Ok. We're not owed anything, we're not entitled to anything, and we earned nothing.
This wasn't a comment on nostalgia but the ridiculous entitlement attitude that I find offensive and pervasive in fan circles.
You're welcome to the nostalgia. I'm ok without it and I'm ok with it. Don't tell me it's the greatest thing ever because it preys on the emoitionality of the audience.
Oh it's certainly the greatest thing in its own way.
What's a bettermeal ? A $1500 dinner made by a michelin star chef, or a big bowl of Fruity Pebbles? I would say they're incomparable. The former is unique, enriching experience. The latter brings you unrequited joy. When I went to Greece last year I experinced just that. I went to a Michelin Star resturant and BOY was that an experience I'll never forget. But I also don't even rank it as "dinner" because it was more a performance than a meal. The best meal I had was in a dive in Santorini that cost me $13. I'll NEVER forget that meal. I'll also never forget the watermelon the size of of a Cello that cost me $3.50.
What's the point of this culinary aside? When Star Trek tries to be the former after 56 years, it usually fails hard. When they tried to hard-science Discovery last season, it was cringe. It sounded out of place because Trek at its core, is a facile fantasy. When Trek instead takes the "saturday morning cartoon and bowl of sugary cereal approach", it is often at its best.
It took a long time for fans to come back arond to that. After the very talky Berman era, which started to give way to the more action oriented NX-01 production, it was disturbing for fans to see action-adventure at the core of Trek in the (Horrid) Kevlinverse films. And while those bad movies have their issues, realizing Trek as a super srs "Andor" esque show is a dead end, was 100% on point. When Picard Season 1 and 2 tried to do that, it wasn't very good.
And just to drive the point home... ANDOR. Star Wars, more than Star Trek, is about selling merch to kids and parents. It's fundamentally a fantasy story for kids that because people grew up with it, folks are desperate to turn into this mature thing. That is one reason Andor got such accolades, because it resonates with sophisticated ardencies. And Mandalorian did too while it was gritty. But what happened when it embraced the "Silly Star Wars" side, and have Jack Black and Lizzo looking exactly like you'd expect them to in Star War? It was revolting to some critics, even though there is far more silly star wars than serious star wars.
Andor is a serious show with serious themes. And Star Wars can do both. But the trap Star Wars is falling into as you have adults consume these exceptionally expensive shows, is they forget Star Wars is always sill first, and serious a far, far distant second. It's going to be really bad when Ashoka is excellent if you liked Clone Wars and Rebels, but nonsense to people who think Star Wars is Andor and Rogue One (my favorite STar Wars movie) which it isn't.
Similarly, Trek... we did the serious bit decades before Star Wars did, and it's played out. A hard lean into the fantasy "sugary cereal" side for the franchise is healthy, expands interest in it., and most of all, will bring people back.
Strange New Worlds is bringing people back in a way the dour Discovery and the dour Season 1 and 2 of Picard didn't (until they hyped Season 3 as TNG Season 8 in all but name), because it gets this. Because it gets that people want escapism, not moralizing.