Doesn't make money either. Investing in the preservation of large set pieces of concluded / cancelled tv shows with a dedicated fan base is not a priority.Doesn't cost much money to give away free stuff.
I know but whatever money you get is more than you get, just by putting it in some dumpster and having it hauled away to the city dump.
Not really. They may get pennies on the investment and moving on to the next production makes them more money that spending money hoping that someone is willing to pay to lease it, store it, and move it.I know but whatever money you get is more than you get, just by putting it in some dumpster and having it hauled away to the city dump.
Not really. They may get pennies on the investment and moving on to the next production makes them more money that spending money hoping that someone is willing to pay to lease it, store it, and move it.
All of this is costing money, including time and labor and storage. From a financial point of view it makes zero sense to the companies. Fans might be interested but that doesn't pay them money.
So, again, take time and labor spending money with no return and inviting people on to their property unsupervised, inviting liability if someone gets hurt?At the very least put them out on the street and put out the word. Come get free Star Trek stuff. First come, first serve. Everything must go! When it comes to something like Trek I think you could even get some people to help out for free out of their love for Trek. I know everything is a business and all but sometimes when it comes to special things people will do something out of their sheer love of something.
At the very least put them out on the street and put out the word. Come get free Star Trek stuff. First come, first serve. Everything must go!
There was once a Star Trek theme park in Vegas which included, among other things, a recreation of the TNG bridge which people could tour, sit in, have their pictures taken and all that fun stuff. It has since been shut down due to lack of interest. There just isn't any money to be had in keeping the old sets around for someone to use/visit in a future time or even setting them up in a Trekkie museum or something.I understand why some sets are destroyed. I mean who is ever going to say they miss the idea of seeing or exploring the sets of Charles in Charge. But for something like Trek you would think people would understand the value of those sets due to the shows being iconic and beloved by a fandom that cares about such things. Even renting them out for comic conventions, fan films and so forth with the chance of reusing in future shows or movies would come in handy. Heck even putting them in a Trek museum or something would be of use.
Not nearly as much to preserve and load.Doesn't it take work to throw it away as well?
this is done over and over again. Up to a point, after a while the pieces just start to crumble.Or, instead of being dumped, they can be used as the bones to rebuild into new sets for different productions, not necessarily involving STAR TREK.
No.At the very least put them out on the street and put out the word. Come get free Star Trek stuff. First come, first serve. Everything must go! When it comes to something like Trek I think you could even get some people to help out for free out of their love for Trek. I know everything is a business and all but sometimes when it comes to special things people will do something out of their sheer love of something.
I also find it weird that somehow only Star Trek sets are iconic enough to deserve the treatment of being preserved forever as part of media history. Why not the Millennium Falcon? Why not the Batcave? Why not the two apartments and Central Perk from Friends? Or the home of the Bundys?
Really, the only purpose-built movie sets I've ever heard of being preserved in situ are exteriors, because it's easier to just let nature reclaim them. Most famously Hobbiton in New Zealand (that was left to the elements until they decided to convert it into a theme park), but to also raise something from my own local movie history, there's the replica of Eger Castle built near Pilisborosjenő, Hungary, for the 1968 historical epic Stars of Eger, about the 1552 siege of the eponymous castle by the Ottoman Turks. It's completely in ruins because it's been set ablaze in the movie, and the only reason its curtain walls are still standing is because the peculiar nature of living in a literal communist dictatorship allowed the production to just ask the government to order the (conscripted, of course) military to mine a lot of stone in a nearby quarry, build the entire castle from scratch, then serve as extras in the movie. It mainly serves as a local hiking spot nowadays, although international productions (such as Netflix's The Witcher) use it occasionally if they need a ruined castle near Budapest.
Probably because they know they will be used again. A niche or genre show has no guarantee.Also this is kind of funny but I have been watching lots of Halmark Christmas movies because my mom really likes them and I swear I think they are using some of the same Christmas Trees and decorations in several movies. I think I have seen the same Tree show up in at least 3 movies.
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