Landman is an American drama series created by Taylor Sheridan and Christian Wallace, inspired by the podcast series Boomtown hosted by Wallace. Starring Billy Bob Thornton as a landman for an oil company, the show premiered on November 17, 2024, on Paramount+. In March 2025, the series was renewed for a second season, which premiered on November 16, 2025. In December 2025, the series was renewed for a third season. Despite some elements igniting controversy, the series has been received positively by critics overall.
Landman is set within the world of oilfields in West Texas, where "roughnecks and wildcat billionaires are fueling a boom so big it is reshaping our climate, our economy, and our geopolitics." The lead character, Tommy Norris, can be abrasive, as is the out-of-town lawyer, Rebecca Falcone, who is investigating a fatal accident, early in season one.
In February 2022, Paramount+ ordered a television series inspired by the podcast Boomtown titled Landman from screenwriter Taylor Sheridan. Billy Bob Thornton stars in the series. In May 2023, Jacob Lofland, Ali Larter, and Michelle Randolph joined the series. In January 2024, Kayla Wallace, James Jordan, Mark Collie, and Paulina Chávez joined the series as series regulars. In February 2024, it was reported that Jon Hamm joined the series. In April 2024, it was reported that Octavio Rodriguez and J. R. Villarreal joined the series as recurring characters.
In May 2024, it was confirmed by Demi Moore that a second season was planned, with production set to commence in early 2025. In March 2025, Paramount+ renewed the series for a second season.
In April 2025, it was announced that Sam Elliott joined the cast as a series regular for the second season. In June 2025, it was reported that Stefania Spampinato was cast in a recurring role for the second season.
In December 2025, Paramount+ renewed the series for a third season.
Filming started in and around Fort Worth, Texas, in February 2024 and concluded in June 2024. Filming locations included the headquarters of the American Association of Professional Landmen, the national association that represents land professionals, as well as the Fort Worth Petroleum Club, Rivercrest Country Club, and Texas Christian University. Filming for the second season started in April 2025 and concluded in August 2025. Filming for the third season may commence in May 2026.
Andrew Lockington, who worked in Mayor of Kingstown and Lioness, has composed the music for the series, marking his third collaboration with the series' creator. UMG Nashville has released the series' seasons 1 and 2 soundtracks. Some of the songs in the soundtrack albums were written by actors Billy Bob Thornton and Mark Collie. Music from Yellowstone actress/musician Lainey Wilson is used in season 2.
The first season launched with two episodes on Paramount+ on November 17, 2024. Subsequent episodes of the 10-episode first season were available weekly on Sundays through January 12, 2025. The second season premiered on November 16, 2025.
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the series has an approval rating of 78% based on 37 critic reviews. The website's critics consensus reads, "Landman plumbs much of the same territory as other Taylor SheridanâÂÂpenned series, but having Billy Bob Thornton on hand turns this Texas crude into highly watchable fuel." Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned a score of 60 out of 100 based on 20 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.
The second season has a 83% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 37 critic reviews. The website's critics consensus reads, "Further refining its brutish elements into addictive drama, Landmans second season makes minor improvements in its treatment of female characters while continuing to benefit from Billy Bob Thornton's hangdog swagger." Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned a score of 66 out of 100 based on eight critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.
Dialogues that included a narrative about renewable energy have been criticized. On the topic concerning wind turbine, the fictional oil man Tommy Norris claims that the amount of steel, oil, and concrete needed to construct a wind turbine produces such a high carbon footprint, that it will not offset the costs in its twenty-year lifespan. This dialog led some people, including fossil fuel advocates, oil executives, and a US senator, to repost the clip on social media. These claims are disputed by life cycle analysis of wind energy where far more carbon is offset by wind energy than is produced during wind turbine construction. An energy researcher at the University of Texas at Austin has scientific data that shows that a wind turbine installed in West Texas can offset the carbon spent to make it within one year.
The program has also been criticized, at least in the first season, for presenting female characters as caricatures and negative stereotypes of women. A reviewer for Texas Monthly writes "With all the low-cut tops, high-cut shorts, and dumb-blonde dialogue, I felt like I was watching a racy reboot of a T & A show." When reviewing the first two episodes of the first season, the reviewer from National Public Radio noted that the talents of Demi Moore and Ali Larter were being underutilized and in those scenes, they were "playing caricatures and male fantasies". A writer from Rolling Stone noted that "The show gives an unsolicited glimpse of what The Dukes of Hazzard would have looked like if it had been on late-night Cinemax. ThorntonâÂÂs Tommy has an ex-wife and a daughter who are seemingly characters plucked from dubious scenarios on PornHub." In her review for Entertainment Weekly, the reviewer wrote "the women of Landman exist solely in the context of how they are perceived by Tommy and his cowboy cohorts â put simply, they are around to distract, annoy, titillate, entreat, or yell at the men." A writer for The New Yorker commented "The screenwriting plays fast and loose with sexist stereotypes; TommyâÂÂs ex-wife, Angela (played by Ali Larter), with whom he rekindles a relationship, is a kind of red-state Manic Pixie Dream MILF, flaunting her cleavage, giving road head, and acting crazy when sheâÂÂs getting her period." While reviewing Sheridan's writing style, a critic for Vulture wrote, "But whatâÂÂs tough to digest is how so much of that simplicity is tied to the whole misogyny thing â and it is misogyny, no doubt about it. In addition to being some weird expression of daddy-daughter s**t that Sheridan is clearly obsessed with, Ainsley is such a difficult character to defend as a creation: an excessively sexualized teenage daughter, played by an obviously older woman, whoâÂÂs perpetually scantily clad around older men. ItâÂÂs just icky."
In contrast, actress Ali Larter defended Sheridan's controversial writing style claiming that he writes "women in their prime, that were still allowed to be alive." Larter also defended her portrayal of Angela, "stating that Angela is able to express that side of herself, and that the character is a full rainbow." Actress Michelle Randolph also defended Sheridan and her own portrayal of Ainsley.
On June 23, 2025, Paulynne, Inc., which owns and controls all of famed broadcaster Paul Harvey's intellectual property, sued Paramount Global in New York federal court. The company sued Paramount for usingÃÂ a 90-second audio clip from The Rest of the Story in Landman without permission. Paramount used a segment about rising gas prices from Harvey's 2009 "Gas Crisis" episode in the opening of Landmans Season 1 finale. The lawsuit accused Paramount of failing to obtain permission to use the clip as well as editing the clip to change Harvey's viewpoint with regard to government fossil-fuel policies and his interest in alternative fuels.