I think having Danny and Lindsay together
plus Flack and Angell in some sort of relationship (enough so to have kissed once, at least),
plus Adam's crush on Stella,
plus Mac's apparent interest in the new deputy inspector - I'd say it's too much.
One canon relationship isn't too bad theoretically, although I still don't like the idea of pairing up two main characters. But when there is so much other stuff they could delve into for these people, it's disappointing that romance seems to be the only option the show takes.
I'd like to see more of Flack's family - if they can successfully show us him flirting with Angell
and more of him with Sam and *crosses fingers* perhaps his father, I'm pretty fine with it. (However, it is a bit aggravating that I don't think we
ever saw two detectives working on the same case, and now suddenly there are two detectives on some typical cases [not even big ones] which provides opportunities for Flack and Angell to flirt - it's obvious that the show changed it's formula of one-detective-per-case in order to accommodate romantic tension, particularly since their very first scene together was flirtatious.)
I'd like to know more about Adam, and while his crush on Stella is cute, I think they're starting to lay it on too heavily. We don't have to see him flirting with her in
every episode to get it, and I feel like they're neglecting his interaction with other characters (like Mac and Danny, for example) which is also fun to watch. I enjoy seeing him be a bit of a bumbling dork around Stella, but I don't want to see most of his scenes eaten up by that dynamic. Plus, I'm just not sure I could see that as a viable relationship. I wouldn't be
against it, exactly, but I'm not convinced at this point. They should do it slowly if they must do it at all.
When a character like Gillian Whitford (or whatever her last name is - the press release was wrong) is introduced and has all of two scenes before a main character asks her out - that bothers me. The character might have some merit on her own, but instead she doesn't seem to be much more than a potential love interest and/or pain in the ass for the team. I'd like to see a more dynamic supporting cast with more character depth, rather than come-and-go recurring roles that do little more than flirt or cause trouble.
Plus, of course, there's the fact that these people all work together - does that not cause a conflict of interest? Are there no rules? Not that I'm saying it would happen, but if Danny and Lindsay are on a case together and something happens to them (the bomb in "Charge of this Post" comes to mind) - their kid would lose both parents at once. Are there not perhaps rules put in place not only to protect the perceived integrity of the workplace but also to safeguard families and whatnot?
The argument that people date and fall in love with coworkers is valid, I'll give you that - but if you look around during an episode of NY, there are a bunch of other people in that lab working, not to mention in the precinct when you add that to it. That's a lot of people they 'work' with, so why do they need to be involved with someone in their very small team? Do people never develop deep, platonic relationships with co-workers?
I'm not saying each situation is not realistic in and of itself, I just think when you combine them all together, it gets to be too much. Thinking in terms of real people: Danny and Lindsay's relationship might happen in real life (heaven knows I've seen people in relationships that make no friggin' sense to me), Flack and Angell might realistically flirt and perhaps date out here in the real world (and they could have pretty, pretty babies together), I could easily see Adam having a big-ass crush on Stella, Mac just might actually flirt with his new superior after just meeting her (although I would think that would be a dangerous thing to do, not knowing how she might respond to romantic advances as his friggin'
boss), etc - but it's all too close and concentrated to have them all at once.
And while romance is part of the characters lives (and when a show is created with everybody single, it's going to happen), that's not the
only thing that would allow the show to be character-driven. Family, friends, neighbors, personal struggles, characters' pasts, etc - all of those things are overflowing with possibilities, and it's disappointing to see that romance is deemed worthy of focus in countless episodes while other stuff gets pushed aside. There is far more to the people I know than who they're seeing, and the show should reflect that IMO.
However, Hawkes definitely needs to get some.

I want to see him get some of everything (screentime, individual focus, a chance to be the hero of the day, family, friends, etc), but he should also get some lovin' if everybody else is getting some.
