"Landman" star Jon Hamm discusses his oil billionaire Monty Miller's fate in Sunday's finale, and what's next. "He was very much playing with fire."
The actor speaks with The Hollywood Reporter about his oil tycoon's ending, the viral Jerry Jones scene and lessons learned for when the show likely returns: "There’s going to be a lot of wreckage to clean up.
During the season finale, Andy Garcia made a cameo appearance which could turn into a regular role if Season 2 is confirmed. Ali Larter, Jacob Lofland and Michelle Randolph are three more actors on Landman. Demi Moore played Monty's wife, Cami.
Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones had a role on a recent episode of the Paramount+ series Landman and displayed surprisingly solid acting chops. A clip of
The Sunday, January 5 episode of Landman may have potentially featured a prominent character's demise, but it's a different moment that has everyone talking: Jerry Jones' wildly unexpected cameo.
Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones stepped into the Taylor Sheridan universe with an appearance on the penultimate episode of Landman ’s season one. The series starring Billy Bob Thornton as a crisis manager is set against the backdrop of the booming and rugged West Texas oil industry.
Jerry Jones is a polarizing figure as the owner of the Dallas Cowboys, to say the least. But when it comes to Jerry Jones the actor, the internet has seemingly come to a consensus. Jones recently appeared as a guest star in the new Taylor Sheridan series Landman, and fans were pleasantly surprised with his more-than-solid performance.
Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones is often in the spotlight running the NFL's most lucrative franchise, but he is receiving a different type of attention early in 2025. It has nothing to do with the future of Cowboys head coach Mike McCarthy. It's all about ...
Monty Miller (Jon Hamm) receives a hospital visit from oil man and Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones in "Landman." While it's not definitively stated, Monty died in the hospital bed. The character ...
Joe Biden took to the airwaves to babble away at his fellow Americans, touting his “legacy” as president and then whining, in a style he
Norman Lear's "The Jeffersons," an "All in the Family" spinoff, was a record-setting Black comedy. But it made important history in other ways.