I'm in Adelaide and know what you mean about the stigma. Probably part of the reason is that the series were always shown at outrageous times like 12 midnight. Most young people haven't had a chance to watch it.
You forget that the Australian TV networks
refused to show TNG, DS9, VOY and ENT in prime time because Paramount USA had pre-sold each series to CIC-Taft Aust. (aka Paramount Home Video Aust.) for monthly sell-thru release, two episodes per tape, on VHS!
Complete with a twelve-month video holdback. So it was doomed in prime time. The avid ST fans had already bought the shows on sell-thru, rented them from a video shop, or pirated them via the US.
I remember when Voyager started and it was on at 7ish in the evening.
You're lucky they tested it out in prime time in Adelaide! You wanted that they should keep it there, even though they were coming last in the ratings? The Nine Network hates not coming first.
Here was this new show with spaceships, aliens (losing lungs) and I was hooked. Within a couple of weeks it was relegated to late night timeslot.
Because... VOY wasn't as popular as TOS, TNG or DS9. The world over. It didn't rate in prime time in South Australia, so it went to a timeslot where the network could guarantee its advertisers they would win the timeslot.
I'm from Melbourne, and 27. Been a Trekkie my entire life. I know what you mean about the stigma. Down here in Oz, Trek seems to be taboo.
I'm 50, and have been a Star Trek fan since the age of 21. I ran a club of 1000 people and the "stigma" is in your own mind.
I'm fairly sure that the Melbourne club, Austrek, is still thriving and unconcerned about "stigma".
Star Trek fans are not treated any differently to other groups of passionate fans. And that includes footie freaks, who dress up in their team's colours and paint their faces, Manga and Anime fans who do cos play, people who groom dogs for "Best in Show" (seen that movie?), goths, emos, and any number of groups.
Even the new film doesn't seem to have generated nearly as much excitement here as it did elsewhere in the world.
Gosh, maybe that explains the recent Sydney Symphony Orchestra, this month, playing music from the movie to packed houses, at the Sydney Opera House, 2000 people at a time!
There was plenty of ST movie excitement around here in Sydney. And the world premiere, to boot! It's my understanding Melbourne had several gala openings for ST XI, and the movie got national exposure on many TV chat shows. What else did you
expect to see? A float in the Moomba Parade? (Austrek have already done that one, IIRC.)
i had a hard time when Nine were (I guess you can call it) showing Voyager at anywhere between 12am and 1am, with those 1800 number commercials inserted in the adbreaks. They really treated Trek like garbage.
All of the episodes had already been out on VHS for twelve months before. What else could they have done with it? Why are 1880 ads any worse than ads for soap powder? From my understanding, late-night VOY got similar ratings to late-night TNG, so it probably got more viewers than it would have got failing dismally in prime time. Remember that VOY and ENT rated poorly in the US, too.
So, are you a member of Austrek? Do you support their fan-run events?