Ginny and Georgia (Season 3)
Review of Ginny and Georgia Season 3
If you’re new here, and stumbled upon this blog through the mythical powers of the Internet, welcome! I know a lot of visitors to my website are people who randomly come upon this website through search engines like Google, but I also do have a lot of visitors who come back. Regardless: my name is Ashley, and I started this blog in order to keep track of everything I’m coming across in the world.
I recently fell into a spell of unemployment probably during the worst time to be unemployed, as it was very hard to find a job. I was applying to hundreds of jobs, getting interviews, but no offer was manifesting for me in the near future. So during this time, I had a lot of free time, and spent a good chunk of it chipping away at the blog.
I’ve been really catching up on my television shows during this time, as I feel like I would actually go insane if I wasn’t doing something besides applying to jobs, freelancing, and working on the blog. I came to realize during this time that if I didn’t have something dedicated to do and a purpose, I would actually go insane in a way that isn’t productive. I need to have a purpose, and working has been a way to find that.
Throughout the month of July 2025, I was going through all three seasons of the television series Ginny & Georgia. The other two seasons I’ve reviewed on the blog already, so if you want to see my thoughts on those seasons and a recap of what happened in them, feel free to peruse around. I started feeling the lull in this show around the second half of season two, and I will admit season three was hard to get through.
I don’t want to spoil my thoughts on season three so soon, but basically I did find this season a little hard to get through compared to the other seasons. I did take my time with this show and spaced out how I watched the episodes, so maybe that played a small factor, but around episode five I found myself really feeling a little burned out and frustrated with the world of these characters.
We’ll get more into this later. The introduction is getting a little long, so let’s get into the actual review!
As Georgia is arrested for her crimes, Ginny and Austin grapple with the fallout of the highly publicized case.
Season three picks up right where season two left off. Georgia, who is getting married in the season two finale, is arrested for murder. Season three then becomes a circus, as she’s dubbed as a murderer by the media and given even a nickname for it, creating a media spectacle around what’s going on.
This impacts her kids, which is to be expected. The students at Ginny’s school are gossiping about the case and she even finds herself isolated from her good friends at certain points, as no one knows whether to believe Georgia’s assertions that she’s innocent and doesn’t have anything to do with the deaths she’s accused of.
Austin is also struggling with what’s going on, and Ginny knows later on that he witnessed Georgia killing Tom (he said something along the lines that he didn’t tell anyone, and Ginny heard him when he made this statement). He ends up acting out later in the series, pulling into question whether he might become more like his own mother down the line.
Lots of drama in this season though. As per usual, the focus is on Ginny and Georgia. In Ginny’s life, she’s having romance troubles, but when she finds a new poetry boy that has some wild thoughts, she finds herself gravitating towards him and leaving behind a still depressed Marcus.
Georgia’s storyline largely has to do with her past and upcoming trial. Paul becomes someone we can barely recognize throughout this season, and there’s a new love triangle introduced throughout the end of the last season and this season—this is something I don’t know if I cared for, and it kind of just exists in the lore of this show.
There are the other subplots involving Marcus and Max, as well as some other characters deciding they need to interfere with Ginny and Austin’s lives. I will say: a lot of beloved characters become pretty terrible people throughout this season, and you can find yourself really turning on them because of their actions and words (aka: Zion and Paul).
Maybe I’m also just getting frustrated with the fact that this show is also crossing off basically what it expects a teenager in a show should do. Not going to reveal the major plot point that emerges later in the season, but it had me scratching my head and saying “really” because of how this show is kind of cramming every single kind of teen issue into it. I love the depression and mental health representation, but now this was a bit extra.
Overall Thoughts
Upfront though: I personally found this season to be losing steam when it comes to plot, even though the ending of it is quite interesting to me. I find this to be a problem with shows with multiple seasons in general; it feels like they’re grasping for straws in terms of plot to continue it for another season when, in reality, it should just end.
I think this season is fine in general, although, as I mentioned in the previous paragraph, I found that this season was the beginning of the end. My hope is that the show continues for one more season before wrapping up the storyline, as it might be a little too drawn out if it goes beyond that—unless they manage to completely pump some life into it with a good plot.
Go watch it if you haven’t already. My opinion might be slightly more negative, but I am a stranger on the Internet and taste is so incredibly subjective. If I might not like something, it could be your favorite movie/show/book ever. And neither of us are wrong—that’s the beauty and frustration of life.
So go see it if you want to!
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