Why Grimm Ended After Season 6

Based on the fairy tales written by the Brothers Grimm, Grimm was an NBC supernatural drama that seemed to defy all odds. It was released in 2011, when other fantasy shows such as Constantine, based on the hit adult DC Comic Hellblazer, were dropping like flies. The popularity of serialized television was still relatively new, but Grimm also had a procedural element, making it more akin to series like The X-Files. It blended the familiar format of a monster/mystery-of-the-week series with a fantastical internal mythology.Defying the odds (for any television series, really), Grimm lasted for six seasons, producing over 100 episodes. However, all good things must come to an end, and Grimm’s seeming cancelation was a disappointment to loyal viewers. Despite the final season being cut short, Grimm’s ending wasn’t as shocking as other genre shows. It didn’t even surprise the show’s creators. SInce the 2010s also featured a slew of revival series, including The X-Files, producers knew they wanted a satisfying but not necessarily definitive ending.A procedural television series based on the Brothers Grimm was slated for development at CBS through Hazy Mills Productions, Will & Grace star Sean Hayes’s production company. The 2007-2008 Writers Strike caused CBS to abandon the show, but the idea persisted. Three years later NBC ordered a pilot and picked it up for series. Writer and producer Stephen Carpenter worked on the original concept that came from Todd Milner, titled Brother Grimm, but left once CBS passed. David Greenwalt and Jim Kouf picked up the baton, successfully selling the show to the network. The two set the show in Portland, Oregon because of the many forest locations they could use for their more supernatural scenes.

Based on the fairy tales written by the Brothers Grimm, Grimm was an NBC supernatural drama that seemed to defy all odds. It was released in 2011, when other fantasy shows such as Constantine, based on the hit adult DC Comic Hellblazer, were dropping like flies. The popularity of serialized television was still relatively new, but Grimm also had a procedural element, making it more akin to series like The X-Files. It blended the familiar format of a monster/mystery-of-the-week series with a fantastical internal mythology.

Defying the odds (for any television series, really), Grimm lasted for six seasons, producing over 100 episodes. However, all good things must come to an end, and Grimm‘s seeming cancelation was a disappointment to loyal viewers. Despite the final season being cut short, Grimm‘s ending wasn’t as shocking as other genre shows. It didn’t even surprise the show’s creators. SInce the 2010s also featured a slew of revival series, including The X-Files, producers knew they wanted a satisfying but not necessarily definitive ending.

A procedural television series based on the Brothers Grimm was slated for development at CBS through Hazy Mills Productions, Will & Grace star Sean Hayes’s production company. The 2007-2008 Writers Strike caused CBS to abandon the show, but the idea persisted. Three years later NBC ordered a pilot and picked it up for series. Writer and producer Stephen Carpenter worked on the original concept that came from Todd Milner, titled Brother Grimm, but left once CBS passed. David Greenwalt and Jim Kouf picked up the baton, successfully selling the show to the network. The two set the show in Portland, Oregon because of the many forest locations they could use for their more supernatural scenes.

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