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My Life with the Walter Boys Season 2: Release date, cast updates and what to expect next

My Life with the Walter Boys Season 2: Release date, cast updates and what to expect next

Business Upturn16-07-2025
By Aman Shukla Published on July 16, 2025, 20:00 IST Last updated July 16, 2025, 16:40 IST
Fans of My Life with the Walter Boys have a lot to be excited about—Season 2 is officially on the way! After that intense Season 1 finale and all the emotional twists, viewers are more than ready to jump back into Jackie Howard's world and see what's next with the Walter family. Here's everything we know so far about the new season. When Is the Release Date for Season 2?
Mark your calendars: Netflix is bringing back My Life with the Walter Boys on August 28, 2025, and yes—all episodes will be released at once. Time to clear your schedule for a proper binge.
The big announcement was made in style at the Calgary Stampede this July, where cast members Nikki Rodriguez, Noah LaLonde, and Ashby Gentry surprised fans with the release date. Filming wrapped up last November in Calgary, so the summer premiere is perfectly timed. Who's Returning and Who's New in the Cast?
The core cast is back to bring the Walter family drama to life, with a few exciting new faces joining the mix. Here's the lineup: Returning Cast Nikki Rodriguez as Jackie Howard, the city girl navigating love and loss in rural Colorado.
Noah LaLonde as Cole Walter, the brooding ex-jock caught in a love triangle with Jackie.
Ashby Gentry as Alex Walter, the sweet bookworm vying for Jackie's heart.
Sarah Rafferty as Katherine Walter, the warm matriarch of the Walter family.
Marc Blucas as George Walter, Katherine's supportive husband.
Johnny Link as Will Walter, the eldest brother, with Zoë Soul recurring as his wife, Hayley, in fewer episodes this season.
Corey Fogelmanis returns as Nathan Walter, alongside Connor Stanhope as Danny, Dean Petriw as Jordan, Alix West Lefler as Parker, and Lennix James as Benny—bringing back the spirited energy of the Walter siblings. Isaac Arellanes and Myles Perez also reprise their roles as Isaac and Lee Garcia.
Beloved characters are set to return as well, with Jaylan Evans as Skylar Summerhill, Alex Quijano as Uncle Richard, Ashley Tavares as Tara, Alisha Newton as Erin, Ellie O'Brien as Grace, Kolton Stewart as Dylan, Mya Lowe as Kiley, Gabrielle Jacinto as Olivia, Jesse Lipscombe as Coach Allen, and Nathaniel Arcand as Mato Summerhill. New Cast Members
Season 2 introduces five new recurring characters who are sure to shake things up: Natalie Sharp as B. Hartford, a confident champion rodeo rider who catches the eye of one of the Walter boys.
Carson MacCormac as Zach, a charming and slightly dangerous senior who gets close to Nathan.
Riele Downs as Maria, a flirty girl in Alex's driver's ed class, stirring tension with Kiley.
Jake Manley as Wylder Holt, a competitive young bronc rider who crosses paths with Alex.
Janet Kidder as Joanne Wagner, Grace's mom and a friend of Katherine's who's not fond of change. What to Expect from the Plot
Season 1 ended with Jackie fleeing to New York City after a messy love triangle involving Cole and Alex. A drunk Alex confessed his love at Will and Hayley's wedding, while Cole's sweet gesture of hiding Jackie's late sister's broken teapot led to a kiss that left fans reeling. Unlike the book by Ali Novak, where Jackie chooses Cole, the show took a bold turn by keeping her romantic future open-ended, with Jackie boarding a flight to New York to live with her Uncle Richard.
In Season 2, Jackie returns to Silver Falls, Colorado, determined to mend things with Alex and set boundaries with Cole while finding her place within the Walter family. But fitting back in won't be easy. Alex, who's had a major glow-up over the summer, is focused on training for a risky rodeo event and enjoying new attention, which might make him less open to reconnecting with Jackie. Meanwhile, Cole takes on a new role at school, but his old habits creep back, stirring up drama. Jackie's journey will center on balancing her New York roots with her new life in Silver Falls, facing choices that could change everything she's worked to rebuild.
Showrunner Melanie Halsall has teased that Season 2 will be 'bigger and better,' with 'massive set pieces' and 'more intricate' stories. The show will deviate from Novak's sequel novel, My Return to the Walter Boys , to keep surprising viewers, so even book fans are in for some twists. The love triangle between Jackie, Cole, and Alex remains at the heart of the drama, with Netflix promoting a 'Team Alex or Team Cole' vibe that promises juicy developments. New characters like Maria and Wylder Holt will add tension, especially for Alex, while B. Hartford and Zach could spark new romantic possibilities for other Walters.
Ahmedabad Plane Crash My Life with the Walter Boys
Aman Shukla is a post-graduate in mass communication . A media enthusiast who has a strong hold on communication ,content writing and copy writing. Aman is currently working as journalist at BusinessUpturn.com
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Rupert Everett Was Fired From Emily In Paris
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Leanne Morgan gets the last laugh with her own Netflix series 'Leanne'
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Leanne Morgan gets the last laugh with her own Netflix series 'Leanne'

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‘Leanne' review: From standup comedian to awkward sitcom star
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The multi-camera sitcom has been on its last legs, which is too bad because it can be such an uproarious format when it prioritizes jokes over the kind of comedy that tends to predominate on streaming: Pleasant enough — fun, even — but straight-up laughs aren't their reason for being. Television is cyclical, and maybe the fizzy possibilities inherent in sitcoms will eventually make their way back onto our screens. Alas, 'Leanne' on Netflix will not be leading the charge. Standup comedian Leanne Morgan stars as the mother of two grown children in Knoxville, Tennessee, who is suddenly informed that her husband of 33 years is leaving her for another woman. That setup, coupled with the Southern twang of the cast, may bring to mind 'Reba,' another eponymous show with a similar premise that premiered more than 20 years ago and ran for six seasons, starring Reba McEntire as a spitfire making do with her new circumstances. 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It's just Leanne and her sister as gal pals who mostly get along bouncing off themselves, their needy parents and Leanne's forgettably superfluous children. Most comedies built around a comedian's standup act draw directly from their lives. But it's worth noting that the real Leanne is very much not divorced from her longtime husband; in fact, her gentle barbs about their personality differences make up the bulk of her material. Morgan is also not an actor by training, so it makes no sense that the show didn't adapt more of her stage persona here, and instead asks her to play something unfamiliar: That tricky sad-funny middle ground of a woman whose marriage has imploded. There's a deliberate pace to the show — and to the dialogue itself — that results in punchlines just laying there. It's weird, because there's an unhurried pace to Morgan's Netflix standup special as well ('I'm Every Woman'), but in it she has some bite and her leisurely cadence is undercut by the sharp comedy of her material, whereas this version of Leanne is oddly bland and lacking a point of view. Exactly one joke lands. Looking at a miserable Leanne, her sister offers to share some of her pill stash: 'I got Xanax, Ativan, Ambien, I think this might be a laxative …' Leanne grabs the last one: 'I'll always take a laxative.' There's a certain amount of violence that's played for laughs, but the show seems uncertain where the humor actually lies in these moments. One episode ends with Leanne decking her husband across the jaw. In another, she finds him in the bathroom they once shared, making himself at home, and in response she grabs a shotgun, marches back in and blows a hole through the ceiling to disabuse him of this notion. If she were really trying to stifle deep rage under a polite, decorous exterior, and that was a running theme in the show — of a woman's worst impulses taking over as she's finally driven off the deep end — that would be so dark, it might come around the other side and be funny as well. But that's not the kind of sitcom this is. Leanne lives in a spacious, well-appointed suburban-style home that apparently goes uncontested in the divorce. In fact, money barely comes up at all. Rarely does divorce not affect either party's finances, but also because Morgan acknowledges the realities of money in her standup act. It's clearly on her mind. Spotting an array of attractive men in the front row of her special: 'Look at y'all in these half-zip golf pullovers — hello, that says 'health insurance' to me. Alright, y'all make me think of my husband, lemme tell you about him, 'cause he's got a 401k.' (Even her grown son in real life — who loves nature so much he raised a baby beaver in his college dorm room, a story she tells in her standup — sounds a lot more interesting than the character on the show, whose only trait appears to be 'henpecked husband.') Now in middle age, Leanne's life as she's known it (the sitcom version, at least) has been turned upside down. Except it hasn't. She's in the same sprawling house. She doesn't seem worried about money. She didn't have much filling her days even before the divorce apparently — she has no professional life nor a social life outside of her sister (who doesn't seem to need to work, either). Leanne's existence is like science fiction — resembling something human but in a contextless bubble that has no connection to anything outside the walls of her home. 'You have a blessed Sunday,' she says at one point, and it's the kind of Southern putdown that's in the same neighborhood as 'Bless your heart.' May 'Leanne' have a blessed run. And may Morgan have another shot at a TV role better suited to her talents. 'Leanne' — 2 stars (out of 4) Where to watch: Netflix

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