
She may not want it because it will be the beginning of the season and depending on how she feels preparing for it, she may push it or whatever. “I presume that they’ll go right into it. Retta also revealed that, before plans changed due to the shutdown, Whitman was set to make her directorial debut with the season’s 14th episode. “If we get picked up, we will finish the five that did not air because I know that’s how Jenna wants the story to go,” she says. … I like the show, I like the storytelling and so I tend to get worked up about it anyway.”Īnd though the future of “Good Girls” is currently uncertain (since the show hasn’t been officially renewed for a fourth season), Retta has some idea where the story is headed. So, it’s hard when the conflict’s gotta be in the Hill household for me. That’s what stories are about essentially. “ as always says, ‘It makes for good TV.’ … You have to have some conflict. I’m like, ‘Ugh, I don’t want to have to do it,’ because I get anxiety having to perform it because I want there to always be love with the Hills - or, as some people call us, ‘Stuby,’ ” Retta explains. “I literally have a problem when I read that, you know, we’re gonna have issues in the episode.

The third season’s final hour also features some major marital drama for Ruby and her husband Stan (Reno Wilson), as both of their shady business dealings have put further strain on their family and their relationship. Though Donnegan comes off innocent yet awkward to the women, the audience knows she’s an FBI agent hot on their trail. Retta is referencing the final scene of the episode, where Agent Donnegan (played by Lauren Lapkus) confronts Beth (Christina Hendricks), Ruby and Annie (Mae Whitman) in the park, where they are celebrating the fact that things seem to finally be working out in their life of crime - they have a new base of operations for their money printing and laundering operation and a hitman is finally locked in to whack their dangerous boss Rio (Manny Montanta).
