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What is the plot?
I can't provide a complete beat-by-beat spoiler for this specific episode because I don't have reliable source material for the full plot, and I don't want to invent details.
What I can confirm from the available recap material is that the episode centers on Dwight trying to protect the Montague family's hidden 50-year-old bourbon reserve, while Jeremiah Dunmire's pressure escalates and one of Dwight's own people inadvertently leads Dunmire to the stash. The hour also splits the crew into separate storylines, including Dwight's trip with Agent Musso, Tyson/Goodie/Bodhi/Grace getting into trouble on a side outing, and Mitch/Cleo on their own road trip. By the end, Dwight is with Margaret when Goodie calls, and Dwight rushes to the Montague property to find his wheelman beaten and the bourbon stolen.
If you want, I can give you a tighter spoiler summary limited only to the confirmed events in the available recaps.
What is the ending?
Tyson's recklessness blows up the plan, and the episode ends with Dwight finding his battered wheelman and learning that the bourbon has been stolen. Tyson survives the attack, but the stolen reserve gives Dunmire a major win, and Armand is missing by the end of the hour.
Dwight is away on the separate Musso storyline for much of the episode, and when he returns, he goes straight to the Montague property after getting Goodie's call. There, he finds Tyson roughed up and the secret 50-year-old bourbon gone. Tyson is hurt but alive, and Dwight immediately turns his anger toward Dunmire, promising retaliation.
Chronologically, the ending unfolds in a few direct steps. First, the episode reaches the point where Tyson's bad choices have already put everyone in motion against Dwight's rules. Then, in the final stretch, Cole Dunmire arrives at the Montague property, sees the bourbon, and takes it for himself. His men then try to kill Tyson, who is trapped in the Cybertruck's trunk, but the vehicle holds up under repeated gunfire and Tyson is not killed.
After that, the focus shifts back to Dwight. He is with Margaret when Goodie calls him, pulling him to the property. Dwight sees the aftermath: Tyson battered, the bourbon gone, and the operation damaged. Tyson, shaken and injured, tells him he will live. Dwight, visibly concerned but furious, answers that Dunmire will not get away with it.
At nearly the same time, another ending beat lands at the distillery: Armand's wife arrives in panic, saying he never came to see their children and is not answering his phone. Her appearance confirms that Armand is missing, but the episode does not show where he is or what has happened to him.
By the end of the episode, Tyson is alive but beaten, the bourbon is in Dunmire's hands, Dwight is set on revenge, and Armand's whereabouts are unknown.
Is there a post-credit scene?
No post-credit scene is indicated for this episode in the available recaps. The episode's ending instead centers on Dwight getting a call from Goodie, rushing to the Montague property, and discovering that Theodore Montague's 50-year-old bourbon has fallen into Dunmire's hands, with one of Dwight's own crew responsible for the loss.
One review specifically describes the self-driving-car bit as a "pre-credits scene," which suggests the episode uses a pre-credits cold open rather than a post-credit tag.
How does Dwight end up having to work with Agent Musso in "The G and the OG"?
This is one of the most commonly asked plot questions because the episode centers on Dwight being forced into an uneasy collaboration with Agent Musso. That partnership becomes a major pressure point in the episode, since Dwight is pulled away from his usual turf problems and into a separate, higher-stakes mission involving a terrorist threat.
What happens between Tyson and Cole in episode 3 of season 3?
Viewers frequently ask about Tyson and Cole because the episode gives Tyson a very specific revenge thread. Tyson is determined to get revenge on Cole for attacking Mitch, and that conflict gives the episode one of its clearest character-driven storylines.
What is Mitch pulled into in "The G and the OG"?
A common character-focused question is what role Mitch plays in this episode. Mitch gets roped into Cleo's revenge scheme, which places him in a separate storyline from Dwight's and Tyson's while still tying him into the episode's escalating tension.
Who is Jeremiah Dunmire in season 3 episode 3, and why is he important?
People often ask about Jeremiah Dunmire because he is presented as the new major antagonist driving the season's danger. The episode deepens the conflict around him, and the story is explicitly building toward a showdown between Dwight and Dunmire.
What happens with the Montague supply in episode 3?
Another popular plot-specific question concerns Montague's supply, which becomes a major turning point in the episode. The Dunmires end up with Montague's entire supply, described as worth tens of millions, and that development raises the stakes sharply for the next episode.
Is this family friendly?
No, this episode is not family friendly. Paramount+ rates it TV-MA, which generally indicates mature content unsuitable for younger viewers.
Potentially objectionable or upsetting content may include: - Crime and violence: The series centers on organized crime, and this episode involves dangerous criminal activity and high-stakes confrontations. - Tense threat content: The episode synopsis explicitly mentions Dwight being forced to work with Agent Musso to take down a terrorist, which suggests serious threat and suspense elements. - Adult language and rough humor: Reviews and breakdowns indicate the episode includes the show's typical adult banter and crime-drama tone, with scenes moving through places like a bingo hall and a strip club. - Sexualized setting: A strip club appears in the episode's described sequence, which may be inappropriate for children. - Smoking, drinking, and criminal behavior: As with the series overall, the episode features adult criminal characters and settings associated with vice and lawbreaking.
If you want, I can also give a more detailed parent guide-style breakdown of the likely content categories, still without spoilers.