Seriously, I think they shouldn't have used Quark on the promo material.
They did, at least around here on occasion when they were advertising all the 'bald aliens' a local channel would feature (B5 and Earth: Final Conflict were included in that promo).Seriously, I think they shouldn't have used Quark on the promo material.
That said, I stuck with it and liked it much better once the Dominion was brought in. Now DS9 is my second favorite series behind TOS and Damar is my favorite character in Trek period. Deep Space has a great deal going for it in terms of plot and character development. An excellent series that had a great deal to say.
Not enough of the people who sampled the show liked it well enough to stick with it; it's not more complicated than that.
It's probably a little more complicated than that. A more fractured audience than when Star Trek: The Next Generation premiered and a less ideal time slot certainly seem likely contributing factors. But, yes, simply put, not enough people who sampled the show stuck with it.
When you refer to a "fractured fan base," that's addressing the interest level of people who were viewers of previous Star Trek.
"A less ideal time slot" would be relevant, that's true, but it's hard to measure that because every station that showed DS9 and TNG had a free choice (within an eight-day window) about where to schedule the shows - they were in first-run syndication and there was no network involved.
I tried to have people post something like this but a lot of people 'round these forums were not first-run viewers. Now, it seems unlikely DS9 would be moved around season to season all across its run. DS9 was the 1st-3rd best first-run syndicated series (that wasn't a game show or judge show) all the time, so it got the most choice timeslots for syndicated shows (unless it was underperforming in a market). It was probably moved once, perhaps even twice, but it's going to be more stable than being bounced around season to season (like some lower rated shows were, but those didn't last too long). In my tv market back in the '90s, syndicated shows usually weren't shifted around wildly, though they were in the big mid 90s network realignment.It's hard to tell what was the norm, given the way the syndication market worked. I wonder how easy it would be to find out this information, outside of anecdotal evidence?
I think the premise is why it didn't catch on. DS9 is a very different show from TNG and not everyone who liked TNG was going to like DS9. And right off the bat DS9 assumes you've seen TNG. It's possible to come into DS9 with no previous knowledge of Star Trek but you'll be at a disadvantage and novices generally didn't want to be bothered with it, so DS9 was largely stuck with TNG fans who were interested in both series.
That's just the first season. In later seasons, you'd have TNG fans who had lost interest in Star Trek after having watched it so long, which would affect only DS9 and VOY since TNG was already over by this point; and you'd have the Roddenberry fans who didn't like the direction DS9 was taking by heading into the Dominion War. I remember complaints about that from message boards in the '90s.
This, along with time slots, led to DS9's audience being halved by the end of the first season and quartered by the end of the series.
If one of the biggest complaints for not watching it originally was "They're not on a Starship".wait, it's "narrow-mindedness" that DS9 didn't capture a larger audience? That's a pretty arrogant view.
I like DS9, but I don't think that people who were previous Trek fans but couldn't get into DS9 are "narrow-minded."
I tried to have people post something like this but a lot of people 'round these forums were not first-run viewers. Now, it seems unlikely DS9 would be moved around season to season all across its run. DS9 was the 1st-3rd best first-run syndicated series (that wasn't a game show or judge show) all the time, so it got the most choice timeslots for syndicated shows (unless it was underperforming in a market). It was probably moved once, perhaps even twice, but it's going to be more stable than being bounced around season to season (like some lower rated shows were, but those didn't last too long). In my tv market back in the '90s, syndicated shows usually weren't shifted around wildly, though they were in the big mid 90s network realignment.It's hard to tell what was the norm, given the way the syndication market worked. I wonder how easy it would be to find out this information, outside of anecdotal evidence?
Well, TNG Season 1-3 had ratings in the 9-11 point range, not exactly weak ratings (and Season 2... I wonder what the across the board affect of the writers strike was on ratings. TNG premiered in late Nov, missing Nov sweeps and aired several episodes in late June and well into July, which would drag down the overall season average compared to an Oct-May + 2 in June season). And I would not constitute something which, even by your standards of getting big in Season 4, was a hit for 4 seasons "a fad". Fads last 1 season, 2 season tops. When you get upward to 4 or 5 years, calling it a fad is a stretch. It has enduring appeal. And TNG's ratings grew over Season 3; BOBW didn't magically get it a huge audience, it was building that audience gradually over many episodes. BOBW did get it hype (despite Part 1 having unremarkable ratings vs. the rest of the Spring 90 episodes) and that would help to get more people tuning in in Season 4, but the big trend started before BOBW.DS9 didn't capture a large audience because Trek has a limited fanbase to begin with.
TNG success was due to it being a fad.
TNG itself didn't get big until "BOBW", one of the first cliffhangers to rival "Who's Shot J.R.?"
It was due to that, TNG gained popularity. That's what got the casual audience to watch.
Don't forget some Trek fans absolutely hated Voyager, even those who weren't fans of DS9.The casual audience didn't give a damn about DS9 because they were never core Trek fans to begin with.
The numbers Voyager pulled are probably closer to how big the actual true core fanbase of Trek is.
DS9 did lose the #1 in syndication (among non-game/talk/judge shows) to Hercules, then Xena, and DS9 was usually in 3rd, though took back #1 for a while in 98-99. That fad might explain lower ratings in 95 & 95-96, 96-97 (when Xena's ratings were growing) but it wouldn't explain DS9's declining ratings before then or when Herc/Xena/DS9 all had their ratings sliding. TNG did have a sizeable casual audience but the casuals certainly didn't just move on to Xena (you have a 1 season gap there and Xena's ratings were decent but not stellar in Season 1 [95-96]). Casuals don't move in a pack like that, they scatter and the "casual audience" following a show at any given time, particularly a hit, is assembled from all over the tv spectrum.No Trek spin off was ever going to re-capture the casual audience because they had moved onto the next fad, Xena. All Treks spin offs were doing at this point was running it into the ground hoping lightening would strike twice.
Well, there are DS9's ratings listed out there and one can determine when the overall cable ratings drain started if the whole syndicated market's ratings were averaged. Has anyone at places like Tv by the Numbers actually codify the season by season decline in broadcast tv ratings to get a sense of how long cable has been notably draining ratings and when that trend was accelerating.We're talking about tracking something like 200 markets over seven years - and for the assessment to mean anything we'd need fairly extensive season-by-season ratings data to go with that (did a particular time shift increase or decrease the show's performance in a certain market - otherwise we're still making big assumptions).
which episode did sisqo go back in time?
He didn't actually go back in time, but in Far Beyond the Stars Sisko was given a vision by the Prophets where he took on the role of Benny Russell, a struggling black science-fiction writer in the 1950swhich episode did sisqo go back in time?
He didn't actually go back in time, but in Far Beyond the Stars Sisko was given a vision by the Prophets where he took on the role of Benny Russell, a struggling black science-fiction writer in the 1950swhich episode did sisqo go back in time?
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