Before you ask, "Then how come DS9 and VOY ran seven seasons?" DS9 and VOY started off with TNG-level ratings. They could afford to lose ratings every year and still run seven seasons. ENT couldn't.
As much as I have lukewarm feelings on this episode I disagree completely. It reminds me of "Trials and Tribble-ations." Were people talking about the plot, as fun as it was? No, they were talking about the inserting of the DS9 crew in with the TOS crew and the fun achievement of that all. People don't talk about the deep stuff too much when it comes to episodes. This is just a feature I've observed over the years on this and other forums. If we hit deep it lingers not as long as other points because the deeper stuff usually gets glossed over for the fun fan stuff. Which I get, but I would not take this as a mark against the season. People like the fan feels. That's a feature, not a bug.Saw someone on twitter say the episode was a 10 because we saw the enterprise D. So what would the episode be if that was some random junker? Just like a few weeks ago people gushing over seeing Defiant and Voyager again. I mean those things are cool - but when that's what people are gushing over and not the actual plot or specific writing then I think there's a problem with the show.
As much as I have lukewarm feelings on this episode I disagree completely. It reminds me of "Trials and Tribble-ations." Were people talking about the plot, as fun as it was? No, they were talking about the inserting of the DS9 crew in with the TOS crew and the fun achievement of that all. People don't talk about the deep stuff too much when it comes to episodes. This is just a feature I've observed over the years on this and other forums. If we hit deep it lingers not as long as other points because the deeper stuff usually gets glossed over for the fun fan stuff. Which I get, but I would not take this as a mark against the season. People like the fan feels. That's a feature, not a bug.
That's actually what happened and why ratings weren't good until season 3. That's how you keep quality high. Every episode used to be do or die. There was actually pressure to make every episode great.
One of those was actually a good episode though.You mean like "Threshold"? Or "Sub Rosa"? Or "Take Me Out to the Holosuite"?
UPN didn't want ENTERPRISE anymore by that point.I'm as ardent a champion of ENT as you'll find on this board and even I knew the series' ratings became anemic by the end. Even UPN saw them as mediocre and UPN probably would have renewed a looped video of spilled milk evaporating under the Sun if they had one to broadcast.
It's all about perception. Enterprise's ratings were often double Battlestar Galactica at the time. They were the critical darling, which is nice, but Enterprise was actually more popular.Those reasons, too.
The ratings sucked and it didn't help Trek was no longer important to the network's "vision for the future." How'd that work out for you, Moonves? Oh. Right.
32 posts in a few hours. You're going to burn yourself out if you keep going at this pace. But anyway...
No, the ratings were pretty good all throughout TNG's seven seasons. Someone has the graph and will be able to provide it, but this link will do in the meantime. It's actually DS9 and VOY (and ENT) that had constantly falling ratings.
(2) Ratings of Star Trek: The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine and Voyager : television (reddit.com)
And the audience for TNG was extremely loyal. They watched every week. It played on TVs in stores, I could talk about the show with friends at school, people off the street were talking about it... Besides TNG, the only other time I remember Star Trek being as big as that was when the 2009 Film came out.
As far as quality, there were times when TNG was on a roll and times when it wasn't, but the ratings were always high during its run. It's the only Star Trek series that can make that claim.
It's my understanding is that they were more focused on the spin offs and movies by the time the seventh season rolled around.You mean like "Threshold"? Or "Sub Rosa"? Or "Take Me Out to the Holosuite"?
If the pressure was there, it didn't seem Berman and Co. were feeling it.![]()
Besides TNG, the only other time I remember Star Trek being as big as that was when the 2009 Film came out.
One of those was actually a good episode though.
One way I measured perceived popularity of Star Trek is by the way Playmates did toys.
You could go into Toys R Us and get a lights and sounds Enterprise D, Vorcha, Romulan Warbird, Bridge set, Engineering, transporter room, etc at any time in 1990-1993.
Generations had a *huuuuge* toy merchanize boom, the Enteprise B, battledamaged Enterprise D, the Bird of Prey, etc.
After that it started fading.
Star Trek was all the rage in 1990-1996..
And then Star Wars returned.
Yeah, the figures were subpar, but the ships and instruments were cool.The Generations line were infamously cheap, quickly-produced pegwarmers that got shafted by the late change in costume change.
Merchandising is probably the worst way to calculate popularity. It relies on so many other factors, such as production, logistics, promotion, how solvent the companies are, etc.One way I measured perceived popularity of Star Trek is by the way Playmates did toys.
You could go into Toys R Us and get a lights and sounds Enterprise D, Vorcha, Romulan Warbird, Bridge set, Engineering, transporter room, etc at any time in 1990-1993.
Generations had a *huuuuge* toy merchanize boom, the Enteprise B, battledamaged Enterprise D, the Bird of Prey, etc.
After that it started fading.
Star Trek was all the rage in 1990-1996..
And then Star Wars returned.
Merchandising is probably the worst way to calculate popularity. It relies on so many other factors, such as production, logistics, promotion, how solvent the companies are, etc.
It's a bit chicken and egg isn't it? Fewer merch is produced if people don't buy previous waves. The underperformance of the Generations line directly impacted future products.In dollars and cents perhaps, yes.
However I've noticed that as merchandizing diminishes, so does perceived popularity and such. Its happened with Star Trek, Star Wars, Doctor Who, etc.
If you don't get your product to market and promote, you got Buck Rogers.In dollars and cents perhaps, yes.
However I've noticed that as merchandizing diminishes, so does perceived popularity and such. Its happened with Star Trek, Star Wars, Doctor Who, etc.
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