Landman, the series created by Taylor Sheridan and Christian Wallace, is set to return with a new season that builds on the emotional and structural shifts left behind in season one. The story remains grounded in West Texas, where the landscape is harsh and the stakes are personal. This is not just about oil. It’s about control, survival, and what happens when those two things collide.
After a season that closed with a death, a shift in power, and the quiet arrival of a new threat, the foundation of the series is changing. These moments were brief but loaded with meaning. Now, with development underway, co-creator Christian Wallace has started to share what’s ahead. His comments, published by Collider, offer a clear sense of direction. The characters are not starting over, but they are walking into something new.
Monty’s exit and Gallino’s arrival
The final episode of season one changed everything. Monty Miller, played by Jon Hamm, is gone. His death didn’t just impact those closest to him. It also opened a seat of power. That seat is now filled by Tommy Norris. Billy Bob Thornton returns to the role, this time navigating leadership in a company that doesn’t rest. M-Tex Oil moves fast. There’s no space for hesitation.
And then came Gallino. Played by Andy Garcia, his arrival was brief, but the weight of his presence was unmistakable. He is the head of a cartel, introduced just as one man exits. There’s no direct line between the two events. At least not yet. But in a world like this, presence alone is enough to shift the tone of everything around it.

Tommy navigating a new kind of responsibility
According to Wallace, Tommy will not walk away from the field. He may be attending executive meetings now, sitting at polished tables, wearing the right suit for the room. Still, the part of him that knows how to work a rig is not going anywhere. Wallace said Tommy might be in the office, but he’s not gone from the ground. That’s where he started. That’s where he belongs. The show plans to keep him close to that.
Season two will lean into this duality. A man who understands people because he has worked beside them. A man now in charge of those same people. The question isn’t whether Tommy can lead. It’s whether he can lead without letting go of who he was. Wallace pointed out that this is not a clean shift. It’s something in between. And it’s exactly what the show wants to explore.
Cooper and Ariana after the loss
Not every storyline in Landman is about business. Some of it is personal. That’s where Cooper and Ariana come in. In the final moments of season one, their interaction was quiet. No music swell. No dramatic declaration. Just silence. A shared moment between two people left behind.
Cooper had lost a close friend. Ariana had lost a husband. Both carried grief, but instead of retreating, they faced each other. Wallace described their connection as meaningful and real. It happened fast. Maybe too fast. But sometimes emotions move like that when everything else falls apart.
Landman season 2 won’t turn away from this part of the story. There’s no certainty about what they are to each other. That’s the point. The second season won’t force a label onto it. Instead, it will follow what comes next. If that means growth, the story will show it. If it means distance, it will show that too. Wallace didn’t make promises. He just said the connection exists, and it matters.

A small operation with big potential
Meanwhile, Cooper is trying something new. He’s building an oil business from the ground up. Wallace shared that he’s doing surprisingly well. Not because he has money or backing. But because he tells the truth. He knows the industry. And he listens. His approach is small. He goes door to door. He finds leases that others ignore. Right now, no one sees him as a threat.
That could change. Landman makes it clear that the oil business is always under quiet observation. Wallace mentioned that in the oil world, people are always watching. During his time in the field, it was common for workers to carry binoculars in their trucks. They’d watch neighboring sites. They wanted to know who was drilling, how deep, how fast. That mindset hasn’t gone away. It’s built into the culture. Surveillance, even in silence, is part of the job.
A world of close observation and quiet rivalry
So Cooper’s independence might not stay under the radar for long. The line between independence and competition is thin. The people around him may start asking questions. Especially the ones with something to lose.
Landman continues to portray oil and gas as a space shaped by rivalries, subtle observation, and calculated moves. Even within families or among allies, tensions are never far. Wallace’s perspective reinforces that sense of constant motion. Characters navigate familiar settings, but the relationships inside them are always shifting.

Landman season 2 premieres in December
Landman Season 2 is officially set to premiere in December 2025 on Paramount+. Wallace confirmed that development is active and that Tommy will be seen navigating both boardrooms and field operations. His dual role remains a focus. Meanwhile, Cooper’s growing start-up oil company is beginning to make waves. According to the latest report, the Norris family could soon be facing off in a very different kind of land war.
A second season built on tension, not resolution
The second season of Landman doesn’t aim to tie up loose ends. That was never the purpose. Instead, it leans into discomfort. It opens space for questions without easy answers. Wallace didn’t suggest closure. He described movement. Not resolution.
Landman does not soften its characters. It lets them struggle. That’s what gives the series weight. And according to Wallace, that weight will only deepen going forward.