Tulsa King episode 3: Dwight has found the traitor to the organization! It is…see more
Dwight ends up involving a hodgepodge of very different people in his piecemeal mob, including cabbie Tyson (Jay Will) and the brilliant-but-slacking pot dispensary owner Bodhi (Martin Starr), gradually running afoul of the old guard mobsters back home and local competition alike. Season 2 ratchets everything up with the addition of menacing new villains, local big shot Carl Thresher (Neil McDonough) and Kansas City mafia head Bill Bevilaqua (Frank Grillo), the latter of whom he ends up partnering with in his growing expansion into marijuana.
Manfredi begins Season 3 under the harsh lights of an interrogation room, thanks to his capture at the hands of Special Agent Musso (Kevin Pollak) at the end of Season 2. Musso’s motives are mysterious, but he knows everything about Manfredi’s criminal endeavors, including killing a man chained to a radiator in a burning house 25 years ago. Dwight pulled the trigger on said man, who happened to be Musso’s informant, so Musso wants a new informant… Dwight. Informing on whom? Musso’s playing coy, but Dwight’s released. He arrives and apologizes to his beau, Margaret (Dana Delany), for the disruptive invasion of her ranch at the end of last season. Driving with Bigfoot (Mike “Cash Flo” Walden) after promising her he’d square said threat and protect her, he receives an unwanted call from old mob connection Quiet Ray (James Russo) before hanging up. “It never f**king ends,” he complains to the massive enforcer. Cue eyeroll and intro credits.
Love Interests Come Calling in the ‘Tulsa King’ Season 3 Premiere
Dwight visits his old Little Italy stomping grounds, first seeing his sister and grandchildren at the Feast of San Gennaro. He then pivots to see Quiet Ray at his home, with Bigfoot and capo Goodie (Chris Caldovino) in tow. Ray delivers Dwight an olive branch to make good on the promise he was offered in exchange for that 25-year stint: they’ll make him his own family, grant him a territory, and he’ll have carte blanche to run it his way. Manfredi turns the offer down, liking what he’s built in Tulsa. That isn’t what Ray wants to hear, and he says it’s finally time for Dwight to share with the New York families. “It’s very disrespectful when you don’t share with your real family. Do I have to paint a f*cking picture for you?” he asks. “No, Ray,” Dwight says. “You can keep all the paints out of this, I get the picture. And you’re right, sharing’s good, as long as you’re sharing with somebody you want to share with.” The pair exchange more tense words before Dwight sees himself out.
A Few Hiccups Mar ‘Tulsa King’ Season 3’s Distillery Deal and the Drop
Elsewhere, Dwight arrives at the Montague Distillery yard sale (which, funny enough, was indeed a yard sale — a true family-run business!) to chat with the Montague family patriarch, Theo (Brett Rice), who has a “handshake deal” to sell the distillery to the Dunmires. An honorable man, he refuses to discuss the terms of their informal deal, but Dwight promises to double it. “Tempting,” he says, but turns him down nonetheless. Back at the garage sale, Mitch continues to rekindle his flame with Cleo when Cole Dunmire (Beau Knapp), Jeremiah’s son, arrives. They clearly don’t like each other. Cleo asks what Cole wants, and he says he’s there to deliver a message from his dad to hers: “Good seeing you.”
Bodhi Turns The Tables in ‘Tulsa King’ Season 3’s Premiere
Grace brings a bag, but it’s full of magazines. “I grabbed the wrong duffel,” Bodhi explains, “That’s my duffel for OCC, the Oklahoma Comic Convention, I’m sure you’re familiar.” Bevilaqua’s crew is mad, and Bodhi implores them to follow him to the shop where the cash is. “You know the way, right?” he asks, a thinly veiled reference to the shooting that killed Jimmy the Creek. Bodhi leaves with the gangster who killed Jimmy, while Tyson and Grace stay with the other members of the KC crew as insurance. Back at the dispensary, Bodhi gathers cash while the KC mobster observes, before Bodhi asks him, “Are you familiar with the term ‘photographic memory’? He goes on to explain that he can revisit any memory in great detail, and the mobster has a “very memorable face, I see your face maybe 50 times a day.” Bodhi turns around with a gun. “Are you out of your f*cking mind?,” the KC mobster asks, to which Bodhi says he did, after he killed his best friend. “You were trying to kill both of us,” but “you’re a terrible shot.” After forcing the gangster to say “thank you for sparing my worthless, sh***y, stupid life,” Bodhi appears content to let him leave, dropping the gun.





