The miniaturized remote-controlled whales that portrayed George and Gracie were far more convincing than the CGI whale we saw in Academy episode 2.Nothing wrong with Trek being niche. Might call for lower budgets. Can't help but think that might be a good thing. Trek like lots of things these days uses way to much CGI.
We are very fortunate indeedStar Trek is popular enough to be in its 60th anniversary with 13 series, 14 movies, and almost 1000 episodes. It my be niche, but it is a large niche.
Not in any conceivable scope or scale. Star Trek never has nor ever will bring in the kind of money that those above listed franchises bring in.Star Trek is never niche and never will be.
It's a juggernaut in the TV landscape and it's the most recognizable franchise on par with DC, Marvel and Star Wars.
Whatever helps you sleep at night.Star Trek is never niche and never will be.
It's a juggernaut in the TV landscape and it's the most recognizable franchise on par with DC, Marvel and Star Wars.
Star Trek is never niche and never will be.
It's a juggernaut in the TV landscape and it's the most recognizable franchise on par with DC, Marvel and Star Wars.
That's a whale of a tale.The miniaturized remote-controlled whales that portrayed George and Gracie were far more convincing than the CGI whale we saw in Academy episode 2.
'War fighter'? Such an idiotic way of saying soldier. Your hegseth is showing.Not to nitpick but why is a HOLOGRAM being trained in the physical realm to be a war fighter?
Can she just be AI prompted to become a soldier if they need her to be?
I dearly wish that were the case and we were looking at Lower Decks, Discovery and SNW carrying on comfortably beyond their five seasons, a long future ahead for Academy, the Star Trek United project on its way and a slew of Michelle Yeoh Section 31 films. This is sadly not the world we live in.Star Trek is never niche and never will be.
It's a juggernaut in the TV landscape and it's the most recognizable franchise on par with DC, Marvel and Star Wars.
I like niche, I think Doctor Who has been struggling with accepting it's niche for the past 15 years. It's extremely popular but it's not gonna be Star Wars and that's fine. Also could scale back the budget a lot and lose very little.Nothing wrong with Trek being niche. Might call for lower budgets. Can't help but think that might be a good thing. Trek like lots of things these days uses way to much CGI.
People's knowledge comes mostly from TOS (which has a large cultural footprint) and TNG (which was unusually successful), so pop culture knowledge probably focuses on that. People might not know who Mariner is, but people probably do know vaguely what a mind-meld is, what a nerve pinch is, "phasers on stun", the LLAP hand gesture, and who Worf is. My grandma knew him and called him Mars Bar Head.Look, people may know Kirk, Spock, Picard, Data or Seven of Nine. But how many people know Garak? Or T’Pol? Or what a Trill is? How many know Saru? Or Pike? Mariner? Or Zero? Brand recognition is one thing. Having the market saturation of a Marvel or a Star Wars is something Trek definitely does not have.
It would be really nice if they did, though. I'd watch it.The whole reason CBS/Paramount wanted to bring it back in 2017 was the brand recognition; I mean, nobody's making "Space Precinct: Discovery".
Spock is now 60 years old.Star Trek's a multi-billion dollar franchise with huge cultural capital, definitely not a niche thing. You can walk into the boardroom of Goldman Sachs and say "Spock" and everyone knows who you mean.
I know, right? The alien head costumes blew me away as a kid, absolutely loved it.It would be really nice if they did, though. I'd watch it.
Being popular doesnt mean that though necessarily. In fact, despite Star Wars' position, I cant think of any show they've made lasting longer than 2 seasons. I'd argue these shows all hitting 5 seasons in this current landscape is kind of remarkable already. It's why I will always wish we got more Lower Decks, but will also always be grateful we got so much. I think I can count the number of popular US cartoons that have had 3 or more seasons after 2015 on my hands.I dearly wish that were the case and we were looking at Lower Decks, Discovery and SNW carrying on comfortably beyond their five seasons, a long future ahead for Academy, the Star Trek United project on its way and a slew of Michelle Yeoh Section 31 films. This is sadly not the world we live in.
Mandalorian has 3 seasons so far, whether it'll get a 4th before this big culmination film is unclear.Being popular doesnt mean that though necessarily. In fact, despite Star Wars' position, I cant think of any show they've made lasting longer than 2 seasons. I'd argue these shows all hitting 5 seasons in this current landscape is kind of remarkable already. It's why I will always wish we got more Lower Decks, but will also always be grateful we got so much. I think I can count the number of popular US cartoons that have had 3 or more seasons after 2015 on my hands.
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