Two points. First, just because a whole bunch of people like something and "that's the way it is," that doesn't mean that it's actually any good. This is especially true in this modern age when utter drivel often passes for good entertainment or art. That is not to say that this film is actually not any good. It may simply be that I, and however many others, do not like it because of what it's done to the characters we have grown to care about. If that's so, then that is indeed the way it is, but it doesn't mean that folks can't feel disappointed or saddened by it.
Second, Battlestar Galactica was nothing approaching the level of what Star Trek was. Battlestar Galactica was a show that didn't make it past its first season, and which failed all the more when it was attempted to be brought back in 1980. As much as many think it was a classic, it was a failure and so the idea of taking it and redoing it in a different way makes sense. Star Trek, on the other hand, is a 43 year old cultural icon which has been successful enough over the years to produce 4 spin-offs and 10 feature films. That's a far, far stretch from the failure that BSG was. It's just not the same thing.
Please note that I utterly reject the notion that the franchise was dead and the only way to bring it back was to do a reboot. It was entirely possible, as I and others have said above, to do all of the things that have made this film generate such excitement without creating an alternate universe. However all that said, that's not really my point in differentiating BSG from Star Trek. The point I was making there is simply that it's much more reasonable "ethically" speaking to redo something like BSG which had a scant few episodes and never really established itself, than to redo Star Trek which has such a long and honored history to it. (Ethically is in quotes because it's not the perfect word. I'm not trying to lift changing Star Trek to the level of morality or ethics. It's just the closest word I can think of presently).
I suppose that's true. Music has sucked since Gabriel left Genesis.
Or The Beatles broke up.
Or Elvis died.
Or the Big Bands disbanded.
Or Mozart went out of style.
The public - and not you or I - are the arbiters of "good." What you actually mean is what is something is not good for
you. Your opinion is your own... and carries only the weight of your opinion.
But wait - I thought BSG was a 70's gem? Is it no longer so, so quickly? Do all those Dirk Benedict/Lorne Greene lovers now have a lesser right than you to grieve? All that change in a half an hour... Or does it just help to backpedal and distance yourself from quantifiable proof of positive results in a reboot?
As to Star Trek... Don't play games - I've been watching since you were in diapers.
Three years. Not 43. And that includes "What is Brain?," "Gunfight at the OK Corral," and all the other lovelies of the third season. Let's not mistake output for legacy. After that, you get a viable eight hours: II-IV, and V.
The 43 years you herald belong to me. I was in New York and Philadelphia in the earliest conventions, I was out there pushing for the space shuttle to be named "Enterprise," I have Lincoln Enterprise's first catalog, I watched Genesis II, Spectre and Questor when they ran, I waited on Phase II, I sat in the theater on that horrible December night when STTMP premiered... You don't get to claim direction on my legacy. Just whatever part of it you had.
And, at the moment, your direction seems to be a minority.
There's another 43 years out there, waiting. The fans held the ship together for the past years, and the fans will hold together the next. And there is no cosmic law that they must be the same fans. In fact, they won't be, unless science suspends old age. No matter what you think of things that aren't "good" for you, it's what is good for the masses that survives. And, as time turns, maybe what is good for the masses turns back to us. I would say you just need to wait it out... but neither you nor I have any choice.