This article contains spoilers for Jury Duty Season 1. The first three episodes of Season 2, Jury Duty Presents: Company Retreat, are available now on Prime Video; the season will continue on March 27 with two more episodes, and the final three episodes will arrive on April 3.
The first season of Prime Video’s Jury Duty was a huge surprise. Coming out of virtually nowhere, the pseudo-reality show focusing on one real guy stuck in the middle of a bunch of actors pretending to be on a jury was laugh-out-loud funny, heartwarmingly sweet, and best of all, stuck the landing when it came to its reveal to the main dude, Ronald Gladden. Thankfully, Gladden also ended up being very nice and very game. So naturally, Prime is doing it again with Jury Duty Presents: Company Retreat, a sort-of sequel, sort-of extension of the brand that once again sticks a normal guy in an abnormal situation.
So with three episodes out on Prime today, has the streamer managed to capture lightning in a bottle once again? Or put more simply: Does Jury Duty Season 2 justify its existence?
Before we get there, a bit of a primer on the first Jury Duty, as ‘the little show that could’ came out three years ago, and may have escaped your notice, given it was on Amazon’s Freevee service, something that no longer exists (though you can now watch the first season for free on Prime Video). Created by Lee Eisenberg and Gene Stupnitsky, the series found Gladden recruited for jury duty on a civil trial ostensibly being “documented” for a series about juries – though everything from the jurors to the witnesses and even the judge were all actors. All eight episodes of the show were scripted as a semi-choose your own adventure; there were paths the producers nudged Gladden down, and all the performers were given both scripted lines and options to improvise. But ultimately, it was up to trusting that Gladden would do the right thing in the trial versus noping out of the whole situation.
Adding to the madness, one of the jurors on the trial – the first season was set at the Huntington Park Superior Court in Los Angeles – was James Marsden; not Marsden pretending to be someone else, but rather a hyper-actualized version of his celebrity self. And upping the hilarity, other than a vague knowledge of Sonic the Hedgehog, Gladden didn’t really know who Marsden was, despite the celeb doing his best to make everything in the trial about himself rather than what was going on “legally.”




