Gilmore Girls? It’s a show. It’s a lifestyle. It’s a religion. It’s no longer on Netflix. 

After 12 years, the WB series starring Lauren Graham and Alexis Bledel as mother-daughter duo Lorelei Gilmore and Rory Gilmore is departing Netflix just as suddenly as Rory dropped out of Yale. 

“We are sorry to say that Gilmore Girls Seasons 1-7 will be leaving Netflix in the US on June 30,” Netflix wrote in a post on X June 15. “Raising a cup of coffee to every fan who visited Stars Hollow with us.”

Indeed, Gilmore Girls has been streaming on Netflix since Babette ate oatmeal, or 2014, just one year before the company began developing the four-episode A Year in The Life revival, which came out in November 2016. 

But while Netflix will no longer be a home for the original series—which also stars Scott Patterson, Kelly Bishop, Keiko Agena and more—it will still be the home for A Year in the Life. Meanwhile, if Gilmore Girls jumps and you jump, Jack—Hulu and Disney+ have had Gilmore Girls available to stream on their platforms for over a year. 

As for whether another return to Stars Hollow will ever come to fruition for the cast? In the years since the revival, Gilmore Girls fans and the cast alike have been gunning to receive some answers for that major cliffhanger at the end of the 2016 series. 

In fact, Graham herself smelled snow by pitching a Christmas special for the Amy Sherman-Palladino series last year, which the creator and showrunner told E! News she thought was “very cute.”

But while Sherman-Palladino confirmed there were no official talks going on about another sequel series, her producing partner and husband Daniel Palladino revealed the couple are always discussing a future for Gilmore Girls. 

“We never thought that the Netflix movies would happen,” he added. “We're constantly thinking of stuff for Stars Hollow, because anything kind of quirky American makes us want to put it into Stars Hollow. But there's no set thing right now.”

In the meantime, the duo have kept mum on their take on whether Jess (Milo Ventimiglia), Dean (Jared Paledecki) or Logan (Matt Czuchry) is the father of Rory’s baby.

The cast, however, has had no trouble pledging their allegiance to a team. 

For Patterson—aka Luke Danes—he’s team Wookiee. 

“I think they’re all bums,” he told E! News in October. “I don't want Rory to end up with any of them. They all have bad stuff, man.”

Indeed, in seeing Rory’s arc in the revival, Patterson admitted he has hopes for a new romantic partner altogether. 

“There’s a new energy for her out there, in a new iteration,” he said. “She's got to get her act together, too. Then somebody will appear in her life, and she'll be ready for it. But these three guys, they just got her through her teen years. They served their purpose—now go away.”

For a ranking of all the Gilmore Girls couples, keep reading…

He sued her father. He almost destroyed Luke and Lorelai's burgeoning relationship. He went by the nickname Digger. What more do we need to say? 

They got married impulsively as teenagers (what a fun trope, said no one ever!) and then he promptly cheated on her. The only thing she got out of this marriage was disappointment and a mean meatloaf recipe.

We still can't believe a proposal with a thousand yellow daisies was wasted on a dud like Max Medin-ugh.

Remember that time Luke randomly married Nicole on a cruise ship? And then she cheated on him? Yeah, we try to forget about it, too. 

Sorry, but the fact that he called her Mary (you know, Virgin Mary?) still creeps us out. 

Rachel was Luke's first love, whose dreams were just too big for Stars Hollow. She was super-sweet and pushed Luke to realize his feelings for Lorelai. Thanks, girl!

OK, hear us out: Lane deserved more than Zack, who was a convenient filler for the void left by Adam Brody's exit. Sorry, not sorry. He's the rebound, NOT THE ONE. 

Two weirdos, one weird relationship. Not the most epic of romances, but she did deal with his night terrors. So, true love. 

Dave was definitely the one that got away (or, you know, ran off to become Seth Cohen on The O.C.). Come on, he inscribed his bible, with "This bible belongs to God but is being borrowed by Dave Rygalski." Swoon City, population: us. 

You never forget your first love...but that doesn't mean you should continue an on-and-off relationship for over a decade. While we liked Christopher, we didn't love these two together, especially when they thought it was OK to run off and get married without Rory (their daughter!) being there. Unforgivable. 

Fact: These two could take over and run their own country. They were made for each other. 

Sigh, the unsung heroes of Stars Hollow also made up its most solid couple that flew so under the radar you often forgot about them...until you needed a cup of sugar from next door. 

Yes, he made her a car and was her first love. But he also cheated on his wife with Rory. Talk about a great way to lose your virginity. Basically, Dean was ruined for us. Still, their quick reunion during A Year in the Life was random, nostalgic and bittersweet in only the way a catch-up session with your childhood sweetheart can be.

She made him a better person, and he helped her learn what she really wanted to do with her life. Often over-shadowed by Rory's two other major love interests, Logan is the dark horse among Gilmore's guys...and possibly Rory's (spoiler alert!) baby daddy?! We're going to need another revival STAT.

Of all Rory's love interests, he was the one that challenged (and frustrated) her the most. The classic bad boy. If only they had met later in life...and watching their brief interaction during the Netflix revival just proved how potent their chemistry still is. 

While Lorelai and Rory's love lives were unpredictable and (deliciously) wrought, there was something so sweet and simple about Sookie and Jackson's love story. You always argue over produce with the one you love!

"Will you just stand still?" Fact: These two had the best and most-earned first kiss in the history of first kisses. And everything else was pretty epic, too. (Let's just all pretend April Nardini, Luke's daughter, never showed up and ruined everything, mmmkay?)

Emily: "No! I did not sign on to your dying. And it is not going to happen. Not tonight, not for a very long time. In fact, I demand to go first. Do I make myself clear?"Richard: "Yes, Emily. You may go first."

Oh, how much more significance this exchange from the series' original took on in the revival after the 2014 death of star Edward Herrmann. BRB, SOBBING FOREVER.