Tag: ginny & Georgia

  • Streaming Soon: The Best New LGBTQ+ Stories on Netflix

    Streaming Soon: The Best New LGBTQ+ Stories on Netflix

    Netflix is going all-in on queer storytelling in 2025, with bold new originals, beloved series returns, and global stories that center LGBTQ+ characters, creators, and communities. Whether you’re looking for love, chaos, heartbreak, or horror, there’s something new under the rainbow. Here’s what to stream now—and what to get hyped for.

    Olympo (Season 1) – June 20

    Set in a high-performance sports academy for elite synchronized swimmers, this Spanish drama dives into the intense world of ambition, control, and desire. Created by the team behind Elite, Olympo features LGBTQ+ storylines and homoerotic tension front and center. It’s a queer coming-of-age drama wrapped in slow-burn rivalries, watery aesthetics, and complicated love.

    The Ultimatum: Queer Love (Season 2) – June 25 & July 2

    Netflix’s sapphic dating show is back with even more high-stakes emotional chaos. Season 2 will be released in two parts: the first six episodes drop June 25, with the remaining six arriving July 2. A brand new cast of women and nonbinary contestants must choose—marry or move on. Known for zero chill, U-Haul-level intensity, and vulnerable queer conversations, the series delivers drama, tears, and moments of genuine love.

    Ginny & Georgia (Season 3) – Now Streaming

    Ginny & Georgia. (L to R) Brianne Howey as Georgia Miller, Scott Porter as Paul, Antonia Gentry as Ginny Miller, Diesel La Torraca as Austin Miller in episode 302 of Ginny & Georgia. Cr. Amanda Matlovich/Netflix © 2025

    Georgia’s fairytale wedding ends in handcuffs, leaving the Miller family reeling. This season focuses on Ginny’s inner conflict—does she still want to stand by her mother when the truth comes crashing down? Maxine’s queer storyline continues to shine, offering authentic LGBTQ+ teen representation within a rollercoaster of drama.

    Squid Game (Final Season) – June 27, 2025

    The brutal survival series returns for its third and final season on June 27, with even higher stakes. And let’s not forget, last season introduced us to Cho Hyun-ju, aka Player 120, a transgender contestant entering the game. As one of the first trans characters in a high-profile Korean series, her presence marks a major step for queer visibility in global media.

    Too Much – July 10

    In Netflix’s new rom-com series Too MuchMegan Stalter plays an American export hoping for a fresh start, but what she gets instead is a crash course in culture clashes, heartbreak hangovers, and one very confusing British man.

    The cast also includes Will SharpeNaomi WattsJessica AlbaKit HaringtonAndrew ScottRhea PerlmanMichael ZegenRichard E. GrantEmily RatajkowskiDean-Charles Chapman, and Andrew Rannells.

    Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery – December 12, 2025

    Detective Benoit Blanc is back on the case in the third Knives Out installment. This time, the world’s most stylish detective faces his darkest mystery yet. With Daniel Craig reprising his role as the now-canonically queer sleuth, expect murder, mind games, and campy couture. The film lands on Netflix December 12.

    Frankenstein – November 2025

    Guillermo del Toro reimagines Mary Shelley’s gothic classic in a visually lush, emotionally charged horror fantasy. The tale of a misunderstood creature seeking connection is inherently queer, and del Toro’s history with themes of otherness and empathy suggests this one will hit hard.

    Stranger Things (Final Season) – Nov. 26, Dec. 25 & Dec. 31

    Hawkins faces one last showdown in a three-part final season. Volume 1 (Episodes 1–4) premieres November 26, Volume 2 (Episodes 5–7) drops December 25, and the series finale (Volume 3) airs December 31. Fans are hoping the show finally gives Will Byers the queer arc he deserves, while Robin’s sapphic storyline continues to shine.

    Wednesday (Season 2) – Aug. 6 & Sept. 3

    Netflix’s goth queen returns in Season 2, which will be released in two parts: Part 1 on August 6 and Part 2 on September 3, with four episodes in each.

    Jenna Ortega’s embrace of the character’s queer-coded vibes only fuels the flames—and co-star Hunter Doohan, who plays Tyler, is openly gay in real life, add a layer of queer visibility to the series.

    Plus this photo of Tyler now exists…

    Hunter Doohan for 'Wednesday' on Netflix.
    Hunter Doohan for ‘Wednesday’ on Netflix.

    Monsters: The Original Monster (Season 3) – Late 2025

    Ryan Murphy’s latest season focuses on Ed Gein—the real-life murderer who inspired Psycho and The Texas Chain Saw Massacre. Charlie Hunnam stars in a chilling exploration of how true crime became pop culture.

    In Production

    A Man on the Inside (Season 2)

    A Man on the Inside. Ted Danson as Charles in episode 106 of A Man on the Inside. Cr. Colleen E. Hayes/Netflix © 2024
    A Man on the Inside. Ted Danson as Charles in episode 106 of A Man on the Inside. Cr. Colleen E. Hayes/Netflix © 2024

    Season 2 of the political thriller is currently in production and will follow Charles (Ted Danson) as he goes undercover at Wheeler College to investigate a potential crime. With an academic twist, this chapter introduces a new mystery set against the backdrop of campus life. And let’s be honest—we have to support Stephanie Beatriz, a proud bisexual and total queer icon, who returns with her usual charm and gravitas.

    Heartstopper: The Movie

    Credit: Instagram/@Netflix

    Nick and Charlie’s love story isn’t over. After three heartfelt seasons, the couple’s journey will wrap up with a feature-length film. Based on Alice Oseman’s novella Nick and Charlie, the movie explores the emotional strain of long-distance love as Nick heads off to university. Kit Connor and Joe Locke return as both stars and executive producers, ensuring a finale as tender as the series that built to it.

  • ‘Ginny and Georgia’ Creators Reveal Alternate Opening for the Series — Plus, Is Season 3 the Queerest Yet?

    ‘Ginny and Georgia’ Creators Reveal Alternate Opening for the Series — Plus, Is Season 3 the Queerest Yet?

    When we last saw Georgia Miller, she was being escorted out of her own wedding in handcuffs. The Ginny & Georgia Season 2 finale ended with Georgia’s arrest for the murder of Tom Fuller—just moments after saying “I do” to Paul. Meanwhile, her daughter Ginny had finally come to terms with her mom’s dark past, only to see it crash back into their lives in the most dramatic way possible.

    Now, with Season 3 streaming now on Netflix, creator Sarah Lampert and new showrunner Sarah Glinski hint that the fallout from that shocking moment is just the beginning. The show continues to dive deep into themes of mental health, racial identity, abuse, and sexuality—all while keeping its signature fast-paced, soapy energy.

    Ginny & Georgia. (L to R) Brianne Howey as Georgia Miller, Scott Porter as Paul, Antonia Gentry as Ginny Miller, Diesel La Torraca as Austin Miller in episode 302 of Ginny & Georgia. Cr. Amanda Matlovich/Netflix © 2025

    Q&A with Sarah Lampert and Sarah Glinski

    Caitlynn McDaniel: How are you feeling going into the live fan watch party?

    Sarah Lampert: I mean, I’m excited I get glam. No, I’m really excited. I mean, honestly, I’m such a creeper on all the Reddit boards, and I love seeing what everyone says about the show. One of my favorite things—the writer’s assistant of Season 2, who then became a staff writer on Season 3—said to me that her favorite part about the show was the online discourse and just how thoughtful and complex the discussions around the show were. And I love that. That’s probably my most proud thing about the show. So I’m really excited to get into it with the fans.

    CM: The show is such a complex mix. Yes, people are rooting for relationships, but it also dives into mental health and the messy parts of being human.

    Sarah Glinski: Hard to be a human.

    Sarah Lampert: Right on the money. No, something my mom always says—which is honestly one of the biggest themes of the show—is everyone’s fighting a battle you can’t see, and everyone’s doing the best they can. And I just think that’s a really beautiful way to approach writing this show.

    CM: What was the foundation for the show when you started?

    Lampert: I know I get asked this all the time. I’ve yet to perfect the answer, and the only answer is I just have so much fun creating this show and these characters. Some of it’s based on truth, some of it’s pure imagination, some of it’s a group effort of the writer’s room. For the creation of the show, I’m really close with my family. I’m really close with my friends. I’m blessed with a very strong support system. So I just really love messy, dynamic—especially female-to-female—relationships. That’s probably the thing I most just want to watch and write about.

    CM: Sarah Glinski, you joined in Season 3, right?

    Glinski: Yes. I was a huge fan of the show in Season 1 and Season 2, so it was kind of a dream to get to play with all these characters in Season 3—and to work with Sarah.

    CM: What were you most excited to explore as showrunner?

    Glinski: Wow. So many things. One of the themes that I’m most excited about exploring is: there are many different ways to be a woman—and even more specifically, a young woman. And I love that this show has many different characters who go through life in different ways, and we celebrate all of them. It’s kind of nonjudgmental. We’re just like, “Here are all these people living life, doing the best that they can.” And they’re all flawed and beautiful and wonderful.

    Also, I just love shows that are entertaining but also important. I think you watch this show, and it’s so fun—and then you leave it, and there’s so much to think about. So just getting to do both of those things that I’m so passionate about was really a dream come true.

    Lampert: One of my favorite things Glinski has ever said is—when I was talking to her about coming on to do the show—she said, “I love all the romance in the show. I’m happiest when a character is kissing. I love all the love triangles. But the real will-they relationship of this show is Ginny and Georgia. And I don’t even know what the happy ending is—if they should end up together or not.” And I just thought that that was such a beautiful window to look into the show with. She knew exactly what we were trying to do.

    Glinski: And like Sarah, I’m very close to my mother. So mother-daughter relationships are really important to me to explore. I also have daughters, so being able to look at it from both as a daughter and as a mother is extraordinary.

    Lampert: I will say, I’m going to say something that I’ve actually only said in this interview, so you can take this and do whatever you want, but the first scene I ever wrote for this show is actually the opening scene to Season 3—where Ginny’s walking down the hallway, and it’s just become public knowledge that her mom was arrested for murder. Originally, that was the very first scene of the show. Then ultimately, I decided there was a lot of story to tell before getting to that point. But that scene is always how I wanted to open Season 3, because that was the seed of inspiration for the show as a whole: What would it be like to be in high school and have your mother just arrested for murder?

    CM: It was going to be a foreshadowing moment, but you held off?

    Lampert: Yeah. I just realized there were two seasons before we got to that.

    CM: This show had me thinking a lot about my own mom. It really makes you reflect on those relationships.

    Lampert: My favorite thing—and Glinski watched the show with her daughter—my favorite thing is when people watch it with their moms and then talk about that.

    And my other favorite thing is some people say they started therapy because of the show. I just think that’s a surprising, beautiful thing I never expected.

    But yeah, I love when people say they watch it with their mothers—although part of me is like, “Oh, so you watched people dry hump in jeans for seven minutes together?” But I used to watch Sex and the City with my mom, and during the sex scenes we’d both kind of be like, “Hmm.” But yeah—I love that.

    Glinski: I think shows like this get conversations started—between mothers and daughters, between friends. I think it’s really, again, important—all the things that we explore and talk about.

    CM: I told the cast, I think the biggest theme of the show is: everyone needs therapy.

    Lampert: I think we can all benefit from a little bit of kindness. And I think that’s really what the show tries to emphasize. It’s hard to human, and you don’t know what other people are going through. The reason that fans connect to the show—I genuinely believe this—is because everyone involved in the show really treats it with so much care and puts so much of their own heart into it. And I think that connects with fans.

    Glinski: It’s funny—we often get asked what our favorite moments of the show are. And for me, it’s the small moments of kindness between the characters. There’s no one big moment, but those little tiny moments of kindness—when the character needs it most. It’s one of the things I love most about the show.

    CM: Any character that surprised you this season or evolved in a way you didn’t expect?

    Lampert: It’s similar to the show. The inside of my brain is a frightening place to be. I would say it’s meticulous chaos. Because we know in the writer’s room there’s a lot of room to play, there are always surprises. Some of the best ideas that happen on the show are birthed in the writer’s room and genuinely shock me.

    At the same time, it feels like a really strong breadcrumb trail to follow, because we’re just following the emotional truth of each character—and really mapping out where each character feels like they are emotionally. And because it’s grounded in character, that’s why the plot has the ability to be so wild.

    Glinski: For every twist and turn or anything that comes up in the writer’s room, we look at it as: Does this feel right, or real, or authentic to the character in this moment? And that’s what helps us make the decision in terms of which way to take the character.

    Lampert: Yeah. We would never want to do plot for plot’s sake. I think the reason the twists feel so gratifying and surprising and fun is because you believe the characters are real. And that’s a testament to the acting, and that’s a testament to the writers in the room.

    CM: I have to ask about Max—my queer icon.

    Lampert: Super intentional. I think it was always the plan that when we introduced Max as a character, we weren’t giving her a coming out storyline. That had already happened.

    One of my favorite lines in Season 3 is, “When you came out, you had a press conference under the jungle gym in third grade,” or whatever it was—which feels very Max.

    Who that character is, is just such an open beating heart. She genuinely wants the best for everyone around her. She genuinely cares and takes on the responsibility of everyone else—right? She’s a protector. She’s Marcus’s protector. She’s her parents’ protector. She’s such a loyal friend.

    At the same time, her emotions are so big. We saw her really go overboard in Season 2 with her reactions because she is a live wire. She feels so deeply—and so much. And all the characters on the show—their greatest strength is also their biggest weakness.

    CM: This season is even more gay than before.

    Lampert: I think we’re just letting the characters be the characters—and really letting them thrive. Thrive might be the wrong word. I wouldn’t say they’re all thriving, necessarily. But we let them just exist and explore and bounce around just being who they are. And I think that’s what makes them so fun and dynamic to watch.

    CM: Anything else you’d like to tease?

    Glinski: We’re just so excited for everyone to see it. That’s the truth. We love the season, and we hope everyone else does too.

    Lampert: I think the actors really stepped up their game this season. We’re always in the writer’s room—very awed and inspired by the actors. So coming off of seeing all of the performances in Season 3, it’s only inspiring us more in Season 4 to push the characters in new and interesting ways—because the actors always make the interesting choice.

    Season 3 of Ginny & Georgia is streaming now on Netflix.

  • The Cast of ‘Ginny and Georgia’ Get Real About Mental Health, Queer Joy, and Season 3 Secrets

    The Cast of ‘Ginny and Georgia’ Get Real About Mental Health, Queer Joy, and Season 3 Secrets

    Stars Felix Mallard, Sara Waisglass, Antonia Gentry, and Brianne Howey share what makes the Netflix series so emotionally real.

    Following the jaw-dropping Ginny & Georgia Season 2 finale—where Georgia is arrested for murder at her own wedding—Netflix’s favorite mother-daughter duo is back and more complicated than ever.

    Luckily, we caught up with the cast to chat about all things mental health, identity, and the secrets behind the fan-favorite series.

    Darker, Deeper Stories

    Felix Mallard, who plays Ginny’s ex-boyfriend Marcus , doesn’t shy away from the heavy material this season. “You want your character to be in a bit of strife,” he said. “You want them to be going through something so you can go somewhere and hopefully your character can grow and change.”

    Mallard hopes that by showing a young man’s emotional journey, the show can help others open up. “We don’t see too much of that vulnerability shown on screen. And to be able to highlight that and hopefully be an advocate for people to try and help themselves and give themselves the tools to deal with emotions that might feel like they’re on top of you, that’s always the goal, and that’s a really big responsibility that I hope resonates with people.”

    Felix Mallard as Marcus Baker, Katie Douglas as Abby in episode 302 of Ginny and Georgia
    Ginny & Georgia. (L to R) Felix Mallard as Marcus Baker, Katie Douglas as Abby in episode 302 of Ginny & Georgia. Cr. Amanda Matlovich/Netflix © 2025

    Our Queer Queen!

    *Sigh* Listen, we are Maxine supporters around here. The outgoing best friend of Ginny (and Marcus’ twin) has become an icon in the queer community. Sara Waisglass says playing Max has meant everything—and hearing from fans only makes it more rewarding. “I think my favorite thing about playing Max is that being part of the queer community is a huge part of her identity, and it doesn’t really define her in a way. It’s not a coming out story. ‘I am who I am, I’m proud and I’m happy.’ So I love that.

    “And I get a lot of messages from little girls saying, you made me feel comfortable to be myself. And that is, if I can do that for one person that feels like I’ve done something incredible for the rest of my life and I can die a happy woman.”

    And when it comes to the haters? “Hey, they’re still watching.”

    Sara Waisglass as Maxine in episode 305
    Ginny & Georgia. Sara Waisglass as Maxine in episode 305 of Ginny & Georgia. Cr. Courtesy of Netflix © 2025

    Do We All Just Need Therapy?

    Georgia’s choices have always been complicated, but this season digs deeper than ever. “Every character is going through their own mental health crisis,” Brianne Howey said. “And it looks very different on everyone.”

    Howey shared that the production team works closely with Mental Health America to ensure respectful representation. “I love that the show is starting conversations surrounding generational trauma and breaking some of these cycles.”

    I’m telling you, everyone on this show needs therapy. But honestly? We could all use a little therapy, ya know?

    Ginny & Georgia. (L to R) Antonia Gentry as Ginny Miller, Ty Doran as Wolfe in episode 302 of Ginny & Georgia. Cr. Amanda Matlovich/Netflix © 2025

    How is Ginny Faring?

    For Antonia Gentry, Ginny’s constant balancing act—between childhood and adulthood, Black and white, honesty and survival—is what makes the character so compelling. “She’s also very much experiencing such a wide range of life moments that are very, very challenging,” Gentry said. “She turns into a new person by the end.”

    Oh no… what could that mean? You will just have to tune in to find out.

    Ginny & Georgia Season 3 premieres June 5 on Netflix.

  • Georgia Faces the Trial of the Summer in Explosive ‘Ginny & Georgia’ Season 3 Trailer

    Georgia Faces the Trial of the Summer in Explosive ‘Ginny & Georgia’ Season 3 Trailer

    Netflix just dropped the trailer for Ginny & Georgia Season 3, and things are getting darker in Wellsbury. Premiering globally on June 5, 2025, the new season promises more secrets, more drama, and higher stakes than ever before.

    Georgia’s Fairy Tale Shattered

    Season 3 picks up where Season 2’s jaw-dropping finale left off. Georgia (Brianne Howey) is arrested for murder during her wedding to Mayor Paul Randolph (Scott Porter). What should have been her happy ending quickly turns into a nightmare, branding her as Wellsbury’s most notorious suspect. Dubbed the trial of the summer, the case pulls the Millers into a whirlwind of chaos, with Georgia confessing, “Everyone thinks I’m a violent, unhinged monster… At least it can’t get any worse, right? Except if I go to prison. That would be worse.”

    Meanwhile, Ginny (Antonia Gentry) finds herself questioning everything she thought she knew about her mom. “I’ve always known my mom was different, but there’s more to her that people don’t see,” she says in the trailer. With Georgia’s future on the line, Ginny must decide if she’s ready to stand by her side or break away for good. Young Austin (Diesel La Torraca) is also caught in the turmoil, determined to keep his family together at any cost.

    Ginny & Georgia. Antonia Gentry as Ginny Miller in episode 301 of Ginny & Georgia. Cr. Courtesy of Netflix © 2025

    New Faces and High Drama

    The upcoming season introduces Wolfe (Ty Doran), a laid-back student in Ginny’s poetry class, and Tris (Noah Lamanna), a sharp skateboarder linked to Marcus and Silver. Showrunner Sarah Glinski calls this season the most ambitious yet, promising new relationships and unexpected twists that will keep fans hooked.

    Mark your calendars for June 5—Ginny & Georgia Season 3 is about to flip Wellsbury upside down.