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Will You Pay for Star Trek?

Will You Pay for CBS All Access to Watch Star Trek?


  • Total voters
    154
SHUT UP AND TAKE MY MONEY!!!

I'm not in the US so I'll probably have to get it via iTunes or Netflix, but year, I'll be glued to a screen watching this thing the second it comes out.
 
I'm not sure how it will be shown in the UK but if it's a streaming service that needs paying for then I'll probably take two things into account:

1) What I know about the show (cast, premise, other assorted rumours).
2) What else will I get if I subscribe to the service (other shows, films etc).
 
There are also people who won't have to pay, but possibly would if they had to.
 
Just to illustrate:

The Golden Age of the 1990s:

- Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987-1994)

- Babylon 5 (1993-1998)

- Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993-1999)

- Star Trek: Voyager (1995-2001)

- Space: Above and Beyond (1995-1996)

- Stargate: SG-1 (1997-2007)

- Farscape (1999-2004)

- Andromeda (2000-2004)

- Dune (2000)

The New Wave of the Mid 2000s:

- Firefly (2002)

- Children of Dune (2003)

- Star Trek: Enterprise (2001-2005)

- Battlestar Galactica (2003-2008)

- Stargate: Atlantis (2004-2009)

The Failed Last Wave of the Late 2000s:

- Virtuality (2009)

- Caprica (2010)

- Stargate: Universe (2009-2010)

- Battlestar Galactica: Blood and Chrome (2012)

--------

So, some of the best/most profound fiction I have ever seen was created in the mid to late 90s - after this there was Firefly and BSG, but then quality of writing went down in the 2000s with the long winded and atrocious shows like Stargate: Atlantis (what a pity it wasn't another SG1) and Andromeda (ugh) - then we have had nothing but failed pilots and the bleak-ass SG:U for about 6 years. When SG1 and BSG ended, it heralded a dire wasteland for fans of space.

No love for "Chronicles of Riddick (2004)? :confused:

There is a lot of detail to unpack in there, but I think it depends on what you were looking for. The SF (speculative fiction, encompassing science fiction and fantasy) took a turn for the more diverse, expanding upon numerous ideas and properties, some successful and some less successful.

I think the resurgence of Doctor Who, as well as the emphasis on Marvel and comic book heroes (Smallville, Daredevil, Arrow, among others) has shifted the SF market to a more "our world but different" exploration in fiction.

Or, I could just be making that up. ;)
 
That's a very 'Hollywood' look at the genre. What about animation and non-American stuff?
 
I'm damned glad the show likely won't be released all at once. Damned glad.

Looking forward here to years of hearing people announce repeatedly that they aren't buying the service, then dropping in to complain about last night's episode with a long explanation of how they managed to happen to see it for free at someone else's house.

Don't look at it as paying six dollars per month to watch Star Trek. Look at it as paying six dollars a month to be able to read my reviews.
 
I'm damned glad the show likely won't be released all at once. Damned glad.

Looking forward here to years of hearing people announce repeatedly that they aren't buying the service, then dropping in to complain about last night's episode with a long explanation of how they managed to happen to see it for free at someone else's house.

That is always the best part!

Also, for good measure, I'll repeat Trekkies' favorite ol' chestnut:

12190041_10153043322622260_3776112279858519091_n.jpg


:lol:
 
Definitely, if you had asked me a month ago that the cost of getting Star Trek back onto TV is $5.99 I would have said shut up and take my money. I just don't understand people saying I'll pay Netflix but not CBS out of principal, this way it directly goes to the people making the show.
 
Anyone who says no, is kidding themselves. Ultimatly, you will pay. Even if you illegally download it, you're paying for your internet connection and the computer you're using to download.

So yeah, everyone is paying for everything in some way or another. The illusion is thinking you're not.
 
Anyone who says no, is kidding themselves. Ultimatly, you will pay. Even if you illegally download it, you're paying for your internet connection and the computer you're using to download.

So yeah, everyone is paying for everything in some way or another. The illusion is thinking you're not.

Sure, but that isn't the question asked in the poll to begin with. It reads:

Will You Pay for CBS All Access to Watch Star Trek?

And that is a perfectly debatable question, IMHO.
 
Just to illustrate:

The Golden Age of the 1990s:

- Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987-1994)

- Babylon 5 (1993-1998)

- Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993-1999)

- Star Trek: Voyager (1995-2001)

- Space: Above and Beyond (1995-1996)

- Stargate: SG-1 (1997-2007)

- Farscape (1999-2004)

- Andromeda (2000-2004)

- Dune (2000)

The New Wave of the Mid 2000s:

- Firefly (2002)

- Children of Dune (2003)

- Star Trek: Enterprise (2001-2005)

- Battlestar Galactica (2003-2008)

- Stargate: Atlantis (2004-2009)

The Failed Last Wave of the Late 2000s:

- Virtuality (2009)

- Caprica (2010)

- Stargate: Universe (2009-2010)

- Battlestar Galactica: Blood and Chrome (2012)

--------

So, some of the best/most profound fiction I have ever seen was created in the mid to late 90s - after this there was Firefly and BSG, but then quality of writing went down in the 2000s with the long winded and atrocious shows like Stargate: Atlantis (what a pity it wasn't another SG1) and Andromeda (ugh) - then we have had nothing but failed pilots and the bleak-ass SG:U for about 6 years. When SG1 and BSG ended, it heralded a dire wasteland for fans of space.

No love for "Chronicles of Riddick (2004)? :confused:

Movie, rather than regular TV show.

That's a very 'Hollywood' look at the genre. What about animation and non-American stuff?

I'm a huge anime fan, but there hasn't been anything space opera wise I've been impressed by in ages - hell, there hasn't been that many good anime, period.
 
Anyone who says no, is kidding themselves. Ultimatly, you will pay. Even if you illegally download it, you're paying for your internet connection and the computer you're using to download.

So yeah, everyone is paying for everything in some way or another. The illusion is thinking you're not.

Sure, but that isn't the question asked in the poll to begin with. It reads:

Will You Pay for CBS All Access to Watch Star Trek?

And that is a perfectly debatable question, IMHO.

I probably should have phrased it "Would you..."
 
Just to illustrate:

The Golden Age of the 1990s:

- Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987-1994)

- Babylon 5 (1993-1998)

- Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993-1999)

- Star Trek: Voyager (1995-2001)

- Space: Above and Beyond (1995-1996)

- Stargate: SG-1 (1997-2007)

- Farscape (1999-2004)

- Andromeda (2000-2004)

- Dune (2000)

The New Wave of the Mid 2000s:

- Firefly (2002)

- Children of Dune (2003)

- Star Trek: Enterprise (2001-2005)

- Battlestar Galactica (2003-2008)

- Stargate: Atlantis (2004-2009)

The Failed Last Wave of the Late 2000s:

- Virtuality (2009)

- Caprica (2010)

- Stargate: Universe (2009-2010)

- Battlestar Galactica: Blood and Chrome (2012)

--------

So, some of the best/most profound fiction I have ever seen was created in the mid to late 90s - after this there was Firefly and BSG, but then quality of writing went down in the 2000s with the long winded and atrocious shows like Stargate: Atlantis (what a pity it wasn't another SG1) and Andromeda (ugh) - then we have had nothing but failed pilots and the bleak-ass SG:U for about 6 years. When SG1 and BSG ended, it heralded a dire wasteland for fans of space.

No love for "Chronicles of Riddick (2004)? :confused:

Movie, rather than regular TV show.

That's a very 'Hollywood' look at the genre. What about animation and non-American stuff?

I'm a huge anime fan, but there hasn't been anything space opera wise I've been impressed by in ages - hell, there hasn't been that many good anime, period.

I get that, but ignoring films ignores the larger paradigm of Hollywood at that time. TV may have suffered but film was starting to make some different transitions in terms of SF. You had the Matrix with its sequels, as well the surge of comic book films, which often fill the niche market of SF fans.

TV marketing has changed a lot, so the brief analysis of what shows came on when fails to capture the dynamics of what was going on. Also, the Clone Wars came out towards the end, and that lasted several years.
 
Fail and it perhaps means another dark age of TV sci-fi.

Ehm, no?!?
We've had some good scifi and fantasy tv shows in the past 20 years after all the Star Trek shows ended...

I should have said space opera.

- 1). We havent had space opera on TV for years, until SyFy's recent turnaround (The Clone Wars being the only exception).

- 2). In the mid-90s till early 2000s there were sometimes three good space opera shows running concurrently.

We had TNG, DS9, VOY, ENT, Babylon 5, Space: Above and Beyond, Farscape, Firefly, the Dune Mini-Series, etc.

It was an incredible time.

The last five years really were a dark age if you like space opera.
Well, i like that there are shows where the Aliens come to Earth, not us going into space to find them...
 
Since a lot of the 'no' votes are likely lies this isn't looking too bad.

Don't like what people are saying, therefore just assume they're lying. Seems legit.

Definitely, if you had asked me a month ago that the cost of getting Star Trek back onto TV is $5.99 I would have said shut up and take my money. I just don't understand people saying I'll pay Netflix but not CBS out of principal, this way it directly goes to the people making the show.

I already have a streaming service that I like with a huge backlog of stuff to watch. I'm not going to sign up for another streaming service just to watch 1 show, even if it is Star Trek. Star Trek is not the be all and end all of my fandom. In fact, especially because it's Star Trek, I'm fairly certain that it will eventually be released in other ways that will be significantly more convenient and maybe even cheaper. My position is probably moot, I guess - I haven't checked, but I assume the CBS thing is US-only, therefore the show will be released some other way here (hopefully Netflix, since that would be most convenient). But if I'm wrong about that, then I still won't be paying for all access.

Anyone who says no, is kidding themselves. Ultimatly, you will pay. Even if you illegally download it, you're paying for your internet connection and the computer you're using to download.

So yeah, everyone is paying for everything in some way or another. The illusion is thinking you're not.

Of course anyone who watches the show will pay something (unless they only watch it in other people's houses which they got to by bumming a ride). The point is whether or not they will pay for CBS All Access. Some people, apparently, will not.
 
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