Re: A fascinating project..IDW "reimagines" TOS episodes, writing by O
Up until a couple of years ago I was into comics, frequenting a comic shop, and got to know quite a few folks there including the owner. He attested to what I could already see: that very few youths today bother with comics. His customers were ranging from some mid twenties and up, and most were in their thirties, forties and into fifties.
Same here. Most folks in my local comic shop are middle aged men 9and older) who've been buying comics since they were kids in the silver age. And while I was being told how valuable a comic collection could be when I was collecting in the 70s and 80s, I'm now told collections are almost worthless, because the market has been fading for years.
Last year I asked the woman who owns the shop if she'd be interested in buying my vast collection. She said "Look around you." I did. I was the only customer.
Comics used to be worth something because of their rarity. When comics were in their heyday they were also seen as disposable. I'm sure more than one or two folks came home from college or were visiting home after leaving the nest to find (to their horror) Mom and Dad and given away, thrown out or sold their collections for nothing at a yard sale. Any issues surviving those years were understandably considered collectibles particularly if they were in good condition. But in the '90s the comics companies started mass producing these things right around the same time as readership and distribution was shrinking. And it was made worse by publications of issues with "special" covers to convince folks these things were collectible. Previous comics were collectible because they were
old and
rare but beyond that there was nothing special about them other than they hadn't been trashed. The newly published "collectibles" and "specials" were just worthless.
Like you,
Forbin, I don't know how many people came in asking the owner if he'd be interested in their '80s and '90s comics only to be told they weren't worth anything. They had to be early to mid '70s or older to have any value. And that was in the '90s. Maybe today not even those matter anymore.
Trades, as wonderful as they are, also killed the back issue market. DC and Marvel and others learned they could get paid twice for the same stories by publishing trade collections. For the customer you could often buy a trade for less than tracking down all the old back issues
plus often the trades had no advertising in them---nice bonus. But now comic shop owners were swamped with back issues hardly anyone wanted anymore.
And all this was going on just as the new youth were discovering video and computer gaming and other online activities. Looking back it's as if the comics companies and distributors were hellbent on self-destruction in the face of massive disinterest from a youth market they could no longer count on.
I grew to hate cross title tie-in stories and multiple covers and more than two titles for a character---how many damned titles of
Spider-Man or
Batman or
Superman do you need?

And I also got tired of going through the
Previews catalogue every month to figure out whether something was worth ordering. And the medium itself had become crap. Once a splash page was used occasionally for a particularly dramatic moment in a story and/or for the first page to grab attention. The splash page became evermore common and sometimes pages were little more than three or four panels. Contained within a mere twenty-two pages I was paying more and more for less and less. Gradually I let titles go until I was only looking at trades and then I walked away all together.
I had enjoyed comics, but they were no longer the easy and affordable entertainment they had once been...unless your reading list was very small.
Once in awhile I dip my toe back in. Last year I picked up the trades from some of John Byrne's
Star Trek stories from IDW. Having frequented Byrne's website it's apparent he has no love for ST09 and I doubt he'd want to be involved in writing stories set in that continuity. Beyond Byrne (who obviously gets TOS) I haven't seen anyone or anything else Trek from IDW that I'd bother with.
Before this the last Trek comic that interested me was Marvel's
Star Trek Early Voyages. And beyond the first half dozen issues or so even that started to wane before they killed it off.
What would pique my interest might be a straight-to-dvd animation of the original continuity in the Pike era, the Kirk era or perhaps even TNG. This year we'll be getting the straight-to-dvd adaptation of
Batman: Year One---
man I want to see that! Maybe this is the sort of thing to do to interest a broad general audience. I talk with a lot of younger folks and these DCU animated films (and Marvel) are something that interest the, much more than comics.
They could either do original stories and/or adaptations of previously published stories in comic or print form.