Love It or Hate It, Ginny & Georgia Season 3 Is the Drama You Craved
Ginny & Georgia Season 3, which dropped on Netflix on June 5, 2025, picks up right after the dramatic cliffhanger of Season 2, where Georgia Miller (Brianne Howey) is arrested for murder at her wedding to Mayor Paul Randolph (Scott Porter). This season, spanning 10 hour-long episodes, dives headfirst into the fallout, delivering a mix of courtroom drama, teen angst, and small-town intrigue. While it’s undeniably bingeable and emotionally charged, it stumbles with uneven pacing and some frustrating character choices. Here’s an honest take on what works, what doesn’t, and why it’s still hard to look away.
Table of Contents
What Works
- Brianne Howey Steals the Show: Georgia remains the heart of Ginny & Georgia, and Howey’s performance is magnetic. She balances Georgia’s charm, vulnerability, and cunning with ease, making you root for a woman who’s undeniably a murderer but also a fiercely protective mother. Her scenes—whether she’s bedazzling her ankle monitor under house arrest or grappling with guilt—carry the season, especially in the intense courtroom sequences.
- Improved Character Development for Ginny: Ginny (Antonia Gentry) has often been a polarizing character due to her whining, but Season 3 shows growth. She’s forced to confront her mother’s actions and her own identity, making tough choices without being paralyzed by guilt. Gentry shines in moments where Ginny navigates school gossip and her mental health struggles, like snapping rubber bands to avoid self-harm.
- Emotional Depth and Themes: The show digs deeper into heavy topics—mental health, depression, self-harm, and the cycle of trauma—while keeping its soapy edge. Flashbacks to Georgia’s abusive past (with Nikki Roumel’s affecting portrayal of young Georgia) add empathy for her morally gray choices. The exploration of parenting insecurities, like Georgia’s fear of damaging her kids, resonates, even if it’s wrapped in melodrama.
- Addictive Netflix Formula: As The Telegraph puts it, this is “the perfect example of the Netflix formula: soapy, cheesy fun led by unbelievably good-looking actors.” The mix of murder, romance, and teen drama, paired with a killer soundtrack, makes it hard to stop watching.
- Supporting Cast Shines: The ensemble, from Sara Waisglass’s Max to Raymond Ablack’s Joe, adds flavor. New characters like Wolfe (Ty Doran) and Tris (Noah Lamanna) blend in well, though they’re underdeveloped. The MANG group’s dynamics and subplots, like Abby’s eating disorder, keep the teen side engaging, even if they don’t always land perfectly.
What Doesn’t Work
- Uneven Pacing and Overstuffed Plot: The season tries to juggle too much—Georgia’s trial, Ginny’s school life, Austin’s trauma, multiple love triangles, and a pregnancy subplot. The legal drama doesn’t kick into high gear until the second half, leaving early episodes feeling sluggish. Georgia’s house arrest sidelines her for too long, and some teen scenes drag.
- Ginny’s Still Divisive: While Ginny’s arc improves, she remains grating for some viewers. Her treatment of Max and occasional self-absorption can feel like a step back. Her romantic indecision between Marcus (Felix Mallard) and others also feels repetitive.
- Problematic Handling of Issues: HuffPost criticizes the show’s shallow treatment of serious topics like abortion access. A teen pregnancy subplot is resolved too neatly, ignoring real-world inequalities, which feels tone-deaf in 2025. Mental health and racial identity arcs, while present, sometimes lack nuance, overshadowed by the soap opera antics.
- Too Soapy for Its Own Good: The A.V. Club calls it “too soapy to stick,” and they’re not wrong. The show leans hard into outrageous twists—like Georgia framing an enemy to walk free—that stretch believability. While fun, these moments undermine the emotional weight of the character-driven story.
- Underdeveloped Subplots: Characters like Austin (Diesel La Torraca) and Paul get less focus than they deserve. Austin’s trauma from witnessing Georgia’s crime is compelling but underexplored, and Paul’s political fallout feels like an afterthought. The pregnancy twist, hinted at in Tudum, sets up Season 4 but feels rushed here.
The Verdict
Ginny & Georgia Season 3 is a wild ride that delivers on drama, emotion, and addictive storytelling, but it’s not without flaws. It’s at its best when focusing on Georgia’s charisma and the mother-daughter bond, bolstered by strong performances and a glossy aesthetic. However, the overstuffed plot, uneven pacing, and occasionally shallow handling of serious issues hold it back from greatness. As creator Sarah Lampert told Tudum, this season “blew up our world,” and it certainly feels ambitious, if messy.
If you’re a fan of soapy dramas like Desperate Housewives or Big Little Lies with a YA twist, you’ll likely eat this up—X posts show fans sobbing and praising the character growth. But if you’re looking for nuance or tight plotting, you might find it lacking, as HuffPost and A.V. Club reviews suggest.
Rating: 3.5/5 stars. It’s not Gilmore Girls, despite the comparisons, but it’s shiny, chaotic fun that knows its audience. With Season 4 already in the works, the Miller family’s saga is far from over, and I’m still hooked enough to see where it goes.
