I disagree, it seems like almost every property with semi recognizable name is getting a TV treatment nowadays. 12 Monkeys and Scream have gotten TV shows. Is Star Trek really less popular then a lot of the properties that have been chosen to get the TV treatment nowadays?
Here is a question you seem to be tip toeing around, does CBS not want to make a Star Trek series because they did extensive market research and made an informed decisions or is it because they want to stay in their comfort zone and not take risk, the way many TV studios that are afraid of the modern media landscape seem to be? It seems like that there are media platforms that are starving for content that is both new and has a recognizable name.
I assume the later, because I think this day and age has far more money making platforms for Star Trek then the past did, Netflix is what syndication was back in the 80s.
I cannot force CBS to be more daring in dealing with the modern media landscape, but I can criticize them for wanting to stay in their comfort zone and not try to do more with Star Trek in this new media landscape.
I don't fault your criticism, but to be perfectly fair, it isn't your money to gamble with either.
As I have mentioned, CBS doesn't have to do anything, and they make money on Star Trek.
Yes, I think CBS is scared. I think most of the major media studios are scared as effects houses close up and consumers have more options and are less likely to consume traditional media. There is a lot of risk, and not seemingly viable way of predicting it.
There is a lot of risk, but that also means there are lots of opportunities that didn't exist in the past. I think the media companies that do take risks in this environment will do better then those who want to live in the past and try to play it safe by not adapting to the new media landscape. I think other media companies are taking more risks then CBS. In business and entertainment, fortune favors the bold.
I think saying there is no way to make money on Star Trek nowadays, is due to a lack of imagination, rather then a solid assessment of the facts of today's media landscape.
Even a B-list superhero has the advantage of being set in the modern day. Sets and clothing are contemporary, so their is less expense for futuristic sets and props.
What about Game of Thrones, it is set in a fictional fantasy world, with very elaborate sets and fictional settings, it still makes HBO money. Is fantasy really that much more of an easy sell compared to sci fi in TV nowadays.
Yes, I think that fantasy is easier to sell than science fiction. Gone are the days where you can present an SF show an the audience buys in to with without expecting some form of realism or acknowledgement of how space travel actually works.
Fantasy gets a little more permission to hand-wave away aspects by claiming fantasy. Same thing with comic book films. Science fiction, especially lately, have been edging closer to harder sci-fi making it more difficult to hand-wave away some things.
tl:dr Yes, fantasy is easier to sell and CBS is not willing to risk money and I don't blame them.
Star Trek has never really had realistic science and I don't think anyone cares about that, as long as it makes sense within the context of the story.
Time travel, god like beings, being split into good and evil halves, all of those are things that appeared Star Trek and have no basis in real science.
Look at Star Wars, they don't explain what the hyper drive is, its just an excuse to get from point A to point B. We don't need some bad attempt at a physics lesson to explain the Warp Drive, its just a plot device device. We don't need to focus that much on hard science in a sci fi, we are talking about entertainment, not something in a class room.
Star Trek is more interesting when it focuses on philosophy and the human condition, rather then hard science. The science in the Inner Light didn't make sense, but it didn't have to. You are underestimating willing suspension of disbelief an audience is willing to give a program if the stories are good.[/QUOTE]
I probably am overestimating the willingness of the suspension of disbelief, but the fact that films like
Interstellar and
Gravity which depict a little harder version of science fiction than perhaps had been done in years past. So, I'm not saying the audience will not buy in to it, but rather there is now another consideration from a production standpoint that prior Treks really didn't have.
No, I'm not saying that Star Trek was ever "hard" but it the demand for harder SF was not nearly as prevalent either. I just think there is a different cultural attitude than existed before. Is it a bad thing? No, but I think that it gives some pause before making stuff. At least, it does me.
Also, you misunderstand me. I have not said there absolutely
no way to make money on Trek-CBS does that by virtue of owning parts of that property. What I am saying is that CBS does not see a predictable way to do so. I think
BillJ pointed it out (possibly in another thread) that the numbers are not lining up in a way that CBS sees as a worthwhile gambit.
I agree that the contemporary media landscape is ripe with opportunity and that bold attempts may create great rewards. But, the capriciousness of audiences is concerning too. There is not the same digesting of media on TV, or even streaming, that there use to be.
I want there to be a new Trek series, but I don't blame CBS for not wanting to start making one either.