Josh Brolin shares nude photo while 'prepping for a scene' of 'Outer Range' season two

Josh Brolin bared it all online – almost. 

The 55-year-old actor went completely naked to work on his tan lines while "prepping for a scene" on season two of "Outer Range" in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

"We are taking things in a different direction now," he teased in the snap shared with his three million Instagram followers. "It's a shifting world and we have to be sensitive to all." 

Brolin looked at ease wearing one silver necklace and a white cowboy hat. He stared off across the pool while sitting on top of a few towels.

JOSH BROLIN BARES ALL WHILE SIPPING MORNING COFFEE IN DESERT SNAPSHOT

"Power of example is everything, so examples we are," he added. "We aren't supposed to post photos from the show but this isn't really during the show, but rather lunch outside in the beautiful Santa Fe desert." 

He added, "Thank you @brianbowensmith for documenting our most private moments on the set."

Brolin's wife, Kathryn, couldn't help but joke, "Oh I thought they weren't release the poster til later this year!!"

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Garrett Hedlund admitted, "That's how I prep."

Ryan Hurst jumped into the comments and wrote, "That necklace looks silly."

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Tom Pelphrey, who recently welcomed his first child with Kaley Cuoco, quipped, "Our fearless leader."

Country music duo Brothers Osborne simply stated the obvious: "Iconic."

It's not the first time Brolin has stripped down to nothing for his Instagram fans. 

"At the end of the day a life will [be] judged by how often you were naked. Nobody told me they meant metaphorically," he captioned a snapshot taken by his wife in 2020.

He was previously married to Diane Lane, and has two children from his first marriage to Alice Adair.

Brolin portrays Wyoming rancher Royal Abbott in the neo-western thriller from Amazon Prime Video. 

The Abbotts are fighting to keep their ranch within the family when they find a mysterious black hole on their land. The black mass may also be an answer into the disappearance of their daughter-in-law.

Florida prosecutor orders investigation after homeowner shoots at Instacart drivers

A Florida prosecutor has ordered an investigation after a homeowner fired shots at a couple who were delivering groceries and accidentally turned onto his property.

Broward County State Attorney Harold Pryor said police investigators never contacted his office about the April 15 shooting in Southwest Ranches that put at least two bullets into the car driven by 19-year-old Waldes Thomas Jr., who was with his 18-year-old girlfriend, Diamond Darville.

The lead detective from the Davie Police Department – which has a contract with Southwest Ranches to provide service – said he could not determine if either the shooter or couple committed a crime.

"Each party appeared justified in their actions based on the circumstances they perceived," the report concluded.

CALIFORNIA WOMAN ACCUSED OF KILLING HOME DEPOT EMPLOYEE SAYS GUN ACCIDENTALLY FIRED

The April 15 shooting happened on an unlit street in a semi-rural neighborhood at a home sitting on two acres.

Police said Thomas and Darville got lost while delivering groceries for Instacart shortly before 10 p.m. They were on the phone with their customer when Thomas turned their 2014 Honda Civic into an area where the shooter stores equipment for his excavation business. The address they were looking for was across the street.

The shooter and the couple gave investigators conflicting reports about what happened next.

The homeowner told officers he asked his 12-year-old son to tell the driver to leave, but soon heard the boy yelling for help. The father said he saw the car driving erratically, banging into logs and boulders, so he told his son to run.

He said the car then drove toward him and ran over his foot. Saying he feared for his life and his son's, the man drew his handgun and fired at the car's tires, but it sped away. He then called the police.

An officer found Thomas and Darville parked nearby. When he asked what happened, they replied, "We just got shot at." He said Darville was crying and Thomas appeared "extremely nervous and scared." The officer said there were two bullet holes in the car's bumper and one tire was flat.

The couple told police they thought they were at the right house, then tried to leave after the boy told them they weren't. Thomas said he put the car into reverse and hit a boulder, which was when the shooter approached "aggressively." That's when Thomas said he heard shots and drove away. Darville said she saw the shooter pull his gun and fire.

"I said, 'We got to go, we got to go,'" Darville told WTVJ. "I was scared, I'm not going to lie."

Police say they returned the shooter's gun after closing the case. He has not been charged with a crime. 

The shooting marked the latest in a spate of similar shootings across the U.S. where people have mistakenly turned onto the wrong property or gotten in the wrong car. One person has been killed and others seriously wounded. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report.