'Landman's Billy Bob Thornton Explains Why Fans Hate Season 2 of Taylor Sheridan's Oil Drama

6 hours ago 1
Billy Bob Thornton in Landman Season 2 Image via Paramount+

Chris is a Senior News Writer for Collider. He can be found in an IMAX screen, with his eyes watering and his ears bleeding for his own pleasure. He joined the news team in 2022 and accidentally fell upwards into a senior position despite his best efforts.

For reasons unknown, he enjoys analyzing box office receipts, giant sharks, and has become known as the go-to man for all things BoschMission: Impossible and Christopher Nolan in Collider's news division. Recently, he found himself yeehawing along to the Dutton saga on the Yellowstone Ranch. 

He is proficient in sarcasm, wit, Photoshop and working unfeasibly long hours. Amongst his passions sit the likes of the history of the Walt Disney Company, the construction of theme parks, steam trains and binge-watching Gilmore Girls with a coffee that is just hot enough to scald him.

His obsession with the Apple TV+ series Silo is the subject of mockery within the Senior News channel, where his feelings about Taylor Sheridan's work are enough to make his fellow writers roll their eyes. 

Taylor Sheridan’s Landman came roaring into Paramount+ last year like a West Texas oil rig on fire, but now, halfway through Season 2, the reaction online has… shifted quite a bit, and series star Billy Bob Thornton isn’t pretending he doesn’t see it. Season 2 of Landman, which premiered on November 16, 2025, has been noticeably more divisive than the show’s explosive debut. While Season 1 followed Thornton’s Tommy Norris as a boots-on-the-ground landman solving oilfield disasters, Season 2 moved him upstairs — literally — into the role of M-Tex Oil’s president, and that promotion has fundamentally changed the show. Now, Tommy is busy navigating boardroom politics and trying to solve financial deals rather than dealing with rigs firing and that's a big problem for a lot of fans. But should we be surprised?

In an interview with Entertainment Weekly before the season even premiered, Thornton flat-out told viewers to brace themselves. He described Season 2 as a “slow burn,” explaining that once the world and characters were established in Season 1, Taylor Sheridan wanted to pivot toward relationships and internal conflicts instead of constant chaos.

“Now that the audience knows all the characters, Taylor was able to really dive into the relationships more. Last season, we had to explain what this business was all about and who the people are. This season, he was able to really focus in the first few episodes on the family dynamic and the business dynamic. But this one really ramps up as it goes on, and there's more and more intensity.”

Why Is Landman Being Criticized?

Online reactions have been split straight down the middle. Some viewers still think Landman is one of the best shows on TV. Others feel like it’s lost what made it addictive — the high-octane disasters, the gritty fieldwork, and Tommy being the guy who swoops in to stop everything from exploding, but now he’s the guy signing papers.

Sheridan’s recent shows have all run into the same problem. Yellowstone Season 5 Part 2, 1923 Season 2, and now Landman Season 2 have all been accused of dragging their feet early on — spending too much time on side stories, family drama, and long-term setups while viewers wait for the big moments. In Landman’s case, that means way more time with Tommy’s family — Angela (Ali Larter), Ainsley (Michelle Randolph), Cooper (Jacob Lofland), and Ariana (Paulina Chavez) — and far less time in the brutal, cinematic oilfields that defined Season 1. However, that's also meant the addition of the mercurial and magnificent Sam Elliott as Tommy's father.

Will it all pay off? Well, we're only one episode from conclusion and Thornton insists it will. The events involving Ariana and Cooper at the end of Episode 9 are hinting at a different kind of battle coming soon. Where the already-greenlit Season 3 goes from there is anyone's guess.

Landman streams on Paramount+.

Read Entire Article