What about the technicians and engineers? The VFX department, set designers and sound production teams etc? I guess that it would be ok if these folk were not fans as long as they did a good job aesthetically and honoured all that had gone before in their work… but if they have not seen all that has gone before and become emotionally invested in it, they would be making generic sci-fi, *not* Star Trek.No, but accomplished writers who understand the fans should.
A general consensus?Ok, what's the right standard?
Curious, given the general consensus of this poll is fans should not be running it.A general consensus?
"If I like it it's Star Trek. If I don't it's hedonistic filth."And what is the general consensus on what makes Star Trek?
Is that the four armed guy in Star Wars?A general consensus?
His brother, actually.Is that the four armed guy in Star Wars?
They are probably all Star Wars fans really.Curious, given the general consensus of this poll is fans should not be running it.
See, I knew it!Is that the four armed guy in Star Wars?
Whatever keeps the peace within the diverse fandom yet still makes sense to the general public/non fans. A representative board responsible to the show runner (like Kurtzman, currently) would achieve this, then the show runner can have the final say, or sway a decision which is not quite unanimously agreed upon. The show runner would have been selected for this purpose on unanimous trust that they would go with their heart on what they believe to be the right storyline choice or character development.And what is the general consensus on what makes Star Trek?
Basically you want TOS and TNG over and over and over again. Oh wait, we're supposed to hate TNG again after Picard. So basically you just want TOS over and over and over again.Whatever keeps the peace within the diverse fandom yet still makes sense to the general public/non fans. A representative board responsible to the show runner (like Kurtzman, currently) would achieve this, then the show runner can have the final say, or sway a decision which is not quite unanimously agreed upon. The show runner would have been selected for this purpose on unanimous trust that they would go with their heart on what they believe to be the right storyline choice or character development.
As for using past canon, characters and plot points, there is nothing wrong with doing this because what is old to fans is *new* to non fans. It is always good to be creative and come up with new original ideas, but they need to fit in with general lore of the Star Trek Universe.
No, it would be about honouring and respecting all of those things whilst making something *new* and taking the franchise forward in a fresh direction.Basically you want TOS and TNG over and over and over again. Oh wait, we're supposed to hate TNG again after Picard. So basically you just want TOS over and over and over again.
I've seen TOS. It's a great show. Star Trek doesn't need to be just an updated version of that and only that.
My preferences in order are:No, it would be about honouring and respecting all of those things whilst making something *new* and taking the franchise forward in a fresh direction.
I believe that a 25th century continuation of Star Trek should begin with a soft reboot of the universe, such as a temporal event preventing the destruction of the Romulan sun, probably connected to the temporal Cold War. This would also bring the JJ Abrams movies full circle as well as concluding an unresolved ‘loose end’ storyline from the Berman era. I mean, it cannot be any more complicated than Spideman: In to the Spiderverse is - and that is a children’s film!
We could also *finally* learn who Future Guy is!
And what would that look like? ST 09 tried and was very popular and accessible yet derided as "not Trek." Does anyone honestly think Spock would die in TWOK if fans were in charge if the producers received death threats after the leaking of that plot point?Whatever keeps the peace within the diverse fandom yet still makes sense to the general public/non fans.
[snip]… just define for me "good Star Trek " with a consensus.
The Reboot Films are the only "new" Star Trek the general public has seen. If you want to win them back over, undoing them isn't a good idea. It sends the message of, "That Star Trek you like? We just undid it!" You have to think about it from their point of view.In regards to a new continuation, I possibly cannot give a definition of “good Trek with a consensus”, though I can give an example of how this was achieved for another franchise.
When Doctor Who was soft rebooted by Russell T Davis and eventually handed on to Steven Moffat, there was general consensus amongst fans and non fans alike that this was a *good* show. The soft reboots within Doctor Who also revolve around the destruction of a planet - Gallifrey. Coincidentally, they also used a time war as the main plot point in nu-Who. But Enterprise started this thread first, so there is nothing wrong with Star Trek finishing what it started and using this as a plot point from which a soft reboot can be achieved for Star Trek in a similar way.
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