I feel bad that it's the end of an era and now being controlled by the brass and the sons of brass. Disco turns my stomach as do the new movies. Abrams is killing everything, like Lost was something special. The big reveal is that they're all dead? I think TZ did that. Everything now to me is a big rip off as it gets more and more controlled by mediocrity.
Don't worry, things happen in cycles. The "brass" have always been in charge of Trek, but maybe we'll get brass more to your liking in the next installment of Trek.
Abrams won't be around forever (and he has more-or-less left Trek outside of producing). I don't really know why he's your bogeyman, but Star Trek has always been bigger than one man's vision.
We have more and more sequels/remakes/reboots these days because that's what sells (and this has benefitted Trek by bringing it back from the dead). Coincidingly, we have had (are having?) a "golden age" of television, with shows more well-written and stylistically produced than at any point in my lifetime.
These two elements, rehashes and high-end programming, while diametrically opposed in many ways, are bleeding into each other slowly, but surely. Discovery, while it turns your stomach, has *some* elements of the best television, but not as well as it could have.
Perhaps the next series will blend the two ideas better. Or perhaps just be a fun Bermanesque style show, for the fans in mourning who enjoy that type of show.
And the big reveal in Lost was that the "flash-sideways" were an *eventual* afterlife for all the characters whenever they died. It would've made more sense for the actual show to reveal they were dead, as was the original plan. Unfortunately, Abrams left that show after the first season, and it quickly went off the rails.
The Twilight Zone was also the second-greatest show of the 1960s.