Nobody is sat there hoping that this new show will finally address the aftermath of the Dominion war.
When it is set absolutely matters he it comes to non fans, setting it in the TOS era allows them to use the "10 years before Kirk and Spock" line to advertise the show, "100 years after ..." doesn't have the same effect. Kirk and Spock are iconic characters, they are widely known outside of the fanbase, being able to connect the show to them is an advantage (at the moment it's just via timeframe and by adopted sister but they have the option of actually casting them), it immediately creates a frame of reference for many people.This. When playing to those outside the fanbase, which really should be the point if we want the franchise to be sustainable, the nerdy details of when in a fictional timeline it's set or what alternate universe it is matter not one jot. What matters is whether the public think this is an exciting/engaging show which they want to watch. If you can drop some culturally familiar elements in there, like the Delta badge, a handful of names of people, ships and places, great, it helps ground the product in a particular franchise, but that's it. Nobody is sat there hoping that this new show will finally address the aftermath of the Dominion war.
I have not read a bunch of pages, so forgive if I am echoing someone. But yeah, Trek in 2018 seems to ignore developments that are already here. Some have postulated the Eugenics Wars set us back in some ways or made us choose to do without some things. But a space navy populated by humans without serious use of AI and lacking transhumanism seems less futuristic than TOS in 1966. Though the DSC timeline does have 3D communication and touch screen gestures in the air. That's something.
The only thing that proves is more people are clicking the play button on a some Star Trek episodes more than other Star Trek episodes. It is in no way evidence of what Star Trek concepts would be the most successful. It isn't even evidence of which Star Trek episodes are the most popular.
It did for TNG, which was pretty successful really. Meanwhile Enterprise went to a new time period and ended up cancelled after falling ratings. The time period in which a series has been set has not generally been an indicator of either quality or viewer interest. The general, non Trekkie, audience just need a bit of light branding, and they're then just looking for a show that captures their imagination or interest. The setting is relevant only to the extent that it affects that.setting it in the TOS era allows them to use the "10 years before Kirk and Spock" line to advertise the show, "100 years after ..." doesn't have the same effect.
Not really - it has global scope which is a great position for it to be in, but it still has half the subscribers that Sky does in the UK, and obviously is completely eclipsed by the free to air channels. It isn't the market leader in broadcasting on any of its territories.Netflix is the biggest broadcaster
Well; it was mentioned a lot in the ninth year afterwardnot even a scant ten years afterward.
TNG was created by Gene Roddenberry, that's a very strong TOS connection right there and the initial promos made sure to mention him, it also indirectly referenced TOS by not being TOS, being different worked in their favor but that only really works the first time you do it, once the audience gets used to things being different the effect is lost.It did for TNG, which was pretty successful really. Meanwhile Enterprise went to a new time period and ended up cancelled after falling ratings. The time period in which a series has been set has not generally been an indicator of either quality or viewer interest. The general, non Trekkie, audience just need a bit of light branding, and they're then just looking for a show that captures their imagination or interest. The setting is relevant only to the extent that it affects that.
Oh...and your very first sentence under #1 is it. That's absolutely the entire reason. Every other reason you wrote is literally in the margins. Bottom line is that TOS is a cultural icon. The spin-offs are good, well-liked, often highly enjoyable NICHE products. You don't reboot niche products in a gamble to revitalize a major motion picture franchise. You reboot major cultural icons.
And TNG and friends ain't that.
It did for TNG, which was pretty successful really. Meanwhile Enterprise went to a new time period and ended up cancelled after falling ratings. The time period in which a series has been set has not generally been an indicator of either quality or viewer interest. The general, non Trekkie, audience just need a bit of light branding, and they're then just looking for a show that captures their imagination or interest. The setting is relevant only to the extent that it affects that.
Not really - it has global scope which is a great position for it to be in, but it still has half the subscribers that Sky does in the UK, and obviously is completely eclipsed by the free to air channels. It isn't the market leader in broadcasting on any of its territories.
Netflix is the platform that a lot of us watch Discovery on. It is also the platform that shows an audience that prefers VoyagerAnd love it or hate it, Netflix is the biggest broadcaster, covering the whole planet. Amazon Prime is just behind that.
Berman era Trek is popular with us ...kids. *cough*
Source?
Endgame was the top of the list of ten, (both eps). Worth noting that it was for 're' watches. Time and Again is there too and I personally hardly ever think of that one.There was a few articles about it a few months ago. Top ten watched trek episodes on Netflix are basically the Borg episodes, and Voyager keeps showing up on ‘Trending now’ for people.
Endgame was the top of the list of ten, (both eps). Worth noting that it was for 're' watches. Time and Again is there too and I personally hardly ever think of that one.
Endgame was the top of the list of ten, (both eps). Worth noting that it was for 're' watches. Time and Again is there too and I personally hardly ever think of that one.
Who the heck is watching and rewatching time and again? With those weird santas workshop elf aliens. I think I can count on one hand the amount of times i've watched that episode since Voyager first aired. Maybe they are stuck in a time loop?
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