Exploring Western Skies: The Real Nursing Home Behind Angela’s Scene in Landman S02E05

Western Skies on Landman: The Real Retirement Home Behind Angela’s Fake Birthday Party

When Landman Season 2, Episode 5 dropped on Paramount+ on December 14, 2025, a small scene stole more attention than some of the show’s explosions and boardroom fights.

Angela Norris walks into Western Skies retirement home, claims it is her birthday, and soaks up an avalanche of affection and odd gifts from the residents. Recap writers have already labeled it what it is: a fake birthday party staged at the nursing home, with Angela more than happy to be the star of the show.

Ever since, fan searches have spiked around the same cluster of questions:

“Where is Western Skies?” “Is Western Skies a real retirement home?” “Can you visit the retirement home from Landman?”

Here is what the evidence from local reporting, filming‑location guides, and production notes actually tells us.


How Western Skies Fits into Landman’s Story

Western Skies is not new in Season 2. It first shows up in Season 1, Episode 7, “All Roads Lead to a Hole.”

In that episode, as recapped by The Cinemaholic, Angela and her daughter Ainsley drive past a drab Midland nursing home and decide on a whim to go in. The facility is identified in coverage as Western Skies, and the scenes show residents mostly sitting idle until Angela decides they need more excitement.

She comes back equipped with board games and alcohol, and the visit quickly turns into a lively, rule‑bending party for the seniors. Entertainment outlets described Western Skies as the place where Angela unexpectedly “finds purpose,” while also giving the show some comic relief from its cartel and oil‑patch storylines.

By the Season 1 finale, “The Crumbs of Hope,” Western Skies has become the setting for one of Ainsley’s wildest ideas. As recapped on Landman.tv, Ainsley plans “the wildest field trip ever” for the Western Skies residents and hauls them to a local gentlemen’s club, where her boyfriend Ryder is dancing on stage. The seniors, in that write‑up, “lap up the chaos,” and Western Skies fully shifts into one of the show’s main comedic engines.

Season 2 keeps that thread going. A recap of Episode 2 notes Angela and Ainsley “teaching aerobics at an old age home” while other characters complain about constantly bumping into them at Tommy’s house. That volunteer gig matches the ongoing Western Skies storyline from Season 1 and sets up the more elaborate visit in Episode 5.

So by the time Angela walks in for her so‑called birthday party in Season 2, Episode 5, Western Skies is already a familiar, recurring location, not a one‑off gag.


Angela’s Fake Birthday Party in Season 2, Episode 5

The fake birthday sequence sits in the middle of one of Tommy Norris’ roughest days on the job.

According to detailed Episode 5 recaps, the hour opens with Tommy juggling pressure from his son Nate, questions about whether Tommy’s father Thomas should be in a home, and growing trouble at M‑Tex Oil. Angela, in contrast, has a very different schedule in mind.

She tells Tommy that her plan is simple: attend a birthday party at Western Skies retirement home, then host a welcome dinner for Thomas later that evening. On screen, that “birthday” turns out to be fake. Angela lies to the residents that it is her birthday, purely to set herself up as the guest of honor.

The recap is blunt about it. It calls the party “fake” and describes how Angela is “showered with love and all kinds of weird gifts” from the residents. The writer even labels her behavior attention‑seeking, then immediately notes that Angela and Ainsley are also “bringing so much joy into the lives of these oldies.”

The show intercuts that Western Skies party with a series of grim turns for Tommy:

  • He discovers M‑Tex is being billed for Cooper’s wells because Cooper named him on the contracts.
  • He scrambles to buy Cooper’s leases into M‑Tex to keep his son from financial ruin.
  • He learns, late, about a suicide and traffic collision on M‑Tex property that no one reported up the chain.
  • He then hears of a separate hydrogen sulfide poisoning incident that hospitalized Jerrell and killed hunters near another site.
  • Meanwhile, a potential financing deal risks tying M‑Tex to a drug cartel.

By the end of the episode, Tommy walks into a house that looks nothing like the day he just had. Angela has thrown a lavish pirate‑themed dinner to welcome Thomas, complete with seafood she has hustled together. The Western Skies “birthday” and the family table that follows form a sharp emotional counterweight to the corporate and legal disasters outside.

Angela’s fake birthday at Western Skies, in other words, is not just a gag. It is the centerpiece of the show’s domestic storyline that week, and it doubles as a window into how Landman uses this retirement home to humanize, and sometimes complicate, its main characters.


Is Western Skies a Real Retirement Home?

The short answer is yes and no.

On screen, Western Skies is a fictional Midland‑area nursing home where Angela and Ainsley volunteer, party, and occasionally push every boundary of appropriate senior recreation.

In real life, those scenes are filmed at a very real facility:

  • Hilltop Park Rehabilitation and Care Center
  • 970 Hilltop Drive, Weatherford, Texas 76086

Multiple independent sources tie Western Skies directly to Hilltop Park.

The official Visit Fort Worth filming‑locations guide lists “Western Skies Nursing Home” at that same 970 Hilltop Drive address in Weatherford and notes that it is a real nursing home. A location feature on Atlas of Wonders states outright that “the Western Skies nursing home is the Hilltop Park Rehabilitation and Care Center in Weatherford.”

A North Texas locations article, republished by Yahoo Entertainment, goes further. It identifies the nursing home from Season 1, Episode 7 as Hilltop Park, again with the 970 Hilltop Drive address. In that piece, actor Michelle Randolph, who plays Ainsley, explains that Taylor Sheridan’s wife Nicole Sheridan volunteers at Hilltop, which likely helped connect the production to the facility.

A CBS Texas casting call for Season 2 extras then locks the connection in place. That notice specifically sought senior citizens “to be regulars at Western Skies Retirement Home” and told applicants the scenes would be filmed at Hilltop Park Rehabilitation and Care Center in Weatherford.

So while Western Skies itself exists only inside the Paramount+ series, the building, interior hallways, and common rooms viewers see on screen are part of a functioning North Texas nursing and rehab center.


Where Western Skies Is Actually Located

In the world of Landman, Western Skies is presented as a Midland‑area home. The drive‑up shots in Season 1 bear that out.

Atlas of Wonders notes that when Angela and Ainsley head to the nursing home in Episode 7, the production shows them passing a real AutoZone and Take 5 Oil Change on West Wadley Avenue in Midland, around 717 W. Wadley. Those street‑level shots give the audience a sense that Western Skies sits in the heart of the Permian Basin.

The reality on the ground is different. The interior and exterior nursing‑home scenes are filmed in Weatherford, a small city about 30 miles west of Fort Worth. The facility is Hilltop Park Rehabilitation and Care Center at 970 Hilltop Drive.

That Weatherford location fits cleanly into the larger production map. Landman films primarily in and around Fort Worth, with additional work in Odessa, Midland, Young County, Weatherford and other North Texas communities. Season 1 shot from February to June 2024, using sites like the American Association of Professional Landmen headquarters and the Fort Worth Petroleum Club, while Season 2 added Sheridan’s SGS Studios complex near AllianceTexas.

Western Skies therefore sits at an interesting intersection. In the story, it belongs to Midland’s world. In practice, it is part of Sheridan’s growing North Texas production footprint just west of Fort Worth.


Inside the Real Facility Behind Western Skies

Hilltop Park Rehabilitation and Care Center is not a soundstage. It is a working nursing and rehab facility with its own history and regulatory footprint.

On its website, Hilltop Park describes itself as part of Priority Management, a privately owned Texas‑based operator of skilled‑nursing centers. The facility lists:

  • Short‑term rehabilitation
  • Long‑term nursing care
  • Post‑hospital recovery
  • On‑site physical and occupational therapy

as its core services, along with 24/7 nursing care and assistance with daily living.

Medicare records identify Hilltop Park as having 132 certified beds, operating under the legal name of Parker County Hospital District, and participating in both Medicare and Medicaid. Hilltop’s own “About” section says it has been serving Weatherford as a rehab and long‑term care provider since 2013.

The Star‑Telegram / Yahoo locations feature adds a uniquely Landman‑specific detail: Michelle Randolph told the paper that Nicole Sheridan volunteers at Hilltop Park. That volunteer connection likely made the home more than just another anonymous filming site and helps explain why the show returned to it for Season 2.

Taken together, the documents and coverage paint a clear picture. When viewers watch Angela leading aerobics, hosting her fake birthday, or loading residents onto a party bus, those scenes are unfolding inside an actual regional care facility that serves Weatherford and Parker County year‑round.


Filming Around Western Skies: Liquor Stores, Craft Aisles, and Clubs

The Western Skies storyline does not live inside the nursing home alone. The episodes that feature it pull in a ring of very real North Texas businesses.

According to Visit Fort Worth and the Star‑Telegram’s location breakdown:

  • The craft store where Angela picks up supplies for Western Skies in Season 1 is a real Michaels at 359 Carroll Street in Fort Worth, in the Montgomery Plaza development.
  • The drive‑through liquor store where she stocks up before heading back to the residents is Watauga Beer Barn, located at 6320 Denton Highway in Watauga, Texas. The store’s distinctive look appears on screen in Episode 7.
  • When Angela and Ainsley haul Western Skies residents to a club later in the season, those scenes were filmed at Rick’s Cabaret, a real gentlemen’s club at 7107 Calmont Avenue in Fort Worth.

Those choices give the Western Skies plotline a specific regional texture. Audiences might hear “Midland,” but the beer barn, craft aisles, and neon club signs belong to the Fort Worth metro area and its neighboring towns.


Why Western Skies Keeps Coming Back in Season 2

From a story perspective, Western Skies offers the writers a reliable way to shift tone. The nursing‑home scenes let Landman cut from hydrogen sulfide leaks and corporate liability to bingo nights, aerobics classes, and seniors gleefully breaking the rules.

From a production perspective, it also appears to be a deliberate anchor.

That April 2025 CBS Texas casting call for Season 2 extras did not treat Western Skies as a one‑scene background. It asked specifically for senior citizens to be “regulars at Western Skies Retirement Home,” indicating multiple scenes and recurring use of the location.

At the same time, Landman’s profile has grown quickly. Season 2 premiered on November 16, 2025 and drew over 9.2 million global views in its first two days, according to numbers reported by TheWrap. Paramount+ called it the most‑watched premiere in the streamer’s history, with viewership up 262 percent compared to Season 1’s debut.

The platform also reported a 320 percent jump in Season 1 sampling after the Season 2 launch and tracked 255,600 social interactions on premiere day, a 489 percent increase over the Season 1 opener. On the strength of that performance, Paramount+ ordered a Season 3 in early December 2025.

The show’s growing audience makes its recognizable locations more important. Hilltop Park as Western Skies is now one of those places, alongside Fort Worth’s petroleum clubs and Midland’s streets. While there is no official statement yet about Western Skies in Season 3, the Season 2 casting call and the repeated return to that building suggest the retirement‑home storyline will likely remain part of Landman’s visual vocabulary. That expectation, however, remains speculative until production confirms Season 3 details.


What Happens Next for Fans of Western Skies

For viewers Googling “Where is Western Skies?” the answer is now very clear.

In the fiction of Landman, Western Skies is a Midland nursing home where Angela and Ainsley cause trouble, find purpose, and, in Season 2, stage an entirely fake birthday party to brighten the residents’ day and Angela’s ego.

In the real world, Western Skies is Hilltop Park Rehabilitation and Care Center, a 132‑bed skilled‑nursing and rehab facility at 970 Hilltop Drive in Weatherford, Texas, part of the Priority Management network and in operation since 2013.

The series blends that real Weatherford address with Midland establishing shots and a circle of Fort Worth‑area locations, from a Michaels in Montgomery Plaza to Watauga Beer Barn and Rick’s Cabaret.

As Landman continues to expand its universe following a record‑setting Season 2 premiere and a confirmed Season 3 renewal, Western Skies sits in a revealing place. It is one of the few locations that touches both the show’s fictional emotional arcs and the real‑life community where Taylor Sheridan and his team have built their production home.

For now, Angela’s fake birthday party in Season 2, Episode 5 stands as the clearest showcase of what Western Skies has become: the series’ most unpredictable retirement home, grounded in a very real North Texas address.

Stacy Holmes
Stacy Holmes

Stacy Holmes is a passionate TV show blogger and journalist known for her sharp insights and engaging commentary on the ever-evolving world of entertainment. With a talent for spotting hidden gems and predicting the next big hits, Stacy's reviews have become a trusted source for TV enthusiasts seeking fresh perspectives. When she's not binge-watching the latest series, she's interviewing industry insiders and uncovering behind-the-scenes stories.

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