Okay, half a season.If only.

Okay, half a season.If only.

Ok. Still be interesting to see.Okay, half a season.![]()
Just sub Kirk, Decker, Ilia and Xon for Picard, Riker, Troi and Data in TNG S1.Ok. Still be interesting to see.

And killed the franchise stone cold dead.Yep. Had it not been for Star Wars, we would have gotten Star Trek Phase II on television without Spock. It might have lasted a season. Maybe.
My biggest criticism of Discovery is the era. Put it in the 25th century and away you go.
And we're not even getting any decent mustard gas out of it.I love how every discussion on this site devolves into gladiatorial combat and levels of aggression normally only seen in trench warfare.
Move on? To what?And you gave up on basically every modern Trek in the past decade.
It’s very hard to take any criticisms seriously from someone who largely gave up on the franchise 25 years ago.
Sometimes it’s just better to move on.
Wooden performance? No, I don't think so.Wooden performance, stereotypical dialog, inconsistent details.
Definititely not. Chakotay is a great character who could have become the best First officer ever if the writers had done their job.I'm with you on that one. IMO, Beltran is hands down the worst first officer since Majel Barret.
Well, if "grow with the world" means "adapting to the taste of the 2020's, then it will be hard to survive.Which is fair, but Star Trek is a business. It has to grow with the world or else it will be quickly forgotten.
Yes!I enjoyed the first four or five episodes of TNG when it came out and so did millions of others.
Current Trek would kill to have the numbers that old TNG did.
maybe it's because the old fans have abandoned the newer Trek series and their attempt to be "modern" and the 18-34 crowd are so brainwashed with blood, gore, doom, gloom and darkness after all the recent years that they simply can't understand the subtle storytelling in classical Star Trek?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.
True!That could be true, but that still doesn't explain why so many Trek fans aren't fans of what's being produced now.
And did the defenders of doom, gloom and gore elect you as their spokesman?Who are these fans you're referring to? Did they elect you as their spokesperson?
True.No, they are simply the fans who no longer watch the show and try to explain why, but get silenced by the fanatics.
Do try and keep up.
That's true.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.
The point is that I know what I want of a show when i start watching it.If you didn't watch something, you really can't judge it. At least that's my opinion.
Hardly. As others have pointed out, if I had judged TNG, DS9, or Voyager, on the first five episodes, I'd have probably gave up on all of them.
And did the defenders of doom, gloom and gore elect you as their spokesman?

I’d vote for you so that’s one vote plus running unopposed so I think you can crown yourself spokesperson elect
That's what's called a red herring strawman argument. There's nothing in my post history denigrating Star Trek.
For someone that doesn't like being disagreed with you go to a lot trouble misrepresenting what's posted for attention.
Really? Even if nothing in the 21st century appeals to you, there is still over a century’s worth of films, over half a century of TV, and centuries worth of music and literature to explore. Not to mention plays going back thousands of years.There's nothing to move on to.
For someone that doesn't like being disagreed with you go to a lot of trouble misrepresenting what's posted for attention.
But then how else can they continue to performatively complain?But to say there’s nothing else, anywhere, that is worth exploring seems absurd.
Really? Even if nothing in the 21st century appeals to you, there is still over a century’s worth of films, over half a century of TV, and centuries worth of music and literature to explore. Not to mention plays going back thousands of years.
That's why I do have a DVD collection of some great movies and series which I like.Really? Even if nothing in the 21st century appeals to you, there is still over a century’s worth of films, over half a century of TV, and centuries worth of music and literature to explore. Not to mention plays going back thousands of years.
Your exhaustively detailed dislike of Trek in this century is certainly crystal clear. And, of course, you are not required in any way to like any particular iteration of Trek that doesn’t meet your expectations. Perhaps the next one will be more to your liking, perhaps not. But to say there’s nothing else, anywhere, that is worth exploring seems absurd.

If this is so, then your observation that there is “no where to move on to” becomes difficult to understand.That's why I do have a DVD collection of some great movies and series which I like.
But it would be nice to find something new to like too.
Nostalgia can be real fun but it's a risk that it becomes a cage.
No one is happier than me when a real good new rock band, movie and series show up!![]()
How many people ever come close to exhausting what’s available? I’d wager the answer is quite small.That really amounts to less than you'd think. I've seen about 1,500 movies and read a similar number of books, along with significant parts of at least another five or six hundred of each.
As the amount of quality new material has decreased*, I've found myself beginning to run out of great older works. If you pick any genre, the actual classics turn out to be thin on the ground.
*Because of problems with the ecosystem of production, not a decline in human creativity.
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