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Taylor Sheridan, Landman, Paramount: What Comes Next

The future of Paramount's content slate and the sprawling empire of Taylor Sheridan hinge precariously on the performance of shows like *Landman*.BuddyTV

Taylor Sheridan — Taylor Sheridan, Landman, Paramount: What Comes Next (featured)
Photo: <a href="https://www.pexels.com/photo/moose-grazing-in-wildflower-meadow-sheridan-wy-38269155/">Deb Hayes</a> / Pexels

The future of Paramount’s content slate and the sprawling empire of Taylor Sheridan hinge precariously on the performance of shows like *Landman*.

BuddyTV’s recent piece, “Taylor Sheridan, Landman, Paramount: What Comes Next,” offered a snapshot of a surprisingly complex and perhaps overly optimistic picture for the studio and its marquee creator. It charted the current standing of the oil-tycoon drama within Paramount+’s streaming ecosystem, highlighting its recent renewal and unexpected chart resurgence. This isn’t an interview in the traditional sense, but rather a strategic update, painting a picture of stability and success for one of Hollywood’s most prolific showrunners and his primary studio partner. The article, in essence, presented the studio’s preferred narrative for a show that represents a significant, if not exactly *Yellowstone*-sized, investment.

Taylor Sheridan — Taylor Sheridan, Landman, Paramount: What Comes Next (photo)
Photo: Angelica Reyn / Pexels

What landed

The article’s key takeaway, designed to reassure, was the unequivocal confirmation of *Landman*’s renewal for a third season. This is, by any measure, a concrete statement of intent from Paramount. In a landscape where streaming cancellations are as common as genre reboots, a multi-season commitment signals faith, or at least a calculated necessity, in the Taylor Sheridan brand. It tells us that Paramount is not yet ready to cut ties with a key piece of its meticulously constructed “Sheridan-verse,” suggesting *Landman* has, at minimum, met internal benchmarks if not set the industry ablaze.

The piece further highlighted *Landman*’s curious return to streaming charts months after its second season concluded. This tidbit is presented as evidence of the show’s enduring appeal, a testament to its discoverability and perhaps a slow-burn success story. For a platform hungry for evergreen content, the notion of a series gaining traction post-initial-release is undeniably attractive. It implies a longevity that transcends immediate buzz, suggesting a valuable, if quiet, asset in Paramount+’s catalogue. The article also gently reminded readers that Paramount+ “still owns a series built around one of television’s busiest creators,” a clear affirmation of Sheridan’s continued, if not exclusive, value to the streamer.

What doesn’t add up

While the BuddyTV piece offered a veneer of stability, a closer look at its assertions reveals more questions than answers, particularly concerning the long-term viability of Paramount’s current strategy. The celebratory note about *Landman*’s “return to streaming charts” months after its Season 2 finale, for instance, feels less like a triumph and more like a gentle sigh of relief. In the hyper-competitive streaming wars, a show performing well *after* its initial run often signals a lack of immediate, impactful new content. It’s the equivalent of celebrating an old hit returning to the radio charts because nothing fresh is quite landing. Where’s the consistent, front-loaded engagement that truly drives subscriptions and buzz?

The glowing reference to Taylor Sheridan as “one of television’s busiest creators” also carries a significant, if unstated, caveat. While prolificacy is often lauded, it inevitably raises concerns about creative bandwidth and potential dilution. Sheridan’s expansive universe — encompassing *Yellowstone* and its various prequels, *Tulsa King*, *Mayor of Kingstown*, *Special Ops: Lioness*, and now *Landman* — demands an astonishing level of creative oversight. The implicit question, carefully sidestepped by the article, is whether even a talent as formidable as Sheridan can maintain the quality and distinctive voice across so many concurrent, high-budget productions. The risk of creative fatigue or a reliance on formulaic storytelling seems not just present, but increasingly probable.

Taylor Sheridan — Taylor Sheridan, Landman, Paramount: What Comes Next (photo)
Photo: Deb Hayes / Pexels

Furthermore, the article’s positive spin entirely omits the massive financial outlay Paramount has committed to the Sheridan empire. The ongoing renewal of shows like *Landman*, while framed as a win, represents continued, substantial investment. The piece neglects to interrogate whether the returns from these shows, particularly those beyond the *Yellowstone* main series, truly justify the reported hundreds of millions poured into development and production. Is *Landman*’s quiet success enough to anchor a streaming service, or is it merely a costly placeholder in a wider, more precarious gambit? The narrative presented feels less like a comprehensive strategic update and more like a carefully curated status report, designed to highlight the positives while strategically ignoring the underlying financial and creative tensions.

The stakes here are high: Paramount’s strategic direction, Taylor Sheridan’s creative legacy, and the very viability of the streaming model relying on mega-deals with mega-creators all hang in the balance, with *Landman* serving as a rather telling barometer come Monday morning.

Taylor Sheridan — Taylor Sheridan, Landman, Paramount: What Comes Next (photo)
Photo: Angelica Reyn / Pexels

Source: OnTheRecord