It feels like an unforced error to involve the fandom this early without a solid commitment, but Stargate is also in a sweet spot where it was even possible. Gateworld/Dial the Gate is pretty much the sole hub of Stargate fandom on-line. If you wanted to go direct to the fans to announce a new Star Trek or Star Wars project, I can think of a half-dozen sites you'd have to hit for Trek, and Star Wars is so big I don't think it's possible for there to be any central dedicated fan-run Star Wars news site (I'm not as into Star Wars, but I can't think of any equivalents to TrekCore, TrekMovie, or Trek Collective as the place to check to know what's going on). On the flip side, fandoms like Babylon 5, Firefly, and Farscape are so dormant that there are fan enclaves here and there, but, like, the main fandom news source for Babylon 5 is the series creator's social media, which isn't exactly a grassroots entity.
I think they really need to stop announcing projects that don't have a 100% commitment from the production company. It probably doesn't have a huge overall impact, but it just it really is getting annoying as a fan to get this big announcement that gets everyone excited and is all over the internet, just to cancel it a few months later. And I really don't understand what they get out of it, other than pissing off the fans.
Sadly, yes. Rinse and repeat. There are around 7 other reboot attempts of BSG in various forms (+/-) that I can recall, starting with Richard Hatch's "Second Coming" effort, and not including RDM's version - the only one that actually got made. Of the more well-known ones were the Desanto/Singer continuation/soft reboot series and the Glen Larson continuation film. I think there was also a "Battlestar Pegasus" project as well, that died a quick and quiet death.
I don't understand why Universal is so obssessed with rebooting Battlestar Galactica, because it's ever really been that popular. The Ron Moore series got a ton of acclaim, and had a devoted fan base, but I don't think it ever got that big of ratings, and the original barely lasted two seasons.
Maybe something related to Stargate will be made as a theatrical film in the future. If a movie is made (which would mean completely resetting the universe and rebooting it), real success would require a genuinely good film capable of attracting the interest of a general audience, much like Project Hail Mary. Otherwise, if no film is made, the universe might continue through low-budget animated projects, or the franchise could be shelved entirely.
If they didn't want to do a series, I can't image they'd do a theatrical film. A movie is going to take a lot more money, and need a much bigger audience than a TV series would. If they didn't want to take a chance on a series, there's probably very, very little chance of them doing a movie.
I expect very little happens because of fan campaigns. You might get another season if you're lucky. Jericho comes to mind.
And we did get a Veronica Mars film from a Kickstarter.
I do remember Netflix saving shows when it was still in its early years.
It's like protesting. At the end of the day, it gets TV coverage, but it never really changes anything.
What we actually need is new IP. I'd prefer new fandoms than rebooting or refreshing old ones. I can't really think of any over the last decade.
If we're talking about completley original IPs the two that jump to mind for me are Yellowstone, which has now had the original series, two prequels, 1883 and 1923, and two comtemporary direct spinoffs, Marshals and Dutton Ranch. The Madison also started off as a spin-off, but the producers changed their minds and it became it's own separate standalone thing.
The only other original one that really comes to mind for me is For All Mankind, which just got it's first spin-off, the Russia based Star City.
And on the adaptation front there's The Immortals Universe based on Anne Rice's books, with Interview With the Vampire, Mayfair Witches, and Talamasca: The Secret Order. There's also a The Vampire Lestat series that either just started or is about to start, but I'm not sure if that's considered a new series, or just the next season of Interview With The Vampire with a new title.
Everything I can find says that the fan campaign was a decisive factor there, but I'm sure it wasn't the only one. Probably the Syfy execs liked the show enough that they were willing to continue it in some form even if the expense and ratings had made cancellation necessary.
One possible contributing factor is that Farscape was always a loss leader for Henson Productions. They were willing to go into debt making it an elaborate production with complex effects because it served as an advertisement for what they were capable of, which brought them profitable work doing commercials and industrial films and made up for the losses they took on Farscape. So the usual profit-and-loss calculations didn't apply there, and maybe that's why Syfy was more willing to continue the show than they otherwise might have been.
I just checked the timeline on Wikipedia, and PK Wars aired around a year and half after the series finale, so I'm thinking they must have already known it was coming when the show ended.
They're figuring out that rebooting old cult fantasy shows is a bad business notion?
X-FIles, can't say. It was something like a mainstream hit. BTVS was big for a low-budget show on two weblets that pitched their content to demos underserved by the so-called "Big Three." B5 was...fuck, it was a first-run syndication show that didn't pull numbers anywhere near Xena or even DS9.
Have they cancelled the Xena reboot yet?
Yes, they cancelled that a while back.
The problem is this is what so many people say - and I'm not saying you're wrong - but then viewership says otherwise. People consistently flock to known IP. Paramount+ is making great hay right now out of "Yellowstone: Outsider Crapper" now or whatever spin off its doing.
The current Yellowstone spin-offs are Marshals, and Dutton Ranch, which each follow different members of the Dutton family after the original series ended.
Oh so many pilots never saw the light of day then then the success rate after commissioning was horrific.
But there were many shows that looked as if they were done for but they gave them a chance. "On the bubble". TNG itself was a show that made it into season three with the smallest of margins.
And sometimes it was fan noise. Sometimes it was seeing something in a certain demographic. Or a certain potential in ratings. Or a certain synergy in the topic. Building a lead in for another show.
But my point was it was humans in the entertainment industry trying to read the data and just occasionally going on a hunch. Or nuance. Or a larger picture.
I don't think that's really the case now.
I know I've heard stories about one or two series with iffy rating being saved because an executive's spouse was a big fan.