None of this worked, it looked like a cheap, goofy fan film. The ship shapes do not work at all, not even slightly
None of this worked, it looked like a cheap, goofy fan film. The ship shapes do not work at all, not even slightly
My parents watched Columbo and NYPD blue. Guess what my least favorite two shows in history are?Though I am not literally indoctrinating my little one (that was tongue in cheek and implies intent) you are sadly mistaken.
Firstly, we tend to end up watching stuff our parents watch, so really, it’s whatever Trek we saw our parents watching, if we then take a liking to it. Or it’s whatever was being repeated on TV.
Yeah... that's mostly just him taking his cues from YOU. Not a bad thing, exactly, but in alot of cases kids will develop opinions about TV shows -- or anything else for that matter -- based largely on what their parents' opinions are. Me, I've been working with kids of various ages going on ten years now, and I have rarely encountered a six year old boy who thought anything was "too violent" unless they were told that by their parents. Most six year olds don't even know what that MEANS. Even the ones who told me that usually didn't.He looked forward to discovery with me, we watched the trailers together coming to launch...he too wasn’t sure about the ships design...and...now he can’t watch it, and isn’t interested in it, because some things put him off, and he knows it’s too violent for him
And keep on TELLING him it isn't his Trek. He'll believe you.And for families where grandad built an enterprise when he was a boy, and daddy did when he was a boy, and now...well. Even if the Discovery had a model kit, he wouldn’t be interested. Because it isn’t his Trek.
Sure. The kids don't understand what's good for them. That's the parents' job.Me, I've been working with kids of various ages going on ten years now, and I have rarely encountered a six year old boy who thought anything was "too violent" unless they were told that by their parents. Most six year olds don't even know what that MEANS. Even the ones who told me that usually didn't.![]()
I'm not claiming that it does. I'm saying that it's what they're AIMING for. Hence the radical changes in design, tone, and story structure. The reason they're doing it, as I've tried to explain, is that they're trying to build more stamina into a franchise that has had a history of going stale relatively quickly and loosing the attention of general audiences. The ratings history of TNG and Voyager -- and especially Enterprise -- bear this out somewhat: the show format becomes tiresome after two or three seasons, and then all you're left with is a highly committed fanbase that will continue to watch even if it's terrible.You make some good points, but I really do not think your overall conclusions fit this situation here. Furthermore, it is a pretty preposterous claim that changing everything magically attracts new viewers. Things being good attracts new viewers!
Existing fans will be alienated no matter what (especially true for Trek fans) but we'll still watch it anyway because we're fans. In television, it is ALWAYS a mistake to avoid a potentially successful innovation purely because some of your fans are afraid of change. If you're going to avoid a choice, it should be because it is a boring or stupid choice, NOT because it might be controversial.When dealing with a franchise like this, the trick of course is how to attract new viewers without alienating the existing fans
Funny you mention that... as far as I can remember, we never actually SAW the Klingon ship from Errand of Mercy. We just saw its torpedoes blasting the hull and Enterprise shooting back. Maybe TOS-R redoes this... but then, TOS is a 50 year old show with a cast of actors who are mostly dead by now, I really don't think the expectations of a NEW viewer are going to be that closely aligned.Another point I'd like to make, is that we all were new viewers at some point. And at least to me the continuity still mattered, it just worked backwards. I started with TNG, and when I later watched TOS and the original movies, it was really cool to see some of the same ships, aliens and other visual elements, as well as events and people referred to in TNG. When marketing this show there has been a lot of talk about how it is set ten years before TOS, and I'm absolutely sure there will be a lot of people who like Discovery and now will due that watch TOS the first time (they're both available on Netflix.) Wouldn't it be way cooler for them when they see 'Errand of Mercy' the first time to be able to recognise the Klingon ships there to be the same(ish) as the ones they saw on Discovery?
For me, it isn't that the D7 is too different from what came before. It's that is different to the point of not being recognizable, from a group of people making the series who said how close to established things in Trek they would be.As for the Klingon ship specifically: much has already been written on the fact that existing scifi fans have grown up on properties like Halo, Mass Effect and Destiny and are accustomed to aliens BEING very strange and alien-looking. We're used to seeing Krogan, Sanghelli, Reapers and nightmares, and some of us are used to seeing Sontarrans, Daleks, weeping angels and whatever the fuck the Silence are supposed to be. Forehead Klingons risk seeming quaint by comparison; I suspect they judged something similar with their ship designs, realizing that the classic Klingon Battlecruiser is basically an inverted Federation design to begin with and they need something more visibly alien and strange. And it's ALL OVER the production choices here: their uniform/armor, their language, their makeup, ALL of it is carefully calculated to make the Klingons look as alien as possible.
So while you are sitting here bitching about how the Klingon design is TOO DIFFERENT from "What came before" (ever notice this exact combination of words has become a buzzphrase in Trek fandom?) the entire POINT of that choice is flying directly over your heads. And in a sense, that's intentional: the change wasn't meant to please YOU, the change was meant to please everyone who DOESN'T think they already know what a Klingon battlecruiser looks like.
I'm pretty sure they never made ANY claims that it would be "close to established things" at all. They only said it was "set in the prime universe" and fans injected their own interpretations about what that actually means. From a production standpoint, all that means is "No Nero." And from a LEGAL standpoint, all that means is "We don't have to pay royalties to Paramount. Neener neener!"For me, it isn't that the D7 is too different from what came before. It's that is different to the point of not being recognizable, from a group of people making the series who said how close to established things in Trek they would be.
How would modifying a triangle be any different than modifying a capital T?They could have updated the actual and established D7 design and added the current Klingon style of ornamentation and it would have looked beautiful. But instead they modified a triangle.
Sorry this makes zero sense. Both Voy and Ent were full of new alien and ship designs that tried to be new and modern looking at the time. They still sucked. If your recipe of attracting and maintaining audience is snazzy visual, then you're already lost the game. (Which is not to say good visuals aren't an asset.)I'm not claiming that it does. I'm saying that it's what they're AIMING for. Hence the radical changes in design, tone, and story structure. The reason they're doing it, as I've tried to explain, is that they're trying to build more stamina into a franchise that has had a history of going stale relatively quickly and loosing the attention of general audiences. The ratings history of TNG and Voyager -- and especially Enterprise -- bear this out somewhat: the show format becomes tiresome after two or three seasons, and then all you're left with is a highly committed fanbase that will continue to watch even if it's terrible.
Sure. Except this 'being terrible' has zero connection to not redesgnig Klingons radically enough.Star Trek cannot survive as a franchise if it depends on the "even if it's terrible" audience. So the goal is to create a new production that structured in such a way that it can continue to deliver much longer.
People still watch TOS. It was decades old when I first saw it, it is much older now. I'd say it has pretty damn good 'replay value'.It's related to the concept in videogame developmnent, what's called "replay value." That is, a game you only play through once and then never really want/need to play again isn't likely to generate a lot of marketshare for its sequels, DLCs or merchandise. So developers build things into their games designed to keep players immersed into the game itself; give them "more to do" and more to come back to time after time. In ANY game series, there are always a few hardcore fans who will love it and replay it no matter how terrible it is, but the goal is to maximize replay value for people who AREN'T hardcore fans and only like it because it's fun. This is the difference between successful games (e.g. Skyrim, World of Warcraft, Elite Dangerous, Dragon Age Inquisition) and unsuccessful ones (Call of Duty: AW, No Man's Sky, Mass Effect Andromeda).
The idea that hard core fans keep watching no matter what is a fallacy. Some do, many won't. I'm pretty sure I have never seen last couple of seasons of Voyager and I didn't go to the theatre to see the last two reboot Trek films after I hated the first (turns out it was a mistake in the case of Beyond, I saw it recently on Netflix and it was pretty decent.)Existing fans will be alienated no matter what (especially true for Trek fans) but we'll still watch it anyway because we're fans. In television, it is ALWAYS a mistake to avoid a potentially successful innovation purely because some of your fans are afraid of change. If you're going to avoid a choice, it should be because it is a boring or stupid choice, NOT because it might be controversial.
Your idea that these things are mutually exclusive is a fallacy, and considering how their business plan relies on getting people to subscribe to their pay service specifically to see Star Trek, alienating existing fans is an unwise move.If the new show is structured in such a way that you HAVE to like the old stuff in order to enjoy it, then you're not catering to a new audience, you're catering to an old one, one that was going to tune in and watch no matter what you did. They aren't trying to please the existing fans anymore, they're trying to create new fans who want to be pleased.
And I'd say that relying on these new people who had never been interested in Star Trek before keeping your pay service afloat is hell of a risky move.So while you are sitting here bitching about how the Klingon design is TOO DIFFERENT from "What came before" (ever notice this exact combination of words has become a buzzphrase in Trek fandom?) the entire POINT of that choice is flying directly over your heads. And in a sense, that's intentional: the change wasn't meant to please YOU, the change was meant to please everyone who DOESN'T think they already know what a Klingon battlecruiser looks like.
My parents watched Columbo and NYPD blue. Guess what my least favorite two shows in history are?
Yeah... that's mostly just him taking his cues from YOU. Not a bad thing, exactly, but in alot of cases kids will develop opinions about TV shows -- or anything else for that matter -- based largely on what their parents' opinions are. Me, I've been working with kids of various ages going on ten years now, and I have rarely encountered a six year old boy who thought anything was "too violent" unless they were told that by their parents. Most six year olds don't even know what that MEANS. Even the ones who told me that usually didn't.
And keep on TELLING him it isn't his Trek. He'll believe you.
First, the capital T is the basis for the D7. A triangle isn't.I'm pretty sure they never made ANY claims that it would be "close to established things" at all. They only said it was "set in the prime universe" and fans injected their own interpretations about what that actually means. From a production standpoint, all that means is "No Nero." And from a LEGAL standpoint, all that means is "We don't have to pay royalties to Paramount. Neener neener!"
It's been clear from the get-go they aren't going for "recognizable" and the design for the Klingon ship(s) have their own internal logic to them that is entirely unique to Discovery and whatever it is they're trying to accomplish with it. I don't actually know what that logic IS, but I know that "something old fans will recognize as familiar" is incredibly far from it.
How would modifying a triangle be any different than modifying a capital T?
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