Cr. Amanda Matlovich/Netflix © 2025
It’s been a hot minute since the wild Ginny & Georgia Season 3 finale, and plenty of time has now passed since cameras stopped rolling on season 4. From Austin taking the stand to frame his abusive dad Gil for murder, to Ginny entering her full “blackmail era,” to that jaw-dropping double-pregnancy twist, the stakes in Wellsbury have never been higher.
Now that creator Sarah Lampert and showrunner Sarah Glinski have officially set the theme for Season 4 as “Cycles and Origins,” we’re looking ahead to what’s next. We know Season 4 is going to be all about rebuilding Georgia after completely breaking her down—and dealing with the massive psychological toll her survival tactics have taken on her kids.
As we eagerly await the return of the Millers, we’ve got our hands on the official episode titles for Season 4 (presented in alphabetical order).
Grab a cup of Blue Farm coffee—here are our most generous guesses on what these titles mean for the future of the series, based entirely on where that explosive Season 3 finale left us!
Ok, first up: the titles, then some theories and observations!
- Dripped On
- FUN!
- Good Great Great Good
- Look At You. With Your Sad Little Clipboard
- Mary & Daisy
- Please Don’t Murder
- Pumpkin Spice Latte
- The Thicket is Dark and Full of Danger
- We’re in Hell
- You’re Probably Wondering How We Got Here
Dripped On
While this could be a cheeky reference to a spilled coffee at Joe’s Blue Farm Café, things are never that simple. Season 3 stripped Georgia of all her masks, and Joe was the only one who didn’t judge her when things got messy. Now that they’ve finally hooked up—and Georgia is unexpectedly pregnant without knowing if the father is Joe or Paul—this title could point to the messy, complicated fallout of that love triangle spilling over into her everyday life.
FUN!
Is this potentially sarcasm? We highly doubt anyone is having actual fun in this episode. At the very end of Season 3, we saw Georgia’s mother and stepdad drive by her house in Wellsbury. They’ve finally tracked down their runaway daughter. This title feels like a classic, panicked Georgia deflection—slapping on a fake smile and pretending everything is “FUN!” when her darkest childhood traumas are quite literally parking on her front lawn.
Good Great Great Good
This frantic rambling screams of someone who is deeply stressed out—and our money is on Mayor Paul Randolph or a spiraling Ginny. If the paternity test results come back and Paul realizes his picture-perfect marriage is on the line (or more likely completely past the point of no return), we can practically hear him sputtering this exact line. Alternatively, this could be Ginny trying to act like everything is “fine” after going to such dark lengths to manipulate her mom’s trial.
Look At You. With Your Sad Little Clipboard
Georgia is finally in therapy!? Brianne Howey teased that realizing Ginny was recreating her toxic actions was the “final straw that leads Georgia to finally want to go to therapy, to finally break the cycle.” This title is flawlessly in character for Georgia. Instead of lowering her walls to heal the inner child she’s been protecting since she was a teenager, she is absolutely going to relentlessly roast her new therapist.
Mary & Daisy
The ultimate origin story? If you know your Ginny & Georgia lore, you know that Georgia’s birth name is Mary Rose Reilly. But who is Daisy? Daisy is Georgia’s estranged mother. With the Season 4 theme officially confirmed as “Cycles and Origins,” and the cliffhanger revealing her parents have found her, this episode is guaranteed to be a massive, emotionally heavy flashback. We are finally going to get the full, unvarnished truth about the toxic mother-daughter dynamic that shaped Mary into Georgia.
Please Don’t Murder
A darkly comedic (but very serious) plea. In Season 3, Ginny realized her mom’s fate was in her hands and decided she didn’t care who she had to manipulate or blackmail to win. She even forced poor Austin to choose between his parents on the stand. Antonia Gentry noted that Ginny’s chilling realization that she has to “be” Georgia to fix things will carry into next season. This title could be Austin—who has already shot his dad and witnessed Tom Fuller’s murder—begging his family to just be normal, or Ginny realizing how far off the deep end they’ve all gone.
Ginny & Georgia. (L to R) Diesel La Torraca as Austin Miller, Brianne Howey as Georgia Miller, Antonia Gentry as Ginny Miller in episode 305 of Ginny & Georgia. Cr. Amanda Matlovich/Netflix © 2025
Pumpkin Spice Latte
Fall has arrived in Wellsbury! We love a seasonal episode, and this feels like a classic high school installment centering around Ginny, Maxine, and the rest of the MANG friend group, navigating normal teenage drama for once. It could also signify a slight time jump, pushing Georgia’s mystery pregnancy further along and showing us how the town is reacting to her walking free from a highly publicized murder trial.
The Thicket is Dark and Full of Danger
This title gives off major literary vibes, which points straight to Ginny and her dad, Zion. Zion has always encouraged Ginny to write poetry, and she ended Season 3 as the Youth Poet Laureate. This could be the title of one of her new poems as they head off on their promised summer trip to South Korea. On a more literal level, it could refer to the lurking danger of Gil. Aaron Ashmore reminded us that Gil knows exactly what Georgia is capable of, and after being framed by his own son, Gil is a wounded animal who will absolutely be out for revenge.
We’re in Hell
The guilt is setting in. Showrunner Sarah Glinski specifically noted that “the burden she leaves on Austin and Ginny at the end of Season 3 is what we’ll have to deal with in Season 4.” Austin framed his own dad for a murder his mom committed, and Ginny orchestrated the whole thing. The kids are carrying the weight of massive, life-altering secrets. This episode title perfectly encapsulates the psychological hell the Miller family will have to wade through if they want to truly heal.
You’re Probably Wondering How We Got Here
The ultimate record-scratch, freeze-frame voiceover. Could this be the season opener or the finale? It captures Georgia’s fourth-wall-breaking narration. If it’s the premiere, it might drop us right in the middle of a new crisis, like a paternity test reveal, Zion officially securing joint custody, or a standoff with her mother, Daisy, before rewinding to show us the immediate aftermath of her courtroom victory.
What do you think of these episode titles? Are you hoping the baby belongs to Paul or Joe? Let us know your Season 4 predictions in the comments below!
