
Season 2 isn’t awful. Not even close. It still captures the oilfields in West Texas in Van Gogh colors, and Tommy Norris is still the tough petroleum landman everyone fell in love with. But some fan concerns need to be addressed. After all, this is currently the biggest thing in Taylor Sheridan’s catalog since the end of Yellowstone. Nothing can be changed about the current chapter, but the writer/producer and his team definitely need to fix a few things for the show to survive past the third season.
There’s a New Boss in Season 2, and She Doesn’t Play

Landman’s second season gets right into business. Following her husband’s untimely death, Cami Miller, an ideologue of wealth, attends a luncheon of oil and banking executives where she intends to announce her active ownership of M-Tex. In what is an obvious nod to Moore’s 2024 sci-fi-horror, The Substance, Cami is age-shamed by a group of young ladies in the bathroom, who wrongfully believe she is there for the same purpose as they are: hunting wealthy men. The shock on their faces when she steps onto the podium is priceless.
Instead of being nice, she opts for a harangue, warning everyone that she will be more ruthless than her husband. Later, several shareholders try to negotiate new contracts, arguing that the previous ones with Monty are now invalidated upon his death. Unfortunately for them, they are rebuffed by Tommy, who dares them to sue.
From there, things move pretty quickly. After dominating her interviewer, Ainsley secures a spot with the cheerleading team at Texas Christian University, and Angela makes plans to purchase a house in Fort Worth to be closer to her daughter. Cooper also believes he has secured his future when one site strikes oil with a predicted volume of 500 barrels a day, but he soon learns that things are more complicated than he thought. Elsewhere, T.L. Norris, Tommy’s estranged father, also finds out about the death of his wife, Dorothy, setting the stage for a funeral where father and son open their hearts and tell each other harsh truths.
‘Landman’s Ainsley/Angela Arcs Are Wildly Unpopular

Scanning through the Rotten Tomatoes popcornmeter, one thing becomes clear. The majority of fans like Tommy. He is the perfect kind of protagonist for a neo-Western show about the oil boom. If you were to ever meet a landman, you’d expect him to look like the Billy Bob Thornton character. The part places great demands on the actor, which he more than fulfills. He acts with a burnished and measured theatricality: his pupils glow brightly in his haggard visage, and even when he rants, he never goes over the top.
However, fans are never too thrilled to see Tommy’s family on the screen, especially Ainsley and Angela (Cooper is kinda okay). First, none of them is likable. Angela reeks of toxicity, constantly getting on Tommy’s nerves for no reason. Whether it’s losing her mind and breaking all the plates during dinner or threatening Tommy, none of her actions ever make sense. She is the typical rich man’s spouse, who enjoys the pleasant golf-and-charity-ball elite circle routine without caring much about anything else. Ainsley, on the other hand, looks like she belongs in a teen drama. She is entitled, carefree, and lost in hedonism.
Something needs to happen. Tommy’s wife and daughter are mere caricatures, and they ought to be freed from their shackles and given better storylines. Sheridan can do it if he wants to. We’ve seen it with Cami. And now is the best time to fix that, when the show is still a hit.
‘Landman’ Needs to Figure Out Its Identity

What next for Landman? Unless Taylor Sheridan saved the best for last, Season 2’s next few episodes are likely to be the same, leaving a large section of fans more disgruntled. But with a Season 3 renewal already confirmed. Sheridan and his team need to think about the next steps. Since the majority of complaints target the personal storylines, should the show focus only on the business side of things going forward?
Season 2 isn’t awful. Not even close. It still captures the oilfields in West Texas in Van Gogh colors, and Tommy Norris is still the tough petroleum landman everyone fell in love with. But some fan concerns need to be addressed. After all, this is currently the biggest thing in Taylor Sheridan’s catalog since the end of Yellowstone. Nothing can be changed about the current chapter, but the writer/producer and his team definitely need to fix a few things for the show to survive past the third season.
There’s a New Boss in Season 2, and She Doesn’t Play

Landman’s second season gets right into business. Following her husband’s untimely death, Cami Miller, an ideologue of wealth, attends a luncheon of oil and banking executives where she intends to announce her active ownership of M-Tex. In what is an obvious nod to Moore’s 2024 sci-fi-horror, The Substance, Cami is age-shamed by a group of young ladies in the bathroom, who wrongfully believe she is there for the same purpose as they are: hunting wealthy men. The shock on their faces when she steps onto the podium is priceless.
Instead of being nice, she opts for a harangue, warning everyone that she will be more ruthless than her husband. Later, several shareholders try to negotiate new contracts, arguing that the previous ones with Monty are now invalidated upon his death. Unfortunately for them, they are rebuffed by Tommy, who dares them to sue.
From there, things move pretty quickly. After dominating her interviewer, Ainsley secures a spot with the cheerleading team at Texas Christian University, and Angela makes plans to purchase a house in Fort Worth to be closer to her daughter. Cooper also believes he has secured his future when one site strikes oil with a predicted volume of 500 barrels a day, but he soon learns that things are more complicated than he thought. Elsewhere, T.L. Norris, Tommy’s estranged father, also finds out about the death of his wife, Dorothy, setting the stage for a funeral where father and son open their hearts and tell each other harsh truths.
‘Landman’s Ainsley/Angela Arcs Are Wildly Unpopular

Scanning through the Rotten Tomatoes popcornmeter, one thing becomes clear. The majority of fans like Tommy. He is the perfect kind of protagonist for a neo-Western show about the oil boom. If you were to ever meet a landman, you’d expect him to look like the Billy Bob Thornton character. The part places great demands on the actor, which he more than fulfills. He acts with a burnished and measured theatricality: his pupils glow brightly in his haggard visage, and even when he rants, he never goes over the top.
However, fans are never too thrilled to see Tommy’s family on the screen, especially Ainsley and Angela (Cooper is kinda okay). First, none of them is likable. Angela reeks of toxicity, constantly getting on Tommy’s nerves for no reason. Whether it’s losing her mind and breaking all the plates during dinner or threatening Tommy, none of her actions ever make sense. She is the typical rich man’s spouse, who enjoys the pleasant golf-and-charity-ball elite circle routine without caring much about anything else. Ainsley, on the other hand, looks like she belongs in a teen drama. She is entitled, carefree, and lost in hedonism.
Something needs to happen. Tommy’s wife and daughter are mere caricatures, and they ought to be freed from their shackles and given better storylines. Sheridan can do it if he wants to. We’ve seen it with Cami. And now is the best time to fix that, when the show is still a hit.
‘Landman’ Needs to Figure Out Its Identity

What next for Landman? Unless Taylor Sheridan saved the best for last, Season 2’s next few episodes are likely to be the same, leaving a large section of fans more disgruntled. But with a Season 3 renewal already confirmed. Sheridan and his team need to think about the next steps. Since the majority of complaints target the personal storylines, should the show focus only on the business side of things going forward?
Perhaps Sheridan needs to dig deeper into the oil business instead of constantly addressing Angela’s dissatisfaction. We need to see more of the burning circuits. We want the midnight “we have a problem” calls, the clandestine meetings meant to throw someone under the bus, the urgent patch-ups, the threatening letters and email messages.
Such a move would make Landman a unique show in Taylor Sheridan’s catalog – it might even attract an Emmy. However, there is a risk of alienating a section of the fanbase, those who became hooked when they first saw Angela acting all sexy during a video call with Tommy, or when they saw Ainsley bonding with her father in the series premiere. Would it be okay to lose fans who tune in for the ‘soap opera’ moments and keep those who value the corporate moments?
The business arcs need some buffing up, too, and that should be easy since the situation is currently good, only a few miles away from excellent. We love the Andrew Lockington scores and the negotiations, which often move as fast as comprehensibility will allow. This may not be an outstanding or particularly original show—the prose outweighs the poetry — but it’s easily the most vivid liquid-gold melodrama since ABC’s Blood & Oil.
Landman isn’t a trainwreck… not yet. If you can stomach the ridiculous, wafer-thin characterization and Santa Barbara plot, you will consider it an enjoyable romp, if only for the gusto these characters bring. But it’s destined to be a trainwreck if nothing changes, so let’s hope the course gets corrected before it becomes one.
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