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Is Ginny and Georgia season 4 releasing in August 2025? Everything we know so far

Is Ginny and Georgia season 4 releasing in August 2025? Everything we know so far

By Aman Shukla Published on July 31, 2025, 18:30 IST Last updated July 31, 2025, 11:49 IST
Fans of Ginny & Georgia are buzzing with excitement, wondering when they'll get to dive back into the drama-filled world of Wellsbury. With Season 3 leaving everyone on the edge of their seats, questions about Season 4's release, cast, and plot are swirling. Is August 2025 the big moment for Ginny & Georgia Season 4? Let's break down everything known so far about the next chapter of this Netflix hit. Will Ginny and Georgia Season 4 Release in August 2025?
As of now, Netflix hasn't confirmed an official release date for Ginny & Georgia Season 4, and an August 2025 premiere seems unlikely. Based on recent updates, production is still in the early stages. The writers' room kicked off in February 2025, and filming is expected to start in Toronto, Canada, sometime between summer and September 2025, with a wrap date set for February 2026.
Historically, the show has followed a roughly two-year gap between seasons, with Season 1 dropping in February 2021, Season 2 in January 2023, and Season 3 in June 2025. Given that filming and post-production typically take around 14 months, a release in late 2026 or early 2027 feels more realistic. What Will Season 4 Be About?
Season 3 ended with jaw-dropping twists: Georgia was acquitted of Tom Fuller's murder, thanks to Ginny and Austin's manipulation, but her milk-chugging moment hinted at a new pregnancy. Is Paul or Joe the father? That's a major question heading into Season 4. Creator Sarah Lampert confirmed to Tudum that Georgia is indeed pregnant, and the season's theme, 'Cycles and Origins,' will explore her past and her parenting choices.
Georgia's realization that her kids mirrored her scheming ways—Ginny blackmailing Cynthia and Austin lying about Gil—pushes her toward therapy to break the cycle of destructive behavior. Brianne Howey told Tudum this is a 'sobering' moment for Georgia, as she sees how her actions have shaped her kids.
Meanwhile, Ginny's heading into her 'hell year' as a junior, grappling with her fractured bond with Austin, her rocky romance with Marcus, and her own growth into a 'badass,' as Antonia Gentry teased. The season will likely balance lighter, hopeful tones with the show's signature drama, moving away from Season 3's darker murder trial vibe. Expect family secrets, love triangles, and small-town chaos to keep the stakes high.
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Aman Shukla is a post-graduate in mass communication . A media enthusiast who has a strong hold on communication ,content writing and copy writing. Aman is currently working as journalist at BusinessUpturn.com
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"Hopefully it's doing something positive": My Oxford Year's Corey Mylchreest on portraying vulnerable men
"Hopefully it's doing something positive": My Oxford Year's Corey Mylchreest on portraying vulnerable men

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"Hopefully it's doing something positive": My Oxford Year's Corey Mylchreest on portraying vulnerable men

The entire internet fell in love with Corey Mylchreest in 2023 when he starred as the young King George in Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story. Fast-forward two years, and the 27-year-old actor is stepping into another heartthrob role - this time as charming professor Jamie Davenport in Netflix's My Oxford Year, opposite singer and actress Sofia Carson. "I did really feel like I knew what to do with Jamie," Corey says when we catch up over Zoom. "This doesn't always happen. I remember Benny Safdie saying that sometimes you have a character in you already that you can just walk onto set and it's there. I'm not saying that that's the case with me and Jamie, I just think that it wasn't so much of a leap. I could understand him quite quickly." Based on Julia Whelan's novel of the same title, My Oxford Year follows ambitious student Anna De La Vega as she moves to the UK for a year at university - only to unexpectedly fall for her endearing and handsome professor, Jamie, who is secretly battling terminal cancer. "I spoke to some really generous, kind and very open people, some of whom have experienced something like what Jamie's experiencing, some of whom have experienced a family member or a friend going through a journey similar to Jamie's right up until the end," Mylchreest tells me. "I'm so thankful. It's a really brave thing to do to speak to a stranger about something that's so personal. Some of those conversations were so pivotal and key in what I ended up doing and I wouldn't have been able to do the same thing that I did without that. It just informed everything." It's not the first time Corey has taken on a character carrying something heavy beneath the surface. His portrayal of King George delved into mental illness with depth and sensitivity. For Corey, playing these emotionally complex men - whether dealing with physical or mental health struggles - is something he sees as both a responsibility and a privilege. "As a man - well different people have different experiences - but never in your life are you really taught that it is all good for you to experience emotion on that level and cry in such an uncontrollable way", he says. "It's quite easy to do like one tear and be stoic and all strong about it, but to really let yourself go is difficult. It's important for me to still strive towards that. I mean, it's not why I do it, but hopefully it's doing something positive to show that men can be vulnerable." Like Jamie, Mylchreest says he often uses "humour as a defense mechanism" and is very "passionate" about one thing - Jamie's being his career as an English professor, and Corey, his acting. In fact, he's working on another project as we speak, telling me to ignore his 'bedhead' as he's just finished filming scenes in Weston-super-Mare. "I've been told not to wash it, because my character is meant to have curly hair, and apparently it's better. So, there's so much product in my hair right now," he reveals. In between filming, Corey has been squeezing in episodes of Love Island with his girlfriend, Hannah Holland, and housemate (priorities). "When will she learn?" he says, referring to Toni's chaotic triangle with Harrison and Lauren, before noting there's been a "switch" - and it looks like she might be moving on (spoiler: she did). While juggling his busy schedule and relationship can be hard, Corey is realistic about how to make everything work: "I think it's always, as anything is, about communication and again the choice, openness, understanding and, commitment." And he applies the same considerations to his on-screen relationships. 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He later attended Junior Guildhall, a Saturday school for music and drama, before graduating with a Bachelor of Arts in Acting from the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) in 2020. Shortly afterwards, he was cast in open-air productions of the Shakespeare plays Romeo & Juliet and A Midsummer Night's Dream. In 2022, he landed a role in Neil Gaiman's The Sandman. Later this month, he'll star alongside Suranne Jones in Netflix's Hostage, a political thriller following a high-stakes kidnapping and blackmail plot during the French president's visit to the UK. "I play Matteo Lewis, who is the French president's stepson and the son of a sort of oligarchical figure in France. Sort of Rupert Murdoch-adjacent guy who controls all the media in France, and who works for an NGO and works to rehouse refugees, and that is in conflict with who the French president has politically become," he says of the role. 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Paula Deen abruptly closes Georgia restaurant that catapulted her to fame
Paula Deen abruptly closes Georgia restaurant that catapulted her to fame

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Paula Deen abruptly closes Georgia restaurant that catapulted her to fame

Former Food Network star Paula Deen announced Friday the abrupt closure of the Savannah restaurant that launched her to fame with its menu of fried chicken, banana pudding and other indulgent Southern dishes. Deen ran The Lady & Sons restaurant with her two sons, Jamie and Bobby Deen, for nearly three decades. Loyal fans visiting Savannah continued to line up for Deen's buffet long after the Food Network canceled her show, "Paula's Home Cooking," in 2013. But 78-year-old Deen said Friday that The Lady & Sons closed for good along with her second Savannah eatery, The Chicken Box. A statement posted on Deen's website and social media accounts didn't say why the restaurants had shut down. "Hey, y'all, my sons and I made the heartfelt decision that Thursday, July 31st, was the last day of service for The Lady & Sons and The Chicken Box," Deen's statement said. "Thank you for all the great memories and for your loyalty over the past 36 years," she said. "We have endless love and gratitude for every customer who has walked through our doors." Deen said her four restaurants outside Savannah will remain open. They're located in Nashville and Pigeon Forge, Tennessee; Myrtle Beach, South Carolina; and Branson, Missouri. Deen said Friday she and her sons will visit the Branson establishment on August 8, and said the family is "excited to continue visiting these restaurants regularly." "Savannah will always be our home, and we'll always be here to support our wonderful community," she said in the statement. Deen was divorced and nearly broke when she moved to Savannah with her boys in 1989 and started a catering business called The Bag Lady. She opened her first restaurant a few years later at a local Best Western hotel, then started The Lady & Sons in downtown Savannah in 1996. The restaurant soon had lines out the door and served roughly 1,100 diners per day at the height of Deen's popularity. A USA Today food critic awarded The Lady & Sons his "meal of the year" in 1999. Deen moved her Savannah restaurant to a larger building nearby the year after The Food Network debuted "Paula's Home Cooking" in 2002. Filmed mostly in her home kitchen, Deen taped more than 200 episodes over the next decade. The Food Network canceled Deen's show in 2013 amid fallout from a lawsuit by a former employee. A transcript of Deen answering questions under oath in a legal deposition became public, which included Deen's awkward responses to questions about race. Asked if she had ever used the N-word, Deen said, "Yes, of course," though she added: "It's been a very long time." Deen returned to television on ABC's "Dancing With the Stars," on chef Gordon Ramsay's Fox show "MasterChef: Legends," and on Fox Nation, which began streaming "At Home With Paula Deen" in 2020. She also posts cooking videos to a YouTube channel that has more than 520,000 subscribers.

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