PT universe, OT universe... What are you talking about? There's only one Star Wars universe, like it or not (it's not like Trek where we have sh#tloads of quantum universes and whatnot). Had you seen more than just a few episodes, you'd notice that a lot of OT aesthetic has been gradually introduced into the show, like Republic cruisers' interiors which look almost exactly like Imperial star destroyers' from TESB and ROTJ. Hell, they even threw in some of Ralph McQuarrie's old unused OT concept art.
Sorry, it doesn't really matter how many characters or worlds from the OT make their way into the show-- the main story still revolves around a war between a bunch of Jedis, Sith, Separatists, and Clones that I couldn't care less about.
The war is stupid, granted. It was a terrible idea to build the whole prequel story around a contrived war where we can't root for either side because one is evil and the other is clueless (well, both are laregly clueless, really.) If it makes any difference,
TCW has shoehorned in some Separtists who have legitimate grievances against the Republic, and also done some work showing the Republic as worth having grievances against - mainly through corruption, ineptitude and maybe just the sheer impossibility of one governing body on Coruscant trying to wrangle control over a whole galaxy.
If you further assume that the "legit" Separatists started the war and the trade federation baddies and Sith just jumped on the bandwagon to exploit the situation, then you could see the war as more tragic than stupid, with two sides having legitimate points of view but it all goes wrong when the bad guys butt in.
I even have a retcon to defend the indefensible: the good guys making clones for cannon fodder! Remember, this is a different culture, and our own values don't necessarily apply. We've already seen in the
Star Wars galaxy that apparently sentient robots with real emotions are treated not much better than inanimate objects, so it could be that human clones are regarded as being intermediate between natural born humans and other natural species on the one hand, and droids on the other.
That kind of heirarchy of value among sentient beings seems repulsive to us, but it's also understanable in a society where there are many forms of sentient beings. The
Star Wars folks could point an accusing finger at the humans of Planet Earth, who treat their fellow sentient Earthlings - the cetaceans - badly, sometimes slaughtering them for fuel and food, and refusing to see them as equals.
But the main way
TCW has redeemed the Clone War is by making it a story of individual personalities who are worth rooting for, even if they are participating in a galactic farce of a war.
It's been 31 years since Shogun aired and people still talk about how that became "event TV" that people made time to watch for a week. Ditto Roots. Torchwood's five-night Children of Earth was one of the most acclaimed SF events of 2009, even outshining its parent program. A Star Wars miniseries would be a huge win for whatever network aired it, cable or mainstream.
None of those examples are good analogies to the state of modern American TV as a business. 31 years ago may as well be a billion years ago, and foreign countries' TV business structure doesn't apply to America's. A
Star Wars series on a broadcast network could easily fail. It's hard getting and hanging onto an audience anymore. I wouldn't try a space opera series on a broadcast network, period, not even one with a famous brand name.
And forget miniseries, the format is dead, except for on premium cable, where their bigger budgets (because of subscription revenues) offset the expense of not being able to amortize your startup costs with an ongoing series. Which leads to the question whether we might see
Star Wars on Showtime or HBO - I dunno. Doesn't seem like the right fit. Showtime and HBO are all about giving people high-toned stuff they can't get elsewhere, and
Star Wars is the epitome of low-brow popular entertainment. Look at the topics of HBO miniseries - I just can't see
Star Wars fitting in.
Both BSG and V are roughly 85% drama and 15% action. In Star Wars, that ratio needs to be at least 50:50, or even in favour of action. SFX-heavy action.
And as good as those space battles may have looked in BSG, that simply isn't good enough for Star Wars, IMO.
I gotta agree, And remember,
BSG got skimpy ratings even by cable standards while
V is heading for cancellation city. You're setting yourself up for failure by assuming the audience that went to the theater to see kick-ass action and endured bad writing and bad acting to get it would settle for even good writing and acting, if they were expecting the usual volume of action that is implied by the
Star Wars brand, and got a lot of talking instead.