resistpoisontangface
replied to your post “Since Diana said “Mom and Dad are waiting”, I’m guessing that Dad…”

I thought it was pretty clear that Nick was “dad,” and as someone is also from a blended family, you can have two dads.

You can absolutely have two dads, including without any step-parents at all! I never meant to suggest otherwise. If you read the linked post in the ask you replied to, I gave three different examples of how I’ve seen kids from blended families refer to their step-parents, including my own, in which I call my step-mother “Momma.”

They left a lot of things open to interpretation in that last scene, not the least of which was who Diana means when she says “mom and dad.” If you think she means Nick and Adalind, great! You’re entitled to that interpretation. I don’t interpret it that way, and that’s also great, and I’m just as entitled to my interpretation. That’s the beauty of leaving it as open as they did…it gives a measure of closure while also allowing fans to fill in the details that make them the happiest.

resistpoisontangface
replied to your post “OH LOOK AT THAT. MONROE IS FINALLY ACKNOWLEDGING THAT WHAT HAPPENED TO…”

It was her fault. Her turning into a Hexenbeist didn’t make her burn down the Grimmabago, help kill Nick’s mom and several of Nick’s neighbors; sleep w/other guys (and in Nick’s bed). Those were choices she made as a Hexenbeist. This just whitewashes her actions. Eh. But hey, they can do it for Adalind, they can for Juliette, right?

Actually, in season 5 they established–however badly it was explained or thought out–that hexenbiests and zauberbiests are heavily influenced or even controlled by their powers. So yes, turning into a hexenbiest did in fact make her do all of those things.

And even if it didn’t, this post was specifically talking about what happened to Juliette, i.e. her becoming a hexenbiest in the first place. Which was in fact not her fault.