It would actually be interesting to hear what his earnings from each movie were, so we can find out who fell beneath him in that regard. I don't think the junior officer/Kirk comparison is that accurate.
What has money got to do with it? We know perfectly well that Abrams was the man in charge. It was a five-man "Supreme Court," yes, but Abrams was the director, the one with the final say, and everyone else was subordinate to him. He had final approval over everything, and anyone who disagreed with him and failed to change his mind would lose the argument. That is what a director does.
I suppose my use of the expression "top brass" is the main trigger point for a lot of the disagreement over my comment? Understood. Personally I would still consider him important to the development of these two movies, and possibly helped inform his future as Trek exec many years later.
Yes, of course he was, but it's absurd to pretend that's equivalent to being a showrunner or a production company executive. Kurtzman was not the boss until Discovery. The distinction matters.
Feel free to disagree, but I see a lot of '09 still playing out in Trek today. The seeds of what would be the "Kurtzman era" were planted way back when.
In the sense that working under J.J. Abrams may have influenced his choices later when he was the boss, I'm sure that's true, just as he learned from working under Abrams on Fringe before that, and from working under Rob Tapert on Hercules and Xena. That's how the business works, or used to before streaming broke the model: a writers' room was a training ground for future showrunners. But being the student differs from being the teacher.
Lastly, my first comment on the subject was more of an effort to decipher what trekfan_01 meant by Kurtzman being in the role almost as long as Berman. I probably shouldve left well alone.
That is the point. It is simply a factually incorrect assertion and therefore should not be defended. Kurtzman rose through the ranks from junior staffer to boss, like Jeri Taylor, Ira Steven Behr, Brannon Braga, Kenneth Biller, and Bryan Fuller. Berman started out as a studio vice president at Paramount who accepted a nominal demotion to supervising producer on TNG season 1, but was actually appointed by the studio to be a watchdog keeping Roddenberry's excesses in check, so unofficially he was effectively at the top to begin with. And he rose to executive producer in season 2 and took more overt control as Roddenberry's health declined. There's just no comparison to Kurtzman's arc.
Particularly since Kurtzman's tenure on Trek was not continuous. He worked for Abrams on the 2009 and 2013 movies, then split with his partner Orci and founded his own production company in 2014, having no involvement in Star Trek Beyond, and was separately hired by CBS in 2016 to produce Discovery. Let's not forget that at the time, Paramount and CBS had split into separate companies and the movies and TV series were independent of each other, which is why they were in separate continuities.