Okay let's see if we can get this boat back on course!
Here are the major stumbling blocks to Trek on TV:
1. CBS doesn't care about space opera or even about sci fi.
2. The only places other than CBS where Trek might end up on TV are CW and Showtime. Neither are a good fit for a mainstream franchise that skews male (CW doesn't want male; Showtime doesn't want mainstream).
3. Space opera in general is dead on TV. Name an existing successful space opera series. I can only think of one: The Clone Wars. Being animated, and being produced by deep-pockets Lucasfilm, TCW isn't a good template for live-action Star Trek on TV (although its success might argue for a new animated series).
Your requirements are not stringent enough. Plenty of shows have died regardless of writing quality or aesthetics. The general TV audience won't know or care anything about Trek history and won't know what you mean by "the Nemesis, the Xindis and the Nexus."Anyway, I believe that a few premisses needs to be estabilished if the show waits to have a chance:
- a good writer;
- history sequence and less holes in the scripts;
- a beautifull ship;
- to forget the Nemesis, the Xindis and the Nexus. They are examples of what don´t have to be done.
Here are the major stumbling blocks to Trek on TV:
1. CBS doesn't care about space opera or even about sci fi.
2. The only places other than CBS where Trek might end up on TV are CW and Showtime. Neither are a good fit for a mainstream franchise that skews male (CW doesn't want male; Showtime doesn't want mainstream).
3. Space opera in general is dead on TV. Name an existing successful space opera series. I can only think of one: The Clone Wars. Being animated, and being produced by deep-pockets Lucasfilm, TCW isn't a good template for live-action Star Trek on TV (although its success might argue for a new animated series).