If you’ve just discovered Landman or you’ve been riding with Tommy Norris since the first blowout in West Texas, the good news is simple: both season 1 and season 2 are available to stream on demand, and they live in one main place. Landman is a Paramount Plus original, so that’s the home base for catching up on every episode in order, whether you’re binging from the pilot or dropping in right before the season 2 finale.

Landman is one of those shows that makes more sense if you watch it like a novel instead of a random cable rerun, so start with season 1 and treat it as the prologue to the chaos of season 2. The series is set in the boomtowns of West Texas and follows landman and fixer Tommy Norris (Billy Bob Thornton) as he navigates oil money, land deals, family drama and the kind of corporate brinkmanship that can blow up lives as quickly as it blows out wells. It comes from Taylor Sheridan’s growing TV empire, which is why it has that mix of modern western grit, high-stakes business and bruised family loyalties you’ve seen in his other dramas.
If you want the cleanest, easiest way to watch Landman in the US, go straight to Paramount Plus. The show is a Paramount Plus original, and the service has every episode of season 1 and the full run of season 2, including the finale, available to stream on demand once they’ve aired. You can watch via the Paramount Plus website or app on pretty much anything: smart TVs, streaming sticks, game consoles, phones and tablets, or through partner apps like Prime Video Channels if you prefer to keep everything in one place.
From a practical standpoint, the on-demand experience is built for binging. Paramount Plus lets you pick up exactly where you left off, so if you start season 1 on your TV and finish it on your phone in bed, your place in the episode queue follows you automatically. The service has two main tiers: an ad‑supported plan at $8.99/month and a premium ad‑free option at $13.99/month if you just want to live in West Texas without commercial breaks.
Once you’re signed up, start with Landman season 1 on the show’s landing page and work your way forward. Season 1 introduces Tommy, his ex Angela, their kids and the ecosystem of roughnecks, executives and would‑be billionaires that make M‑Tex’s world tick, and it lays the groundwork for the bigger swings in season 2. Think of season 1 as the orientation tour: who owns what, who’s in debt to whom and why the next big deal feels like life or death for basically everyone involved.
Season 2 is where everything gets louder, riskier and more personal, which makes watching it on demand especially satisfying. By the time you reach the back half of the season, Tommy is clashing hard with Cami Miller (Demi Moore), the M‑Tex boss who wants to double down on a controversial offshore natural gas rig even as everyone around her sees disaster written all over it. The tension of that bet, plus Gallino’s involvement and the fallout from decisions made on the rig, hits harder when you’ve just watched the earlier episodes instead of trying to remember what happened weeks ago on linear TV.
Bingeing also helps with the family storyline, which quietly becomes one of the show’s most compelling threads. Cooper’s spiraling anger and the violent confrontation that gets caught on security cameras land differently when you’ve just spent a few episodes watching him try—and fail—to keep things under control. Ainsley’s trip to cheer camp sounds light on paper, but the roommate-from-hell setup feels like another version of what the show is always doing: putting pressure on people until one bad decision could change their lives.
If you’re outside the US, the basic rule still holds: look to Paramount Plus first. In Canada, for instance, Landman streams on Paramount Plus with the full season 1 lineup and new seasons added there, and similar arrangements exist in other Paramount Plus markets. Availability can vary by country, but whenever Paramount Plus operates in a region, Landman is positioned as one of its flagship dramas, alongside other Sheridan series.
If all you care about is catching the season 2 finale, you can technically jump straight to the last episode on Paramount Plus once it’s live, but the show really isn’t built for that. The season 2 closer, “Tragedy and Flies,” lands after weeks of mounting friction inside M‑Tex and escalating trouble in Tommy’s personal life, and the emotional payoff depends heavily on knowing how he got fired, who sided with Cami and what Cooper did when pushed too far. Watching the finale in isolation is like reading only the last chapter of a Taylor Sheridan novel; you’ll get the gist, but not the gut punch.
What makes Landman interesting to watch on demand is that it plays like a climate‑era corporate western: a boom‑and‑bust story where fortunes are made and lost in boardrooms as much as on the rig floor. The series leans into the idea that the Texas oil patch isn’t just local drama—it’s tied to the economy, the environment and geopolitics in ways that ripple far past the Permian Basin. Streaming it in long stretches lets all of that texture build, from small family arguments around a kitchen table to billion‑dollar gambles in glass offices over the Gulf.
So if you’re planning a weekend in West Texas from your couch, the roadmap is simple. Grab a Paramount Plus subscription, queue up Landman season 1 and let it roll straight into season 2 until you hit the finale. Whether you’re here for Billy Bob Thornton doing weary, sharp‑eyed damage control or for the spectacle of an oil boom that might blow up the people chasing it, watching Landman on demand is the easiest way to see the whole messy picture.
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