I've gone back and forth on this so many times, especially recently after re-watching the series in it's entirety - in order (I had a bad flu - so there were a few LONG days of Enterprise while my wife was at work.) Selfishly, I didn't want that viewing marathon to end - and I miss the show a lot. It's what brought me to the forums and began really getting me interested in other opinions on the show (which I've enjoyed a lot - both the positive ones, and most of the thoughtful negative ones that give alternate ideas about directions that could've improved the show from the beginning.)
So, I'll apologize for a long post, as well as if I repeat old thoughts/topics - I've only been here a short time - so it might not be fresh, but it's how i feel. I also am not writing this post to criticize the writing or B and B (I have strong feelings there - but this isn't the post for that.), so much as to try and really think about the reality of what S's 5-7 might have meant.
As a business person in the entertainment field, I understand and have no choice but to respect some (not all) of the decisions that led to ENTs cancellation, especially those centering on budget issues. Enterprise was expensive to produce correctly, and Paramount surely did right by the show visually, and I, for one, am glad they didn't keep it around only to then slash production values like they did to TOS in S3.
BUT (and it's a big BUT) I do think that Enterprise was not given the benefit of a stable and supportive network. That wouldn't have changed in the short term, and I do think that trying to get accurate ratings for the product was not really possible as well. UPN was an incomplete network, not serving all available markets, and had a spotty reputation, at best. (Aside from the fact UPN's demographic just grew to be so wrong for ENT - I always wished it was syndicated,---#1 - a larger potential audience #2 - Probably a more stable set of time slots and #3 - I couldn't believe I, myself, was watching a network that aired nothing else of value. UPN was not a network that spoke to adult, educated minds - I laughed whenever I had to watch the commercials for the other 'programming.')
People less and less watch anything at the time it's broadcast - I TIVO or, hulu, or whatever - and all of my friends do as well. In addition to a 9 to 5 career, I also produce and perform musically, and that's takes up my evenings. So - especially when ENT moved to Friday - I couldn't stay at home to watch it - and why would I when I could watch at my leisure whenever I wanted? (In other words, even though traditional ratings technically declined in the fourth season - I am of the opinion that was an erroneous calculation that would've been different if TIVO and the like had been a part of the calculation system as it is now.) I know that it's widely thought that ENT had eroded everything it had left, but I still think what it did have wasn't correctly counted. No matter, that was what it was. No matter how you calculate it - ENT didn't hold the audience until it was too late. Air the best of S1+2 as S1, air S3, then 4, and maybe it'd have held an audience a bit better (again, another topic, sorry.)
I'd be totally pleased if I had another 3 boxes of DVDs here to watch quality episodes. Enterprise (IMHO) hit it's stride in seasons 3 and 4 and IF that's what we would've gotten more of in the future - great! However, if seasons 5-7 would've continued with many of the inconsistencies that continued from the beginning up to cancellation, I think it was positive all around that ENT was allowed to conclude with as much as we got, and for ST to take a rest. I didn't want ST:New Idea, I wanted either GOOD ENT or for there to be a rest.
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As with everything in the computer age, Enterprise was start-to-finish a show that was actively discussed on the internet. Frankly - with a lot of what was being said on franchise forums about the show, I can see how that would influence even those who were 50/50 about the show into focusing more on the negatives than the positives. That's just human nature when negatives are pointed out to you. So - if the mentality of "nothing the people at ENT create will ever be good enough, the premise is so fundamentally flawed that it never should've made it out of spacedock, or too many mistakes have already piled up and it's beyond hope, or Manny can only do so much, etc." were to continue permeate the collective consciousness of many of the vocal watchers or detractors of the show, no matter what changes were already in progress or could've sprung forth in season 5-7 would've made no difference. Many of sci-fi's own voices had already overwhelmed the community. Still to this day, I'm sure any forum-hopper knows how dangerous the word Enterprise can be.
Obviously, ENT wasn't coming from a very nurturing outside environment, except for that core group of loyal supporters, so I can see where any studio would have ambivalent thoughts about continued production. People with negative opinions often speak them louder and always get more attention, media-wise, than those who may like a show. Normal fans don't go online and try and combat the vehement postings of those who hate, in this case, ENT. With that being said...
The outporing of love from those who genuinely cared for the show, upon cancellation, was beyond anything I had seen or noticed before. If that love and support had been behind it so vocally since day one, we wouldn't have faced cancellation at all, most likely. But we who loved ENT were faced the difficulty of our own community excising and ridiculing us, coupled with some decisions creatively (internally) with ENT's direction that were only fueling the fire. I know that many people who hate ENT feel that it was just the lowest of the low and that they weren't ever going to accept anything about it, it was crap on their boots, the writers were pandering to the lowest common denominator, or just recycling old, tired ideas. What about all the great things about the show - for me, to many to list - (and I'm sure everyone who appreciates the show would list different things anyway.)
It's everyone's right love or hate what they will, but many science fiction fans hated ENT right out of existance, many tried to hate it right out of the universe (ie. erase it from canon.) It's almost 4 years later and people are still waiting in the wings to go after anyone who says the wrong thing praising ENT.
No matter what, It was by no means the bottom of the barrel when it came to science fiction on TV. It had a lot of potential - and though it took a while (too long, obviously) it began to realize that potential as it found it's voice in later seasons. TNG was pretty bad in the beginning too, but because fans were starved for Trek, it was accepted. Enterprise got no slack whatsoever. It was nitpicked to death from day one.
I'm too young to have been around for the TOS campaigns. Enterprise was the first anti-cancellation campaign I ever joined and supported. It disappoints me that Les Moonves' contempt for the the show (only going by what I've read) and Paramount's desire to jettison Rick Berman from Star Trek (I think I would have a hard look at the man at the helm if I was reading the backlash from franchise fans that brewed on the internet about ENT - as well as the ratings decline) put a good show in an impossible position.
ENT was tons better than much of the drek on TV, no matter how you slice it, and having it replaced with reality show type bs was a kick in the teeth. I still maintain that ENT had a terrific cast (in fact, I feel most sorry for the cast when it's all said and done. They did, what in my opinion, was the best job anyone could with what they were given, and got zero respect.), a terrific support team (esp. VFX), and was shortchanged in promotion and ratings calculation. I don't think that, given the way the deck was stacked, and the previous writing and storyline direction issues that hurt the series from the beginning, that there would've been enough confidence in future seasons to allow them to proceed in a manner than still maintained the budget and kept the quality we expected and deserved. I wouldn't have wanted bastardized ENT in any way, shape or form.
So, to end my rambling. I would have loved 7 seasons, DEFINITELY. Would I have wanted 3 more status quo seasons without continuing to improve significantly beyond season 4, no way. I wanted to know Travis and Hoshi. I wanted to see the fleshing out of Starfleet, and see more starfleet ships and commanders and crews. I wanted to enjoy more of Vulcan and watch as they grew to be the people that fascinated me while viewing in the 80's and 90's. I wanted to see in the flesh much of what I knew (from reading what I'm sure most have read) was potentially coming up in the future on the series. For some reason - just reading that small list of story ideas makes me feel better. I wanted ENT, as it was just finding it's voice by it's cancellation, to scream during 5-7 .
Should it have had 7 seasons - definitely - if they'd have been continually improving creatively. The cast of Enterprise will always be top notch in my mind, and if they'd have had a powerful voice behind their continued journey for three more years - nothing would've made me happier on the entertainment side...
rhodeschroma.