Would it really matter if the next Trek series were on linear TV?

Discussion in 'Future of Trek' started by jefferiestubes8, Oct 19, 2010.

  1. jefferiestubes8

    jefferiestubes8 Commodore Commodore

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    Since most TrekBBS members here are actual fans of the show would it really matter if the next Trek series were on linear TV?
    Would you be willing to pay for video-on-demand rental via cable, or season-pass subscription via subscription-based Youtube, subscription-based Hulu, Netflix if it were available instead of watching it on cable or broadcast television?
    Yes obviously CBS Television would have to make a deal with many distribution outlets but it is possible to buck the regular TV trend and locking into a TV channel in the USA.

    I'm talking about streaming or viewing via download rental, not purchasing to own like Blu-ray/DVD full season or iTunes/Amazon digital file to own (even though iTunes usually has new TV episodes to download to purchase the next day).

    as I mentioned in the provider for new Trek series as original series download thread the idea that there are enough Trek fans to support a new show via a subscription to a series.

    In this changing media landscape are you willing to pay to first-time view new episodes? Yes/No,
    How much for episode rental/streaming?

    related:
    Poll:What channel should a new Trek TV series be on?
     
  2. AviTrek

    AviTrek Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    Lets put some numbers here. An episode of Enterprise costs about $1.5m. Between distribution costs, and profits for everyone you probably need at least $3m in revenue/episode. By the end, Enterprise was only getting 3m viewers. Apple just set a rental price/episode of $1. Do you think you can get every viewer to agree to pay for what they were watching for free?

    I'd be willing to pay $1/episode, and I'm sure a lot of people on this board would too. But until the nature of the TV market changes dramatically, you're just not going to get 3+ million people to agree to pay for each show.
     
  3. Shatnertage

    Shatnertage Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    I'd watch if it were part of my Netflix subscription, but it had better be The Wire good for me to pay per episode.
     
  4. jefferiestubes8

    jefferiestubes8 Commodore Commodore

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    This is what I'm really getting at as mentioned here.

    If Hulu premium or Youtube premium or Netflix decides to incorporate an extra subscription fee for a Trek series could it be funded and work as a business model?
    Even if not an extra fee could they distribute a Trek series within the USA under a subscription model similar to HBO & Sirius XM [full-time channel Howard 100 extra fee].
     
  5. Temis the Vorta

    Temis the Vorta Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    If I couldn't watch it on TV I aleady pay for, I'd wait for DVDs thru Netflix. I already pay enough for TV and I'm not adding another dime. I can get everything I want thru my cable or Netflix.
     
  6. robtclements

    robtclements Lieutenant Red Shirt

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    I'd pay to see a show i liked (ie, not anything by JJA); but we're talking a company which couldn't see the logic behind straight-to-DVD titles when it was staring it in the face. Why does anyone think they'd get pay-to-view production?
     
  7. AviTrek

    AviTrek Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    Because pay-to-view would be spun as cutting edge future of TV, while DTV is bottom of the barrel content.
     
  8. jefferiestubes8

    jefferiestubes8 Commodore Commodore

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    Well said AviTrek.

    These days on Amazon.com's Video on Demand service offers a 'season pass'.
    some shows are $.94 while others are $2.84 per episode.

    Let's compare 2 other 60 minute dramas:
    iTunes offers Desperate Housewives for $.99 for a 48-hour rental,
    $2.99/episode for HD purchase
    or $49.99 for a season pass while another show Glee is $57.99 for a season pass.

    If the next Trek series were not broadcast on a linear TV channel in the USA I'm guessing the above would cost the same.
    Even if it were syndicated-only I think the price would still be the same cost as above.

    =====================
    Alternatively in the USA only if CBS Television were to make deals with most of the
    Top 10 Largest Cable Companies by subscribers
    * 1. Comcast Corporation
    * 2. Time Warner Cable, Inc.
    * 3. Cox Communications, Inc.
    * 4. Charter Communications, Inc.
    * 5. Cablevision Systems Corporation
    * 6. Bright House Networks LLC
    * 7. Mediacom Communications Corporation
    * 8. Suddenlink Communications
    * 9. Insight Communications Company, Inc.
    * 10. Cable One, Inc.
    DishNetwork
    DirectTV
    Verizon Fios
    AT&Ts U-verse
    for on-demand only distribution of the next Trek series
    It would then not need a linear TV channel even though CBS owns a number of channels.
    All CBS-owned channels could promo the show as video-on-demand only. Sort of like "pay-per-view" but allowing viewers to see the show at any time instead of at a particular time like a pay-per-view boxing match.
     
    Last edited: Oct 20, 2010
  9. robtclements

    robtclements Lieutenant Red Shirt

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    But it won't be, that's the point. When the studio can keep repackaging its back catalogue without spending a cent, why would it bother being inventive in financing new projects? I time-shifted Nemesis last night (it was only the 15th time the film has screened on .au pay TV this year). Can anyone else remember which film proved the franchise was dead when it crushed ST:N in the box office? Haven't seen that one on TV in years....

    If the Star Trek producers had had a quarter of the nous that the Stargate team had, we would have had several made-for-dvd titles, a mini-series or two, probably a whole slew of webisodes as well - instead we got years of nothing ending in a poor to middling, borderline offensive reboot. I paid to see that one to see Nimoy (& Pegg). I won't make that mistake again

    For the record, i'm a regular supporter of crowd-sourced financing. Can't see the networks experimenting with that, either - though if anyone pitches a DS9-based fan film, let me know
     
  10. Admiral Buzzkill

    Admiral Buzzkill Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    I'd find a way to watch it for free.
     
  11. AviTrek

    AviTrek Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    And because of people like Dennis Sci Fi is DOA.
     
  12. Admiral Buzzkill

    Admiral Buzzkill Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Uh-huh.

    If that's (ahem) true, is it because people who like entertainment other than "Sci Fi" are more willing to pay for it, or simply that there are so many more of them? Neither is much of an argument in favor of sf.
     
  13. YARN

    YARN Fleet Captain

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    I'd be willing to pay if I were allowed to download the episode.

    $1 per episode isn't bad. I don't think I would go higher than $3 per episode.

    At any rate, I'd like to see Trek back on a mainstream network before hoping for any schemes like these.
     
  14. Temis the Vorta

    Temis the Vorta Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    iirc, it was Maid in America with Jennifer Lopez.

    I remember it like it was yesterday. :rommie:
     
  15. robtclements

    robtclements Lieutenant Red Shirt

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    Almost the correct answer (it was actually called Maid in Manhattan). You win absolutely nothing....

    (I'm no Nemesis fan, by the way, though i thought Insurrection was badly underrated. But this explains why Paramount can afford to be so lazy - they're still making good money off what is generally considered a failure. Why be creative?)
     
  16. robtclements

    robtclements Lieutenant Red Shirt

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    Probably more due to the fact the things nerds like in SF - stories, characterisation, ever romance - aren't what studios want in SF - product placement, viciousness, expansive plastic surgery. I'd pay to see Stephen Fry as a Klingon - they want me to pay to see Will Ferrell as Jim-Luke Packard. It ain't happening

    This may (or may not be) good for SF. It's bad for the studios. I have more money to spend than kids & they ain't getting it
     
  17. Temis the Vorta

    Temis the Vorta Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    That disaster is what motivated their sorry asses to stop being so lazy, when they realized that they were frakking up a valuable franchise so badly that a dumbass Jennifer Lopez vehicle could beat them. Either that, or JJ Abrams just waltzed into their offices one day and offered to solve all their problems because he had a hankering to make a Star Trek flick.
     
  18. Admiral Buzzkill

    Admiral Buzzkill Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Uh - wha? That's got nothing to do with the entertainment industry on this planet. :lol:
     
  19. robtclements

    robtclements Lieutenant Red Shirt

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    Quite true. Which is why the US film industry is an expensive irrelevancy - it can't tell stories & can't make profits. Also why i'm actually happy there won't be a DS9 film. Rather nothing than a travesty

    Still think Fry would make a great Klingon, though. Don't you agree?
     
  20. jefferiestubes8

    jefferiestubes8 Commodore Commodore

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    Regarding Hulu's subscription-based offering Hulu Plus possibly offering a short-term promotional price of $4.99/month
    the L.A. Times mentions this week:
    So I guess even if a new Trek series weren't on a linear TV channel CBS Home Video would feel the same way?