Yes Yes This!!!
This is exactly what this was an opportunity to do. Let's do what THREE of the FOUR post TOS series did. They went forward, they pushed boundaries and they showed us new things whilst still respecting what came before and sticking within the established history. And then came the Fourth show...the one that didn't get 7 seasons. The one that essentially got cancelled.
I feel like we've missed a golden opportunity with this and instead there's been a safe choice.
This is exactly what this was an opportunity to do. Let's do what THREE of the FOUR post TOS series did. They went forward, they pushed boundaries and they showed us new things whilst still respecting what came before and sticking within the established history. And then came the Fourth show...the one that didn't get 7 seasons. The one that essentially got cancelled.
I feel like we've missed a golden opportunity with this and instead there's been a safe choice.
One of the greatest things about TNG was that it was a dynamic leap FORWARD from what we had seen before. In many, many ways. Part of the enjoyment was in seeing the evolution of everything from the Kirk-era series and films -- how had Starfleet and the Federation changed, what happened to all the Enterprises in between, what had changed with the Klingons, what was the Enterprise's mission now... on top of the fun of seeing new phasers, communicators, tricorders, uniforms, graphics... it build upon and evolved the Trek asthetic at the same time that it created it's own foundation by progressing the Trek universe into the 24th century.
The Trek universe was expanded, not contracted.
A big problem with trapping another series into a previous part of confined Trek history (as others have pointed out) is that at every turn, at least a dozen times an episode, we are going to be taken out of the story they are telling but bumping into pre-established cannon, story points, or visual contradictions ("well, they look like the old phasers, but they seemed re-imagined... but more modern... and powerful... oh wait, is that a Romulan logo... how could then know what a Romulan looked like at this point... weren't the Constitution class ships the only big guns out there at this point...etc, etc").
There will be so much fan-service to the "look and feel" of Pike's era, but it won't really match up in a cohesive way, because the producers will need their creative freedom to do and try anything new -- which they should! So there is always going to a be a push and a pull -- only because the previous incarnations of Trek did such a remarkable job of maintaining a 40 year dramatic continuity. A continuity that should be built upon, not overstuffed.
It was like Phlox on Enterprise... I could never get over "why have we never heard about his species before". It just seemed off-kilter in so many fundamental ways.
This was grand opportunity to do what Trek does best... go forward. Show us something new and let it feel fresh and unknown. And they may still do that in a unique and innovative way, who knows... we'll have to see how it turns out. I just feel in my gut that a post TNG era timeline had the most potential for original, compelling Trek storytelling at this point.