^Some of those postcard images are good, but some seem like the artist knew nothing but the title or a brief plot summary.
WRT merchandising, I've wondered that for years. Star Wars clearly has their sh*t together in that regard.What is wrong with Star Trek?
WRT merchandising, I've wondered that for years. Star Wars clearly has their sh*t together in that regard.
^ Trek could have a wider appeal if the merchandising and marketing was more aggressive.
The Trek novels are regularly on the best-seller lists, but the two times action figures found success were the original Megos (when TAS was airing in children's viewing times on Saturday mornings, and TOS repeats were stripped daily in prime time), and the first few waves of TNG figures from Playmates (when TNG was the #1 first-run hour drama in prime time syndication).
Not so sure that the Trek merchandise needs to be more aggressive when no young kids are being attracted to new Trek, and the last three TV series have aired so late at night. The Bad Robot movies (and IDW tie-ins) seem to be aimed at trendy young adults and nostalgic older fans, not small children.
But with Trek, the last series that seemed to be promoted towards kids was DS9, were it was sponsored by Shreddies cereal and it had a game on both the Super Nintendo and Sega Genesis (the two big game consoles in the 1993-95 era that many kids had or knew of someone who did), plus the toys were available in the big box stores like Wal-Mart, Sears and K-Mart. Ds9 even had a kids novel series.
I was under the impression that DS9 sank later and later in TV schedules in the USA as the series progressed. That it started out in prime time and was even dropped from some syndicated channels in its seventh year?
Since it was syndicated, there wasn't anything as regular as that going on. When and whether it was shown depended on the market. Here in Cincinnati, IIRC, the later seasons weren't shown at all locally, and I had to watch the static-laden signal from a Dayton station 50 miles away. There were many episodes of DS9 that I didn't see clearly until years after the fact in syndication.
We moved from a couple hours outside of Chicago to about half an hour outside of Phoenix part way through DS9's run, and the later seasons after we moved aired pretty consistently at a reasonable time. I don't remember exactly when it aired in Phoenix, but I know it was on one of the local non-network stations on the weekends either in the late afternoon or evening.Since it was syndicated, there wasn't anything as regular as that going on. When and whether it was shown depended on the market. Here in Cincinnati, IIRC, the later seasons weren't shown at all locally, and I had to watch the static-laden signal from a Dayton station 50 miles away. There were many episodes of DS9 that I didn't see clearly until years after the fact in syndication.
I was under the impression that DS9 sank later and later in TV schedules in the USA as the series progressed. That it started out in prime time and was even dropped from some syndicated channels in its seventh year?
Here in Oz, DS9 was airing after 10.30 at night, and poor ol' ENT ended up after midnight.
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