television
Award-Winning Series, Football Culture, and a Premise TV Audiences Already Love
Southern Bastards is a series that ran from 2014 to 2018, spanning a total of 20 issues. The official synopsis reads: “Welcome to Craw County, Alabama, home of Boss BBQ, the state champion Runnin’ Rebs football team… and more bastards than you’ve ever seen. When you’re an angry old man like Earl Tubb, the only way to survive a place like this… is to carry a really big stick.”
However, Southern Bastards distinguishes itself from Friday Night Lights through its heavier crime elements and more mature themes, placing it firmly in a league of its own. If there was ever a comic series destined for a TV adaptation, it would be Southern Bastards, as it has all the ingredients needed to become the next great television hit, and fortunately, that potential hasn’t gone unnoticed, with Hulu having already ordered a pilot for the series.
