The network will always do what's best for the network. What's best for one show, regardless of the anticipated audience, comes somewhere way down the line. That's how the show business works.
Bottom line, Trek is one little property of a multi-billion dollar conglomerate. You and I aren't even fruit flies buzzing that banana.
Be happy that they even want to try another series.
I expect the network executives to do what's best for the network and understand why they do. But there's no reason for me to be personally happy about a
Star Trek show I'll never get to see.
at the same time, one has to acknowledge that times change and we can't expect the world to stop moving just because we haven't kept up. And eventually there comes a point when that "cutting-edge" stuff is the new normal, and you have to break down and join the 21st century or risk getting left behind when it comes to new entertainment mediums.and platforms.
Don't get me wrong. I've misrepresented myself if I come across playing a tiny violin and crying, "Woe is me!" Personally, I have some discretionary income. I just prefer lobster tails to computer gadgets; and I'm willing to risk getting left behind on new entertainment because I'd just as soon pop in a DVD with original cast
Star Trek. I don't like much of the new entertainment on an aesthetic level anyway.
But there are a lot of people less well off than I am. Television has never been available to everybody, but for a long time in much of the world, television programming over the airwaves has been affordable for a lot of people. I was close to a family in a third-world country, and they didn't have an indoor bathroom but had a television and got programming through the airwaves, and they weren't atypical in that country. So it saddens me to see television become more and more costly; and I don't like it when people underestimate the cost, because for many, it's not a choice to just move on to the next new thing, to "break down and join the 21st century," while for others, it's a choice that eliminates other choices, precludes other kinds of leisure that used to be easily enjoyed along with cheap television.
Along those lines, I think there's value in much of the same programming reaching people of widely different socioeconomic backgrounds. Yes, some of the niche programming and the arguably more progressive content won't survive, when programming is geared to mass audiences; but that specialized programming loses some of its value when the only people who see it are (a) comparatively privileged and (b) the people who already want it, anyway. The original
Star Trek was a highly creative show, artistically speaking, and pretty darn progressive show, socially speaking, that had a major cultural impact because all kinds of people were exposed to it on network television and syndicated reruns over the airwaves.