Wow.That's not the case here in the US. DS9 hasn't aired here in over a decade - and even then it was overnights on a 2nd tier cable network.
In the US it appears as if DS9 and Voyager are still under contract to SPIKE' even if SPIKE doesn't air them anymore.( http://www.cbstvd.com/shows.aspx?showID=60) However Voyager is stillness unhinge here in Canada.Wow.
We're comparitively inundated with reruns. Even Voyger got a rerun recently...
Could contracts maybe be in the way of it actually airing? From the CBS site, it sounds like SPIKE still has both shows under Exclusive Contract.It hasn't been on TV in over a decade. How much deader do you need?
Sure, that's true for much of the younger generation. But there are a lot of folks like my mother who doesn't use Netflix, but tunes into BBC America for TNG fairly often, and apparently it's one of BBC America's higher rated shows. I don't think the market for DS9 or Voyager in syndication or on cable is quite as dead as people might think.
Perhaps. Don't know the particulars of the contract. I don't know why Spike would pay not to air a show though. "Just in case" demand suddenly picks up for a show no one outside of fans have seen in years? Does not compute.Could contracts maybe be in the way of it actually airing? From the CBS site, it sounds like SPIKE still has both shows under Exclusive Contract..
That may be the case now, but that doesn't explain the last 10 years.Plus many people in the US are abandoning the standard way of receiving TV, (cord cutters are getting rid of cable and satellite and even rabbit ears for ATSC reception, and are only going with cable for the Internet) and for them Netflix, Amazon and iTunes are the "NEW" TV Networks.
If it's worth anything, I recently watched some X-Files remastered on Netflix(203 and 204), and there were HD shots with text. The only shots not in HD were the opening shots of 204 (which were shots of NYC, probably stock footage) and the title sequence.Which is bullshit, because it only takes 5 minutes to find these fonts via Google:
http://www.fonts4free.net/x-files-font.html
http://www.myfonts.com/WhatTheFont/forum/case/405933/
Licensing ("too expensive, these were cheaper") is probably the reason. The X-Files HD project was a low budget production.
Plus, if you use Netflix as a metric for what Trek is popular and what isnt...
TNG has 1159 reviews. For the sake of argument lets say the remastering broke even.
DS9 has 817 reviews. That's 70% of TNG.
Not knowing exactly how many plays each series gets - that's probably the best direct comparison of popularity we have.
Then you could look at Rotten Tomatos. TNG scores 86. DS9 is 71.
TMP has a 47% on rotten tomatoes. How did that film even make it to VHS, much less bluray?
Because a Rotten Tomatoes score doesn't necessarily equate to sales, obviously.
Didn't say it alone did. But until finds me some shred of evidence that blah blah blah.
Don't have you have a facebook group to run or something?
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