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Are there still issues with film vs. TV rights now that CBS and Viacom are one again?

SG-17

Commodore
Commodore
Can we see Sovereign class ships on TV, directly reference film-only characters, etc now?
 
I don't believe there ever was any restriction on movie references on TV Trek; I think that was a myth. There have been movie elements in Discovery -- Ceti eels, Marc Okrand's Klingon language, the concept of katras, Earth Spacedock (glimpsed under construction in the season 1 finale), a version of the Saurian design from TMP.

Also, Picard's backstory is largely shaped by the aftermath of the Romulan supernova established in the 2009 film. So clearly there are no restrictions now, if there ever were.

The reason we never saw Sovereign-class ships on TV was the same reason we never saw a Constitution-class ship in TNG, the same reason we never saw an Intrepid-class ship besides Voyager until DS9 did an episode that needed to use VGR's sets -- because the producers didn't want to confuse the audience with a too-familiar ship design that they might mistake for the Enterprise or Voyager. At that time, everything was still one company; the CBS/Paramount schism didn't happen until the start of 2006.
 
Only lawyers can know for sure. And even then they could probably argue the other case.
 
Ha, what a coincidence. Someone just posted this on Twitter and it came across my timeline.

https://www.viacbs.com/news/content-and-experiences/star-trek-picard-on-cbs-all-access

Picard’s release is significant, as it’s the first original, tentpole premiere on CBS All Access in the newly merged ViacomCBS. It’s also symbolic; since 2006, the franchise’s film and TV rights were split between Viacom-owned Paramount Pictures and CBS. Star Trek: Picard is the first Star Trek production that will benefit a unified balance sheet. In addition to Star Trek: Picard and Star Trek: Discovery, ViacomCBS is developing two Star Trek films at Paramount Pictures and two animated series, one at CBS All Access and one at Nickelodeon.

Guess it's not an issue anymore.
 
The reason we never saw Sovereign-class ships on TV was the same reason we never saw a Constitution-class ship in TNG

The reason why we never saw the Constitution on TNG is because the filming model was a heavy, finicky beast that was hard to shoot, especially on a TV budget. It needed a rehab every time they pulled it out of the crate.

Then again, people kept trashing it during shoots (aside from TMP itself) so that reputation may not entirely be earned.
 
The reason why we never saw the Constitution on TNG is because the filming model was a heavy, finicky beast that was hard to shoot, especially on a TV budget. It needed a rehab every time they pulled it out of the crate.

The original 6-foot E-D model was just as cumbersome, but they still used it (at least until they replaced it with the 4-footer that had different proportions so it looked weird when they cut between them). And they could always have built a new model of the refit Constitution if they'd wanted. The Stargazer was going to be that class at first, but they made it a new class instead and built a new model for that. And they later built a new model of the TOS Enterprise for "Tribble-ations."
 
Can we see Sovereign class ships on TV, directly reference film-only characters, etc now?

Being careful about spoilers here, but

A model Sovereign, as well as a second model of the Enterprise-E "Captain's Yacht", are visible in the background of a museum scene in Picard's first episode.

So I'm guessing there's no issue. ;)
 
A myth shared by the Discovery writers themselves during season one. So whatever the truth was/is, the confusion went high up enough to impact the stories. I really do hope it's all settled now.
They really should have known better. If there were indeed a restriction preventing the TV shows from using something from the movies, that would mean they couldn't use the Klingon language since that originates from the movies. And if there's one thing Disco definitely used plenty of in the first season, it's the Klingon language.

But then this and the whole 25% thing prove just what a state of utter and complete covfefe Disco was in behind the scenes back then.
 
Exactly. It's not getting the correct answer in the end, it's that the poor writers (and artists) weren't properly communicated their boundaries with regards to writing Trek - and the product likely suffered as a result.
 
... the whole 25% thing prove just what a state of utter and complete covfefe Disco was in behind the scenes back then.

As of 2019, the majority stakeholder (large owner) now owns the Star Trek franchise in its entirety.

Star Trek Discovery was released in 2017.

Written by December 2018:
Shari Redstone pushed for CBS to re-merge with Viacom earlier this year (2018), and in March (2018), CBS took the unusual step of attempting to dilute Redstone’s control to prevent the merger, resulting in a lawsuit that was set to go to court ... the biggest opponent to the Viacom/CBS re-merger has been CBS CEO Leslie Moonves. However, today’s announcement includes news of his resignation amidst new accusations of sexual harassment ... https://trekmovie.com/2018/09/09/br...g-potential-viacom-re-merger-moonves-resigns/

Written by August 2019:

ViacomCBS CEO Bob Bakish expanded a bit on this in his discussion with the investment press when touting the combined library of the newly merged company:

We will have one of the largest libraries of iconic intellectual property, including more than 140,000 premium television episodes and over 3,600 film titles. Notably, this library reunites TV and film rights for some of our most popular franchises, including Star Trek and Mission: Impossible.
https://trekmovie.com/2019/08/13/vi...panding-all-access-with-nickelodeon-and-more/
 
As of 2019, the majority stakeholder (large owner) now owns the Star Trek franchise in its entirety.

Star Trek Discovery was released in 2017.

Written by December 2018:

Written by August 2019:
All that is interesting but not relevant to the comment I made that you quoted. The "25% thing" I spoke of refers to a comment John Eaves made on his Facebook account claiming that when Disco brought in something from previous Treks, they were required by CBS to make it look 25% different for legal and/or marketing reasons. CBS jumped on that within a day of the post being made and stated there was no truth to the claim whatsoever. Eaves then deleted his Facebook account and stayed away from his other social media accounts for a period of several months.
 
There were still movie references even while TNG was produced.

The events of STAR TARK VI were referenced in "Unification".

Some Genesis wave screenshots were used in "The Schizoid Man".

The Klingon Bird of Prey, which first appeared in STAR TREK III, has been used many times.

There are more examples, but it's clear movie stuff could be used during the tv series' run.
 
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I answered the OPs question what the ownership status of Star Trek property by showing when negotiations started and to what end.

There was an overlap of Disco S1/S2 production and the negotiations and your Eaves comment was made exactly during that time.

All that is interesting but not relevant to the comment I made that you quoted. The "25% thing" I spoke of refers to a comment John Eaves ...

Blindness cannot be cured, indeed.

a) You wrote, that writer believed the thing. b) CBS denied it.

c) The February 2018 comment (https://trekmovie.com/2018/02/18/st...ain-pike-klingons-having-two-organs-and-more/) about writers having concerns about right issues reinforces the notion that writers of DISCO felt handicapped.

d) The OP asked for what's the status of rights issues.

And the connection is:

Ownership (b, d) --> property (b, d) --> legal bounds (b, d) --> task given to writers --> writers (mis)interpretation (a, b, c) --> writers venting on Facebook (a) --> the myth (a)

Situations have changed by August 2019.

Since the ownership is now unified, writer confusion shouldn't be a problem anymore. QED, end of lecture.
 
There are more examples, but it's clear movie stuff could be used during the tv series' run.

Well, of course, because it was all one studio back then. It wasn't split into two studios until the start of 2006, after Enterprise ended. So the question only applies to things produced between January 2006 and December 2019, because that's the only period in which the TV and movie properties were in different hands. Which means that the only Trek television show where it's even a question is Discovery.
 
And how in the world could you measure if a model or idea was 25% different? Silly.

Easy. If something is 50% different, it's halfway between the "original" and a new thing, sharing many elements between two ideas. If it's 25%, it's halfway between a 50% difference and the original.

Eaves had been instructed to make a ship that looked mostly like the original, but then halfway different, and then halfway to the original. Sharing design elements with Discovery, but mostly with TOS.

He was only talking about the Enterprise, and the reasoning from on high was probably not to cause a whiplash in design lineage, which would've happened if they used the Star Trek Continues ship or something.

25% isn't some android-level measurement of all the design elements measured against a base model. It's just shorthand for "mostly the same". It's not meant to be taken exactly literal, by fans, paralegals, or art designers.
 
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