(11-10-2018, 06:55 AM)brandon Wrote: You have a bad impression if you come out with Nick only interested in sex.
They will not have planned something like this but you have to take into account that real life is unexpected and it usually happens bitter moments as well as sweet.
It's funny and notorious what Nick says about Adalind:
Nick: Hank, what are you doing?
Hank: [He takes a picture of Nick] Testing out the new equipment and getting a picture of you while you're still young and innocent.
Nick: Oh, well, I am getting married once, not four times.
Hank: Oh, you're a happily ever after guy.
Nick: Yeah. [He notices a blonde woman]
Hank: Detective, what are you looking at? You just bought a ring.
Nick: That's not what I'm looking at.
Hank: Come on, don't ruin it for me.
Nick: No, she wears Armani, makes low six figures, drives a BMW, and is falling for a senior partner at her law firm. Nothing but trouble, Hank.
Hank: Why can't you just look at her ass like the rest of us?
Nick: I can't.
Hank: Come on, Nick. We have a call.
[Nick suddenly sees the blonde woman briefly take the appearance of a hag]
(grimm wikia)
I think Nick fell in love with Adalind when he found out that after all they were not as different as they thought they were.
Is this a respond to my post? If so, you must have misunderstood my point. The stick/"other place" linked Diana and Nick together. If everything that happened "in the end" was foreseen, as Monroe suggested, then what happened outside the coffee shop when Nick saw Adalind for the first time, was an indication of what to come. This is NOT consistent with how Grimm was created. The storyline was a dynamic process, not a predetermined long term plan. But this can be used as an argument if you ONLY consider the storyline itself. I've never said Nick was only interested in sex, where did that come from?