

Netflix knows a thing or two about lighting a furious fire under its subscriber base, which largely tends to revolve around the never-ending procession of hit fantasy shows the streaming service loves to cancel so much. In a highly unexpected twist, though, one of the platform’s most controversial recent originals is a relatively tame-sounding dramatic comedy.
Ginny & Georgia recently returned for its second season, with the plot picking up with the former half of the title duo reconciling with the fact her mother is a murderer. After discovering her stepfather’s death wasn’t an accident, the latter half of the equation needs to offer a maternal olive branch to ensure they can start to rebuild a fractured familial relationship, without any more revelations coming to light.