Ginny & Georgia Review (Seasons 1–3): Raw, Real, and Addictively Chaotic
I love Ginny. Antonia Gentry absolutely embodies the role. At 26, soon to be 27 in September 2025, she plays a teenager with so much authenticity. The emotion, the rawness, the subtle shifts. She’s phenomenal.
I’ve always rooted for Ginny and Marcus. Their relationship felt real and grounded in the messiness of teenage life and mental health. I didn’t like that they had to separate, but Marcus did what was necessary for his well-being, and that was important.
Georgia is a lot, and I love it. But when she killed Cynthia’s husband, Tom Fuller, it felt like a complete character assassination. Up until that point, every questionable thing Georgia had done came from a place of survival. Protecting herself or her family. She didn’t owe Cynthia anything. What she did was out of line. I’m glad she was acquitted, but I hated what it took to get there.
Watching Ginny become more like her mom has been powerful, she will do what it takes to protect her family and love ones. Especially the scene where she asks Austin to choose between their mother and Gil. Gil is the worst, no doubt, but Austin didn’t need to lose his father in order to save his mother. That burden shouldn’t fall on a child.
Joe is the only one who truly loves Georgia for who she is, flaws and all. Zion betrayed her. And Paul? Paul made vows, then ran when things got messy. Yes, Georgia lied about being pregnant, but “for better or worse” means showing up during the worse. He didn’t.
Georgia isn’t always right. She’s selfish sometimes. But she’s also a survivor, and that’s what shaped her.
I also have to shout out Simone, Zion’s girlfriend, played by the amazing Vinessa Antoine. She’s fierce, grounded and brought such grace to her scenes. I loved her already from Diggstown and she absolutely delivered here too.
And that final twist. Georgia is pregnant. So now the question is this. Is the father Paul or Joe?
I’m already counting down the days to Season 4.