• 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/Paramount sues to stop Axanar 2 - Electric Boogaloo-Fanboys gone WILD-too many hyphens

Do you enjoy pie?

  • Yes, sweet, please

    Votes: 79 40.9%
  • Yes, savory, please

    Votes: 42 21.8%
  • Yes, any kind

    Votes: 80 41.5%
  • No, I'm a heathen

    Votes: 37 19.2%

  • Total voters
    193
Apparently, people have been writing to Creation saying featuring Axanar at the convention isn't the best idea. In a prime example of the Streisand Effect, I found that out from a very thirsty email newsletter begging to write emails to Creation about how great Axanar is.

While very few people knew it until now, Axanar will be at Creation's Star Trek Las Vegas show in August!

Of course, the Axanar haters have launched a letter writing campaign, attacking our appearance, and lying about Axanar and me to the Creation staff. So I need everyone who loves Axanar to write Creation an email, and tell them about YOUR positive experiences with Axanar.

Gary Berman, the co-founder of Creation, and I have known each other for 30 years, and he has made a commitment to us, but he also wants to hear from Axanar fans and all the positive stories you have (as he already has heard the nonsense from the haters!).

So please email Creation:

[Let's not and say we didn't]

THANK YOU for being a positive force in Star Trek!

Alec Peters
 
It's never a good sign when you have enough "haters" to launch a letter writing campaign against you:lol:

I eagerly await Alec's mantrum agaisnt Creation when they realise what a pile of steaming shit they're working with and ditch him like everyone else has.
 
Axanar just sent out an email about "haters" yesterday.
Is this it?
haters-gonna-hate-ainters-gonna-aint.jpg
 
This looks interesting...

https://www.cbr.com/paul-jenkins-documentary-toxic-fan/

Paul Jenkins is taking his experience with what he describes as a toxic fan and he is turning it into a documentary about his experience but also about toxic fandom in general.

Yesterday, the longtime comic book writer tweeted out, "For the past year or so, my family and I have been under constant attack by a toxic fan. Today marks the beginning of the end of this cruelty. We are making a documentary, and we're making a stand."

Today, he released the teaser for the documentary that he was referring to, called Into the Wormhole: The Battle for Axanar.

The film is based around a fan-film, Axanar, which began life as a Star Trek fan film before various lawsuits caused it to drop the "Star Trek" part of the title. The film raised roughly $2 million but it has encountered numerous setbacks over the years. Paul Jenkins became involved in the project at one point and his involvement also eventually led to a lawsuit, as well.

So the documentary explores Jenkins' personal experience with the fan behind the project, Alec Peters, who Jenkins describes as being the center of every setback and controversy on the project and what happened when Jenkins began to explore what happened to the money pledged for the making of Axanar.
 
All too true, but maybe, just maybe, we'll finally get an accurate accounting of where the two-plus million dollars went.
 
All too true, but maybe, just maybe, we'll finally get an accurate accounting of where the two-plus million dollars went.
I don't think so. Hell, Jenkins at the time (and the Director); wasn't even told the particulars of the CBS v. Axanar lawsuit, and you'd think the Director WOULD be given that info to be sure he doesn't come up with a vision for the film/shoots content that violates said settlement agreement.

My point? If Alec Peters won't even do that, what makes you think he'd show Jenkins anything regarding Axanar financials? Hell, that's probably what clued Jenkins in that this was a scam...he probably asked about his production budget, and the current financial situation, was met with silence or discernable bullshit, went online to try and get some history of the project, leading to the situation as it stands today.
 
Last edited:
@Noname Given, I actually agree with most of what you posted. One minor point of contention, though...
Hell, that's probably what clued Jenkins I'm that this was a scam...he probably asked about his production budget, and the current financial situation, was met with silence or discernable bullshit, went online to try and get some history of the project, leading to the situation as it stands today.
Possibly. However, finances aren't the responsibility of the director in the first place. (Same for a writer.) Those responsibilities are typically the domain of the producer and co-producer.

Furthermore, while it may make sense to give Jenkins the immediate production budget, so he knows how much money he has to play with, it makes no sense to give him historical information about the group's finances, as there is nothing Jenkins could actually do to help that situation, and it's pretty obvious now that he'd use that information against them instead. Choosing not to give him that financial info would be the rational and customary course of action rather than proof of guilt.
 
Heh, considering that cbr.com article ends with a "if you are interested in supporting" plea, it seems that Jenkins learned a most important lesson from Peters: hobbies and pet projects are way more fun if you get other people to pay for it.
I don't have a problem with people using Kickstarter or whatever for something like this, as long as they actually deliver the product. Jenkins seems like he should hopefully be more trustworthy than Peters in that regard.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top