[.... I still think an HD upgrade with the live-action film rescanned at a minimum is all but guaranteed.
This "all but guaranteed" phrase is still puzzling to me. The arguments you present seem to lead me in the other direction. And in any case FrontierTrek said nothing was guaranteed, and that things look uncertain at best right now.
"All but guaranteed" seems kinda like a faith-based initiative to me. Do you have some blood of the Prophets in your veins? lol....
When I say it's "all but guaranteed" I mean the precise definition of the "all but" idiom: very nearly guaranteed. I don't mean it's 100% guaranteed or even just plain guaranteed. THAT would be a "faith-based" statement with no possible justification. And I mean it primarily from a long term point of view.
Look, I make no exact predictions because I can't know what is in the minds of the CBS executives who are in a position to make that call. Also, consider that those executives who are there today will likely not be there in the future. Studio executives usually have a high turnover rate and don't stick around at any one place very long. The top jobs are almost always temporary. What is considered too expensive or unfeasible today could be totally possible and a "go" tomorrow with different people making the call. As I mentioned earlier, the company's stock is 10 points higher today than a year ago. If you look five years back, it's over 50 points higher. The trend for the company is up, up, up!
I'm sure FrontierTrek is right that the likelihood of DS9-R done by CBS Digital looks grim in the short term if it doesn't get a green light soon because they will have to lay off the additional employees they hired to work on TNG-R Seasons 3, 5, 6 & 7. Then there's a somewhat smaller probability that it could happen a year from now (and be ready just in time for the 50th anniversary) after a well-deserved break and more money flows in from TNG-R... but three years from now, five, ten, 15... each year that passes it becomes, perhaps counterintuitively, more probable once again. Why is that?
Sometime in the near future, all SD broadcasts, streaming and digital downloads will end and content distributors will only accept 720p HD as a minimum standard, maybe even 1080p -- we can only hope. SD will be completely antiquated and
verboten. In that future world, the two remaining
Star Trek shows will be completely unsalable in their current state. If they aren't going to remaster those shows ever, they might as well throw away all the film because it's just taking up space and costing them money with no financial return. It is in the best corporate interests of CBS to convert their entire
Star Trek library to HD. And that is -- wait for it -- all but guaranteed.
