True, it could very well be done within canon. I do agree that Star Trek didn't choke on it's own canon. Its audience did.
Allow me to elaborate.
As TNG was riding the top of its popularity wave, Deep Space 9 came into existence. DS9 was continuity heavy and relied on viewer knowledge. Casual viewers said "fuck it" and tuned out. Voyager wasn't as reliant on arcs and continuity, but people regardless felt that they needed to be like experts or something, just to watch it. Even today, when someone new gets into Star Trek, they don't ask "What series is the best?" but rather, "What series do I need to watch to understand all this?".
So, I ain't talking about the fans - the Trekkies, Trekkers, Trekkerians - whatever. I'm talking about Joe Everyman, Jane Whats-Her-Face.
So, the goal with a new series is to be mindful of that. I don't think a new Star Trek series could survive for very long just on the core fandom base. Not if we want decent production values, anyways. If someone can create a new series that fits in the canon... well, cool beans, great. I'd make sure all concepts are easily understood by anyone though. Mainstream appeal, without compromising intelligence and all the important stuff.
The canon's never been an impediment, yeah... it provides part of the foundation for the stories that take place... it's basically lower on my priorities list than say... casting the show right, getting good stories and making sure the Enterprise doesn't look lame. In-show continuity is max-o important though. Otherwise, there's great potential for jump-the shark moments, head scratchers and general WTFs.
The general consensus seems to be that either full inclusion to canon or a full reboot are the best bets. Calculating in my head, its hard to determine which one would be the best approach, storytelling-wise.
Allow me to elaborate.
As TNG was riding the top of its popularity wave, Deep Space 9 came into existence. DS9 was continuity heavy and relied on viewer knowledge. Casual viewers said "fuck it" and tuned out. Voyager wasn't as reliant on arcs and continuity, but people regardless felt that they needed to be like experts or something, just to watch it. Even today, when someone new gets into Star Trek, they don't ask "What series is the best?" but rather, "What series do I need to watch to understand all this?".
So, I ain't talking about the fans - the Trekkies, Trekkers, Trekkerians - whatever. I'm talking about Joe Everyman, Jane Whats-Her-Face.
So, the goal with a new series is to be mindful of that. I don't think a new Star Trek series could survive for very long just on the core fandom base. Not if we want decent production values, anyways. If someone can create a new series that fits in the canon... well, cool beans, great. I'd make sure all concepts are easily understood by anyone though. Mainstream appeal, without compromising intelligence and all the important stuff.
The canon's never been an impediment, yeah... it provides part of the foundation for the stories that take place... it's basically lower on my priorities list than say... casting the show right, getting good stories and making sure the Enterprise doesn't look lame. In-show continuity is max-o important though. Otherwise, there's great potential for jump-the shark moments, head scratchers and general WTFs.
The general consensus seems to be that either full inclusion to canon or a full reboot are the best bets. Calculating in my head, its hard to determine which one would be the best approach, storytelling-wise.