Ghosts S02e04 Hdtv May 2026

This week’s episode of CBS’s Ghosts , titled "The Tree," tackles a surprisingly high-stakes (for a comedy) piece of real estate: the massive, ancient oak tree in the backyard of Woodstone Mansion. Sam and Jay are trying to make the B&B dream work, but the old oak is dropping branches on guests’ cars and blocking the perfect view for a potential wedding photo op. Jay, desperate to impress a wedding planner, decides the tree has to go.

There is an old saying: "The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The second best time is now." Unless, of course, that tree is currently being used as a supernatural screaming device by a colonial ghost who is very attached to his foliage.

The problem? That tree is the final resting place of (the Viking ghost). While the other ghosts have the mansion, Thor has his tree. He was tied to it, died against it, and apparently, his ghostly essence is now tangled up in its root system. If the tree gets cut down, Thor doesn't just lose a favorite sitting spot—he believes he will cease to exist entirely. Thor’s Meltdown: Pathos with a Side of Lightning What makes Ghosts work so well is its ability to pivot from slapstick to genuine emotion. Thor, usually the loud, thunder-obsessed brute, reveals a surprisingly tender side. The tree is his last physical tether to the living world. It’s his monument.

His panic is palpable. He summons a literal lightning storm (which is a fantastic visual effects flex for a sitcom) to scare off the lumberjacks. But when that fails, we see the vulnerability of a man who has watched the world change for a thousand years, clinging to the one piece of ground that remembers him. The other ghosts are split. Sassapis points out that no one knows what happens if a ghost's anchor is destroyed—do they get sucked off, or do they just vanish into a void? Hetty, in a hilariously on-brand moment, initially sides with Sam and Jay because "a tree doesn't pay taxes," but eventually softens when she realizes Thor is having an existential crisis.