I think Voyager was a big mistake. It’s about the bridge crew on a starship who encounter alien worlds and the various kinds of crises that can occur aboard a starship. It features a slightly different cast of characters in a slightly different situation, but when you get right down to it it’s essentially the same premise as TOS and TNG. By S7 on TNG, it looked like they were starting to run out of good ideas of what to do with that premise, and Voyager proved it.
Then after VOY’s seven seasons of what can be described as mediocre television at best, they started yet another series based on the same premise, driving viewers away in droves and ultimately resulting in the series’ cancellation after four seasons. Even with the built-in audience that comes with the Trek name, they couldn’t attract enough viewers to stay on the air.
I think they should have explored different aspects of the Trek universe. I had an idea for a series (I wanted to call it Star Trek: Capital) about the highest levels of the Federation government. It would have been kind of like The West Wing set in the Star Trek universe (although nobody would have called it that because this was several years before The West Wing hit the air).
Sure, there would have been howls of protest from a lot of TOS/TNG fans whose thinking was trapped in the box and wanted the same basic premise to go on forever. (There were howls of protest when DS9 was announced, and this would have been a much bigger departure.) A lot of TOS/TNG fans would have hated it. On the other hand, it would have appealed to a lot of people who didn’t like TOS/TNG. And as it turned out, it would have been especially interesting watching a peacetime government make the transition to a wartime government when the Dominion War started two or three seasons in. An added bonus is that the series would have had a much lower special effects budget than TNG or DS9.
This series could have been followed by other series that explored different situations in the Star Trek universe, instead of trying to go on forever with starship-based adventures.
What do you think? What should have been done with the franchise after TNG? Should they have gotten away from the starships? What other aspects of the Trek universe could or should have been explored?
Then after VOY’s seven seasons of what can be described as mediocre television at best, they started yet another series based on the same premise, driving viewers away in droves and ultimately resulting in the series’ cancellation after four seasons. Even with the built-in audience that comes with the Trek name, they couldn’t attract enough viewers to stay on the air.
I think they should have explored different aspects of the Trek universe. I had an idea for a series (I wanted to call it Star Trek: Capital) about the highest levels of the Federation government. It would have been kind of like The West Wing set in the Star Trek universe (although nobody would have called it that because this was several years before The West Wing hit the air).
Sure, there would have been howls of protest from a lot of TOS/TNG fans whose thinking was trapped in the box and wanted the same basic premise to go on forever. (There were howls of protest when DS9 was announced, and this would have been a much bigger departure.) A lot of TOS/TNG fans would have hated it. On the other hand, it would have appealed to a lot of people who didn’t like TOS/TNG. And as it turned out, it would have been especially interesting watching a peacetime government make the transition to a wartime government when the Dominion War started two or three seasons in. An added bonus is that the series would have had a much lower special effects budget than TNG or DS9.
This series could have been followed by other series that explored different situations in the Star Trek universe, instead of trying to go on forever with starship-based adventures.
What do you think? What should have been done with the franchise after TNG? Should they have gotten away from the starships? What other aspects of the Trek universe could or should have been explored?