Table of Contents >> Show >> Hide
- Jump to the good stuff
- What Kayla Wallace revealed (and why it matters)
- Landman Season 2 basics: premiere date, schedule, and where to watch
- Why this is a big deal for WCTH fans
- The Rebecca Falcone factor: why Kayla’s character matters in Season 2
- Cast updates and bigger stakes in the oil patch
- How a short Instagram post turned into a full hype cycle
- What to expect in Season 2 (smart guesses, no spoilers)
- FAQ
- Fan experiences and real-life moments around the news (bonus section)
- Final takeaway
If you’re a When Calls the Heart fan (aka a proud Heartie) and you’ve recently wandered into the dusty,
high-stakes world of Landman, Kayla Wallace just gave you a reason to mark your calendar in permanent ink.
The Hallmark favorite turned Paramount+ powerhouse shared a major Season 2 updateone that connects two very
different TV universes: cozy frontier comfort and West Texas oilfield chaos.
What Kayla Wallace revealed (and why it matters)
The headline is simple: Kayla Wallace confirmed that Landman Season 2 is comingand she didn’t do it with a
dry press release or a mysterious “soon 👀” tweet. She shared a sneak-peek trailer and paired it with the kind of
caption that leaves zero room for guesswork: “NOV 16. SEASON 2.”
That’s catnip for fans for two reasons. First, it’s a concrete dateno “sometime this fall,” no “later this year,”
no “we’ll keep you posted.” Second, it came from Wallace herself, which hits differently than a network account.
When an actor posts it, it feels like a personal message to the people who actually watch the show, argue about it,
and rewatch scenes like it’s a competitive sport.
In other words: this wasn’t just “news.” It was a signal that Season 2 is real, locked, and ready to rolland that
Wallace’s character is still very much in the mix.
A quick timeline so you don’t have to keep 19 tabs open
- Season 1 premiered: November 2024.
- Season 2 renewal: Reported and confirmed in spring 2025.
- Kayla’s “Season 2 is coming” post: late summer 2025, paired with a trailer tease.
- Season 2 premiere date: November 16, 2025.
Landman Season 2 basics: premiere date, schedule, and where to watch
Let’s answer the questions everyone texts their group chat at the same time:
When does it start? How many episodes? Where do I watch?
Premiere date
Landman Season 2 premieres on Sunday, November 16, 2025.
The date lines up with Kayla Wallace’s own social post, plus multiple entertainment outlets reporting the same
release window.
Episode count and release schedule
Season 2 is a 10-episode run, with episodes dropping weekly on Sundays. If you love bingeing,
this is the part where you sigh dramaticallythen watch anyway, because weekly episodes are basically the gym
membership of fandom: you complain, but it’s probably good for you.
Where to watch
In the U.S., Landman is a Paramount+ title. (If you’re outside the U.S., availability can vary by region,
often through partner streaming services.)
One more detail that matters: Landman isn’t just “a new season of a show.” It’s a Taylor Sheridan universe
projectmeaning it’s built for long arcs, power shifts, and characters who make decisions that feel questionable
until you realize the show wants you to wrestle with them.
Why this is a big deal for WCTH fans
On paper, When Calls the Heart and Landman have wildly different vibes.
One is frontier romance, community, and earnest hope. The other is oil money, moral conflict, and a lot of
conversations that feel like they come with a hard hat.
But Kayla Wallace is the bridge.
From Hope Valley to high-stakes legal warfare
Wallace became a fan favorite on When Calls the Heart as Fiona Miller, a character with modern energy in a
period settingambitious, independent, and not afraid to push against expectations. When she stepped back from the
Hallmark series, the reason was practical: she landed a major series-regular role on Landman, which films
out of town and demands a different production schedule.
In WCTH story terms, Fiona’s absence was explained by her work with suffragettes and opportunities away
from Hope Valley. Behind the scenes, Wallace (and the show’s producers) were straightforward: schedules collided,
and she had to choose.
“Never a goodbye” energy
The reason Hearties still pay attention to Wallace’s career moves is that she’s consistently framed her departure
as flexiblenot a scorched-earth exit. In interviews, she’s suggested it’s often about whether a return can work
with whatever she’s filming that year. That’s not a promise, but it’s also not a locked door.
So when Wallace shares big Landman updates, it’s not just “cool, her new show is back.” It’s also:
What does this mean for her time, her schedule, and the odds of seeing Fiona again?
The Rebecca Falcone factor: why Kayla’s character matters in Season 2
On Landman, Kayla Wallace plays Rebecca Falcone, a sharp attorney who walks into rooms full of powerful men
and refuses to shrink. If Fiona’s strength was warm and community-centered, Rebecca’s strength is steel-toed.
Rebecca isn’t just “a lawyer on a TV show”
Rebecca’s role is designed to expose the machinery behind the oil business: liability, risk, money, influence,
and the human consequences when things go wrong. In interviews about Season 1, Wallace has talked about the work
it took to make the legal side feel groundedlearning the language, the posture, and the pace of someone who can
’t afford to hesitate because hesitation gets eaten alive.
Why she’s a Season 2 highlight
As Landman expands its power struggles in Season 2, a character like Rebecca becomes even more valuable.
When the stakes rise, the legal battlefield gets louder. And because Rebecca already has a “walk in like you own
the place” reputation, the show can use her to trigger conflict quicklywithout needing to spend three episodes
convincing you she’s capable.
Cast updates and bigger stakes in the oil patch
The splashiest Season 2 casting headline is the addition of Sam Elliott, who joins the show as a key figure in
Tommy Norris’ life. Elliott’s presence also sends a message: the series isn’t playing small. It’s stacking the
deck with heavyweight talent to deepen the drama.
The returning core
Season 2 keeps its main ensemble in place, including Billy Bob Thornton as Tommy Norris and Demi Moore in a larger
orbit of influence around the oil empire. Kayla Wallace returns as Rebecca Falcone, and other established players
continue to shape the show’s “money, power, and consequences” ecosystem.
Why Season 2 feels like a pivot point
Season 1 introduced the worldhow the oil business works, who the players are, and why the job is both lucrative
and dangerous. Season 2 gets to skip the orientation and move into escalation:
- More pressure: Once success is visible, everybody wants a cutor control.
- More exposure: When people get hurt, the “human cost” isn’t abstract anymore.
- More politics: Business decisions become personal, and personal decisions become business.
- More legal warfare: A character like Rebecca thrives when the rules get bent.
That’s why Wallace’s “Season 2 is coming” post lands as more than a date. It’s an announcement that the show is
entering the part of its story where the chess pieces actually start taking each other out.
What to expect in Season 2 (smart guesses, no spoilers)
Based on what’s been reported about the Season 2 setup, plus how Taylor Sheridan series typically structure their
second seasons, here are the most reasonable expectationswithout stepping into spoiler territory.
1) Tommy’s new responsibilities will create new enemies
When a character climbs the ladder, the show gains new angles: boardroom pressure, strategic compromises, and
rivals who are suddenly close enough to strike. That shift usually expands the series from “one man handling chaos”
to “one man trying to control chaos… while chaos schedules a meeting.”
2) Rebecca Falcone will be even more central
The bigger the business, the bigger the messand the bigger the mess, the more the lawyers run the room.
If Season 1 introduced Rebecca as a force, Season 2 has room to turn her into a power broker: not just reacting
to crisis, but shaping outcomes.
3) The show will keep balancing spectacle with consequence
Landman doesn’t just want to entertain; it wants you to feel the weight of the world it depictsdanger on
the job, moral tradeoffs, and the ripple effects of “profit at all costs.” If you’re coming from Hallmark, that
tonal difference can be jarring at first. But it’s also part of what makes Wallace’s career jump so interesting:
she’s proving she can live in both worlds.
FAQ
Is Landman officially renewed for Season 2?
Yes. The series was renewed in 2025 after strong performance for Paramount+.
When does Landman Season 2 premiere?
Sunday, November 16, 2025.
How many episodes are in Landman Season 2?
Ten episodes, released weekly.
Where can I watch Landman?
In the U.S., it streams on Paramount+.
Is Kayla Wallace coming back to When Calls the Heart?
Nothing is confirmed long-term. Wallace has publicly suggested it’s not “goodbye,” but whether Fiona returns
depends on timing, story, and scheduling.
Fan experiences and real-life moments around the news (bonus section)
One of the funniest things about modern TV fandom is how “news” isn’t just information anymoreit’s an experience.
Kayla Wallace didn’t merely announce a date; she triggered a familiar ritual: the collective scramble. Phones come
out. Group chats light up. Somebody says, “Wait, is this real?” Somebody else says, “It’s on her Instagram, so yes.”
And then a third person adds, “Okay but what does this mean for Fiona?” (There’s always a Fiona person. Respect.)
For When Calls the Heart fans, Wallace’s Landman update often hits with a double emotion. There’s
excitementbecause seeing a beloved Hallmark actor thrive in a very different genre feels like watching a friend
level up. But there’s also that tiny twinge of “Hope Valley nostalgia,” because every big Landman moment
reminds you why Fiona isn’t around as much. In a way, Season 2 news becomes a trade-off you can actually feel:
you’re gaining Rebecca Falcone’s sharp edge while missing Fiona Miller’s warm spark.
Meanwhile, the Landman crowd tends to react like they’re clocking in for a shift: “All right, what’s the
damage this season?” They talk cast additions, power dynamics, and whether the show will go even harder on the
moral gray zones. That’s part of what makes Wallace’s role so fun to watch in real time. She’s a crossover point
where two fandom styles meet: the Hearties who love character bonds and community growth, and the Sheridan-show
viewers who live for tension, consequences, and people making questionable decisions for understandable reasons.
If you’ve ever participated in a “premiere week” fandom sprint, you know the rhythm: rewatch a few key Season 1
scenes, refresh your memory on who’s aligned with whom, and then line up snacks like you’re hosting a mini event.
For some fans, it becomes a traditionSunday night watch, Monday morning recap reads, and midweek theories that are
40% evidence and 60% vibes. And when the headline comes from Wallace herself, it feels like you’re being invited to
the party, not just sold a ticket.
There’s also a quieter, more personal layer to the experience: seeing actors mark major milestones publicly while
their projects return. When entertainment coverage ties a premiere week to life updates (like Wallace sharing
personal news around the Season 2 window), it creates a “full-circle” feeling for fans who’ve followed her since
Hallmark days. You’re not just watching a character’s arcyou’re watching a career arc, too.
And finally, there’s the simplest experience of all: that satisfying moment when a show you like stops being
“something that ended” and becomes “something that’s coming back.” A date on the calendar turns waiting into
anticipation. It’s the difference between “I hope Season 2 happens” and “Okay, I need to be emotionally available
on November 16.” (Or at least available enough to not open spoilers before coffee.)

How a short Instagram post turned into a full hype cycle
There’s a reason Kayla Wallace’s update traveled fast: she has two fanbases that don’t always overlap, but both
show up hard online. Hearties are loyal (and organized). Sheridan-show viewers are intense (and opinionated).
When Wallace posts something simple and definitive, it becomes shareable fuel.
Why fans trust actor-posted news
Network announcements can feel corporate. Actor announcements feel like you’re getting a “heads up” from someone
on the inside. Wallace didn’t oversell it. She didn’t write a paragraph of buzzwords. She dropped the date, posted
the preview, and let the fandom do the rest.
And yes, her real-life headlines added momentum
Around the Season 2 premiere window, Wallace also shared personal life news publiclygiving entertainment coverage
even more reasons to put her name in headlines. That combination (career milestone + life milestone) is basically
PR rocket fuel, even when it’s delivered in a calm, personal tone.