Jury Duty Presents Company Retreat Review: A Worthy Second Season
Jury Duty Presents: Company Retreat, the second season of Prime Video’s acclaimed hidden-camera series, premiered on 20 March 2026 — available in the UK the same day as the US on Prime Video. The show replaces its original courtroom setting with a week-long corporate retreat for fictional hot sauce business Rockin’ Grandma’s, placing one unsuspecting man — temp worker Anthony Norman — at the centre of an elaborate, fully scripted world built entirely around him.
What Is Jury Duty Presents Company Retreat and How Does It Work?
The original Jury Duty (2023) built its reputation on a brilliantly simple premise: put one ordinary person — Ronald Gladden — inside a fully staged jury trial, surround him with actors, and let warmth and absurdity do the rest. The show was widely praised for treating its subject as a hero rather than a fool, a quality that set it apart from traditional hidden-camera formats.
Company Retreat keeps that DNA intact but scales the operation considerably. The retreat unfolds across a large outdoor campus rather than a confined courthouse, which creates far more variables for the production to manage. Every employee of Rockin’ Grandma’s Hot Sauce — from the CEO to the warehouse manager — is a professional actor. Anthony Norman is the only person who does not know the cameras are rolling.
The new setting forces the series, find the right subject, and the show can reinvent itself indefinitely.
Anthony Norman Is the Heart of the Series
Every version of this format lives or dies on its central subject, and Anthony Norman is an outstanding find. He is warm, quick to laugh, and — crucially — he does not flinch when the world around him grows increasingly strange. Where another person might withdraw or grow suspicious, Anthony leans in, befriends the oddballs, and attempts to help everyone around him succeed.
The most affecting storyline follows his growing friendship with Dougie Jr. (played by Alex Bonifer), the CEO’s son who has returned from years in Jamaica with an unconvincing accent and zero business experience. Dougie is an objectively ridiculous character, but Anthony identifies the genuine desire underneath the performance and quietly tries to help him succeed. It is a sweet dynamic — and an entirely unscripted one, which makes it more remarkable.
What Anthony does, without knowing it, is act as the audience’s surrogate. He is the reasonable person in an unreasonable room, and watching him process the chaos is frequently as funny as the chaos itself. His instinctive decency — throwing himself behind his new colleagues when a predatory venture capital firm arrives — gives the season its emotional spine. When the final reveal comes, it earns the emotion it asks for.
The Supporting Cast Deserves Equal Credit
One risk with this format is that the actors carry less obvious tension than the unwitting subject. In Company Retreat, that risk does not materialise. The ensemble is consistently strong, delivering committed, layered performances over the course of an entire week of filming — not a single afternoon.
Remote IT worker Claire (Rachel Kaly) arrives on screen determined to avoid sunlight show that understood workplace absurdity is funniest when the characters take it completely seriously. Every cast member here does exactly that, and the consistency across an entire week of improvised interaction is genuinely impressive.
That said, Alex Bonifer’s Dougie occasionally tips into grating territory. The Rastafarian accent is a questionable creative choice, and there are moments where the character’s eccentricities edge past funny and into uncomfortable. It is a minor complaint, but worth noting for viewers who are sensitive to that kind of humour.
Where to Watch in the UK and What You Need to Know
Jury Duty Presents: Company Retreat is available exclusively on Prime Video in the UK, launching on 20 March 2026. The first three episodes dropped simultaneously, with new episodes releasing weekly thereafter. Prime Video costs £8.99 per month as a standalone subscription, or is included with an Amazon Prime membership at £95 per year.
The series has not yet received a formal BBFC classification for its UK streaming release, which is standard practice for Prime Video original content. Based on its content — which includes moderate language, adult workplace humour, and no graphic violence — it would likely fall in the 12 or 15 category if submitted. Parents should be aware it is not intended for younger viewers.
For UK viewers who missed the first season, the original Jury Duty (2023) is also available on Prime Video. Watching it first is not strictly necessary — Company Retreat functions as a standalone story — but the original provides useful context for the format and is well worth your time.
Does Company Retreat Justify the Return?
The question hanging over any returning format is whether it can replicate what made the original special without simply repeating it. Company Retreat answers that question with more confidence than expected.
It is not identical to the first season. The larger scale introduces occasional pacing issues — some mid-episode stretches feel slightly loose — and the ethical dimension of placing an ordinary person inside an elaborate deception is harder to ignore is extraordinary. The comedy is frequently sharp. And the show demonstrates that its format is not a one-off accident — it is a repeatable template with real franchise potential.
If Jury Duty was lightning in a bottle, Company Retreat is evidence that the bottle was never the point.
Verdict
Score: 8/10
Jury Duty Presents: Company Retreat is a rare second season that justifies its own existence. Anthony Norman is a worthy successor to Ronald Gladden, and the expanded format proves this is a show with a genuine future.
Best for: Fans of The Office, hidden-camera comedy, and warm, character-driven television
Skip if: You are uncomfortable with the ethical dimensions of elaborate prank formats, or found the original slow-paced
UK Where to Watch: Prime Video (£8.99/month or included with Amazon Prime at £95/year)
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Where can I watch Jury Duty Presents Company Retreat in the UK?
A: Jury Duty Presents Company Retreat is available exclusively on Prime Video in the UK. It launched on 20 March 2026. Access requires either a standalone Prime Video subscription at £8.99 per month or an Amazon Prime membership at £95 per year, which includes Prime Video as part of the package.
Q: When did Jury Duty Presents Company Retreat release in the UK?
A: The first three episodes of Jury Duty Presents Company Retreat dropped on Prime Video on 20 March 2026, with the UK receiving the same release date as the United States. New episodes follow on a weekly schedule after the initial triple-episode launch.
Q: Is Jury Duty Presents Company Retreat worth watching?
A: Yes, particularly if you enjoyed the first season or shows like The Office. The series successfully repeats the original Jury Duty formula on a larger scale, anchored by a likeable lead in Anthony Norman and a committed ensemble cast. Minor pacing issues and an occasional ethical unease are the only reservations worth noting.
Q: Do I need to watch the original Jury Duty before Company Retreat?
A: No. Jury Duty Presents Company Retreat works as a standalone series with a new setting, new cast, and a new central subject. Watching the original first will it is not required to enjoy or follow the second season.
Q: Who is Anthony Norman in Jury Duty Company Retreat? A:
Anthony Norman is the sole non-actor participant in Company Retreat. He was hired as a temp assistant for fictional company Rockin’ Grandma’s Hot Sauce and was unaware the entire retreat — including all of his colleagues — was staged. His warmth, humour, and decency under pressure are the emotional engine of the series.
Q: What is Jury Duty Presents Company Retreat rated in the UK?
A: Jury Duty Presents Company Retreat has not yet received a formal BBFC classification, which is typical for Prime Video original content. Based on its moderate language and adult workplace humour, it is likely suitable for viewers aged 15 and over. It is not appropriate for young children.
Q: How is Jury Duty Presents Company Retreat different from the original Jury Duty?
A: The original Jury Duty was set inside a staged courtroom trial. Company Retreat replaces that setting with a week-long corporate retreat for a fictional hot sauce company, operating across a much larger outdoor campus. The format and emotional approach remain the same, but the scale is significantly bigger.
References
- Prime Video UK — https://www.amazon.co.uk/primevideo
- Mashable review by Belen Edwards (19 March 2026) — https://mashable.com/article/jury-duty-presents-company-retreat-review
- BBFC official classification database — https://www.bbfc.co.uk

Lewis Calvert Founder & Editor, BriefLedger
Lewis founded BriefLedger and has six years of experience covering film, TV, and entertainment news. He leads the site’s Movies and TV sections and runs the news desk — always with a straight-talking British take.
