• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

CBS files for two new trademarks: Star Trek Picard and...

Star Trek: Prodigy certainly sounds like it could be the Nickelodeon kids show.

Or a band name for some crude heavy metal-like songs that are for anybody except the kiddies! :devil:

Starfleet Academy is kind of a lazy name, and kind of shooting themselves in the foot if they wish to last more than four years.

True, but it worked for a video game... :D

Will kids be able to say "Prodigy"?:lol:

For every additional syllable used in a word, the statistically less likely it is for anyone under 30 to write or say it. :razz: Unless they're doing a "Young Wesley" show, but "Star Trek: The Prodigal Son" just lacks the pizazz... :guffaw:
 
Didn't stop shows like Buffy or 90201.

Buffy the Vampire Slayer was a description of the main character. 90201 is a zip code of the location of the show. Neither of them are tied to a scholastic location by name.

"Starfleet Academy" brings to mind the idea that we're following characters as they attend the Academy, usually depicted as a four-year institution. There are tons of ways around it, but it spreads incredulity if the main characters aren't allowed to graduate on time and/or all get jobs as instructors or something in Season 5. Glee and Community had the same issue, and dealt with it in their own way.
 
"Four years and out" for student characters at an Academy-based series suits me. If they want to show a mix of characters - cadets with different graduation-years, and faculty, and civilians - that's even more preferable.
 
Pretty sure Kirk is referenced as having done a 5th year. Spock in the Kelvin universe remained on as an instructor after graduating. Plenty of scope to keep characters around.

An even easier way as I said before is ditch the one season = one year thing. It's pointless.
 
Pretty sure Kirk is referenced as having done a 5th year. Spock in the Kelvin universe remained on as an instructor after graduating. Plenty of scope to keep characters around.

An even easier way as I said before is ditch the one season = one year thing. It's pointless.

If Academy is a CW show, then it will likely have 22 or so episode seasons, except for maybe the first season if it's a midseason replacement. If it was a 10-episode season on All-Access, then I'd agree that it would probably just be a series of story arcs that our Cadet heroes will deal with, with dates being barely a factor.

But, a season conveniently spread out the equivalent of a school year makes me think that that would be too much to not utilize for potential storylines (and you have the drama of a new school year, etc.). Unlike the aforementioned Buffy and 90210, Star Trek is set in the future, not roughly "real time", so they don't have to lend themselves to the calendar year and can begin and end each season wherever.

If we aren't focusing on one class, but instead a group of Cadets (and Instructors) of varying ages, maybe only one real main character as he or she enters the Academy, then every season (if equivalent to a year) will have drama and tensity regarding what will happen to Character B or C. Maybe just our main character will become an instructor in his fifth year, or enter the Command Training Program.
 
Star Fleet Academy and then if the show is a hit you just make spinoffs.

Star Trek: Throw Enough Shit to the Wall and Something Will Stick.
 
Buffy the Vampire Slayer was a description of the main character. 90201 is a zip code of the location of the show. Neither of them are tied to a scholastic location by name.

"Starfleet Academy" brings to mind the idea that we're following characters as they attend the Academy, usually depicted as a four-year institution. There are tons of ways around it, but it spreads incredulity if the main characters aren't allowed to graduate on time and/or all get jobs as instructors or something in Season 5. Glee and Community had the same issue, and dealt with it in their own way.
What about MASH? The show that ran 11 seasons and was set entirely within the confines of the two-and-a-half year Korean War?
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top