Talk:Adalind Schade/@comment-47.188.105.113-20170427051431/@comment-25862208-20190207005905

I readily admit having a bias towards the show (as my name would suggest lol), but I think you are throwing out a premise here that's really just far too cynical. Based on everything I know about the show's crew and cast and the interactions I've had with some of the crew, I know that they cared very much about ending the show the right way. NBC gave them a shortened season of 13 episodes, yes, but this was done well enough in advance as a way to allow them to plan things out and end things on their terms, even if some storylines (e.g., the triplets) had to be abbreviated. As far as Nick & Adalind's relationship goes, the producers didn't confirm it as canon after the fact, as there was enough information given in the epilogue to correctly assume they were married; checking the edit history here, that edit was indeed made soon after the airing of the finale on April 1. I understand fans' frustration in not actually seeing Nick & Adalind in the epilogue or the triplets, I really do. If NBC would've allowed it, I would have loved to see them allow Grimm an extra 5 minutes of air time to show more characters in the epilogue, but since the epilogue took place 20 years in the future, it does make sense for the writers to have focused on what was the core of the future generation of Grimm's heroes, Nick and Adalind's children.