A valid comparison. But of course there is always a person going out there way to defend the show to the hilt despite its evident flaws
Too late.I say 5, that's enough. Don't drag it out until people lose interest.
That’s either 17 years of 10 episodes or 26 episodes a season.170 episodes at least?
Too late.
That’s either 17 years of 10 episodes or 26 episodes a season.
Nonsense. Reviews are positive, it is getting great numbers in viewings. Don't mistake your personal dislike for fact.
My fear is that despite reviews/viewership the overall streaming landscape is contracting (collapsing?) and I am nervous for what this will mean for this show...I don't think it will be the end of Trek or whatever but as actors become more expensive as a show goes on I think it is highly unlikely studios will be willing to keep them going....
Netflix password crackdown was a one-time boost. Streaming is a broken model. They don't have enough content to justify these prices, and the production costs are astronomical on many of them, including every Trek series. You can no longer make that back on syndication.
So you phase out Mount, Navia, Babs, Chong and Rebecca and try to hang on to Peck, Bush and Gooding. Bring in Quinn and Wesley as regulars. Cast new and less expensive actors as Sulu, McCoy and Chekov.My fear is that despite reviews/viewership the overall streaming landscape is contracting (collapsing?) and I am nervous for what this will mean for this show...I don't think it will be the end of Trek or whatever but as actors become more expensive as a show goes on I think it is highly unlikely studios will be willing to keep them going....
So you phase out Mount, Navia, Babs, Chong and Rebecca and try to hang on to Peck, Bush and Gooding. Bring in Quinn and Wesley as regulars. Cast new and less expensive actors as Sulu, McCoy and Chekov.
No idea what either number might be.Yes, but given how out of balance reduction costs and revenues seem to be I am wondering if even this is possible.
You mean the syndication the Star Trek shows have on tv? Nothing is set in stone, and who knows if more studios will decide to put OG streaming content on syndication after a while. They're learning, it's a process.
Oh, and a one time boost it may have been.... But it showed many people (literally millions) were willing to pay to continue streaming. This is also an indication that streaming is certainly NOT broken. It needs tweaking.
The shows lose massive of amounts of money. In the old days, you recouped with ads, which nobody wants to watch anymore, or via syndication, which is mostly dead. Meanwhile, these networks are still getting $ from cable subs, but have nothing to put on those networks because again, of streaming exclusivity, perhaps the dumbest concept in all of it.
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