I thought the point of this message board was to discuss Star Trek...? Its success or failure as such has no impact on my ability to discuss it.
But would anyone here want to see the franchise go on hiatus because CBS wouldn't get their act together in terms of handling streaming? I think its perfectly fine to criticize their approach, IMO.
I personally think this is taking the wrong approach. People are far more willing to be selective and choosy about content and do not possess the brand or network loyalty anymore. CBS is taking a more conservative approach and that may work. Or not. I don't know. We don't have all the information to make these decisions. And if Star Trek fails then so be it.
Yes, but the more variety of popular shows a service has, the more viewer sit attracts IMO.
If CBS All Access has one or 2 popular new shows (like the Star Trek ones) and Netflix or HBO Max or whomever, has 10 new popular shows, which service will people be more willing to shell out for?
At that point, I rather Star Trek be part of a service with more content I like over Star Trek is on a service that offers little besides Star Trek.
You can say one or two shows can carry a streaming service, but ultimately popular shows are what makes up a good library, the more popular shows a service has, the better the library is and the more they will thrive. In terms of popular shows, more is better, rather than less.
I was editing my post when you posted so I'll share some real world examples of why I think CBS will be OK:
To add a little bit of real world experience to this mix. I use to work in sporting goods retail management. Part of my job was managing and running the footwear department. One year, Under Armour decided to make shoes. Prior to that, Under Armour had pretty much had heat gear and cold gear, and small assortment of accessories.
Care to guess how many models of shoes Under Armour started off with? 3. 3 Men's Models. Then they branched and added two Women's models. That's a total of 5 shoes, vs. their competitors (Nike, Asics, New Balance) who easily had ten models in our store per gender.
Now go look at Under Amour's shoe line. It extends to multiple sports, hiking, tactical wear, kids, and cleats. It got a lot bigger.
It just didn't start big.
I think you comparing apples to oranges here. I know nothing about sporting goods, but I do think I know something about entertainment and streaming. For you know Under armor in this scenario could be Disney or HBO or Peacock or any other player in the game.
I think CBS needs to at a minimum put the Showtime stuff on CBS All Access, that would show some serious continent to this service, if they are unwilling to do that, maybe they should follow Viacom's lead and sell their stuff to other players.
In terms of buzz and general interest, I do not see that for CBS All Access the way I do for Netflix, Disney+, HBO Max, etc.
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