You can't blame CBS, though. If Trek's biggest fanboys can't upgrade their Next Generation sets (one of the most popular Treks) to Blu, then who the hell is going to authorize remastering lesser-popular DS9 and Voyager, which will sell even less? The REALLY sad thing is when the people who can't see a difference on their dinky 30" tvs finally upgrade to a bigger tv, they're going to be kicking themselves because they'll be in the same boat as those of us who have big TVs we CAN see a difference on
Edit: Agreed CBS didn't seem to want to sell these set, either. I live about 40 miles from Tennessee and the only place I could find season one was at a Best Buy in Lexington, which had all of three copies. So, instead of driving 60 miles to buy every season, I had to order them all off Amazon.
See, that's the thing though. I *can* blame CBS. There were a couple of bad business decisions that, IMO, made it harder for the TNG blu rays to gain market share.
The supply issue is one of them. Bricks and mortar retail (we keep being told) is a dying industry, and I too found it impossible to buy them from a store -- I had to order them from Amazon. This isn't a bad business decision, but it was a bad time for them to be doing this project if the aim was to sell boxsets.
Even with a six month delay between the boxsets and the HD episodes being streamed, the difference in price point might have been enough to keep people waiting until they could stream them instead. You and I and the fish all know the Blu Rays look and sound better than streaming (bitrate, data size, etc), but to a lot of people who just want to see TNG in HD, they might be willing to hold onto their wallets a little longer and just stream them. Bad business decision.
The 'special edition' blu rays (BOBW, Redemption, Unification, etc) were another brain fart. I can understand
one of these, but doing one a season and putting exclusive value added material on them, that simply split the market. Sure there are completists who will buy everything, but not everybody has got money to burn. Bad business decision.
The afforementioned decision to re-release all seven seasons in discounted form on DVD early in the run. As
BillJ said above, talk about cutting your own throat. There's no way that
didn't bite a chunk out of the sales, as there's still a sizable market of people who either can't afford blu ray, or simply haven't upgraded. Either way, it was like one branch of CBS was giving the middle finger to another branch of CBS. Bad business decision.
I think the restorations
*will* make their money back eventually, and go into profit, as now that they're done they will reap benefits from HD broadcast sales and streaming. But the fact is, there were a shit-load of bad decisions/unfortunate circumstances which led to these physical TNG-R boxsets not being as profitable as CBS anticipated. That
isn't the fault of the fans, no matter what Burnett thinks.
