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    Home»TV Shows»Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 4 Review: A Fair Exchange Is Never Fair
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    Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 4 Review: A Fair Exchange Is Never Fair

    Willie MurphyBy Willie MurphyOctober 12, 202510 Mins Read
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    Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 4 Review: A Fair Exchange Is Never Fair
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    Critic’s Rating: 4.25 / 5.0

    4.25

    Well, that escalated quickly. 

    One day out of pocket and Dwight comes back to find $150 million in bourbon vanished, tempers flaring, and his house barely holding together — and I don’t just mean the criminal enterprise. 

    The man’s juggling old-school muscle, new-school schemes, and a romance that keeps pretending it’s “just business” while setting off every territorial alarm in his body. Holy moly, Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 4 is a lot.

    (Brian Douglas/Paramount+)

    Let’s start in the warehouse, where the hangover hits. 

    Dwight reads the room like a disappointed dad who left the kids alone with the car keys and came home to a crater. Tyson’s not benched, which surprised me. Instead, he’s told to fix it — consequences without exile. 

    That’s an important nuance for this crew. Bodhi comes in hot (not wrong, mind you), and Grace plays peacemaker with that family line that felt both aspirational and, let’s be honest, a little aspirationally delusional given the week they’re having. 

    Meanwhile, Joanne puts a little of the mess on Dwight — he wasn’t where he was supposed to be — and I can’t even argue. He’s been splitting his focus, and the bill always comes due.

    Bill’s arc turned darker than I expected. The way that confrontation with the driver spiraled… yikes. “Tell me where it is” turns into a panicked draw, and Bill drops him. Full stop. 

    It’s a reminder that this world doesn’t just flirt with violence; it marries it. Bill’s also quietly worried about Armand — not because Bill suddenly turned into a fed-sniffing savant, but because everybody’s Spidey sense is tingling. 

    (Paramount+/Screenshot)

    Stir in Vince paying a visit to Quiet Ray in New York — a guy whose nickname tells you everything and nothing — and you can feel the East Coast web tightening around Tulsa. 

    When Quiet Ray later rings Bill, soft-selling history with Bill’s grandfather and that “I’m just here if you need advice” routine, it’s either mentorship or a velvet noose. Maybe both. Are you freakin’ kidding me? That’s trouble with a capital T.

    Then there’s Bodhi and Grace, who spend the episode speed-running a case study on modern grifts. 

    On one hand, Bodhi’s busy cyber-bleeding Jeremiah’s trucks like a surgeon — efficient, invisible, low risk. On the other hand, Grace wants to spin up an AI bourbon influencer because an algorithm can’t get canceled for old tweets. 

    It’s funny until you realize they’re building a house on sand and calling it beachfront property. The moment Grace shrugs off the “is anyone going to find out?” question because, hey, he’s not real… that’s the thesis statement. 

    We’re in a season about authenticity — about what’s real loyalty vs pretend loyalty, real romance vs transactional proximity, actual power vs the projection of it. A fake face selling fake scarcity to juice a very real business? That’s snazzy until it isn’t.

    (Paramount+/Screenshot)

    And this comes from someone actively researching AI options to put my face online; well, a reasonable facsimile of me, because who wants to be makeup-ready 24/7? But honesty is the best policy there. You’ll know. You always know.

    Tyson’s journey is the quiet winner this hour. He’s humiliated, angry, and still, with Mark’s steady hand at his back, he does the grown-up thing — he slows down. Serenity isn’t a soulmate; she’s a plant. (We all clocked that, right?) 

    Old Tyson would’ve barreled; new Tyson phones Dwight, spots the stash, and waits for the cavalry. That’s remarkable growth. 

    Mark’s mini-monologue about not trading the direction his life took for anything was short and sweet, and exactly the kind of mentorship this show can use more of. It’s the anti-Dwight schooling: less sermon, more “I’ve been there; here’s the exit.” 

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    But together, Mark and Dwight make a formidable pair in pushing Tyson to do right. That’s been key since Tulsa King Season 1. If Dwight’s torn in too many directions now, it’s the perfect time for Mark to step back in.

    And honestly, I love that despite his grumbling and concerns over Tyson’s relationship with Dwight, Mark still relishes the action. He’s been there. He even admitted it. He still wishes his son were on a different path, but he’s rolling with it. 

    (Paramount+/Screenshot)

    Everything with the Montague 50 is peak Tulsa King — crime as opera, with father-son tragedy playing first chair. (And until I reread this, I didn’t realize we’ve got two father-son pairs in motion this time.)

    Cole’s such an earnest buffoon that my heart hurts for him even as he absolutely had this coming. 

    Inside that warehouse, the stolen cask becomes a holy relic, Jeremiah literally offers prayer (his guy, am I right?, and outside Bill and Bigfoot hold a gun to the real sacrament — the son. 

    “Fair exchange” becomes the language of the day, and when Jeremiah yields to save Cole, it’s both moving and chilling. Jeremiah is telling us who he is: a man who will sacrifice flesh and blood for the house he built, and a man who believes he can take back whatever he surrenders. 

    Cole hears the mercy; I hear the threat. The chessboard is bigger than a single barrel, and this move will echo. If you think Jeremiah’s finished because he took the loss today, you just fell off the turnip truck.

    Meanwhile, Musso calls from Mount Olympus to remind Dwight that the Watchmaker job is the mission, not this Dixie Mafia moonshine war. He’s right — and that’s scary. 

    (Brian Douglas/Paramount+)

    The show keeps asking whether Dwight can keep two clocks wound at once: local fires and the long con. Every time he blinks, the short game gets bloodier and the long game slips. That driver’s blood on the floor is the cost of doing business when you insist on doing every kind of business.

    And then we come to Margaret, who remains the most fascinating mirror in Dwight’s life. 

    Lunch with Cal is a masterclass in cheerful manipulation. She reads his likability (or lack thereof), offers her shine for his shadow, and writes the whole deal off as transactional. Get Cal elected, get her ranch back pennies on the dollar, everybody wins — and she doesn’t need Dwight’s money to do it. 

    This is where the series is hella interesting about gender and power without turning it into a TED Talk. 

    Margaret plays the game the way men have forever, and Dwight suddenly discovers his inner caveman. He’s not wrong to see risk — she is, after all, hitching herself to a guy he needs but doesn’t trust — yet his “I’ll break his jaw in six places” line betrays where the business ends and the feelings begin.

    Yes, I know that we’ve spent two seasons insisting this is a partnership of convenience. It isn’t. Not anymore. These two are thisclose to saying it out loud.

    (Paramount+/Screenshot)

    Their bedroom scene seals it for me. After a day of chaos, they read in bed like a real couple, trading vulnerable little nothings — the kind you say when your guard drops and your future sneaks in. 

    Dwight’s “people need people” isn’t exactly original (Margaret laughs first, which I loved), but it is honest. Here’s the guy who showed up in Tulsa a ghost, now feeling like a second-chance human. That’s character movement you can taste, like oak and smoke in a good pour. 

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    It’s why the political bombshell lands so hard; it’s not that she moved without him, it’s that she moved where he lives — that soft underbelly he pretends isn’t there.

    Back to the big picture: the episode frames control as an illusion everyone’s desperate to maintain. 

    Dwight thinks he’s orchestrating; really, he’s reacting. Bodhi thinks he’s untouchable behind a keyboard; he’s one exposed VPN away from disaster. Grace believes the fake face will keep them clean; the lie is the stain. Bill flexes competence and bleeds morality. 

    Jeremiah sacrifices now to wage war later. Vince tries to buy credibility with Quiet Ray; Ray sells him the aura of it. And Margaret? She wraps risk in a bow and calls it strategy, which — to be fair — it is, provided she doesn’t underestimate what it pokes in her man.

    (Paramount+/Screenshot)

    If you want a single shot that sums up the hour, it’s the prayer over the barrel while guns wait outside. Faith, family, business, violence — all in one frame, all justified by “fair exchange.” 

    Tulsa King loves the myth that there’s a clean deal to be made if you pay the right price. “Staring Down the Barrel” argues that the price is always higher than you think.

    A few stray sips before last call:

    • I can’t be the only one who winced at the AI influencer reveal. It’s clever… and gross. The show’s winking at us about the modern hustle, but it’s also planting the grenade. When that face is exposed as fake, somebody important is going to be holding the bag. Maybe you feel differently.
    • Tyson and Mark rolling up with pipes like a Home Depot strike team made me laugh — and then admire how quickly they pivoted to caution. Growth looks like restraint, not heroics. Spiffy character work.
    • Dwight assuring Bill that Armand isn’t a rat only works if Dwight’s read on Armand is better than his read on everything else right now. Ok, come on — even Dwight can’t bat a thousand when his attention’s this divided.
    (Brian Douglas/Paramount+)
    • Quiet Ray’s “I knew your grandfather” patter is classic mob lullaby. If Bill takes that call again, he’s going to owe a favor before he realizes the ask was made. That’s how debt gets sussed out in this world — softly, then all at once.

    So, where are we as of Tulsa King Season 3 (other than almost at midseason)? 

    Dwight’s empire is expanding and fraying; Margaret’s play could either cement their future or crack it. Tyson’s stepping into his next self, while Bodhi and Grace are daring fate to notice them. Meanwhile, the New York shadow is lengthening across Tulsa. 

    It’s messy, propulsive, and — in the best way — dangerous. That’s entertainment.

    What did you think? Is Margaret making the right call by hitching herself to Cal, or is she poking a bear who doesn’t share? 

    Did the Montague 50 exchange land as a clean win or a moral gut punch? And where do you stand on the AI bourbon pitch — savvy or sheer hubris? Drop your takes below; let’s pour one and hash it out.

    • Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 4 Review: A Fair Exchange Is Never Fair

      Dwight’s losing control, Margaret’s playing politics, and chaos is the new currency. Read our Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 4 review before things explode.

    • Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 4 Recap: Staring Down the Barrel

      Dwight scrambles to regain control after a massive bourbon theft, while Margaret makes a bold political move in Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 4.

    • Dwight Faces a New Kind of Power Play On Tulsa King In This Exclusive Sneak Peek

      Margaret makes a bold move in this exclusive Tulsa King clip — and Dwight’s not thrilled. Watch the power shift before Sunday’s full recap and review!



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