The international Netflix deal has paid for the first season, so a second is almost guaranteed at least.Ehh I hope it lasts more than three seasons.
The international Netflix deal has paid for the first season, so a second is almost guaranteed at least.Ehh I hope it lasts more than three seasons.
Thing is cable brought hundreds of shows, on dozens of stations, the only thing that going to be on CBSAA that I want to watch is Star Trek.VOY and ENT were on a cable channel, so it was paid for one way or the other.
Fair enough. But, for me I watch Big Bang, and NCIS, Blue Bloods, JAG, as well as shows I want to catch up on or revisit like Flashpoint,The Odd Couple and Taxi.Thing is cable brought hundreds of shows, on dozens of stations, the only thing that going to be on CBSAA that I want to watch is Star Trek.
The only other CBS shows I watch are Big Bang Theory and occasionally NCIS, and they're available outside of CBSAA.
What do you mean? How much would it cost me? Okay I don't have cable Internet or cable TV or Netflix or Access. I watch what is on TV. I know it's archaic but some of us still exist, lol. The common man, well a woman.You do realize you've always paid for Trek in one fashion or another? I have no issue with $5.99 a month for new Trek. I just dropped nearly $50 each on the Roddenberry Vault on Blu-Ray and Star Trek: The Motion Picture soundtrack LP.
Late one year ..Does anyone know when it will be on?
So next year then?Late one year ..
Maybe...they keep pushing it backSo next year then?
Star Trek for the haves, stuff the have nots.
The common man, well a woman.
There are two episodes in the can at least according to CBS.Maybe...they keep pushing it back
It's also been declared a right by the UN:CBS determined Star Trek won't succeed on traditional TV. After Enterprise finished with less than 2 million viewers a week (the end of a long ratings decline that started with DS9), I'd say they are likely right. So it's either fans pay for it (CBS All-Access or a variety of home release options later on) or it simply doesn't get made.
Nope. Most folks have access to the internet in one form or another.
The resolution “affirms that the same rights that people have offline must also be protected online, in particular freedom of expression, which is applicable regardless of frontiers and through any media of one’s choice.” The resolution later calls on governments to “promote digital literacy and to facilitate access to information on the Internet,” as it can be “an important tool in facilitating the promotion of the right to education.”
"The right to communicate cannot be ignored," Dr Hamadoun Toure, secretary-general of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), told BBC News. "The internet is the most powerful potential source of enlightenment ever created…. governments must regard the internet as basic infrastructure - just like roads, waste and water. We have entered the knowledge society and everyone must have access to participate.”
#noStarTrekfanleftbehindAny time there is technological progress, there are always a few left behind. We can't stop progressing because a few can't/won't come along with the rest of us.
Someone I correspond with occasionally online (who likes Enterprise) said that more people were watching it than they thought, but they were recording it on Tivo to watch later so it was somehow confusing the ratings. I don't know if this is true or not because I don't know how the Nielson ratings work.CBS determined Star Trek won't succeed on traditional TV. After Enterprise finished with less than 2 million viewers a week
My main issue is that it will only be on cbs all access which you will have to pay for.
Someone I correspond with occasionally online (who likes Enterprise) said that more people were watching it than they thought, but they were recording it on Tivo to watch later so it was somehow confusing the ratings. I don't know if this is true or not because I don't know how the Nielson ratings work.
Sweet. A few left behind like we are too stupid to keep up? Is that you are implying. Sometimes there are other considerations mate.Any time there is technological progress, there are always a few left behind. We can't stop progressing because a few can't/won't come along with the rest of us.
At least you have a practical alternative to a situation where I for example am not being lazy or too stupid to know how to use the Internet. I simply do not have the funds and a reliable enough Internet speed where I live. I just have to weigh up whether it all will be worth it..If someone doesn't want to watch it "live", there's always DVD box sets at a later date.
And was The Original series a rating success?I would bet broadcasters have ways to measure those things. One thing was clear from the Neilsen data across all the shows: the ratings decline started with DS9 and ran for the rest of the Berman-era run.
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