I think the fact that the television series (past and future), along with the franchise in general, are owned by CBS Television Studios, while the film franchise is licensed to Paramount Pictures. I say this because CBS also owns the merchandising to franchise, including Paramount's current film franchise. In addition, CBS seems to rather promote the versions of the characters from their own series rather than the current versions (which makes since, considering that they would rather merchandise their own holdings rather one that licenses their rights). However, since Paramount can't merchandise their films, it can cause them to lose people who would potentially be interested the franchise (both versions) due to there not being much cross over (compare to The Walt Disney Company with Star Wars and Marvel, whose films can have interest built around merchandising). The only merchandising that I can think for either of the films was a video game that came out around the time of Star Trek Into Darkness and even then I believe CBS and Paramount had to work on it together.
The point is, I think if everything was under one company, it could help build interest to the new material in the franchise and even help get some attention to older parts (a person could see the new film and television series and then become interested in what came before).
Also, didn't J. J. Abrams say at one point he was frustrated with this.
The point is, I think if everything was under one company, it could help build interest to the new material in the franchise and even help get some attention to older parts (a person could see the new film and television series and then become interested in what came before).
Also, didn't J. J. Abrams say at one point he was frustrated with this.