All this and character development too!It did long form story telling a decade before it became mainstream cool or even the big player once streaming came around.
All this and character development too!It did long form story telling a decade before it became mainstream cool or even the big player once streaming came around.
Personally, I've always been of the "just leave DS9 be" camp. A few nods here and there I can live with, but I really don't relish the idea of someone truly continuing the story of DS9.
As I recall, Avery Brooks decided to stop acting after DS9, and became an acting teacher up until his retirement. Granted he does some documentaries here and there, but I don't think you'd ever get him to come back to play Sisko. For me, I just satisfy myself with the further DS9 stories from STO.
As I recall, Avery Brooks decided to stop acting after DS9, and became an acting teacher up until his retirement. Granted he does some documentaries here and there, but I don't think you'd ever get him to come back to play Sisko. For me, I just satisfy myself with the further DS9 stories from STO.
That's strange, because according to a video (a 3-way discussion) I saw on YouTube, the people that were on it (one of them being Cirroc Lofton) were asking why Brooks wasn't in any more movies and TV shows after DS9 had ended, with (IIRC) a conspiracy mentioned keeping him out of acting in the film and TV industry (as soon as I can find the specific video, I'll post it here.)
Same. I get it with people that there is this desire for things to last forever. Keep the same familiarity, and those wonderful warm fuzzies of nostalgia, all sounds extremely appealing but I think leaving it be, as a self-contained story works way better.Personally, I've always been of the "just leave DS9 be" camp. A few nods here and there I can live with, but I really don't relish the idea of someone truly continuing the story of DS9.
Star Trek as a whole has got new fresh fans after Disco i would think, so maybe a movie based on DS9 could happen in the future. I would love that.
Many factors had diminished the brand imho, not the least of which might've been oversaturation, or imho an odd cinematic fit for the TNG cast, which had them presented very differently in the movies than they'd been in their show. Whatever the reason, Trek had doomed itself to stall, and none of the post-TNG productions had enough pop currency to rekindle it.
Yeah, I can see that. Although, there's some blurred lines between the effects of oversaturation & spreading itself too thin. It's all kind of symptomatic of the same issue. Over-milking the cow, leaching the soil. Exploiting a thing to the point of its own detriment. Something this new generation might want to be wary of as wellI've always said that I think the reason for Star Trek's decline in popularity wasn't because there's was too much of it, but, that it just wasn't as good as it used to be. Plain and simple.
Some of Star Trek's best writers were on TNG and DS9 and once they moved on to other things, the franchise never really got adequate replacements. The Enterprise docs on the BLU-RAYs go into this pretty heavily from that show's POV.
This isn't the only reason for it, I think, but, certainly a main one.
I've always said that I think the reason for Star Trek's decline in popularity wasn't because there's was too much of it, but, that it just wasn't as good as it used to be. Plain and simple.
Some of Star Trek's best writers were on TNG and DS9 and once they moved on to other things, the franchise never really got adequate replacements. The Enterprise docs on the BLU-RAYs go into this pretty heavily from that show's POV.
This isn't the only reason for it, I think, but, certainly a main one.
…but I am also in the camp that DS9 is best left alone.
DS9 was part of that decline, though. It lost viewers every season, ending with barely a third of what it had in the first season.
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