I know this is a little bit off-topic for this blog, but…

Net neutrality is important. Net neutrality is what allows fandom to exist online the way it does. Could fandom exist without it? Sure. It did before the internet was a thing. But not like it does now.

Without net neutrality, we could not have liveblogged six seasons of Grimm with you all.

Without net neutrality, it would be next to impossible for fan archives that host fanart and fanfic to reach and be reached by their userbase.

Without net neutrality, people in smaller fandoms like the Grimm fandom would have an even harder time connecting.

Net neutrality is so, so important for so many reasons…but for the purposes of this blog specifically? FYNB would not exist without it. Grimm fandom would be scattered and disconnected without it.

So if you support net neutrality, go to http://www.battleforthenet.com and find out how you can help make sure that we get to keep it.

i patiently waited for grimm to fix silverhardt since 4×09. through the painful arc of hexen!jules & nick being ooc. watching julies lose herself & get killed. the horrible n/dalind arc & that yucky affair & jules being unable to show emotions. i stuck through when jules came back in s6 & she & nick started showing feelings for each other again. & the writers dropped the ball. for faithful grimm fans that were there from S1 and watched it for GRIMM not just n/dalind that was freaking unfair

I feel you, anon. It’s been months and I still feel you so hard.

Kinda wondering… has anybody done a gif compilation of Eve’s abilities during her days of being an agent for Hadrian’s Wall? That would be sick if someone did that!

I haven’t seen one, no, but that would be amazing.

I sadly don’t have a computer that’s very good at giffing anymore (which is what’s behind the shameful lack of new graphical content on FYNB, btw), but if anyone does such a compilation we’d LOVE to see it and reblog it and signal boost it to the moon!

did you feel like nick was badly written in the last two seasons? cause to me he sometimes seemed to be a different nick altogether which is sad since I loved nick and they kinda ruined him… and it wasnt just nick either. it was everyone. it’s like the writers gave up on being true to their characters. such a shame.

A little yes, and a little no, anon. Let me see if I can explain.

There were definitely arcs where I felt Nick behaved very out of character. And in the Juliette/Hexenbiest arc at the end of season four, I felt that everyone behaved out of character without any good explanation (except for Juliette, who had all the reason in the world). It was almost like they made the entire team thoughtless and incompetent just so they could force Juliette’s arc, when there were definitely better ways to make that happen.

Granted, some of Nick’s writing during this time was par for the course–emotional avoidance, disregarding Juliette’s feelings, making things about him that so very were not–but the beauty of the show was that the characters’ flaws often balanced each other out. Nick’s tendency toward emotional avoidance and self-centeredness was balanced out by Juliette’s insistence on facing things head on and Hank’s tendency to point out the problems in his actions. Monroe’s pigheadedness was balanced by Rosalee’s level-headedness. The entire team’s collective gooeyness was balanced by Renard’s ruthless pragmatism…and occasionally Rosalee’s, depending on the subject. They all had skills and strengths that worked well with the rest of the team, and they were (mostly) good at communicating when it mattered.

But in that arc, suddenly, no one was balancing anyone out. No one was reacting to anything the way they usually would. Everyone was being ridiculously obtuse and not talking about shit and it was infuriating to watch. They basically all fell back to letting Nick do whatever he wanted–similar to how they acted in season 2, actually–and the end result was Juliette dead and Diana in the wind.

But overall, I thought Nick’s writing was fine in seasons 5 and 6, with the exception of one particular subplot (you know the one) in which the writing, acting, everything felt forced and stilted and just wrong. So wrong that up until the final episode I was sure it had to be some kind of spell causing him to act completely out of character. It wasn’t just that he was displaying traits that seemed unusual for him, it was that he was portraying certain emotions in a way that Nick Burkhardt definitely did not express himself, with no plausible explanation given as to why.

So. Yeah…I kinda feel you. But there were also moments that Nick felt every bit the Grimm we all know and love. Notably, his solo interactions with Hank, Monroe, and Juliette/Eve were super in-character and smacked of season one so hard that I had to swallow a nostalgic lump in my throat at times. And although sometimes his actions as a Grimm made me sad, they were also part of a clear progression that had been building for a few years, so I understood them as (not necessarily positive) character development, rather than OOC writing.

mmorgan317:

lostinawop:

On the final day of shooting the cast and crew threw him a party. “They bought me a cake and said really sweet things and the camera crew gave me a clapper board with my name on it,“ says Giuntoli. “And then Russell Hornsby [Hank] started singing ‘For He’s a Jolly Good Fellow’ and everyone joined in. I’m, like, ‘What year is this? Who sings that anymore?’ It was hilarious, and really, really emotional. I had to sneak off to Bitsie’s trailer for a few minutes because I didn’t want anyone seeing me get misty-eyed.” (Grimm’s David Giuntoli Makes His Directing Debut, http://www.tvinsider.com/article/103825/grimm-david-giuntoli-directing-debut/)

Awwe