On this page
Two new voices, same social order.
Two new voices test how open Charleston's old-money circle really is.
A rhythm worth tracking.
Season two brings Landon Clements into Southern Charm's main cast alongside a fuller role for Kathryn Dennis, widening the social circle the founding season introduced. Twelve episodes keep the format tight, tracking the same Charleston manners and family stakes with two additional voices in the mix. The core group's established chemistry carries the season, even as the new arrivals test how open this social world really is to outsiders.
The #06 slot.
Slot #06 of 11 in the Southern Charm Editor's Canon. Season two sits at the midpoint of this canon because it's the format's first real test of growth. Landon Clements joins the main cast, and Kathryn Dennis moves into a fuller role, the first change to the roster since the founding season. Twelve episodes, the show's shortest order at that point, don't leave much room for the additions to fully settle, which keeps this from ranking with the show's most confident stretches. But the core group's chemistry absorbs the change cleanly, and Charleston's social hierarchy reads just as specific with two new voices in it. A solid, necessary proof of concept, more than a peak.