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Could a new Trek show done in the 90's TNG/DS9 style work today?

And if people actually are paying to see those dystopic series, then the world is in real trouble.
I would not recommend paying to read a lot of literature and stories. One of the biggest aspects of fiction is telling us things that are uncomfortable so that we make differences, not that we believe "Happily Ever after" happens post credits.
 
They tried a more serialized approach in DS9, and the ratings kept going down.
The ratings for Star Trek in general peaked with TNG and EVERY subsequent iteration of Star Trek lost overall viewers. For better or worse TNG was pretty much (after the syndication success of TOS that lasted for nearly 2 decades prior to TNG) the ONLY series that at first grew Trek viewership - plateaued - and everything Trek related afterwards bled viewers.

(And I not a big TNG fan, but I can't deny what it did in really creating a larger Star Trek franchise. For me as the years go on - more of the show becomes unwatchable to me - in contrast with TOS where some TOS episodes I didn't care for when I was younger have improved and become more watchable to me.)

YMMV of course - but 53 years after I saw my first TOS episode (at age 6) <--- I still find TOS the most rewatchable and most enjoyable incarnation of what has become the 'Star Trek franchise' for me. And for me Star Trek Discovery Season 2 was absolutely enjoyable for me overall BECAUSE they went back to a 'more TOS' style with Pike and Spock and the other Enterprise characters.

What really draws me to - and makes me excited for Strange New Worlds is that from what I've seen in the trailers so far, they are going 'back to basics' WRT 'Star Trek' and bringing in more of what I really to this day still enjoy from TOS. I like that they don't seem to be taking everything so drop dead seriously <--- And for me that was a BIG weakness of TNG in that at times it (and it's characters) took some things WAY too seriously...and a lot of the 'fun' was just sucked out as a result.

Time will tell; but I HOPE the trailers weren't just well edited and what we saw translates in the actual execution of this new series.
 
They tried a more serialized approach in DS9, and the ratings kept going down.
That's just how TV series work in my experience. Sometimes the show's quality gets much better, sometimes they have stunt casting or epic crossovers, but despite an occasional spike the ratings graph keeps going down. There are exceptions, like TNG and Game of Thrones, and Doctor Who can regenerate, but generally the best they can hope for is that the ratings will fall slower.
 
And I don't want to see a second more of the blod-splattering doom-and-gloom dystopic 2010's and 2020's Trek. There are already too much od such crap going on, especially those Middle Ages series which sword-waving bearded gnomes and the dystopic futures series where everything has gone to hell. I'd rather watch the first three seasons of Voyager for the 250th time than having to be drowned in all those negative series we have to stand now. Not even NCIS is worth watching anymore.

It Trek joins the doom-and-gloom league, then it's better if it is cancelled.

And if people actually are paying to see those dystopic series, then the world is in real trouble.
discovery changed a lot from the doom and gloom of the first season.
 
There's a lot about the 90s shows I like, like the semi-serialisation and the one and done stories, but I think you can do a successor show to that with modern sensibilities look. I think "Fringe" did a similar thing to what I'm saying, looking at a lot of weird concepts and several character and plot arcs. That's kind of what I want to see. Maybe SNW will be that. Who knows.
 
Why not - a new Trek show done in the style of the 60s worked in the late 80s. :p

Whatever show that might have been, it wasn't TNG.

I was 24 when TNG premiered, and during TNG's run I was reading letterzines, then CompuServe's Trek forum, and then usenet groups. Plenty of us had grown up with TOS and were happy to watch TNG, but there were two other types of fans: the old diehards who didn't think the new series was real Trek, with its characters who'd sit around and have meetings instead of going out and kicking ass, and the TNG converts who found TOS a slow, campy, badly made, unwatchable load of drek. Even now there are still a lot of fans who consider TNG the true beginning of Star Trek, with TOS as some forgettable and failed first draft.

TNG was not done in the TOS style. TOS didn't use that A and B story structure, for a start. The approach to lighting, to music, to continuing plot threads, they were all different.
 
If anything, The Orville is proof you can't do that kind of show again. There are people on this board who will argue vociferously that it's not a parody, but, well, it is. It's warmed over TNG nostalgia with a lot of crass jokes aimed at 13-year-old boys.

...Have you watched it lately?
 
I've watched every episode. I like the music, I like Adrianne Palicki and Penny Johnson-Jerald, and I'm not immune to the TNG nostalgia factor. And I don't think the more serious episodes work, because McFarlane can't carry that weight.
 
And I don't want to see a second more of the blod-splattering doom-and-gloom dystopic 2010's and 2020's Trek. There are already too much od such crap going on, especially those Middle Ages series which sword-waving bearded gnomes and the dystopic futures series where everything has gone to hell. I'd rather watch the first three seasons of Voyager for the 250th time than having to be drowned in all those negative series we have to stand now. Not even NCIS is worth watching anymore.

It Trek joins the doom-and-gloom league, then it's better if it is cancelled.

And if people actually are paying to see those dystopic series, then the world is in real trouble.

It depends on the type of show.

If it was a series set in the Romulan War, Mirror Universe, some Klingon conquest, or within decades of the Burn, then the blood spattering and gloominess makes sense. It’s where Berg & Harberts/Chabon would make sense as showrunners.

If it is a live action, feel good show in the vein of LD, then the blood spattering and gloominess would be completely wrong

If it is a thought-provoking show, even thought the blood spatter & gloominess could happen a la “Conspiracy”, its also completely unnecessary.

The only settings that would encompass the feel of ‘90s Trek in my eyes are the Lost Era, something set in the Dyson Sphere in the mid 25th century, or a 29th century timeship like the Relativity.

The main thing to take away from TNG/DS9 is that the development of the characters are what needs to be serialized, more so than the episodes themselves. There shouldn’t be a reset button for their character development; it should carry over week to week, both good and bad.
 
And by that I mean the way Berman & Braga produced Trek during TNG's run, and also the way Ira Steven Behr & Ronald D. Moore produced DS9 (I chose only those two shows because this was the heyday of the Trek resurgence in the 90's which started to decline when VOY started). In other words, that 90's television style that we saw in a lot of shows during that time period you don't see these days in Trek or any other show for that matter.

If I were to describe it I guess it would be a Trek show that doesn't feel like a we're watching a movie each week (if that makes any sense). For the record, I enjoy NuTrek and I understand that that style of flash is the norm for TV these days so I'm fine with it.

But would you like to see a return of that 90's style of Trek? And would it even work these days?
If anything, The Orville is proof you can't do that kind of show again. There are people on this board who will argue vociferously that it's not a parody, but, well, it is. It's warmed over TNG nostalgia with a lot of crass jokes aimed at 13-year-old boys. Maybe the jokes are there to support a parody defence if Paramount/CBS sue them for ripping Star Trek off so blatantly. But maybe they're there because we have several hundred episodes of Berman Trek already and that was the Orville's way to try to make their retread feel a bit fresh. McFarlane wants to play The Orville more seriously sometimes, but he's shot himself in the foot by making several of the core characters, including the captain (his own role), walking jokes with no depth. They can try a scene like "There are four lights!" but no one is going to buy it from this guy. You'd expect him to say something like, "sure, there are five lights, those four there and the one up your ass." I mean, this is a show that did an episode about how funny it is that an alien is raping all the Orville's cast.

The closest thing I've seen in recent years to '90s TV was when my wife watched NCIS a few years back, but even that started doing bigger productions and more complicated ongoing storylines. TV changes. Watch the original Outer Limits and imagine someone running an hour-long anthology series with really slow-paced SF stories now. It wouldn't happen. Some of the episodes are classics, but they just don't make them like that any more.
I think it could today’s shows leave you hanging every episode it would be nice to miss one once in awhile and not be totally lost
 
It Trek joins the doom-and-gloom league, then it's better if it is cancelled.
I will NEVER comprehend this attitude. Even if it becomes all “doom and gloom”, that’s not, in and of itself, a strong argument for cancellation. There are, literally, hundreds of shows that I don’t like (some quite strongly) on right now. I don’t wish cancellation on any of them. Apart from the unemployment it would create, I have no desire to punish others whose tastes are not like mine. Much easier (and fairer) to simply change the channel.
 
I will NEVER comprehend this attitude. Even if it becomes all “doom and gloom”, that’s not, in and of itself, a strong argument for cancellation. There are, literally, hundreds of shows that I don’t like (some quite strongly) on right now. I don’t wish cancellation on any of them. Apart from the unemployment it would create, I have no desire to punish others whose tastes are not like mine. Much easier (and fairer) to simply change the channel.
I feel very similarly to you. I do not understand this attitude of "Well I don't like it so cancel it." But, then, I also don't understand the idea that a show can "disrespect" the Star Trek name, or that Star Trek can't deal in doom and gloom scenarios, however that is defined.

To me, Star Trek works best as a variety storytelling platform, including more sorrowful moments. Even Orville managed to do that early on in Season 1, but left that somewhat behind.
 
Which is ironic, given that discovery is back on something like regular TV in many countries, where you don’t have the option of pausing and going back if you miss something.
 
The "watch occasionally" crowd would have had a hard time with Twin Peaks thirty years ago, to cite just one example. Sitcoms and certain formulaic police procedurals like Law & Order are good "watch occasionally" shows, but a lot of prime time dramas have had significant serialized elements for quite a few years.
 
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