I'm sure someone will fix it someday...Well ... Today, is really awful to see DS9 on a HD TV![]()
I'm sure someone will fix it someday...Well ... Today, is really awful to see DS9 on a HD TV![]()
I think so as well. The fans have far more investment in this than CBS does at this moment in time and are willing to invest time and money without expecting a return.As I’ve predicted in other threads, I think eventually some motivated fans will make the HD DS9 that we all want. It’s just a matter of time and technological advancement.
It costs too much.The excuses for not upgrading all the old series make increasingly less sense. The new CBS-Paramount amalgamation has said that Star Trek is the jewelry in their crown. Not having all the series available at the highest quality will stick out.
The excuses for not upgrading all the old series make increasingly less sense. The new CBS-Paramount amalgamation has said that Star Trek is the jewelry in their crown. Not having all the series available at the highest quality will stick out.
I believe that excuse is implicit in my first sentence. My point is to argue that CBS-Paramount's stance about spending on Str Trek has clearly and dramatically changed in the last few years, an effect of the it being a property they want to highlight (unlike during the late 2000s and 10s). Saying they don't want to spend much on Trek these days is just plain silly.It costs too much.
I think the point is they would rather spend millions of dollars on new Trek series with a potential of making more money than on remastering old shows that likely won't turn a profit. If the TNG sets had sold better, we probably wouldn't be having this conversation.I believe that excuse is implicit in my first sentence. My point is to argue that CBS-Paramount's stance about spending on Str Trek has clearly and dramatically changed in the last few years, an effect of the it being a property they want to highlight (unlike during the late 2000s and 10s). Saying they don't want to spend much on Trek these days is just plain silly.
ETA: Les Moonves is gone. His thinking about Star Trek no longer applies.
This guy's Star Trek channel is one of my favorites. He does a good job explaining this....
Sorry, but I've been here a long time. I read all the arguments, both from users and people who worked on the show. My point, the one that apparently you don't understand, is that circumstances are changing. There is every reason to ask that CBS rethink its decision. Converting these series is no longer THE SAME financial burden, the platform for the converted series would not be the same, and the company has invested in Star Trek as its foremost, most public franchise rather than seeing it as a burden. CBS-Paramount need not be fossilized in its thinking. Neither should we.I think the point is they would rather spend millions of dollars on new Trek series with a potential of making more money than on remastering old shows that likely won't turn a profit. If the TNG sets had sold better, we probably wouldn't be having this conversation.
This isn't a small amount of money. And no guarantee of return.I believe that excuse is implicit in my first sentence. My point is to argue that CBS-Paramount's stance about spending on Str Trek has clearly and dramatically changed in the last few years, an effect of the it being a property they want to highlight (unlike during the late 2000s and 10s). Saying they don't want to spend much on Trek these days is just plain silly.
ETA: Les Moonves is gone. His thinking about Star Trek no longer applies.
"Duet" jumps to mind.If a full remaster of the whole series is out of the question, could we at least have a four-episode sample pack (perhaps two each from DS9 and VOY)? Even a series of short clips, preferentially choosing scenes with no CG or composite shots, would be a nice way to see the characters and sets in HD.
I think it's muddy by the fact that you would have to be willing to play and extremely long game in terms of investment to seeing an eventual return. And, while I think that Viacom/CBS will eventually see that as a viable possibility in terms of this will benefit the franchise over all I do not think the cost of processing the film makes financial sense right now. It could very well in the future if they can make a reasonable projection of how profitable it can be for them.It's sort of muddy in the streaming space out there. It seems to be hard to stand apart. Here's an easy card to play for franchise owners. "Easy" meaning they have the series/films and the AI technology is improving and becoming more efficient by miles.
Converting these series is no longer THE SAME financial burden, the platform for the converted series would not be the same, and the company has invested in Star Trek as its foremost, most public franchise rather than seeing it as a burden. CBS-Paramount need not be fossilized in its thinking. Neither should we.
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