Here's what we need to do: convince Moonvies that Trek on TV is a better thing to spend their time and energy on, than yet another iteration of CSI.
CSI's benefit is that it's safe and CBS knows it can succeed with it.
But here's what Trek offers: a hope for the future. CBS' audience is aging right out of the demo advertisers care about. Trek has just demonstrated once again that it has appeal to a broad, young-skewing audience.
And sci fi is pretty successful on TV. It has the handicap of attracting too many time-shifting type viewers (who advertisers discount because they tend not to watch as many ads) but any new sci fi show does tend to make a splash at least initially. Sci fi gets you buzz, and makes your audience more youthful. That has to have some value to CBS.
And then there's all that new media jazz. It's very embryonic now, about 1% of viewership, but it's only going to grow. Star Trek is well positioned to take advantage of those new media.
LOST is probably the most successful SCIFI show in the 2000s (unless you count Hannity). So it can be done...
rob
Lost is an outlier. There have been many failed attempts to mimic Lost and they've all flopped. Moonvies isn't going to be convinced by that argument.
There's also the problem that Lost isn't space opera. The sci fi that works on TV is non-space-opera, another mark against Trek.
And why would Moonvies - or anyone - think that idea would attract a bigger audience than the CSI spinoff they could air instead? That is the hurdle Trek must clear to air on CBS.
Also consider that if the show is on CBS, its most likely audience (the ones who will be advertised to) is the CBS audience, which has demonstrated zero interest in sci fi. Sure, other networks' audiences can be reached but networks value synergy between programs - a lead-in show that can deliver its audience intact to the next time slot. There's nothing on the CBS lineup that is remotely compatible with Trek.
And definitely do not dis the new movie in your correspondence. Abrams is now the God of Star Trek because he made shitloads of money, which is all that ever really counts in Hollywood. The only reason Moovies would even consider a Trek series is to ride Abrams' coattails.
No offense, xortex, but studios don't take unsolicited television series proposals. When they want to start a series, they go find a producer/writer with whom they already have a working relationship or who has a track record. You're not likely to ever get a response.
What could, remotely, work is for fans not to send ideas (because let's face it, the pro's can come up with dozens of perfectly good ideas and don't need our help) but to simply state that we would watch Star Trek on TV. I don't watch anything on CBS but I would start if Star Trek were on CBS. That is really the only thing networks want to hear - that you will watch the show and therefore watch the ads that pay their salaries.
Let's focus less on the content and more on the business aspects of getting Trek back on TV. There's all sorts of content that can work. The business problem is far trickier.