Ginny & Georgia season 3 is great, but there is one problem that it needs to fix for season 4. After Georgia Miller is arrested for murder at the end of Ginny & Georgia season 2, she has to prove her innocence in season 3. Being on trial for murder and being on house arrest pushes Georgia to her limits. Life also becomes more challenging for Ginny, Austin, and Paul Randolph between the public scrutiny and the threat of what will happen if Georgia is found guilty.
The shocking reveals in Ginny & Georgia season 3 are mostly satisfying as the show continues to sensitively explore issues ranging from mental health challenges to teenage pregnancies. By the end of Ginny & Georgia season 3, Georgia is a free woman thanks to Ginny, but both characters, and Austin, are forever changed by their recent trauma. Despite all these strengths, season 3 does suffer from one overarching issue. Fortunately, the series has already shown how this issue can be fixed in season 4.
Ginny & Georgia’s Season 3 Flashbacks Were Disappointing
They Were Not As Compelling As The Flashbacks In Seasons 1 & 2
Season 3 follows a similar format to its predecessors by interspersing young Georgia flashbacks throughout each episode. In the previous seasons, these flashbacks felt essential to the show as they revealed crucial and new information about Georgia's past, her relationships with Zion Miller and Gil Timmins, and Ginny and Austin's childhoods. While Nikki Roumel continues to be perfect casting for young Georgia, season 3's flashbacks are disappointing because they do not reveal anything truly new or meaningful that the audience did not already know.
Many of the season 3 flashbacks focus on Ginny feeling judged by Zion's parents, along with Georgia and Zion trying and failing to make their relationship work. There is also more of Ginny being resourceful in helping her children, and using things like “car camping” to make life seem better than it actually is for Ginny and Austin. This is all familiar territory that the show has explored before. Unlike the prior seasons' flashbacks, the season 3 scenes do not recontextualize the present as effectively, and the flashbacks feel far less essential this time.
Ginny & Georgia Season 4 Has 2 Ways To Fix Its Flashback Problem
Season 4 Already Set Up Both Solutions

One way for Ginny & Georgia season 4 to fix its flashback problem is to spend more time highlighting the pasts of other characters. Season 3, episode 9, “It's Time For My Solo,” does this by featuring flashbacks of young Marcus and Max Baker. These are the best flashbacks of the season because they provide new and meaningful insight into what Marcus and Max's relationship used to look like when they were kids, along with Max having a long history of her feelings being downplayed and overlooked by her loved ones because of her big personality.
Marcus and Max's struggles in the final episodes are recontextualized and have more depth because of these flashbacks. Season 4 can have more flashbacks with them, perhaps with Marcus and the best friend he had, who died tragically young, and whose loss has contributed to Marcus' ongoing challenges with depression. Ginny & Georgia can do more flashbacks with other characters whose pasts are worth exploring while also continuing to reveal more about Georgia's past.
Another way to fix the flashback problem is to focus more on Georgia's parents in season 4 instead of retreading more familiar territory.
Another way to fix the flashback problem is to focus more on Georgia's parents in season 4 instead of retreading more familiar territory. One of the biggest questions after Ginny & Georgia season 3 is what Georgia's mother and stepfather have planned. Both characters have been set up as a major threat after arriving in Wellsbury, especially after Georgia's father called to warn about them being able to find her. Season 4 flashbacks can help build up the threat and plans of Georgia's mother and stepfather.
Season 4 flashbacks can also reveal what actually happened with Georgia's father. Georgia believes he tried to kill her when she was six years old and that this is why he is in prison. The dangerous nature of Georgia's mother and stepfather, along with her father's call, indicate that this may not be the true story, though. Georgia's mother may have lied to her and Georgia's father may have been trying to protect her. Ginny & Georgia season 4 can shed light on the truth, which will allow the flashbacks to carry more weight this time.