I think DSC will go for 5 seasons.
As @Noname Given says, they won't air at the same time. It also relieves the pressure a bit from each individual series. I think from next year there will be up to 2 years wait between seasons, giving each show more production time and not over saturating the market.
I can't imagine a Star Trek animated show that I'd like.
Yet it featured heavily in ST'09 which was a huge successThe exact idea that has been binned due to zero viewer interest each of the many times it was pitched since the end of the TOS movies...
No doubt that's the strategy they're looking at for maintaining year-round subscribers.Three Trek shows and The Twilight Zone would be plenty to keep me subscribed year-round, if they each run 10-15 episodes.
I’d invest in a high quality mattress if I were you.Wake me when they launch a new series that is run by someone other than Kurtzman.
His contract was 5 years, so wake @mos6507 in 2023.
Unless they renew again and again a la Rick Berman, in which case you may want to swap a mattress for a cryo tube.
Supermarionation-Trek.I could go for a Star Trek featuring cast of puppets.
Looks like that Captain Sulu series is finally going to happen! Only they waited so long it's not even going to be original Sulu but Kelvinverse Sulu.Which is interesting because CBS now has "Twilight Zone" and they can do a story where Takei finds out his long wish for a Captian Sulu has come true but TWIST he won't be the star. Fade to do,do,do,do music.
Jason
Pike/Number One or GTFO.
Supermarionation-Trek.
I'd watch that.
And we will not.During the DS9 years, we got up to 52 episodes and a film in a year. We're nowhere near that yet.
“The fact that the streaming world has eliminated the lines between movies and television
allows for big universes like ‘Star Trek’ to thrive in a way they really couldn’t have before,” says franchise honcho Alex Kurtzman, an executive producer of “Star Trek: Discovery.”
That CBS All Access show has weathered some turmoil (at least five reported changes in its showrunning teams) and is set to explore new ground in Season 3. Meanwhile, Kurtzman is overseeing an unprecedented expansion of the “Trek” TV universe, while two films are in some stage of development. It’s a far cry from the franchise’s past presence in film and TV.
An animated “Trek” series by Kevin and Dan Hageman (“Trollhunters”) is in development for Nickelodeon. Kurtzman promises it’s nothing like the cartoon series of the 1970s: “I can’t reveal details on that one, but it’s something that has never been done before in ‘Star Trek.’ ”
Another animated series, “Lower Decks,” is coming to All Access from Mike McMahan, a writer of the irreverent Adult Swim series “Rick and Morty.” Kurtzman reassures, “It’s a total love letter to ‘Star Trek’; there’s no mockery.”
Two untitled live-action series have also been announced for All Access. One continues the story of franchise favorite Jean-Luc Picard (with Patrick Stewart returning in the role) and one follows the mysterious organization Section 31, featuring Philippa Georgiou (Michelle Yeoh). Georgiou is a “Discovery” character who died in its first episodes, only to return — sort of — as her less-nice self, a scheming empress from the franchise’s Mirror Universe (introduced in an “Original Series” episode).
And Kurtzman says there are still others in development that have not yet been announced.
https://www.latimes.com/entertainme...rek-franchise-expanding-2019040509-story.html
So what will they announce next?
I'll eat the next paragraph with jalapeno ketchup if I'm proven wrong:
Yes, the rebel outlaw brats commandeer a ship and learn lessons while being funny and being comprised of a gaggle of Mary and Marty tropes who will always be able top repair the ship and make Wesley Crusher look dim by comparison because there's, as the grade school dropouts say, "there's no AI self-healing tech".
So far, what's thrived? Last I'd heard, official ratings statistics haven't been released for DSC and there was spin involving new subscriptions during another big but non-Trek event a couple months ago. That and how come Netflix has dropped Trek streaming so Amazon would pick it up, for all except North America oddly enough? (The seemingly obvious reason makes less sense unless Australia and other countries that have access to CBS All Access actually don't?)
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