For the record: I started reading comics in 1986, then stopped in 2011. So I'm not really up-to-date.
So, unless those years are just coincidence, I'm guessing you started with the Crisis (or perhaps
Dark Knight?), and stopped with the "New 52"? Pretty glaring contrast between a well-executed reboot and a badly executed one. The latter almost drove me away from comics, as well.
I agree with you that the Borg are the more memorable to general audiences of the time.
Perhaps, but they're also a "force of nature" type villain. To deal with them properly in any "final" sense, you need something on the scale of the
Destiny novel trilogy... and that's not going to happen on film. What Picard needs for a closing bookend story is something that suits his character, a
thinking man's opponent... and the Romulans do fit that bill. Although they're not the only ones...
To be honest, there is no reason why they couldn't have Andrew Robinson return as Garak and Picard prevent a Cardassian coup or something too, and blend aspects of DS9 into a Picard story
...this, for instance, could be really fascinating as well. In fact, it's kind of a shame we've never seen these two characters on screen together. (Of course, I'd love for them to pick up the thread from the novels that Garak is now Castellan of the Cardassian Union...)
The movies make good money, but that’s all they do. None of the ancillary stuff that say the marvel or Star Wars, or even the Dc, universe manages. Those are markers of success for SF franchises these days.
As we're talking about "cultural impact" and not just artistic or commercial success, I suppose you have a point here. I'd be curious about the relative sales for Pocket of TOS-based vs. TNG-based Trek novels. (Actually, given that someone somewhere is clearly standing in the way of renewing the license for Trek novels, after a nearly 40-year run, I'd be curious about the sales
overall for Trek novels. But that way lies a different discussion...)
he got a set of action figures...but they lay forgotten while Star Wars does its thing. As it ever was....except when TNG had a toy range. Then those figures were everywhere. In the olden days.
This aspect, I don't quite get. No question that the Star Wars PTB have been geniuses at toy marketing over the years, but even when I was a kid and it was all new, I just didn't get the
point of all those little plastic action figures and whatnot. I definitely never collected them. I prefer "ancillary" products that still involve a
story of some kind.
But this is all just ‘should Trek move forward, or forever reboot and orbit the nut that is TOS’ argument. ... My point is that that you can’t slice TOS from the TNG era, or vice versa, because the TNG era, and it’s success, is integral to the franchises existence...
I don't think those two things are necessarily in opposition. TNG is an integral part of the larger Trek "franchise," yes, but the core of the franchise has always been TOS.
Consider Sherlock Holmes. Over the decades the character has been developed in every possible way. Sequels and prequels and interquels and "lost tales," adaptations and modernizations and crossovers and reimaginings and genderswap versions and more, in every medium from books to comics to stageplays to movies to TV... often multiple versions competing at the same time, since thanks to the magic of public domain Holmes isn't a monolithic "franchise" controlled by some corporation and is free to evolve in every direction at once. And much of it is wonderful. And yet, despite all that, the
core of the Holmes mythos, its reliably beating heart, remains the canon of 56 short stories and four novels written by Conan Doyle... nothing more and nothing less, and that's what it will always remain.
This is the beauty about the Trek IP: It's fluid. It suports lots and lots of different versions. ... TNG proved the Star Trek universe itself is as much a playground for new characters and stories.
I do wish the creators would realize that a bit more. "Crew of bridge officers on a ship at the frontier" is a pretty flexible format itself when done right, but it can and does get tired after a while, and there are so many
other possibilities to explore!...
Literally all people I know that are significantly younger than me that are Trek fans - started out by watching the JJTrek movie. That was their gateway drug.
Interesting. You don't specify what you mean by "significantly younger than you," but FWIW if I were to say the same I'd have to say the gateway drug was VOY. I know a lot of millennials, people currently about 18-35 — the key demo for marketers, let us note — and as I discover more of them who are into Trek, they repeatedly cite VOY as the show that hooked them as kids. I personally can't quite grasp how VOY on its own merits could turn
anyone into a fan, but there you have it, nonetheless.
(It's also interesting that quite a lot of them haven't heard of DSC, and of those who have quite a few haven't watched it. CBSAA seems to be a very effective bushel basket under which to hide a light.)
See, for me, the JJ films didn’t have that impact in those around me that are younger. Voyager did for the now early twenties crowd.
Yep, exactly. This.
It's really incredible how many fan think that Star Trek is or should be made for them specifically.
I'm surprised you find it surprising that people like what they like and don't like what they don't like, and have a sentimental attachment to the former but not the latter. Why should anyone care about the fortunes of a corporate IP "franchise" that's producing material one doesn't like?...
I'm sorry, but other than much of the writing, and the performances of Katsulas and Jurasik, nothing much about Babylon 5 stands the test of time.
Wow, I ordinarily agree with you so much that this statement really shocks me! I think
B5 not only stands up admirably to re-watching (I've watched it beginning-to-end more than once), but arguably stands out as the single best SF series in TV history. And seriously, you can't say "other than the writing," because the writing is what
made the show. What JMS accomplished there was and is amazing. Not only did
B5 pioneer long-form serialization and nail the landing better than any show since, not only did it do slow-build reveals and dramatic payoffs that really worked, but it was chock-full of the kind of wonderfully intricate politics and shifting allegiances and evolving characters that characterized, say, the early seasons of
Game of Thrones (before it went past the books).
Ah, and there's the rub isn't it? Everything takes on political overtones today, whether it's intentional or not, thanks to the internet.
Can't argue with that, and I hate that situation with a passion.
It's not just the internet; it's really nothing new, and hardly worth hating. The personal
is political, as the saying goes, and always has been. Politics is interwoven into every aspect of life. In any era, the only people who claim they prefer being "apoltical" are those who happen to enjoy the maximum advantages of the current
status quo, and therefore prefer to think of it as a natural state of affairs rather than a constructed one, and avoid rocking the boat.
As the inscription on Thor's hammer, Mjolnir, reads: "Whosoever holds this hammer, if he be worthy, shall possess the power of Thor." (If Thor were created today I am reasonably certain "he" would be "they")
Eek! I'm as progressive as the next person (actually much more so, on average), but political sensitivities should never be an excuse for bad grammar!

(And as
@Jinn helpfully pointed out, when you're dealing with a magic hammer, it's covered anyway.)
My very existence would be accused of being part of an "SJW" agenda if I were put in a movie: a half-Iranian, atheist, mostly women friends, and I have "long" hair, so I must be one of those "damn hippies".
Seriously though, anyone who's opposed to "SJWs" and yet somehow conflates them with "hippies" has political sensibilities lodged 50 years in the past, so...
...umm, then again, most people like that
do, I suppose. So never mind, point taken!...
Did the Alien franchise have some sort of agenda when they had a women survive after all the manly Marines had their asses kicked?
Not necessarily originally... the screenplay for
Alien did specify that most of the roles could be played by someone of either gender, and Ridley Scott has always worked well with strong female characters, but still the producers were originally looking for a male to cast as Ripley before they eventually discovered Sigourney Weaver. But after that, in the sequels?... Yes, it's hard to argue that it was anything but a deliberate agenda — especially in
Aliens — and hey, it was one that
worked!...