Right ho, although popularity perhaps must figure somewhere -- perhaps as measured by generated revenue. Now we have to decide exactly what to include in SF. Doctor Who, Harry Potter, and Star Wars are all fantasy IMO.
I almost never see people in Star Trek t-shirts
Stargate was good, but hasn't really had the staying power, or cultural influence of the other two Stars or even Dr. Who. I'd probably say that at their height The X-Files and NuBSG were bigger too. I know I saw a lot more stuff popping up in the media, both genre based and mainstream, about those two that I ever did about Stargate.Great SF franchise should have the word "Star" in it, so here is the list:
Star Trek
Star Wars
Stargate
So, what does Google think?
Stargate was good, but hasn't really had the staying power, or cultural influence of the other two Stars or even Dr. Who. I'd probably say that at their height The X-Files and NuBSG were bigger too. I know I saw a lot more stuff popping up in the media, both genre based and mainstream, about those two that I ever did about Stargate.
I had honestly assumed it's numbers were a lot better than that. But I was mainly talking about the fact that it got a lot of talk while it was on the air, and even in the years since it ended shows like Big Bang Theory will still throw in the occaisional "what the frack" and stuff like that.I remember reading once that NuBSG only had about two or three million US viewers an episode -- on par with Enterprise, basically. It just got a lot more media attention than most shows with that kind of audience. There were arguments that it was one of the first shows to have a huge, unmeasured audience through Tivo and whatnot, but even if you double the audience, you've got fewer people than the average UK audience for Doctor Who -- in a country with about a fifth as many people.
I have to admit, I'm actually a little surprised there wasn't more cultural impact from Stargate.Even while it was on the air I rarely saw articles on Stargate, and I don't think I've ever seen a reference to things like Gao'uld or Jaffa outside of the franchise.I can't help but think that Stargate may have been the SF equivalent of Wings. That was a popular sitcom with pretty good ratings, lasted for years, and made no cultural impact at all. X-Files was really big, too, but it outstayed its welcome and I know I wasn't the only former fan who would have ended it earlier.
Yeah, I think DW would probably be number three. I work at Wal-Mart and I've been amazed how often I've seen people wearing DW clothes. Sadly, I think I've only seen people wearing Star Trek clothes a couple of times in the 9 years I've worked there.Star Wars, Star Trek, and Doctor Who are the big three. Longevity, audience (we don't all live in the USA), books, comics, cultural impact. Nothing else compares.
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