Sadly, I thought both were rotten movies.I disagree that "cerebral stories will kill this show."
Recent movies such as Gravity and Interstellar have shown that audiences can handle more thoughtful content
True, but OTOH, every other Trek show, including the horribly imbalanced Enterprises, managed to introduce all the main credited cast before the end of the first half of the two parter. I remember looking for Michael Rapp in 1x1 but I don't recall if he showed up, and the Doctor had maybe one scene.Ask ten Trekkies what Star Trek is and you get twenty different answers. So I disagree with the premise that Discovery is not “what Star Trek is about”. Different folks are looking for different things in it. I'm not convinced that “Star Trek is hope” is really what would ensure Discovery's success.
The thing is, though, that Michael Burnham seems to be the main cast member in the center of the show. Introducing her seems to be the priority.
And in every way possible CBS failed horribly at that task. They only showed one episode. The first half of the pilot. It didn't introduce most of the main cast or concepts. All it showed of the main character made them seem like the most unlikable twit on television. Remember broadcast viewers didn't see episode 2. They HATE her by the end of the first episode. And not in a Breaking Bad/House of Cards deliciously evil sort of way. After seeing just that one first episode, just acts one and two of the first story. The first half of a movie, the audience hates your main character. They haven't seen the ship yet. The Klingons look like leftovers from Stargate casting so the audience doesn't recognize them. It's a mess of an introduction. At least it's a pretty and expensive looking mess.
Though exact numbers have not been made available, the new Trek also led CBS All Access — the exclusive home to the sci-fi drama’s second and all future episodes — to a record for subscriber sign-ups in a single day (eclipsing the previous mark fueled by this year’s Grammy Awards). That in turn capped the streaming service’s best week and month ever in new sign-ups.
Um, they showed one more episode public ally then NETFLIX shows for new streaming content - and that never seemed to hurt the viability/profitability of that content for NETFLIX.
CBS showed episode one as a marketing tease to see if they could get a few more people to 'bite' and try the service. That's the only reason one episode ended up being broadcast on their Network. It was a commercial. Frome this article, the move appears to have been successful:
http://tvline.com/2017/09/25/star-trek-discovery-ratings-season-1-premiere-cbs/
But I would say ultimate success for ST: D on CBSAA will depend on how many STAT subbed after the one week free trial.
^^^
That's when you can claim one way of the other that this CBS marketing move succeeded or failed.
The Cage was rejected for other reasons. The "too cerebral" story is Roddenberry's vague, self-aggrandizing, half-truth recollection from years after the fact.Cerebral. The Cage was rejected because it was too cerebral. Not because it was intellectual, or made you think. It all happened in Pike's head, mind tricks, mental manipulation, cerebral.
Star Trek has at times been clever, but its not intellectual, and the crux of its survival isn't hope and optimism, its its entertainment value and mass appeal. I think its off to a good start.
I don't know what you all were expecting, but there was very little about this I found "dour" or "grimdark."
I hope this isn't the case, because her character isn't interesting enough to me to be the focus of the show.
It is one thing for JJ Trek to get away with mass action blockbusters that appeal to the mainstream summer audience, but this is Trek on TV and needs to stick to the core principles that has made Trek because it needs to sustain itself for many episodes. So far the show has not done that. It has 13 episodes to show us it can rise out of the dreary, dark world of war, and become a show about exploration and inspiration. If it does not then I predict it will end after the already paid for second season.
Star Trek is hope.
It was pretty much the whole show.
This show will not die for several years no matter how poorly fans think it's doing. We can all think of TV shows we don't like or don't consider to be good that continue on year after year. I've noticed, for example, a lot of antipathy in fandom to The Big Bang Theory.
I've seen some pretty "grimdark" stuff on TV over the last few years. This ain't that.
Paint the sets bright white with glitter in the paint and use extremely bright lights on every single set.
Have the cast wear pink, fluorescent yellow, and turquoise uniforms. with bright red booties.
Every episode should be about the wonders of humanity's utopia, and our evolved sensibilities and superior moral compass in the future.
Phasers should have only two settings- tickle and full-body gasm.
Explore and discover the wondrous and peaceful beings that inhabit our galaxy every week. Find ways to make friends with them when we teach them about how wonderful humanity is.
Lots of fun. Like a belly laff every 6-7 minutes. Because fun!
No conflict...characters should all agree politely after quoting some high-meaning words about how humanity in the future doesn't do this or that.
LET'S MAKE STAR TREK GREAT AGAIN and eliminate this horrible, dark, bleak vision of humanity that DSC has inflicted upon us.
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You're a political speech writer, aren't you?![]()
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