Well, yeah. DS9 was at the top in first-run syndication, after TNG ended, only competing with Hercules and Xena.


Well, yeah. DS9 was at the top in first-run syndication, after TNG ended, only competing with Hercules and Xena.
Discovery has the lowest average audience score of any Trek series: 48% on RT. Season 2 (35%) was lower than Season 1. So people watched it but didn't like it.
Don't trust RT's metrics. A lot of the reviews on there are just spam.
Discovery has the lowest average audience score of any Trek series: 48% on RT. Season 2 (35%) was lower than Season 1. So people watched it but didn't like it.
To be honest, after all those reports, dubious or not, of intentional mass negative-scoring actions targeting Star Wars: TLJ and Doctor Who, I won't believe anything regarding audience scores on Rotten Tomatoes ever again.RT audience score for Discovery clearly diverges from similar results of other websites so I wouldn't draw such conclusions from it. Besides, at the end of the day the most important voting takes place somewhere else and costs a few dollars a month. And more people than those 1835 took part in it.
So I tried watching a bit of that Midnight's Edge video (in incognito mode so Youtube wouldn't remember) to see if I could get a sense of what argument they would make against these facts. I've never watched any of their videos before so I didn't know exactly what to expect. I couldn't last more than a few seconds, there was just so much stupidity. The whole argument seemed to be nothing more than, "I HATE IT!!!" He even tries to use the fact that the Screen Rant article was written by a guy whose last name is Bacon as evidence that DSC is a failure.I'm not even able to comprehend the level of idiocy I just witnessed.
Good for you for at least trying to see what the argument is. But yeah, to anyone familiar with the hot takes of Paramobius/Doug Fitz back in the day on this website, it's basically just more of that stuff, from what I have watched of them and seen from their faithful.
So people watched it but didn't like it.
Fans can be like that sometimes.
If it weren't for all the Trek fans who kept watching TNG "hoping it'll get better" the show might not have made it to a second year.
TNG had no competition in the space opera department on American television and sci-fi was relatively an unpopular genre unlike today.Wasn't it one of the better sci-fi shows of the time, even then? My impression is that there was relatively little genre programming -- totally different TV landscape.
TNG had no competition in the space opera department on American television and sci-fi was relatively an unpopular genre unlike today.
Discovery shouldn't be compared to TNG, it's closer in tone to DS9 or in era to TOS, or being a TOS prequel, to Enterprise. Space operas still aren't plentiful today, the only current ones I think of besides Discovery are Lost in Space and The Expanse, unless you are comparing it to past not current shows. Though now with everything available on demand, I guess Discovery is not only competing with other Trek shows, but with every space opera every made.That's what I don't get about the continued TNG/Discovery comparisons. There's now more really great sci-fi than I can hope to watch. TNG was best of breed almost by default, even when it was bad, but Discovery has to work way harder.
Discovery has the lowest average audience score of any Trek series: 48% on RT. Season 2 (35%) was lower than Season 1. So people watched it but didn't like it.
I actually use to date her and was her fav for several years.People hate Discovery the same way that people hate the nice lady who ties them up at whips them at the local BDSM club.
Discovery shouldn't be compared to TNG, it's closer in tone to DS9 or in era to TOS, or being a TOS prequel, to Enterprise. Space operas still aren't plentiful today, the only current ones I think of besides Discovery are Lost in Space and The Expanse, unless you are comparing it to past not current shows. Though now with everything available on demand, I guess Discovery is not only competing with other Trek shows, but with every space opera every made.
TNG had a much broader demographic appeal than most modern fantasy shows, which tend to focus in on loyal niche audiences. Paramount knew that they had something remarkable, and tried hard - too hard - to build and expand on it.Wasn't it one of the better sci-fi shows of the time, even then? My impression is that there was relatively little genre programming -- totally different TV landscape.
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