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    Home»TV Shows»Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 5 Review: The More You Know, the Less You Know
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    Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 5 Review: The More You Know, the Less You Know

    Willie MurphyBy Willie MurphyOctober 19, 20256 Mins Read
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    Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 5 Review: The More You Know, the Less You Know
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    Critic’s Rating: 3.65 / 5.0

    3.65

    What the hell just happened? I mean that sincerely. 

    Because if you walked away from Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 5 with your head spinning and your jaw somewhere on the floor, welcome to the club.

    The pieces that were already sliding around the board just exploded in every direction. Dwight’s balancing act between Musso, Margaret, and Jeremiah has officially gone off the rails, and I’m not even sure who’s playing who anymore. 

    (Paramount+/Screenshot)

    We’re at midseason now, and whatever this episode just triggered feels like the flip — the “you thought you understood the plan, didn’t you?” moment.

    The distillery’s grand opening should’ve been a high point. Everyone’s dressed to the nines, Tyson’s back at Dwight’s side, and the crew’s trying to prove they’re more than the chaos they’ve caused. 

    Instead, it turns into a full-blown disaster, complete with a dead health inspector, Jeremiah staging a public meltdown, and Dwight once again trying to put out fires he didn’t start. 

    Bigfoot crushing the inspector with barrels was both horrifying and grimly funny — this show really knows how to blur those lines.

    And speaking of blurred lines, poor Cole’s stuck between loyalty and shame, and it’s eating him alive. That axe-to-the-barrel moment was his breaking point. 

    (Paramount+/Screenshot)

    Watching Spencer’s disappointment hit him square in the face — the silent “you’re better than this” look — said everything words couldn’t. Cole’s been Jeremiah’s echo chamber all season, desperate for approval, but now he’s realizing that validation comes at a cost. 

    When your father’s rage is louder than your own conscience, something’s bound to give. Spencer may not know the whole story, but her heartbreak might be the one thing that finally snaps Cole out of his father’s orbit.

    But even before the event spirals, something’s off with Dwight. He’s scattered, distracted, and everyone can feel it. 

    Tyson, ever the conscience of the operation, sees through the cracks and pushes Dwight to define what it means to be a man. Their conversation’s a quiet highlight — Dwight, gruff and world-weary, tells Tyson it’s about value, courage, and what you mean to the people around you. 

    Tyson doesn’t fully buy it, even admitting he’d never rescue strangers from a fire (WTF dude?). These two have always mirrored each other — mentor and mentee, father and son — but now Tyson’s starting to question if Dwight’s compass still points north. 

    See also  Law & Order: SVU Season 27 Episode 7 Offered A Powerful and Disturbing Cautionary Tale
    (Paramount+/Screenshot)

    Well, he’s questioning something anyway.

    Meanwhile, Margaret remains the only person who can draw out Dwight’s humanity. 

    Their chemistry is so unforced, it feels lived-in — like two people who actually know what quiet looks like. There’s a warmth in their scenes that you don’t get anywhere else in this show. 

    The way they tease each other, that little smirk when he calls Cal “the albino,” the comfortable laughter — it’s domesticity wrapped in danger. 

    Dwight’s clearly falling harder than he planned, and she’s the one piece of his world that feels real. It’s why this double-life tension is hitting so hard; he’s risking something that finally matters to him.

    (Paramount+/Screenshot)

    But here’s the thing: everyone around Dwight notices something’s wrong. 

    He’s vanishing on short notice, dodging calls, and looking more paranoid by the day. This isn’t a man who ghosts his people for no reason. 

    Musso’s entire operation — whatever it actually is — hinges on Dwight’s ability to function like a normal guy. That illusion’s cracking fast.

    Which brings us back to the question that nagged at me the whole way through “On the Rocks.” Is Musso really that stupid? Or just that arrogant? 

    He’s supposedly using Dwight to lure an assassin, but he’s doing it in the most reckless way possible. 

    (Paramount+/Screenshot)

    This isn’t a sanctioned operation — Musso already admitted that on their little road trip. He’s freelancing, which means every move Dwight makes is technically illegal, and every person watching him is potential collateral. 

    If he actually wants Dwight to stay clean long enough to deliver results, maybe stop making him disappear during public events with high-level guests and press coverage?

    Unless, of course, Musso’s goal was never to catch the Watchmaker at all. Maybe it’s about watching Dwight implode.

    Because let’s be honest: nothing about this adds up. Musso’s timing is too convenient. He calls right as the Watchmaker reaches out, taps Dwight’s phone, and sends him into the meeting like bait — then leaves him hanging with nothing but a whisper and a photograph. 

    That’s not supervision. That’s more like entrapment.

    (Paramount+/Screenshot)

    And then there’s Goodie’s text to “Watch Repair,” which just deepens the WTFery of it all. We’ve never seen that code name before, and it reeks of Musso’s fingerprints. 

    It could be a cleanup trigger, it could be a signal to one of his people — or it could be the moment Musso decided the inspector’s death could be spun into something useful. 

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    Because that wasn’t an accident; that was a test. And every test Dwight passes, Musso pulls him in tighter.

    Meanwhile, Bill finally connects the dots. He’s seeing Dwight disappear into shadowy meetings, realizing his narrative doesn’t quite hold water, and daring to ask questions — big mistake. 

    Their confrontation is brutal in its honesty — Bill practically begs Dwight to tell him the truth before Dwight turns a gun on him. And the thing is, Bill’s not wrong. If Dwight saw someone doing what he’s doing, he’d pull the trigger too. It’s self-preservation 101 in their world.

    (Paramount+/Screenshot)

    So when those black vehicles box Bill in at the end, it’s less “execution” and more “recruitment.” 

    Musso doesn’t waste capable men. He flips them. And that’s what makes this so terrifying — Bill might live, but he’ll come back branded — another pawn in Musso’s private war, just like Dwight.

    Unless it’s not Musso at all. Who the hell knows?

    Somewhere between those moving pieces, Tulsa King found its midseason gear.

    The world’s closing in on Dwight. Tyson is questioning his identity and the path he’s on. Margaret’s love is the last calm thing in his life, while Musso plays puppet master with no oversight or conscience.

    (Paramount+/Screenshot)

    So where does this leave us? In the best kind of mess. The kind where we can’t tell whether Dwight’s saving his soul or selling it one handshake at a time.

    Is Musso manipulating everyone? 

    Did Dwight just volunteer Jeremiah as a target — or was that part of the plan all along? 

    And is Bill the next recruit in Musso’s shadow army? 

    Whatever’s happening, it’s not random anymore. The walls are closing in, and the General’s starting to feel it.

    If this is the midpoint, buckle up. The second half of Tulsa King Season 3 is going to get ugly — fast.

    • Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 5 Review: The More You Know, the Less You Know

      Dwigh’’s losing control as Musso tightens the leash, Margaret grounds him, and chaos reigns in Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 5.

    • Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 5 Recap: On the Rocks

      Here’s your no frills recap for Tulsa King Season 3 Episode 5, “On the Rocks.” And read our review for our scintillating commentary, too!

    • Tulsa King Season 3: How the New Villain Finally Fixes Taylor Sheridan’s Antagonist Problem

      Jeremiah Dunmire fixes villain problem in Tulsa King Season 3, finally bringing grit, danger, and Southern pride the series was missing.



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