It's only contested in that you refuse to accept it, because reasons. You've been given numerous examples from multiple sources and yet you change your standard of evidence constantly. That doesn't sound like someone open to correction.
No, I haven't, and no, I haven't.
Do people with such peculiar tastes exist? I never denied it. The central question here is about the frequency of their distribution in the population, and (by extension) whether that frequency is sufficient enough to support generalizations about popular tastes.
An analogy: I think that anyone who thinks Donald Trump belongs in the Oval Office is certifiable. If I were to generalize based on my own circles of friends and colleagues I would also assume such people to be exceedingly rare, because my friends and colleagues are (by and large) sane, and (all joking aside) we tend to share certain political sensibilities. However, I
don't make that generalization, because I know that such people exist in large numbers: a substantial minority of the population voted for Trump in 2016, and many of them still support him today in public opinion surveys.
You didn't make any
specific claims about the number of people who insist on consuming Only!New! TV and movies and music and such, only asked the rhetorical question "do you know how many," but your intent was relatively clear: you think it's some critical mass of the population. I think that's unlikely. Other posters here have offered up individual examples (although none have offered
themselves as examples), and I have reacted with incredulity insofar as I just can't imagine
why anyone would think that way (I am similarly incredulous about Trump supporters), but I haven't contested the basic point that such people exist.
However, the examples at hand are hardly sufficient to settle the question of whether they exist in
numbers comparable to (e.g.) Trump supporters.
It seems to me reasonable to suppose that if such tastes were so commonplace as to be dominant, that would preclude the possibility of material outside that narrow range from having a viable presence in the entertainment market. (Indeed, that seems to be the upshot of your original rhetorical question. If not, by all means please clarify.) However, we do not observe that outcome to be the case. In fact, we observe the exact opposite. Old!Stuff! is incredibly widespread in the consumer marketplace, in a variety of media and formats, as is ancillary merchandise associated with such stuff. On any night of the week in any part of the country, you can enjoy a classic black and white movie (or even a silent one!), or a song originally recorded on a vinyl 78, or a TV show produced in the 1950s. You can buy or download video games (or emulations thereof) that were popular decades ago. You can do most of this at the click of a button; if you prefer physical media, you can do it by visiting a local store. In any town of reasonable size, you can do it with large numbers of other people — watching such a movie on a big screen in a revival house, or dancing to such a song on a real dance floor, or having drinks at a bar that specializes in vintage TV shows, or playing at an arcade that specializes in vintage games. You can go participate in public trivia games that rely on in-depth knowledge of such things. You can shop at collectors' shops that sell vintage memorabilia, or regular retailers that sell brand new memorabilia of much of the same stuff.
(And let's not even get
started on the market for vintage cars, and toys, and sports equipment, and other things further afield from entertainment.)
Short of scientifically conducted surveys, I think that adds up to fairly compelling evidence. Long story short, Old!Stuff! is widely available and incredibly popular. I have no doubt that some people do in fact disdain it (and probably quite a lot more people are merely indifferent to it). However, there are nowhere near enough of them to keep it from being marketable.
FWIW, my circles of friends and acquaintances exemplify this diversity of tastes. I feel kinda sorry for anyone for whom that's
not true.
That is completely irrelevant. The point is that TOS looks outdated even to many fans, and overwhelmingly to non-fans. If you want to revisit that era for general audiences, you need to update it.
That's a bold proposition, and the evidence at hand really doesn't support it.
Moreover, even if people with the kinds of tastes you describe
did dominate the market, that
still wouldn't really support this point, because the distinctions you're talking about are all about technical details of presentation (production values like CGI quality, etc.), not the content of the thing being presented (designs), and as
@Jadeb upthread is merely the latest to point out, those are
not the same thing.
After all, nobody's saying DSC should be produced and delivered like a '60s TV show (4:3 ratio, 480i, flat lighting, handmade props, practical FX, static matte paintings, mono sound, etc.). It's not that any of those things actually make Old!Stuff! unwatchable (of course not!), even if a few people disdain them, but since we do have more sophisticated technology now, there's no reason not to use it. When we're talking about classic designs, though, we're talking about the
content that technology is used to deliver. Those looked good then, and if anything look
better now when recreated with better tech.
In a nutshell: there is nothing about the
Enterprise having a bridge window or extra nacelle fins that is intrinsic to the production values used, or that looks any more or less "outdated" than the original design, or is any more appealing to "general audiences." Tastes in design are more individual and quixotic than that. As
@fireproof78 demonstrates, for instance, even a design that
virtually everyone agrees is timeless (the TMP refit
Enterprise, which the DSC redesign conspicuously resembles) won't
literally please everyone (e.g., his wife).
lawman said:
If a friend recommends a great restaurant that one hasn't been to before, who's gonna refuse to eat there just because the tables and chairs are old?
My brother, my wife, possibly my mom (depends on how old that we are talking about), and few other friends I know.
They must find restaurant reviews very frustrating, then! All those ever talk about are the food.
