Woodstone Mansion was in for quite the surprise on this week’s episode of Ghosts.
The penultimate episode didn’t disappoint, revealing yet another ghost’s powers. It looks like Pete (Richie Moriarty) isn’t stuck on the property after all. Unlike everyone else, he isn’t bound by the ghost border at Woodstone and can travel wherever he pleases. Naturally, his first getaway is a trip to the grocery store with Jay (Utkarsh Ambudkar), who immediately loses him due to the fact that he can’t actually see any of the ghosts.
Luckily, this wasn’t another Flower (Sheila Carrasco) situation. By the end of the episode, Pete had returned safe and sound. But the newfound confidence he got from leaving the property inspired him to take a trip to see his family. Hopefully he’ll be back in time for Isaac’s (Brandon Scott Jones) wedding!
Although it’s been a shorter one, Ghosts Season 3 has certainly packed a punch. Over the course of nine episodes, the show has revealed more ghosts powers, introduced and said goodbye to a love interest for Alberta, and gave audiences much-needed details on some of the ghosts’ backstories, including how Hetty (Rebecca Wisocky) died.
Another touching story involved one of the first ghosts that viewers ever learned more about — Trevor (Asher Grodman). After his memorial last season, mention of his younger brother inspired an entire episode in Season 3, where Trevor got to not only see his brother but also instill some older sibling wisdom onto him, even from beyond the grave.
Grodman spoke with Deadline about Season 3, his hopes for Trevor in the future, and whether or not he’s actually secretly jealous of these other ghost powers.
ASHER GRODMAN: Shoutout to our writers and showrunners, Joe Port and Joe Wiseman. They had one line in an episode about Trevor’s parents visiting the house in Season 2. It was just like a reference to Trevor’s brother. He’s still crashing in the parents basement, and it was one line. And from that audiences were like, ‘Oh, we’ve got to meet this guy.’ It’s just such good writing when, with so little, you can stir something that’s so engaging, so shout out to them. As someone who grew up playing Madden and warring with my brother over football, I certainly related to the storyline. And one of the fun things that Trevor gets to do — that Pete gets to do a little bit — but it’s a unique thing with those who are more recently dead is that the impact that we had on the living world is still being felt. So we get to have these ‘Tom Sawyer at his own funeral’ moments and then play with how Trevor saw the world or how Trevor sees his brother, and how that is different from how the rest of the world may see his brother. So it’s just very fun to kind of play in two worlds, if that makes any sense. We’ve spent a lot of time establishing the dynamic of the house and the history of the house. We get these one off episodes every once in a while to fill out another universe. So as an actor, that’s really, really exciting.