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A Scene From Landman Is Going Viral After Billy Bob Thornton’s Character Unleashes a Scathing Take on The View. ML

When Billy Bob Thornton’s character fires off a line that leaves jaws on the floor, you know Taylor Sheridan is behind the words.

In the latest episode of Paramount Plus’s oil-soaked drama Landman, Thornton’s Tommy Norris delivers a gut-punch line aimed straight at daytime television, and it is dripping with that classic Taylor Sheridan fire. While catching up with his estranged father, T.L. Norris, played by none other than Sam Elliott, Tommy tosses out a suggestion that sounds innocent enough.

T.L. admits he does not know what to do now that he is living at Tommy’s place after years of no communication. Tommy tells him to read a book or maybe kick back and watch TV. Then he delivers the hammer: “Watch one of them daytime talk shows, you know, like The View or something.”

T.L., clearly not a daytime TV junkie, asks, “What’s The View?”

That is when Thornton’s Tommy unloads one of the most blistering takes ever heard on a streaming show. He calls it “a bunch of pissed off millionaires bitching about how much they hate millionaires and Trump and men like you and me and everybody else they got a bee up their ass about.”

Mic drop.

This is not your average prime-time drama. Landman is raw and unfiltered and as rugged as the West Texas oilfields it is set in. And in true Sheridan fashion, it is not afraid to swing at cultural institutions, even if they host one of the most-watched talk shows in the country.

Tommy even goes a step further and says the show is “pretty funny,” not in a sitcom kind of way, but more like “fart in church funny.” His dad, played to grumpy perfection by Elliott, deadpans back with, “That don’t sound funny, either.”

You can practically hear the chuckles from living rooms across the country.

What makes this moment hit so hard is not just the punchline. It is how perfectly it fits the characters. Tommy Norris is no polished PR guy. He is a rough-cut oil executive who says what he means and means what he says. When Thornton delivers lines like that, it feels natural and not rehearsed.

Gritty dialogue like this is what separates Landman from the rest and continues to prove Sheridan as a master of tension, truth, and Texas-sized swagger.

This moment is yet another example of Landman refusing to play it safe. The show dives headfirst into generational rifts, personal pain, and corporate corruption, all while handing actors like Thornton and Elliott some of the most explosive lines on television.

Elliott told People that his character is a “fractured man” and that the season will explore how he and Tommy begin to rebuild what was lost between them. If Episode 5 is any clue, they will be doing that with plenty of grit and some sharply delivered truth bombs along the way.

As for The View? No official response yet from the co-hosts, but we would not be surprised if one of them fires back. Or maybe, like George Strait at the Kennedy Center Honors, they will stay silent and let the moment speak for itself.

Either way, Landman is not playing nice. It is bold and proud and not afraid to stir the pot, whether it is about oil, fathers and sons, or what gets said on daytime TV. Billy Bob just lit a match, and Taylor Sheridan’s fire continues to burn hot.

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