Tires Season 2: Buckle Up — Business Is Booming and the Boys Are Barely Holding On
- Boxofficehype
- 15 hours ago
- 3 min read

After a wildly successful debut, Tires is rolling back onto Netflix with Season 2 premiering June 5, 2025, and let’s just say — the rubber’s really about to meet the road.
Created by Shane Gillis, Steve Gerben, and John McKeever, this gritty, irreverent workplace comedy continues to follow the misadventures of a misfit crew at the Valley Forge Automotive Center — a struggling tire shop now riding high on an unexpected wave of marketing success.
Where We Left Off
In Season 1, viewers met Will (Steve Gerben), the overly earnest manager of his family's floundering auto-repair business, and Shane (Shane Gillis), his insufferable cousin and employee whose constant antics made every workday a minor disaster.
.The show blended low-stakes chaos with a high dose of absurdity, carving out a loyal fan base thanks to its unfiltered humor, painfully relatable characters, and a tone that was equal parts The Office and It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia.
Season 1’s surprise hit? A goofy but genius marketing campaign that actually worked — catapulting the business into temporary success and setting the stage for the madness to follow.
Season 2: More Tires, More Trouble
With their marketing gamble paying off, Will and Shane find themselves doing the impossible: succeeding. But in true Tires fashion, they have no clue how to handle it.
As the business grows, so do the egos, the expectations, and of course — the dysfunction. Personal and professional growth? Maybe. Emotional maturity? Not quite.
Season 2 asks the question: What happens when you give the keys to the kingdom to two guys who shouldn’t even be trusted with a set of jumper cables?
New Faces, Familiar Mayhem
Returning to the garage are:
Chris O'Connor as Cal, the deadpan, oddly insightful technician
Kilah Fox as Kilah, the much-needed voice of reason in a sea of fools
Stavros Halkias as Dave, bringing his signature chaos energy
And joining the madness this season is none other than Thomas Haden Church (Sideways, Spider-Man) as Phil, whose presence promises more drama — and maybe a few lawsuits.
You’ll also catch guest appearances by comedy heavy-hitters like Andrew Schulz, Tommy Pope, Francis Ellis, and Matt McCusker, making this season a who's-who of rising (and roasting) stars.
Why Tires Works
Tires isn’t trying to be polished. That’s the point.
It’s raw, loud, and built on the kind of chemistry that comes from creators who’ve spent years honing their comedy together. The show thrives on blue-collar absurdity, awkward silences, and the cringe-inducing reality of trying to keep a barely functioning business (and friendship) alive.
Whether it’s customer service disasters, bizarre marketing plans, or workplace vendettas, the laughs in Tires hit hard — and usually come at someone’s expense.
Is This the Next Great Workplace Comedy?
Let’s not get ahead of ourselves — Tires doesn’t want to be heartwarming or inspirational. But it does something just as valuable: it makes you laugh, loudly and often, and reminds you how ridiculous most workplaces actually are.
Season 2 is shaping up to be bigger, dumber, and even more delightfully unhinged.
Catch Up and Get Ready
Season 1 is currently streaming on Netflix. Whether you’re in it for the banter, the blowups, or the bizarre brilliance of Shane Gillis and crew, now’s the time to binge — because come June 5, Valley Forge Automotive is back in business… whether it should be or not.
Don’t miss it.🔥 Tires spin. Tempers flare. Comedy ensues. 🔧
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