He'll go back to
Heroes first. But frankly, I'd say that's good for maybe two more seasons. After that he can start in on
Star Trek. There won't be a new TV series
immediately. They'll want to let the movies build the fanbase back up first.
Plus there is the big dilemma that the problem afflicting all genre shows (
Pushing Daisies and
Heroes among them), that genre TV fans don't watch shows via the old-fashioned live broadcast method. But networks can't figure out how to make much money off anything but old-fashioned live broadcast viewing. Maybe live plus three days at most.
A new
Star Trek series is going to have an unusually big chunk of new-media viewing, probably over 50% of the total audience. So waiting a couple more years might be a good idea simply to give the networks more time to figure how how to make money off new media viewing - they need to get it sorted out before taking the risk of launching a new series and having it fail simply because everyone is DVRing and downloading it.
Another factor here is that the cost of making shows are being offset via product placements, which allow DVRing beyond the plus-three days to still count in the budget. Product placements can lower production costs and the cost to the networks reduced, which offsets the lower ad revenues. But
Star Trek can't do product placements, so a big element in making new media viewing pay off is not going to apply.
'if people can see it for free on tv, they will be less likely to pay to see the next two movies I'm making'.
That's not the way it works. The TV and ongoing movie series will provide a PR boost for each other. The TV series certainly must be premium, which is why I objected to the idea in another thread here of it going to the Sci Fi Channel, which doesn't draw a large enough audience to do anything "premium." Paramount will not allow a cheapo TV show to impinge on the perception of quality that they are trying to re-build for the franchise.
Star Trek will have to find a way to survive on a network if it's going to be on TV at all.
Bringing the 23rd century to the TV will only reduce the effect of spectacular that created by the movie.
Star Trek isn't about being "spectacular" or visual or a visceral roller-coaster ride. It can have those elements in a movie, where they are expected, but is fundamentally about characters and ideas, and to adequately explore those things, you need a lot more than just two hours every couple of years.
Star Trek was born on TV, and TV shaped what it is. It's a creature of TV just as
Star Wars is a creature of movies.