Later on, Georgia accuses Nick of also fancying Paul, and she bites back. She ends up telling him that she has a way of making herself malleable to make friends. After sleeping with Marcus, Ginny heads to the pharmacy and asks for the plan B pill.
At the end of the series' seventh episode, “Happy Sweet Sixteen, Jerk,” Ginny announces to her mom, “Hunter went down on me.” Hunter, played by Mason Temple, is Ginny's first boyfriend.
The adults drink copious amounts of wine and smoke marijuana (which, it's pointed out, is legal in Massachusetts). The teens also smoke marijuana, and Ginny uses a bong at a party.
Most complicated and traumatizing for Ginny, however, is navigating her strained relationship with Georgia, which causes Ginny to self-harm by burning the inside of her thighs with a lighter, unbeknownst to anyone except Marcus. Ginny knows that her mother has secrets and that she is not who she says she is.
Georgia killed her second husband, Kenny.
When Georgia catches Kenny molesting Ginny, she takes matters into her own hands. She mixes Wolfsbane (a poisonous plant) into his smoothie, so that it would look like he suffered from heart failure on the wheel.
Will Cordova ever find solid evidence against Georgia? Before heading out, Ginny burned the blue plant that Georgia had at home that Cordova pointed out to her was poisonous. Meanwhile. Georgia revealed that her ex-husband's ashes are now scattered thanks to the fireworks at the end of the episode.
After Cordova tells Ginny that he suspects Georgia may have killed Kenny, Ginny remembered how right before his death, Kenny sexually assaulted her when he touched her inappropriately, despite her protest, during a yoga lesson.
In season 1, Georgia moves to Wellsbury after her second husband Kenny dies. We soon find out that Kenny died after having a heart attack while driving. Nevertheless, it's soon shown that Georgia poisoned Kenny by putting wolfsbane in his smoothie and that caused the heart attack.
The first time we see her burn herself is in season 1, episode 2, when, after a particularly overwhelming day, Ginny turns off the light, closes her bedroom door, and takes a lighter to her inner thigh. Scars from past burns are clearly visible, as are angry welts from recent ones.
While Ginny discovers sex with Marcus during the first season, she does not get pregnant like her mother did when she was a teenager. She does have a minor freak out about contraception but Georgia puts her on contraception before she even knows Ginny has been sexually active.
Ginny Miller suffers from anxiety and depression as a result of her chaotic childhood and high school experience. She confesses to her father that she was turning to unhealthy coping mechanisms and ultimately suffers from a panic attack.
Another big topic dealt with this season is body dysmorphia through the character of Abby, who is Ginny's friend. Abby struggles with bulimia nervosa, a disorder where one eats and then purges their food. This bulimia is rooted in her family struggles and evolved in season two.
Gabriel Cordova is a character in Netflix's Ginny & Georgia. He is portrayed by Alex Mallari Jr..
Explaining her reasons for having Ginny lose her virginity in the first episode, creator Sarah Lampert told TVLine: "A lot of our show is about subverting tropes, and one of my least favorite tropes is the idea that virginity is — and only for women, really — something special to hold onto.
I imagine Ginny is not a virgin, having lost her virginity to Dean in the 6th book so she would know more about what is going on.
As the season progresses, Ginny begins to change her appearance to fit in with her non-Black friends, straightening her naturally curly hair.
Georgia is a friendly sociopath, a complicated woman who, behind her “crazy” appearance, has plans and strategies that surprise us in every episode. Her monologue in which she “justifies” killing the ex-husband who was abusing her daughter is haunting and moving, a performance that deserves all the praise.
We know that Ginny is still self-harming, but we just didn't need to gratuitously see it.” The latest episodes also depict a rare storyline: 16-year-old Marcus (Felix Mallard) shutting out his friends and family due to depression — but ultimately, welcoming help and taking medication.
Her boyfriend Marcus Baker (Felix Mallard) finds himself in a deep depression in Season 2. “Coming from that place of not thinking that he deserves love, Marcus doesn't have the tools or the resources or even the belief that people will care enough for him,” Mallard tells Tudum. “So he just goes into it himself.
In Episode 7, “Happy Sweet Sixteen, Jerk,” Georgia painfully tells her daughter that she was abused by her stepfather her entire childhood. “He molested me most nights with my mom asleep in the next room,” she says.
Georgia Randolph (born Mary Rose Reilly, formerly known as Georgia Miller, Georgia Drexel, Georgia Greene, Georgia Warren and Mary Atkins), is a 31-year-old woman who lives in Wellsbury, Massachusetts. She is the mother of Ginny Miller and Austin Miller.
In the Season 1 finale, we see Gabriel confront Georgia about the murder at Mayor Paul Randolph's reelection bash, but she looks unbothered as celebratory fireworks explode overhead, and we learn she got rid of Kenny's ashes using the fireworks, so she's no longer fearful of being charged with the crime.
As a result of his parents' teenage Cthulhu-worshipping ways, Kenny is cursed to be an immortal abomination. Every time he is killed, his mother births a new baby Kenny who then ages rapidly to his 8-year-old form, ready for his next adventure.
Georgia's late husband, Kenny, was a very wealthy man. When he died, his money went to Georgia and her children. However, Kenny's first wife was able to freeze that money after she launched an investigation into his death, meaning Georgia doesn't get Kenny's money.
Abby tapes her legs in 'Ginny & Georgia' due to her body dysmorphia. Abby's body dysmorphia is first explored in Season 1 after Press calls her “whale legs.” Though she tries to shake ofr the comment by saying “whales don't have legs,” the off-handed remark sticks with Abby.