Okay, first, as a donor, I take your post with much more weight than most others.
Second, some of the things you claim, I did not know about. If it was said upstream, it was said within posts that to me were just attacking and attacking. You're right about the money. The only reason the money could be used to build an office and the rest is if Axanar is planned to be like STPII or STC, an ongoing series. Then it would be beneficial to have all this infrastructure in place. STPII has their studio in NY. They don't rent a building, build the sets, film an episode and tear it down. In Axanar's case, it would be even better for their position if they let other Fan Films use their facilities and only charge them for utilities for the time they are filming. IF they offer post production work for OTHER Fan Films, then there is no reason they can't charge them. One, the Fan Film does not have to contract for that and two, the people working on someone else's FF should be compensated for their time.
NV has a studio in upstate NY, Continues in GA.... Neither are in the 30 Mile inclusion zone of Hollywood..
ON more than one occasion, the producers of Axanar, have said, that they are planning on using Ares Studios to make for profit, commercial films. They even cited a David (I have no dog in this fight) Gerrold work as something they have secured the rights to to make (Which David Gerrold has since denied). This means, they took money, that was donated to them, through a fundraiser, that used ALL sorts of Star Trek IP, and used it to build infrastructure they later plan to use for, for profit, commercial work.
This is beyond just fan film work (Ala Starbase Studios in Oklahoma) they are building a professional soundstage with the plans of creating some sort of digital media empire (From their podcast)
Axanar Podcast Episode 20 at the 45 minute mark said:ROB: “I can see that we might have our own [...] internet satellite streaming channel that will come all over the world and it’ll all come back here to Ares Studios and we can custom design entertainment in ten years. People will come up with ideas the same way that Amazon is having a bake-off with their pilots--they’ll make pilots and depending on feedback, they’ll go and make a series out of something. Well they’re going to have their own...they have their own distribution network already in place. If you want to watch an Amazon Original, you go to Amazon and watch it via streaming. I could see us having ten channels in the future of not just Star Trek programming but all kinds of programming that we’re going to create. You and I are working on a project with David Gerrold that would be perfect for this.
ALEC: “Absolutely”
ROB: “And it would be going directly to Ares Studios subscribers or Axanar subscribers. We might have a fan base worldwide of 50 million people that are all donating, you know, five bucks or 9.95 a month to get what we’re producing which is sort of what we want to do. I mean, if you’re thinking about in the long run, we want to produce programming and entertainment whether it’s movies or shows or podcasts like this one that are specifically targeted to the fan. The discerning fan, who has a wide breadth of knowledge on many different subjects that we’re trying to touch on.
ALEC: “Yeah, I mean why do we not have SyFy Channel turned on constantly all day long. Shouldn’t we? I mean I...listen...I did ten years ago or whenever it was the Irwin Allen channel...I mean, it was on all the time because I love that stuff. But nowadays there’s such dreck on SyFy Channel. They’ve really gotten rid of all the shows that we really want to watch. The ‘Battlestar Galacticas’. And now they’re like ‘maybe we were wrong about that. Maybe we need to come back...’ Yeah, you do! And because there’s no one place for...what a phenomenal genre. How big is science fiction? There’s great science fiction movies that come out and get enormous audiences. But there’s no one place where you can go in and go, ‘I’ll just turn this on and leave it on all day long’ because after Star Trek, they’ve got Battlestar Galactica and then Lost in Space and then they’ve got you name it. Yeah, so, I think we’re all in the same place and talking to fans who have become really good friends of mine through Axanar, they all want the same thing.