Picard- more of the actor yes. Not Data and most definitely not Worf.
From what I've understood, this show was the most successful Star Trek show in terms of ratings and was/is pretty well-received. My question is how iconic is this show?
I wouldn't say it's as iconic as TOS, but where does it stand?
TNG would be more popular today, if it weren't for "Deep Space Nine" and "Voyager". (That's not a put down by any means of those 2 shows). TNG is less special because it all became this diluted "franchise".
TNG hasn't had the legs of TOS in terms of legacy.
TNG at its height -during its run- was more popular than any Trek incarnation. It really could have gone on beyond Season 7 because of ratings and popularity. It would have, on a network.
TNG would be more popular today, if it weren't for "Deep Space Nine" and "Voyager". (That's not a put down by any means of those 2 shows). TNG is less special because it all became this diluted "franchise".
It's first 2 seasons are dated in ways TOS isn't, even today. Unwatchable even. That hurts it's legacy.
Worf is definitely not well known to those who didn't follow TNG or DS9. Data isn't really that well known. Data may be known to those who like the robots/droids in a variety of films and tv shows. But Worf? Heck NoYou think anyone who is passingly familiar with pop culture doesn't know who Data and Worf are?
Hard to say. At the moment, TOS has the advantage because it was being rerun constantly in syndication for a generation or two (not unlike, say, GILLIGAN'S ISLAND). TNG has lived on in reruns, too, but in a much more crowded cable universe, so it seems less ubiquitous than TOS was back in the seventies and eighties.
Granted, those of us who grew upon daily STAR TREK reruns are going to die out, but I wonder whether TNG can be ever achieve that level with familiarity with the general audience now that there are more than four or five TV stations on the dial . . . and a lot more viewing options.
Hard to say. At the moment, TOS has the advantage because it was being rerun constantly in syndication for a generation or two (not unlike, say, GILLIGAN'S ISLAND). TNG has lived on in reruns, too, but in a much more crowded cable universe, so it seems less ubiquitous than TOS was back in the seventies and eighties.
Granted, those of us who grew upon daily STAR TREK reruns are going to die out, but I wonder whether TNG can be ever achieve that level with familiarity with the general audience now that there are more than four or five TV stations on the dial . . . and a lot more viewing options.
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