The thread title.Evidence?
No, that's ridiculous. Star Trek isn't that important, if Discovery was a failure they wouldn't develop four or five other projects just to have something on the air, especially not with Kurtzman.There are many reasons to go all-in on Trek that have nothing to with DISC. In fact, one would be to make sure that other projects are in the hopper if/when DISC fails.
The Starfleet Academy series will detail the Academy's origins as Trump's Space ForceI do wonder if we will see backsliding on diversity? After the internet temper tantrums over the various Disney Star Wars films and Discovery.
More white men at the center of the various shows.
Me too, actually, another series about young people, from the producers of Runaways no less. I am however kinda afraid of disappointment.Actually- I'm MOST excited by the Starfleet Academy idea. I don't know why, exactly. I think I'd just like to see them do something that different.
The thread title.
No, that's ridiculous. Star Trek isn't that important, if Discovery was a failure they wouldn't develop four or five other projects just to have something on the air, especially not with Kurtzman.
No, that's ridiculous. Star Trek isn't that important, if Discovery was a failure they wouldn't develop four or five other projects just to have something on the air, especially not with Kurtzman.
^^^Kurtzman to fandom:
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Yeah, actually, they would. It's completely plausible. And sorry if I upset you - I can't think of any other reasons why you've devolved into calling my views "ridiculous"!
Phaser- love you to death...but think about the implausibly from this perspective:
CBS BOARDROOM:
"Ladies and gentlemen, we've all seen the data and we've discussed how much of a morbid failure Star Trek Discovery was this past season on Our All Access streaming service. Well, as you all have been expecting, now it is time to take action."
"As we continue to film our second season of this crash-and-burn waste of $100M per season, we will offer Alex Kurtzman, one of the creators of this dumpster fire, a massive multi-year contract and put him in charge not only of showrunning this atrocity, but he will shepherd in an entire new era of Star Trek for CBS."
"In parallel to continued development of the aforementioned plague ship that is DSC, we will be developing 4-5 other Star Trek concepts. As you all know, our typical battle plan is to take anything super-expensive that fails horrifically and looses millions of dollars, and then go and duplicate that in other forms, because that is an enormously risk-free and obvious solution."
"So, let's get to work. We need to draw up a multimillion dollar contract for that a-hole Kurtzman who developed this whole mess with Fuller, then we need to start pumping money into the initial development of these other ideas that are all from the same franchise that just burned us so terribly in the form of DSC. Because once again, spending time and money on the prolification of business ventures that have been proven to lose massive amounts of money is what we here at CBS are all about, and is the cornerstone of our strategic growth plan for CBSAA"
It's nonsense.
DSC might be a disappointment to some, and it had story issues (despite the fact that I still found it wildly entertaining), but it was critically successful, generated good buzz, and I think there's no way within reason we can deny that CBS has viewed it as anything other than a success from the perspective that it accomplished whatever it is that they had defined as success for it.
So, while I agree that "quality" and "business success" are two different things, there's no way we can view the series of events that have taken place since Oct 2017 as any indication other than CBS considers DSC a good success.
Your interpretation of the facts makes many assumptions in and of itself - many of them ignoring how the business side of the industry works.Waaaaaaaaay too many assumptions, Vger. As Spock said in COTEOF, "We're not that sure of our facts."
Your interpretation of the facts makes many assumptions in and of itself - many of them ignoring how the business side of the industry works.
Indeed. Few series escape BTS drama, even if it isn't to the extent of Discovery. Corporations, especially CBS, are generally reluctant to throw good money after bad, especially with someone who is supposedly responsible for a failed product.Your interpretation of the facts makes many assumptions in and of itself - many of them ignoring how the business side of the industry works.
Waaaaaaaaay too many assumptions, Vger. As Spock said in COTEOF, "We're not that sure of our facts."
It is generally accepted at this point that DISC has not been a creative success. There are some people who liked it - and I'm happy for them - but it had a huge amount of problems. Some argue that it was a financial success, while strangely failing to make room for the possibility that people watched the whole season, like me, hoping it would get better, and also failing to account for the fact that CBS is almost certainly basing any appraisal of DISC's financial success on the number of All-Access subscriptions ("AAS") it enlisted. CBS has no way of knowing, however, how many people signed up for an AAS, but thought DISC was a trainwreck. Like me.
The clearest evidence that DISC is not a success is that it has been the subject of more BTS drama than most series get in their lifetimes. That cannot indicate that all is well and that everything is going swimmingly, although people here confusingly continue to argue just that. Moreover, your premise assumes that Kurtzman was intimately involved in the "dumpster fire," when in fact all evidence is to the contrary. Every piece of data we have suggests that OTHER people came in to run with whatever broad ideas Kurtzman had - that was his brief with regard to DISC - and those people are now gone. So CBS has turned back to Kurtzman, probably because he came up with what CBS views as a good proposal for rescuing Discovery, and because CBS thinks of him as a stabilizing figure and doesn't want to start all over. Instead, they're going to make sure that Kurtzman is the one in charge, for better or worse, and fire all of the Harberts and Bergs that have botched things so far.
You may disagree with this interpretation of facts, but there's absolutely nothing implausible about it. Your version, respectfully, acts like Discovery is a big success because Kurtzman is still around, ignoring the likelihood that Kurtzman didn't have anything to do with Discovery and all of its problems. Your version also ignores the strong possibility that if Discovery were really that great or really doing that well, CBS would play it out and let it have the spotlight instead of announcing something like five other series right after sacking Discovery's EPs.
It is generally accepted at this point that DISC has not been a creative success.
Some argue that it was a financial success, while strangely failing to make room for the possibility that people watched the whole season, like me, hoping it would get better, and also failing to account for the fact that CBS is almost certainly basing any appraisal of DISC's financial success on the number of All-Access subscriptions ("AAS") it enlisted. CBS has no way of knowing, however, how many people signed up for an AAS, but thought DISC was a trainwreck. Like me.
The clearest evidence that DISC is not a success is that it has been the subject of more BTS drama than most series get in their lifetimes. That cannot indicate that all is well and that everything is going swimmingly, although people here confusingly continue to argue just that. Moreover, your premise assumes that Kurtzman was intimately involved in the "dumpster fire," when in fact all evidence is to the contrary. Every piece of data we have suggests that OTHER people came in to run with whatever broad ideas Kurtzman had - that was his brief with regard to DISC - and those people are now gone. So CBS has turned back to Kurtzman, probably because he came up with what CBS views as a good proposal for rescuing Discovery, and because CBS thinks of him as a stabilizing figure and doesn't want to start all over. Instead, they're going to make sure that Kurtzman is the one in charge, for better or worse, and fire all of the Harberts and Bergs that have botched things so far.
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