So, with the news about the Georgiou show, I'm reminded of something I read back in 2017 regarding Kurtzman - the "new Berman" of the series.
For some reason, Kurtzman seems to be under the impression that modern TV must be serialized - and modern serialized shows must be one thing and one thing only. At the same time, he recognizes that Trek historically included quite a good deal of different types of stories. In his recent comments he's made some odd statements (like people wrongly confusing Deep Space Nine and Voyager since they were on at the same time and looked similar) and kept reiterating the new Picard show will be dramatically different in tone.
Thus it seems like the "future of Trek" is clear. There will be a Trek for everyone, but each Trek will do one and only one thing. If you want comedy, go to Star Trek: Lower Decks. If you want a coming-of-age story, go to the Starfleet Academy series. If you want more cerebral Trek, watch Picard. If you are a kid, watch the new kids show.
I don't think this is an awful model to have from a fan standpoint. Lots of Treks with different flavors means we're very likely to enjoy some of them. But it seems like instead of targeting the modal fan and building 12 months of broadly popular Trek content, they're pursuing a bunch of new Trek projects which many Trekkies won't have much interest in seeing. Thus I'm not sure it's a smart idea from the standpoint of CBS All Access, which just wants our sweet, sweet subscription revenue.
At New York Comic Con, during the Star Trek: Discovery panel, Alex Kurtzman said something that I've been thinking about a lot. He said that you couldn't do "City on the Edge of Forever" now, because Kirk would have to spend a whole season mourning Edith Keeler.
For some reason, Kurtzman seems to be under the impression that modern TV must be serialized - and modern serialized shows must be one thing and one thing only. At the same time, he recognizes that Trek historically included quite a good deal of different types of stories. In his recent comments he's made some odd statements (like people wrongly confusing Deep Space Nine and Voyager since they were on at the same time and looked similar) and kept reiterating the new Picard show will be dramatically different in tone.
Thus it seems like the "future of Trek" is clear. There will be a Trek for everyone, but each Trek will do one and only one thing. If you want comedy, go to Star Trek: Lower Decks. If you want a coming-of-age story, go to the Starfleet Academy series. If you want more cerebral Trek, watch Picard. If you are a kid, watch the new kids show.
I don't think this is an awful model to have from a fan standpoint. Lots of Treks with different flavors means we're very likely to enjoy some of them. But it seems like instead of targeting the modal fan and building 12 months of broadly popular Trek content, they're pursuing a bunch of new Trek projects which many Trekkies won't have much interest in seeing. Thus I'm not sure it's a smart idea from the standpoint of CBS All Access, which just wants our sweet, sweet subscription revenue.