So...I've been a Trek fan since the late 70's. I grew up on TOS re-runs, TOS movies...and remember being in 7th grade and filled with excitement when TNG premiered in early October with "Encounter at Farpoint."
I also remember years later giving a new prequel show called "Enterprise" a quick watch or two, and then quickly forgetting about it, as it was unable to hold my interest (despite giving it a very open-minded try). I hadn't really been able to stick with "Voyager..." and this seemed even more difficult to engage with.
So, I'd never seen about 70-80% of the series. I watched a few episodes here and there. I saw the Brent Spiner "augments" arc, but mainly because it had Brent Spiner in it. I tuned in here and there during the Xindi arc...but was lost because of the serialized storytelling and my lack of dedication to the show.
Now, fast-forward ~15 years later...I decided this past winter to do a complete "skip nothing" re-watch of the series on Netflix. I must say, I enjoyed it tremendously. It wasn't perfect...and it wasn't nearly as good as TOS or DS9 in my own personal rankings...but I thought it was a fun, engaging and interesting show.
So- my theory: Honestly, I think if "Enterprise" had premiered in 1987 (in place of TNG) or even 1993 (in place of DS9), it would have been much more well-received. I actually believe it is possible that it would have been MORE popular than TNG if it had premiered in TNG's place. As a related data point: I'm having trouble forcing my way through a TNG re-watch right now. I had no such issue with ENT. Now, admittedly, some of that is probably because ENT was largely "new" to me, and I hadn't seen it before...but I think more of it is because as loose and foolish as ENT could be at times, it was just admittedly more "fun" and adventure-oriented. It was less pretentious and preachy, and the characters were far more relatable than the TNG characters. I think ENT did poorly because, chronologically, it fell after so many other series and felt repetitive and stale. But, when watched "in a bottle" like I just had the chance to do, it can be observed much more on its own merits...and I found it to be very entertaining.
So, count me an "Enterprise" fan!
I also remember years later giving a new prequel show called "Enterprise" a quick watch or two, and then quickly forgetting about it, as it was unable to hold my interest (despite giving it a very open-minded try). I hadn't really been able to stick with "Voyager..." and this seemed even more difficult to engage with.
So, I'd never seen about 70-80% of the series. I watched a few episodes here and there. I saw the Brent Spiner "augments" arc, but mainly because it had Brent Spiner in it. I tuned in here and there during the Xindi arc...but was lost because of the serialized storytelling and my lack of dedication to the show.
Now, fast-forward ~15 years later...I decided this past winter to do a complete "skip nothing" re-watch of the series on Netflix. I must say, I enjoyed it tremendously. It wasn't perfect...and it wasn't nearly as good as TOS or DS9 in my own personal rankings...but I thought it was a fun, engaging and interesting show.
So- my theory: Honestly, I think if "Enterprise" had premiered in 1987 (in place of TNG) or even 1993 (in place of DS9), it would have been much more well-received. I actually believe it is possible that it would have been MORE popular than TNG if it had premiered in TNG's place. As a related data point: I'm having trouble forcing my way through a TNG re-watch right now. I had no such issue with ENT. Now, admittedly, some of that is probably because ENT was largely "new" to me, and I hadn't seen it before...but I think more of it is because as loose and foolish as ENT could be at times, it was just admittedly more "fun" and adventure-oriented. It was less pretentious and preachy, and the characters were far more relatable than the TNG characters. I think ENT did poorly because, chronologically, it fell after so many other series and felt repetitive and stale. But, when watched "in a bottle" like I just had the chance to do, it can be observed much more on its own merits...and I found it to be very entertaining.
So, count me an "Enterprise" fan!