One of the dumber arguments the pro-Orville, anti-Discovery brigade used four years ago was that The Orville, by virtue of being on regular TV, was thereby more real Star Trek than Discovery. Which would mean The Orville was more real Star Trek than any of the Star Trek movies, because movie tickets cost money. The real reason The Orville isn't the real Star Trek is because it takes more than putting TNG and Voyager reruns in a blender on puree, changing some names, and adding dick jokes to make Star Trek.
Considering that Orville started as a sci-fi/Trek
parody (unlike DSC) and wasn't an officially branded offering, it's amazing how far it's come...
Before I sat to watch Orville I had the same mindset, "Star Trek with dick and fart jokes" - like what Family Guy praised itself for doing and what even Doctor Who was doing often enough for a while... There are a few jokes that are deemed ribald, but it's a lot tamer than I'd thought. Quite a surprise, in fact... The only dick joke I remember is the phrase "got wood" at the end of one, which was surprisingly cleverly implemented.
At least they're not flagrant swearing and acting like a bunch of fast food workers after getting out of Senior High. Check that, Orville's done that as much as DSC had as well, with that stupid smartphone episode being the most flagrant case of being an uninspired Trek ripoff (the hollow asteroid with colony being the other.) But, as for swearing with the belief they're somehow being more sophisticated, Orville has kept it remarkably mature and is a step above DSC in that regard, if nothing else.
Yeah, there's some plot puree in there. DSC is guilty of the same things. Harry Mudd being one of the more obvious examples. Orville's done a few more neat twists that feel more original as well. I'm sure DSC has as well. Lower Decks had and I've watched far more of that. I missed a fair bit of Picard and if its big twist is from its season finale, I'm just going to say "we agree to disagree".
No, the real Star Trek of the last several years is Discovery, Short Treks, Picard, Lower Decks, and Prodigy, and soon Strange New Worlds. Just as some people struggled to accept The Next Generation in 1987 (I was 24 then, and believe me, there were people who loudly declared TNG wasn't real Star Trek), so too the new shows are real Star Trek, despite all the people this time around who are stuck in the 1990s. You may have noticed that, despite the haters, The Next Generation didn't go away, it stuck around and had several spinoffs, all of which are real Star Trek.
Except the easiest comeback of all time would be, "The only real Star Trek is the one that both Roddenberry and Justman created." There goes everything after TNG...
But it's inevitable when it comes to slapping a brand name on something. Each era has its fans and detractors, for numerous reasons. Not every era is liked the same and even clunky episodes have good moments, and vice-versa. I'm sure some Trek fans are stuck in the 60s, or refuse to do with anything post-1989, or pre-1999, and so on. Heck, even some called DS9 "Deep Throat Nine" because they didn't care for it. None of this is new, as far as phenomenon go.
That silliness aside, you are quite right. The "not real star trek" is not new. But people also noticed TNG got up to 3~6x million more viewers than the current shows. DSC started out with nearly 10 million, but by season 4 dropped to 1.4M. (Sources: EW and Variety) TNG started with 15M, quickly dropped to 8M, then went back up... but by its 4th season was 12M. Season 5 peaked at 13M. Between the seasons the ratings were comparatively steady.
Plus, TNG wasn't behind a paywall. There's no way around that one. Partly because people aren't going to go spend $70/mo for Hulu+Live just to see the new Orville episodes. (Unless the $7 and $12 plans for their library content include newly made episodes, which seems unlikely - especially as you apparently can't make a TV show anymore where a single episode costs < $1M to make.)
Not that ratings are the real deal, but to some they are.
Same shit, different decade.
Talk about an obvious food replicator joke as Federation Suit talks to Orion slave about where the fake apple came from...
Oh look, here's the officially branded show's most dignified moment:
Get past the odd use of profanity and there's a scene that could have been great, if they'd get it past the familyguywannabe/seemingly rough draft stage.