Then perhaps you should adjust your expectations. Simply put, your definition of 'prequel' is wrong.
Could be, but I'd rather strive for my idea of quality and think everyone else's definition is wrong.
Then perhaps you should adjust your expectations. Simply put, your definition of 'prequel' is wrong.
Hey, I'm not a fighter...TOS movies > Star Trek 09 > Galaxy Quest > TNG movies > Into Darkness/Beyond
There. Fight me.
I'm not including Axanar, because that's clearly a fan production, and not a professional, polished product. Galaxy Quest has major props fur very, very elaborate and expensive make-up effects, special effects, and a good blend of costumes and CG for it's aliens. In fact, I'd say it was much more professional than any of the Trek television episodes (although not the movies).
It means it's got no "Faith of the Heart":What does that mean?No more “faith” grumbles./
Hey, I'm not a fighter...
But seriously, including GQ in a 'top Trek movies' list is like including Justin Timberlake's Justified album in a 'top Michael Jackson albums list'.. I mean, WHY..?
Of course it's a professional production, just like about 200 movies a year... but WHY would you include it..?? It's not ST, has nothing to do with ST, I sincerely do not get it, never have, never will...It solves a lot of problems. Like the even-odd-curse (Good Trek movie/bad Trek-movie). It WORKS when you include Galaxy Quest in this timetable (as the "good" Star Trek 10 between the "bad" Insurrection and Nemesis, followed by the "good" ST09 and the "bad" Into Darkness again)
Also, It's clearly the only other "professional" Star Trek movie out there. All other parodies are usually very low-budget (like "The Orville). But Galaxy Quest is a complete, finished movie that works on it's own. It's not a "spoof"-movie like, for example, Spaceballs - which is fine IMO, but I'd never call it a full-fledged Star Wars movie.
Of course The Orville will have more viewers, but each viewer for Discovery matter more since they are a direct subscriber and provide revenue directly to CBS. Only viewers 18-49 matter for the Orville, and that is just a factor for advertising revenues.WIll the second episode be available on cable? Or is it already on All-Access?
Because that'd be IMO the make-or-break point for Discovery.
Betting on much more viewers for Discovery for the premier episode, but for more viewers of The Orville to continue to watching the second episode, than new people subscribing to All Access for the next Trek episode.
Yeah, it feels very wrong. It's like "I'd rather watch someone else's fanfic or parody than the real thing." I don't understand that mindset in the slightest.
See if I was producing a TV show and had that early Installment weirdness, then needed to make a prequel. Even if the early stuff has some bad moments, my brain would immediately go into problem solving mode and try and find a way to make it work. It would be torture for me to just pretend it never happened.
^^^SULU: They must be aware we're after them, sir. They've gone to warp six also.
KIRK: Warp factor seven.
SULU: Aye, aye, sir.
KIRK: Something the matter, Mister Spock?
SPOCK: A sustained warp seven speed will be dangerous, Captain.
KIRK: Thank you, Mister Spock. I mean to catch them.
SCOTT: We'll either catch them or blow up, Captain. They may be faster than we are.
KIRK: They'll have to prove it.
Only viewers 18-49 matter for the Orville, and that is just a factor for advertising revenues.
See the bolded part. In "The Cage" Pike ordered Warp 7 like it was no big deal. You mean to say 12 year AFTER that 'Warp 7' is a very dangerous speed? Guess Star Trek technology DOES go backward as the years go forward. (and this line was left in when they made parts of "The Cage" canon in "The Menagerie".)
Of course The Orville will have more viewers, but each viewer for Discovery matter more since they are a direct subscriber and provide revenue directly to CBS. Only viewers 18-49 matter for the Orville, and that is just a factor for advertising revenues.
Somehow, this part makes me really, really worried for Trek...
Somehow, this part makes me really, really worried for Trek...
Orville may have more viewers but Trek may make more money and in the end that is what matters to both CBS and Netflix.
It could still be dangerous, just because they didn't bring it up doesn't mean it wasn't. Maybe Pike's people were better trained than Kirk's?
I think they will have different metrics for Discovery. International numbers will play a big part. Currently CBS AA has somewhere between 1.5 to 2 million subscribers. I can’t imagine that they’d expect that number to jump past the regular viewer numbers that FOX has spent thirty years building. The question is will The Orville hold their numbers with the move to Thursday nights?
Or "Time Warp Factor 7" refers to a different scale than "Warp Factor 7."
I'm not going to pretend there aren't issues, and Trek fans are great at rationalizing issues. Hoever, the more consistent something is and the fewer rationalizations are needed the better I will enjoy it. For me that includes big things and minutiae.
I'm not so sure Trek will make more money? I can guarantee FOX isn't spending $8.5 million per episode on Discovery.
Wise man once said "You're nearly a laugh, but you're really a cry."And there's no crying in Spaceballs, because you're too busy laughing.
This I can understand.However, the more consistent something is and the fewer rationalizations are needed the better I will enjoy it.
This makes me want to shout "IT'S TELEVISION! IT'S NOT REAL!" But I won't.For me that includes big things and minutiae.
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