But it fits the preconceived notion that he wants to be true.You keep repeating this claim that has no actual backup beyond one guy on a podcast reporting nebulous "sources." Absolutely nothing has proven just what the viewership numbers were.
But it fits the preconceived notion that he wants to be true.You keep repeating this claim that has no actual backup beyond one guy on a podcast reporting nebulous "sources." Absolutely nothing has proven just what the viewership numbers were.
Change in leadership.Genuine question, why would the show be cancelled before its second season airs? Like, what internal metrics would they be looking at to make that decision before S2 has even been shown?
I can't word this in a way that doesn't sound like I'm trying to suggest something about the viewership, but I'm honeslty not (and the numbers Stoklasa claimed were obviously bullshit), I just don't know what motivates Paramount's decision-making.
I imagine the numbers, whatever they were, were on a downward trajectory that didn't give them faith that season 2 will draw in a bigger audience.Genuine question, why would the show be cancelled before its second season airs? Like, what internal metrics would they be looking at to make that decision before S2 has even been shown?
I imagine the numbers, whatever they were, were on a downward trajectory that didn't give them faith that season 2 will draw in a bigger audience.
Genuine question, why would the show be cancelled before its second season airs? Like, what internal metrics would they be looking at to make that decision before S2 has even been shown?
I can't word this in a way that doesn't sound like I'm trying to suggest something about the viewership, but I'm honeslty not (and the numbers Stoklasa claimed were obviously bullshit), I just don't know what motivates Paramount's decision-making.
As I understand it this is pretty common; a huge chunk of what people actually want to watch is the kind of classic TV that streaming executives sneer at as lowbrow and outdated, and streaming originals generally lose to them, barring breakout hits. I did hear that SFA even got beaten by TOS at various times.I kept track of the top ten shows on paramount plus every week a new episode was released. It goy beaten several times by old shows like Everybody Loves Raymond, King of Queen, SpongeBob etc. It only flirted with the top ten momentarily and disappeared within hours or a day usually. These old shows were staying im the top ten longer at times.
I would be curious to see the demographics of those watching.As I understand it this is pretty common; a huge chunk of what people actually want to watch is the kind of classic TV that streaming executives sneer at as lowbrow and outdated, and streaming originals generally lose to them, barring breakout hits. I did hear that SFA even got beaten by TOS at various times.
The problem is that, from what we can tell (and what the top ten charts show), their efforts at this get routinely smoked by stuff like NCIS, sometimes by several orders of magnitude. The worst is obviously when 60-year-old Star Trek manages to beat brand new streaming Trek in the rankings, which shouldn't really be happening.I don't think executives sneer so much as they're constantly trying to find the next big thing to get an audience. We sit there and laugh comfortably to ourselves about various numbers, while they're trying to stay ahead of competition while also keeping stockholders happy and grow an audience base.
I do not.Part of the original model of promoting "prestige" TV was by sneering at everything else - remember "it's not TV, it's HBO"?
Because the same people are not running it. Who is there to teach them how it was run 30 years ago?I get experimentation but the part I don't get is the seeming refusal to even consider, as one of those experiments, considering making some of these franchises in the way they were made during their most successful eras, and which the most popular TV today is made.
There's still people within organisations like CBS making very successful network TV; the decision to not hand properties like Star Trek to those departments but instead insist on transforming them into prestige/"event" TV on streaming platforms seems to have been an ideological one, which is what's so puzzling.Because the same people are not running it. Who is there to teach them how it was run 30 years ago?
As I understand it this is pretty common; a huge chunk of what people actually want to watch is the kind of classic TV that streaming executives sneer at as lowbrow and outdated, and streaming originals generally lose to them, barring breakout hits. I did hear that SFA even got beaten by TOS at various times.
Which brings me back to the evergreen question of why the hell they don't produce Star Trek in the old network style that broadly worked for it for 60 years, but I'm sure there's reasons.
To be honest, SFA scraping the top ten at all actually sounds encouraging - if the direst predictions were true, it simply wouldn't have made it on there at any point.
Because they're watching other networks do it. It's the ultimate "keep up with the Joneses" attitude within the industry. These are people who are looking at it from a business and stockholder perspective and wanting their own stamp to have a distinction. And then they get feedback from people inside their world, not as a consumer.There's still people within organisations like CBS making very successful network TV; the decision to not hand properties like Star Trek to those departments but instead insist on transforming them into prestige/"event" TV on streaming platforms seems to have been an ideological one, which is what's so puzzling.
TOS had to rely on excellent writing to draw in viewers.
Producers today want to impress with giant sets when all I want is great stories.
Especially by characters who look down on past people.Today's audiences aren't in any mood to be lectured to on a weekly basis. They WANT the razzle dazzle and the bling.
Some of the greatest sci-fi writers in history wrote for TOS (Harlan Ellison, Richard Matheson, Theodore Sturgeon, Robert Bloch).
They had a writer's Dream Team back then.
Today's audiences aren't in any mood to be lectured to on a weekly basis. They WANT the razzle dazzle and the bling.
Real Life sux enough as is. Who wants to pay to wallow in it?
We get lectured more on these new shows than the original series. Obvious lecturing. So much social justice messaging and obvious links to our world that it gets annoying and boring.
That a 60 year old show can be more entertaining than shows in the same fictional world 60 years later is telling at just how talented TOS people really were in that show. They also had to make 25 plus shows a season. Not a measly 10. An amazing achievement.
Because this was the height of subtlety:We get lectured more on these new shows than the original series. Obvious lecturing.
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