The "core SG audience" is, by definition, the audience that's sticking with SG:U. Estimating it as any larger is wishful thinking.
I could never like show.
I think that's a good sign that it's time for you to move on. Bye!
Mr Awe
And since you like advice, I think you need to get a grip, sir.
The "core SG audience" is, by definition, the audience that's sticking with SG:U. Estimating it as any larger is wishful thinking.
I think that's a good sign that it's time for you to move on. Bye!
Mr Awe
And since you like advice, I think you need to get a grip, sir.
I'm just saying, if you could never like this show, don't bother with it. Why do I need to get "a grip" for something a common sensical as that?!
The "core SG audience" is, by definition, the audience that's sticking with SG:U. Estimating it as any larger is wishful thinking.
What I'm trying to say is that there is number of people that are more than willing to watch Stargate and then there is a greater number of people that seem to enjoy Sci Fi realism. In the case of Stargate that number is at most 3.5 million as the Atlantis pilot showed the greater audience was shown by Battlestar Galactica who had pilot numbers in excess of that.
What I'm trying to say is that there is number of people that are more than willing to watch Stargate and then there is a greater number of people that seem to enjoy Sci Fi realism. In the case of Stargate that number is at most 3.5 million as the Atlantis pilot showed the greater audience was shown by Battlestar Galactica who had pilot numbers in excess of that.
This is something like the difference between the core and potential TV audiences for Star Trek.
At its greatest TV success, there were 12 to 13 million people in the U.S. who watched it regularly. When it contracted to the core audience, it was bumping along at (and sometimes below) 3 million.
It looks like the core Stargate audience is about 1 million.
Alright, you really need to knock that off. Just because you don't like SGU doesn't mean the ones that do like it have low/ poor standards. It's getting annoying....but they have standards too and won't waste their time with SGU.
Alright, you really need to knock that off. Just because you don't like SGU doesn't mean the ones that do like it have low/ poor standards. It's getting annoying....but they have standards too and won't waste their time with SGU.
"Core" versus "hard core" is a meaningless semantic distinction used to press an unprovable point.
If they don't stick it out, they're not "core audience."
Core fandom shows up for a Nationals home game because the Nationals are playing.
What I'm trying to say is that there is number of people that are more than willing to watch Stargate and then there is a greater number of people that seem to enjoy Sci Fi realism. In the case of Stargate that number is at most 3.5 million as the Atlantis pilot showed the greater audience was shown by Battlestar Galactica who had pilot numbers in excess of that.
This is something like the difference between the core and potential TV audiences for Star Trek.
At its greatest TV success, there were 12 to 13 million people in the U.S. who watched it regularly. When it contracted to the core audience, it was bumping along at (and sometimes below) 3 million.
It looks like the core Stargate audience is about 1 million.
"Core" versus "hard core" is a meaningless semantic distinction used to press an unprovable point.
If they don't stick it out, they're not "core audience."
Core fandom shows up for a Nationals home game because the Nationals are playing.
Unfortunantlyl you can't just strip the label of Core Fan because a large number have standards and aren't going to stick around while the true fanatics hang on tooth and nail.
If you do that you'll never recognize when you're loosing your "Core" group...you'll continually assume that core group was smaller then you originally thought and like Trek Producers believe...they thought they had burned out the franchise when that was far from the case. They merely failed to continually entertain those Core Fans.
"Core" versus "hard core" is a meaningless semantic distinction used to press an unprovable point.
If they don't stick it out, they're not "core audience."
Core fandom shows up for a Nationals home game because the Nationals are playing.
Unfortunantlyl you can't just strip the label of Core Fan because a large number have standards and aren't going to stick around while the true fanatics hang on tooth and nail.
they thought they had burned out the franchise when that was far from the case. They merely failed to continually entertain those Core Fans.
"Core" versus "hard core" is a meaningless semantic distinction used to press an unprovable point.
If they don't stick it out, they're not "core audience."
Core fandom shows up for a Nationals home game because the Nationals are playing.
Unfortunantlyl you can't just strip the label of Core Fan because a large number have standards and aren't going to stick around while the true fanatics hang on tooth and nail.
If you do that you'll never recognize when you're loosing your "Core" group...you'll continually assume that core group was smaller then you originally thought and like Trek Producers believe...they thought they had burned out the franchise when that was far from the case. They merely failed to continually entertain those Core Fans.
The fact is, you're describing a group that cannot be quantitatively defined, and it's therefore meaningless in a discussion of ratings and financial viability for a TV show. "Core fans" could be an amorphous blob of 10 people or 10 million. There is no way to know, and so they don't matter. There are only two kinds of people that matter from a business standpoint: those who watch your show, and those who don't.
"Core" versus "hard core" is a meaningless semantic distinction used to press an unprovable point.
If they don't stick it out, they're not "core audience."
Core fandom shows up for a Nationals home game because the Nationals are playing.
Unfortunantlyl you can't just strip the label of Core Fan because a large number have standards and aren't going to stick around while the true fanatics hang on tooth and nail.
Sure you can, if you want the term to have any meaning beyond some kind of odd self-congratulation.
they thought they had burned out the franchise when that was far from the case. They merely failed to continually entertain those Core Fans.
You're just rationalizing events to fit a weak argument, here. What Paramount eventually realized was that core fandom was not big enough to support Star Trek and that this fandom would come along for the ride if they simply recreated Trek into something that a whole lot of non-trekkies would enjoy. And that worked just fine.
Unfortunantlyl you can't just strip the label of Core Fan because a large number have standards and aren't going to stick around while the true fanatics hang on tooth and nail.
If you do that you'll never recognize when you're loosing your "Core" group...you'll continually assume that core group was smaller then you originally thought and like Trek Producers believe...they thought they had burned out the franchise when that was far from the case. They merely failed to continually entertain those Core Fans.
The fact is, you're describing a group that cannot be quantitatively defined, and it's therefore meaningless in a discussion of ratings and financial viability for a TV show. "Core fans" could be an amorphous blob of 10 people or 10 million. There is no way to know, and so they don't matter. There are only two kinds of people that matter from a business standpoint: those who watch your show, and those who don't.
With all do respect but it has meaning in the business perview. That is the idea behind targeted advertising and marketing. Understanding your maximum potential vs what you've already pulled in. SGU was pulling in 1 million people. If the number of people just willing to watch compelling Sci Fi from what just BSG pilot was 5.2 million then 1 million isn't tapping your audience very well. If SGA started off at 3.5 million on it's pilot then 1 million isn't even tapping the Stargate audience well.
People's tastes change over time, so it makes absolutely no sense to assume that because 3.5 million people watched your show 5 years ago and only 1 million watch it now, there is some magical way to get those 2.5 million back. It could be they just plain aren't interested anymore and that there is nothing that will bring them back. Marketers have no way of knowing either way so they don't attempt to target these people.
^^ Indeed. Franchise fatigue syndrom exists, in part, because people just plain get tired of something over time. They want something new. Even if the quality of your show remains the same season after season, you may well lose viewers. The trick is to change things up enough so that you keep it fresh. But, that is very, very difficult to do over a long time.
Mr Awe
And we should also avoid using ratings to gauge a show's quality. Terrific shows can get godawful ratings. Barrel-scraping horseshit can be #1 in the Nielsens. People just like to use ratings to validate their own opinions of a show.
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