The Outnumbered panel on Fox reacted to the season two trailer for Martin Scorsese’s docudrama The Saints, and conservative viewers watched proudly as Kayleigh McEnany recounted a powerful, faith-filled story from the series. The segment wasn’t some sanitized Hollywood puff piece — it was a reminder that stories of courage, conviction, and real sacrifice still resonate with Americans. For those tired of the cultural left’s constant cynicism, this trailer felt like a welcome counterpunch.
Fox Nation will debut season two of Martin Scorsese Presents: The Saints on Sunday, November 16, beginning with an episode dedicated to Saint Patrick, and the first four episodes will roll out weekly through December 7. The network’s official rollout notes that the chapter will include episodes on Saint Peter, Thomas Becket, and conclude with a profile of newly canonized Carlo Acutis — a young, internet-savvy saint modern conservatives can rally around. Even the finale is a family affair, directed by Francesca Scorsese, underscoring the series’ blend of prestige filmmaking and sincere storytelling.
This isn’t a small project tucked away for niche viewers; Scorsese is once again hosting, narrating, and serving as an executive producer on eight new episodes that will span the Christmas and Easter seasons into spring 2026. Season two spotlights a roster of saints — from Saint Mary the Virgin to Saint Longinus — and leans into the human drama behind their faith-driven lives. That a filmmaker of Scorsese’s stature is committing to this kind of moral storytelling on Fox Nation speaks volumes about the appetite for content that affirms religious conviction and traditional virtues.
Don’t let anyone tell you faith doesn’t sell. The Saints smashed viewership records for Fox Nation in its first run, becoming the platform’s most watched and most engaged series, and the network staged a high-profile premiere that felt like a cultural victory lap. Conservatives should take pride: when America tells its own stories — stories about sacrifice, redemption, and faith — the audience shows up in force, proving that the cultural elite don’t have a monopoly on taste or truth.
Watching Kayleigh McEnany recount a moving moment from the series on national TV was more than an entertainment beat; it was a reminder that our media can and should celebrate faith. McEnany didn’t gussy up the story; she told it plainly, the way hardworking Americans appreciate stories about people who put convictions above comfort. That straight-shooting approach is why viewers trust conservative voices to bring real, meaningful conversations back into the mainstream.
Martin Scorsese’s turn toward religious projects has been no secret — his interest in exploring faith and saints is part of a broader creative arc that many in Hollywood quietly respect even if they disagree. His willingness to partner with Fox Nation and to foreground Christian figures should be read as a repudiation of the idea that prestige art must be relentlessly hostile to faith. For patriots who’ve watched elites scorn religion for decades, seeing a titan of cinema tell these stories is a welcome development that rightfully reclaims cultural ground.
If you’re tired of hollow celebrity virtue-signaling and crave content that uplifts the family, faith, and country, mark November 16 on your calendar and tune in. This series is a reminder that our values aren’t fringe — they’re foundational, and when properly told they draw millions. Support the storytellers who defend those values, and keep fighting to make faith and common sense the centerpieces of American culture once again.

