I've seen some screencaps of how its done on Prime Video internationally (very well) but nothing concrete and unsure how it compares to other Trek shows.How is the show tracking compared to SNW and DSC? One assumes DSC and SNW got huge ratings.
I've seen some screencaps of how its done on Prime Video internationally (very well) but nothing concrete and unsure how it compares to other Trek shows.How is the show tracking compared to SNW and DSC? One assumes DSC and SNW got huge ratings.
I don't trust pundits. I'll tell you why: they're dependent on promoting a particular POV and their audience relies on them having that POV. If something happens that proves them wrong, they have to find a way to spin it in order keep having that POV. Which means distortion at best and bald-faced lies at worst.
The Variety interview where he specifically says he wants to piss off a portion of the fanbase.
TLJ effectively decimated the Star Wars film franchise
and many of the creative choices that went into TLJ also went into PICARD season 1.
I think PICARD season 3 manages to be an evolution of the Berman-era storytelling from DS9 and late ENT, while PICARD season 1 was more of a rupture. It just feels too divorced from what came before, and needed much more grounding.
Check out his YT interviews with the Popcast guys and Robert Meyer Burnett...
I think many of the people who hated PICARD season 1 would have liked PICARD season 3 even if not all of the TNG cast came back. Season 3 has great new characters.
There are many people with Star Trek franchise history that have condemned most of NuTrek,
And, Terry Matalas has specifically said he hoped his season would appeal across the fanbase. So is it the season itself being divisive, or the reception to it?
I didn't say he was fired.
But if CBS was so happy with PICARD season 1, they would have tried to get him to stay on for another season,
Sticking the landing on a highly serialized season of genre television where everything fit together:
Michael Chabon: 0
Terry Matalas: 4
The episode needed to show that, otherwise it borders on character assassination of Riker and Troi.
Fair point. But season 3 is doing a much better job in doing so. It's grounded in the universe, not a Firefly/Alien/Mass Effect/CW mashup.
Fair to say it's open to interpretation, especially if you liked season 1. But the "toxic fans" label seems to be used to brush off way too many legitimate complaints.
Season 1 was both very expansive yet claustrophobic in its execution. And season 2 does bridge seasons 1 and 3 in an interesting way, with season 1 carryover characters, but with the production designers and day to day writers of season 3.
This is my big question. Rios was panned as "not Starfleet material " at times bit Shaw is generally positively accepted. Raffi was maligned for daring to have substance use but Shaw makes a marijuana joke and that's fine...Honestly, there's no particular reason so far for why S3 features Captain Liam Shaw and Commander Seven of Nine of the USS Titan-A instead of Captain Cris Rios and Commander Raffi Musker of the USS Stargazer.
I've seen some screencaps of how its done on Prime Video internationally (very well) but nothing concrete and unsure how it compares to other Trek shows.
The economics of streaming series in the 2020s is radically different from that of syndicated TV seasons in the 1980s and 1990s. It’s like comparing the production of cars in the 1970s and the 1930s. Or laptops from 1990 to those of today. Far more variables in play than “doing badly”, no to mention the analogy you’ve drawn is often a barely disguised version of a tired cliché.Discovery must have been doing badly, it was canceled and will never reach 7 seasons like TNG and DS9 - even Voyager. And only 5 *short* seasons, unlike the workhorse actors who did TNG, DS9, and Voyager.
The economics of streaming series in the 2020s is radically different from that of syndicated TV seasons in the 1980s and 1990s. It’s like comparing the production of cars in the 1970s and the 1930s. Or laptops from 1990 to those of today. Far more variables in play than “doing badly”, no to mention the analogy you’ve drawn is often a barely disguised version of a tired cliché.
Again you are misreading the economic situation. Among the biggest expenses this far into a series is contract renewal for lead actors. Many popular series have been cut short for this reason, or have had major cast changes. Beyond that, every streaming service that produces original material is feeling the squeeze, particularly the smaller ones like Paramount. In the frenzy to copy the Netflix model, many services financed their efforts with debt—debt that unexpectedly increased via inflation (which also increases production costs). Even almighty Disney is cutting back production on things. Moreover, a five year run, in all eras of TV, represents strong success. As for “short” seasons, they are the norm outside US productions, so fewer episodes doesn’t mean “unsuccessful”. And Trek is expensive to make. A sitcom is a lot cheaper. Reality TV cheaper still. The issue of popularity is not to be ignored, of course, but it’s hardly the only factor at play. Look at all the streaming shows (and old fashioned network shows) that don’t complete one season, let alone five. TOS would have LOVED a five season run. And PIC, allegedly so popular as to bring back NuTrek haters in large numbers, is only getting three.If Discovery was as popular as people claim, it never would have been canceled. It would make no sense to cancel a show thats pulling massive ratings for a streaming service.
If Discovery was as popular as people claim, it never would have been canceled. It would make no sense to cancel a show thats pulling massive ratings for a streaming service.
I think it might have something to do with the fact that Shaw is a straight white male. Rios was only two out of those three, while Raffi is none of those three.This is my big question. Rios was panned as "not Starfleet material " at times bit Shaw is generally positively accepted. Raffi was maligned for daring to have substance use but Shaw makes a marijuana joke and that's fine...
Never mind my general distaste for weed jokes or stoner culture, it seems quite odd to me that one is accepted but the other dismissed...![]()
Personally I much prefer Rios to Shaw, but there's a damned obvious reason why they didn't use Rios in Shaw's place--they wanted an antagonistic captain who wouldn't defer to Picard and Riker.
It was pulled because of money. The longer a show goes on the more money actors cost. With the financial situation of all studios feeling the pinch it makes sense to cut costs.If Discovery was as popular as people claim, it never would have been canceled. It would make no sense to cancel a show thats pulling massive ratings for a streaming service.
If Discovery was as popular as people claim, it never would have been canceled. It would make no sense to cancel a show thats pulling massive ratings for a streaming service.
I think Shaw stayed antagonistic with Picard and Riker for half the season. Right up until the end of "Imposters" when the Titan had to make a run for it. Before that point, Shaw couldn't wait to be rid of Picard and Riker. He probably still feels the same way, even as of "Surrender", but there's no time to dwell on it. Plus his hero Geordi is there.But the antagonistic aspect of Shaw really didn’t last that long. One could have played it off with Rios with conflicting priorities between his duties preparing for Frontier Day and his loyalty to Picard. The one aspect that might have been hard to pull off is having Rios call Starfleet and move the conspiracy theory forward. But perhaps having another character who was a liaison to Starfleet (think Remmick from “Coming of Age”) be that person might have handled that.
So, what started as a prequel series became a sequel series and the producers seemed to be more concerned that they hit all the social-diversity-identifiers, that they forgot to write a story. They had 13 to 15-episode seasons that built a massive “universe is going to be destroyed” theme, that was wrapped up in the last 10 minutes of the final episode because Berman had a nice chat with the bad aliens – every single season.
One of the show’s most famous directors, Jonathan Frakes was asked if the franchise would ever again return to the 32nd century. His answer was quite blunt: “I wouldn’t hold my breath.”
Alone? No. A major factor in a contracting market? Yes.It's pretty naïve to think actor salaries alone sank STD. The budget per episode of STD is about $8-8.5 million. By contrast a single episode of 1923 is between $30-35 million.
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