• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Do you think this show will succeed in getting kids interested in Star Trek?

Do you think this show will succeed in getting kids interested in Star Trek?

  • Yes

    Votes: 36 69.2%
  • No

    Votes: 16 30.8%

  • Total voters
    52
I don't like it when people mix Trek and Wars... its hardly a travesty, but its like comparing apples and oranges and the distinction is definintely palatable.
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
I am not trying to be negative, but I think the answer here is a solid “no.”

Most kids don’t even watch TV anymore. They watch YouTube videos and play online games. Very rarely will they get invested in a weekly show. And given that this isn’t Star Wars or Superheroes…unless Trek fan parents are passing it on to their kids, I think the young fan growth will be very limited.
 
I don't like it when people mix Trek and Wars... its hardly a travesty, but its like comparing apples and oranges and the distinction is definintely palatable.

Honestly, I have little to no interest in superheroes either... some of the stupidest inventions really... no actual purpose in changing societal problems... they just treat the symptoms. Boring really.
Trek at the very least has merit from a science, technology and societal point of view, but its not everyone's cup of tea... though I can understand why he doesn't like Star War.

Point being, I don't think there's anything wrong with your son not liking Wars, Trek or superhero stuff... though I'm not sure what to make of his interest in PAW patrol... maybe he likes stuff that has more to do with animals - but I am quite astonished as to what is being fed to kids these days. Its as if stuff is extremely low grade for people who might even have mental difficulties... its kind of an insult to kids if you ask me.

Perhaps this could be the time to get your kids to read more relevant books instead of watching tv?

Also, instead of trying to hook your son onto the things you like, perhaps try picking his brains and see what tickles his interests instead.
He certainly won't find that in the education system, and neither will your daughter, so you'd probably be the kids best chance at discovering and nurturing what they like and getting involved in that (while bearing in mind that those interests can change over time).

Personally, I don't have (nor want kids)... too much of a responsibility. The concept of having kids repulses me next to the fact I don't like them - but that's just me.

His primary interest in a show is based upon whether it has a small cute creature in it - particularly if it's a mouse/rat. His favorite movie is My Neighbor Totoro.

I'm not particularly into superhero stuff myself, but he's really judgmental about it. Like, he won't be friends with kids who like superheroes.

He's just transitioning into being an independent reader. His favorite books tend to be a series about a guinea pig. Other than that, he mostly likes to read nonfiction books about space and prehistoric life...which I can relate to.
 
Quite the contrast from my experience. Discovering the Adam West Batman show at about the age of 4 was the epiphany that sparked a lifetime of geekery.
 
I loved Adam West as a kid, but it was Lego, and Star Wars, Star Trek's Mego figures, and Robert Heinlein that spurred me in to geekery.
 
I am not trying to be negative, but I think the answer here is a solid “no.”

Most kids don’t even watch TV anymore. They watch YouTube videos and play online games. Very rarely will they get invested in a weekly show. And given that this isn’t Star Wars or Superheroes…unless Trek fan parents are passing it on to their kids, I think the young fan growth will be very limited.
Shh…the merch suits might hear you!
 
I wish there had been a third option - "Maybe", for that would be my answer. My experience with Star Trek is that I learned to love Star Trek from my mother who saw the original series in the 1960s and passed her love of it to me. If there are parents who have this connection to Star Trek, they will watch this show with their children. And their numbers have not diminished greatly, as might have occurred with another franchise thankfully. Even though I think the current generation of show runners have made some questionable choices, they have not committed the equivalent of the unforgiveable sin that is "The Timeless Children" (Doctor Who) in the franchise. So, the fanbase is still relatively strong and people are still excited about Star Trek.
 
I don't expect Star Trek to become the hot new thing the kids are all in to... but I do expect to see an increase in merchandise at stores and to encounter an increasing number of fans in the coming decades who cite Prodigy as their entry point into the fandom.
 
While I'm sure it'll draw-in the random new young fan or two, I doubt it will be a culture-changing series or anything of that nature. Thing is, EVERY iteration of the franchise has done that to some degree.

If Star Trek ever wants to Ted Lasso itself back in to the Premier League of IPs, then it's going to have rely on the film franchise. It really needs a run of four of five Oh-Ninesque films (Both in quality and mass appeal.) over the course of a decade. A handful of tent poles to erect a new tent.
 
I am not trying to be negative, but I think the answer here is a solid “no.”

Most kids don’t even watch TV anymore. They watch YouTube videos and play online games. Very rarely will they get invested in a weekly show. And given that this isn’t Star Wars or Superheroes…unless Trek fan parents are passing it on to their kids, I think the young fan growth will be very limited.
I agree. I got into Star Trek when I was a child and it was the material presented which drew me in; seeing larger than life heroes was what got me into the series. My friends likes videogames, something which contrast the normal life of being a kid which was escapism. Star Wars and Superhero movies does that very well by taking a child somewhere which enhances their imagination, and then later we could play a version of what we saw on the PS3 and admire the toys and posters in the room and make their own stories.
 
I was exposed to Trek as a youngin. TNG came out when I was 8, and we watched it together as a family, but even before that, I had watched plenty of TOS in syndication, and had seen at least a few of the TOS movies (and a bit of TAS).

I can't say I ever particularly cared much about the characters though. Characters don't matter that much to me in fiction in general. It was more about the scenarios in the stories, and daydreaming about exploring the universe.
 
Even if you're right, I still see Prodigy finding an audience among older Trekkies. Especially with more Trek alums lending their voices.
 
I grew up on Popeye, Tom & Jerry, Looney Toons & Saturday morning cartoons.

Star Trek was the first adult oriented TV show that I gained any interest in at that young age.

But the times they have a changed ...
Unless they somehow find a way to show PRODIGY on YouTube and its ilk, then most kids of today will probably not develop an interest.
 
I will watch it with my kid. I probably wouldn't otherwise. I think that is part of what they are going for, Trek fans' young kids on streaming and a more general young audience on Nickelodeon.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top