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Is it time to put Star Trek to rest?

Only when the insults towards production teams stop and the declarations of perfect Trek are recognized as being subjective not objective fact. Fans are too busy insulting production teams for "lazy writing" so much that it's become cliche and meaningless, like the word hate.
I could say the same for people who always dismiss critcisms. It's not enough to say "I like this show no matter what." They go the extra mile of dismissing people who disagree, grasp at straws for why their show isn't popular and wave away every metric that demonstrates their show being unpopular.

IDIC doesn't mean I don't get to comment and maybe say I like something you don't and that doesn't make whole eras bad.
Ironic, because my point was that everyone's opinions matter and should never be dismissed. That includes people who have a different opinion. I've seen way too much of the opposite around here. It's typical gatekeeping behavior and its disgusting.
The poor faith argumentation is centered around false dichotomies, straw men, and conservative viewpoints on the franchise to actual nuance discussion. A lot of broad sweeping generalizations of eras, fans, and producers. Berman isn't all bad and he isn't all good. Kurtzman isn't all bad and isn't all good. No, Star Trek will not rise to heights in the 90s because the whole media landscape has changed.
I remember a similar statement made in the 80s. It's a crutch. Other shows have no problem succeeding in today's media landscape.
It's like sports fans who insist modern players could never compete in the 80s. What a meaningless discussion point.
That's been sports talk since the beginning of time.:shrug:
 
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could say the same for people who always dismiss critcisms. It's not enough to say "I like this show no matter what." They go the extra mile of dismissing people who disagree, grasp at straws for why their show isn't popular and wave away every metric that demonstrates their show being unpopular.
Which is why popularity needs to be let go of as a metric. Popularity really is a poor measure because it doesn't equate quality. Look at the Transformers.
remember a similar statement made in the 80s. It's a crutch. Other shows have no problem succeeding in today's media landscape.
So let's have discussion around what is working, not whether or not it is succeeding.
That's been sports talk since the beginning of time.
And it's stupid.
That strategy doesn't seem to be working very well. :shrug:
Then bye bye Trek. And that's ok.
 
That strategy doesn't seem to be working very well. :shrug:
That's why they took down the sets after wrapping up season two of Academy.... They decided not enough profits are coming in for a new trek production to be worth it. Their research may be telling them too many "mainstream" viewers don't want a sci fi show.
 
That strategy doesn't seem to be working very well. :shrug:

It could simply be that Trek has largely run its course. My nostalgia isn’t my kids nostalgia. Same thing is happening to other properties. Hollywood has to figure out how transition these properties into something that the modern 18-34 crowd wants to watch.

It isn’t an easy trick to pull off.
 
It could simply be that Trek has largely run its course. My nostalgia isn’t my kids nostalgia. Same thing is happening to other properties. Hollywood has to figure out how transition these properties into something that the modern 18-34 crowd wants to watch.

It isn’t an easy trick to pull off.
I'd rather they create new franchises, new shows and new concepts for people who don't care about Star Trek or science fiction.
 
That's why they took down the sets after wrapping up season two of Academy.... They decided not enough profits are coming in for a new trek production to be worth it. Their research may be telling them too many "mainstream" viewers don't want a sci fi show.
That could be true, but that still doesn't explain why so many Trek fans aren't fans of what's being produced now.
 
You don’t have vested financial interest in it.
If I had a vested interest in Star Trek, I wouldn't hire people who don't understand the franchise. Kurtzman and his ilk would never have came within a mile of Star Trek. I certainly wouldn't be wasting time and money trying to reach people who don't like Star Trek or science fiction. It's like trying to sell chinese food to people who hate chinese food. It's stupid.
 
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That's why they took down the sets after wrapping up season two of Academy.... They decided not enough profits are coming in for a new trek production to be worth it. Their research may be telling them too many "mainstream" viewers don't want a sci fi show.
No, they folded up the sets because a new regime is coming in.
 
Their research may be telling them too many "mainstream" viewers don't want a sci fi show.
This is what worries me, that if execs feel the recent shows have underperformed, they'll end up reaching conclusions "Star Trek isn't viable" or "sci-fi is dead/unmarketable" when in reality it's just that people didn't take to these specific shows and the creative decisions within.
 
This is what worries me, that if execs feel the recent shows have underperformed, they'll end up reaching conclusions "Star Trek isn't viable" or "sci-fi is dead/unmarketable" when in reality it's just that people didn't take to these specific shows and the creative decisions within.
Given the limited data set you're basing said judgment on seems to be online reactions, I wouldn't say that's what the "reality" is to execs in charge of such decisions.

The internet isn't a bellwether of conclusive analysis; never has been.
 
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