Board Thread:General Grimm Discussion/@comment-98.117.68.195-20150503215639/@comment-24399666-20160209014452

TheJorgon23 wrote: I just see the number of views of the last episode, I see how much people are hypocrites, the first episodes have focused on the relationship between Adalind and Nick (In which I hate because it makes no sense) and the ratings have been very low and the show is in danger of being canceled, then it turns out that Juliette / Eve is alive, and many people have offended the character and the actress (Nadalind Lovers), the last two episodes that focus Juliette / Eve show a number of views of 3.81 (second highest losing to the premiere) and 4.42 (the highest, Adalind and Kelly did not appear and neither were mentioned) and because of that the series now have a good chance of being saved. Why this happened it is simple my dear friends. After the failure of the fourth season, and yes, it was a failure, many people stopped to see the show, and don't follow anymore the show on facebook, twitter, wiki, etc ...

Let's be honest and realistic, people like the Bitsie, and I think if the show to focus on Nick / Adalind relationship, the show will be canceled, this is my opinion. I never had a problem with Bitsie, or much of a problem with Juliette or with Nick/Juliette, so I may not be the right person to comment on this, but I think you may be seeing causation where there is merely correlation. What's changed since last fall? Well, offhand:

- Bitsie/Juliette/Eve is back

- Nick and Adalind kissed

- There's more Meisner

- There's more Trubel

- We're starting to get hints that our protagonist (Nick) is becoming a more active participant in the main plot of the season

- The lineup changed

Personally, if ratings have increased since last fall, my immediate gut reaction would be that the lineup change gets most of the credit. Last fall, tuning in to watch Grimm was not really a fun experience. The NBC gods, in their great wisdom, started Grimm every week last fall, a whopping 1.5 seconds after the final scene of a sitcom, leaving me, at least, reeling from tonal shock, and made it virtually impossible to focus on the characters and drama of Grimm. This spring, they seem to have wised up a bit and are now apparently airing it after a variety show of some sort, which is at least not a sitcom. I'd rather go from music to Grimm than a laugh-track to Grimm any day.