It waits under a sky that feels too large for the map, behind grasslands that roll for miles, and beneath bluffs that once guided emigrants, traders, soldiers, ranchers, and dreamers across the open country. This is not the glossy, packaged version of the West. Western Nebraska is older than that, quieter than that, and in many ways better for it.
We’ve completed our first short documentary on the bluffs and buttes of western Nebraska, and you can now watch it in high definition.
This program explores some of the most recognizable landmarks in the Nebraska Panhandle — the rugged bluffs, isolated buttes, sandstone formations, and...
On any given summer evening, when the sun drops low and the heat finally starts to fade, you’ll spot them: Jeeps with the doors off, the roof stashed in a garage somewhere, and a couple of friends rolling slowly through town or down some country dirt road. The music drifts, the air rushes, and the world feels lighter for a while. We call it jeep-therapy.
It waits under a sky that feels too large for the map, behind grasslands that roll for miles, and beneath bluffs that once guided emigrants, traders, soldiers, ranchers, and dreamers across the open country. This is not the glossy, packaged version of the West. Western Nebraska is older than that, quieter than that, and in many ways better for it.
With mobile live broadcasting now enabled, our goal is to deliver real-time, on-the-ground coverage straight from the field. This isn’t studio content—it’s raw, immediate, and rooted in actual exploration. Whether we’re navigating backroads, documenting remote landscapes, or working through changing conditions, the focus is on showing things as they happen, without filters or delay.
It's a silent sentinel — a low mesa rising above the western Nebraska plains, weathered by wind and time, hiding layers of human occupation. Signal Butte, perched above Robidoux Pass, is more than a landmark. It’s one of the most important archaeological sites in the Central Plains. Its bones, hearths, and tool fragments whisper of people who lived here long before settlers crossed in wagon trains.