http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2015/11/star-trek-returns-to-a-new-tv-landscape/413680/
The Atlantic thinks its a good idea.
The Atlantic thinks its a good idea.
I surely won't be paying to watch Star Trek.
Well... let's examine the word ''paying''. When you watch a Star Trek movie, whether on the big screen or the small, you're paying for a movie ticket, or maybe paying for the episodes (either on physical media or streaming). Certainly this is more likely to be the case these days, now that not many free-to-air television channels rerun any of the shows any more. Unless you're downloading them all illegally, of course, in which case you're obviously not paying.![]()
Basically, if you're watching Star Trek these days, you should already have paid for it. One way or another. So, what exactly is the problem with paying to watch a new TV series?
Unless, what you are REALLY saying when you tell us that you ''won't be paying to watch Star Trek'', is that you won't watch the new Star Trek, or that you'll be watching the new Star Trek, illegally, by downloading it from a torrent site?![]()
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TV was free when Voyager and Enterprise was on the air?? I remember paying for tv service back when Enterprise was on. I was in college when Voyager ended so no cable bill.... but I'm pretty sure room and board applies....
The last time I watched Star Trek for free was 1994 (dubbed on German TV). After that I rented it on VHS as UK import or bought it on DVD/Bluray. So I pay for Star Trek for 20 years now.
Since I'm not in the U.S. market it might not matter as far as I'm concerned, but for me to pay for a new Trek series (or any series) it would have to be something I'd be desperate to see.
It's way too soon for me to make that judgment.
Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.
As someone whose sole income is disability payments, I would tend to disagree. Just spent two weeks flat broke and out of food due to an overdue bill and having to buy new shoes. There's only one check a month.Literally, America's welfare recipients and many of the homeless could set aside $6/month if they wanted to.
I don't see what the problem is, frankly.
Everything is moving to streaming. More and more people are canceling their cable and satellite services and going streaming only. It's way cheaper (for now, anyway) and you pay only for what you want. $8 for Netflix, $8 for Hulu, $15 for HBO Now, $10 for Showtime, $6 for CBS....still less expensive than your average cable/satellite bill. They're all easily dropped and re-added too. No hassle, unlike cable/satellite packages. Also, no real equipment other than a streaming device; no big boxes taking up space. No (or few) commercials. Binge watching.
Streaming only (no cable/satellite) is the way of the future. It's coming. Deal with it.
^However, CBS don't care about overseas so much. Most of their income is from the home market, so why should Star Trek be any different? They're not making TV for the world, they're making it for the US - if other countries happen to like it, that's just the icing on the cake.
EDIT: This is in response to The Wormhole above.
As someone whose sole income is disability payments, I would tend to disagree. Just spent two weeks flat broke and out of food due to an overdue bill and having to buy new shoes. There's only one check a month.Literally, America's welfare recipients and many of the homeless could set aside $6/month if they wanted to.
I don't see what the problem is, frankly.
Everything is moving to streaming. More and more people are canceling their cable and satellite services and going streaming only. It's way cheaper (for now, anyway) and you pay only for what you want. $8 for Netflix, $8 for Hulu, $15 for HBO Now, $10 for Showtime, $6 for CBS....still less expensive than your average cable/satellite bill. They're all easily dropped and re-added too. No hassle, unlike cable/satellite packages. Also, no real equipment other than a streaming device; no big boxes taking up space. No (or few) commercials. Binge watching.
Streaming only (no cable/satellite) is the way of the future. It's coming. Deal with it.
From my perspective, it isn't the fact that it's streaming only so much as it's only going to be on the CBS streaming service, which is unavailable to anyone outside the US, such as myself. Star Trek is a mainstream franchise with a worldwide fanbase, in fact STID actually did better in the overseas box office than in the US. By limiting this series to the US only and cutting off a decent percentage of Trek fandom, CBS has already shot itself in the foot regarding this show.
They aren't locking out other markets. The series will be offered to those markets to syndicate as they see fit.It still sounds like piss-poor marketing to produce a series for an established franchise like Star Trek and then intentionally lock-out half its fandom.
Yeah, but does anyone actually think like this? For most people, they buy a TV package, they don't pay for an individual show.
Yeah, but does anyone actually think like this? For most people, they buy a TV package, they don't pay for an individual show.
But you won't be paying for an individual show. You'll be paying for every show CBS All Access provides, Star Trek 2017 being only one of them. Which is no different than paying whatever ridiculous amount of money per month cable or satellite TV currently is, just to see the one or two shows that you actually care about.
So to answer your above question, yes, people buy TV packages all the time just to watch one or two shows.
Maybe, with a year's head start. Only recently got down to about a pack a day. But homeless people probably need that six bucks to eat.Give up one or two packs of cigarettes a month.
Boom.
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