Yeah, the thing about Star Trek is it may have its downfalls with the ratings game, but it also has a lot of success, too. And dammit, everyone has heard of it.
I'm not trying to start anything, but I do find it funny that you pointed to Wesley Crusher as an example of anything. Personally, I'm not a 'Wesley hater', but it still elicited a chuckle.
Of course I recognize that your point stands, but still. See the humor in this.
The way the US Naval Academy did it for a while was you went to the academy for one year, then you receive academic and practical instruction aboard ships with the fleet for three years as a midshipman, followed by one more year at the academy.I love your idea and I think that it will work.Cadets on away missions to space could be the basis for a great show. Starfleet would keep freshmen and sophomores on planet, and then let the juniors and seniors get their feet wet in the Milky Way - right? So focus on the last two years of the Academy and the first few years in Starfleet. But the suspicion will always be that any show about people in their late teens/early 20s will be mindless junk.
A Star Trek series that follow a group of midshipman <b><i>AWAY</i></b> from the academy during their second, third and fourth years aboard a starship would be far more interesting than a campus show.
It is owned by MTV Networks, a division of Viacom
The network is planning its first foray into original scripted programming, beginning with two new sitcoms.
The network no longer labels itself as a "Classic TV" network.
The two new sitcoms they did wereIn October 2008, the network began devoting its late primetime schedule to a new programming block airing from 9 pm-midnight Monday-Friday, called TV Land Prime, which featured the network's original programming efforts, movies, and newer archive programming
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TV_LandHot in Cleveland, starring Valerie Bertinelli, Jane Leeves, Wendie Malick and Betty White, premiered in June 2010 to 4.75 million viewers, a TV Land record.[5] Meanwhile, Retired at 35 starring George Segal, Johnathan McClain, Jessica Walter, Josh McDermitt, Ryan Michelle Bathe, Casey Wilson and Christine Ebersole,[6] will premiere in January 2011.
Showtime's new Showtime Anytime video streaming service will allow subscribers to watch all of the net's programming online.
Showtime Anytime -- which is available through the pay cabler's cable, satellite and telco affiliates -- will offer more than 400 hours of Showtime series, movies, sports and other offerings.
Comcast customers can access the service now through Xfinity TV's online service at XfinityTV.com. Additional participating MSOs will be announced at a later date.
SOURCEShowtime joins competing premium TV services Home Box Office, Starz and Epix, as well as such basic services as TBS, TNT, A&E and Discovery in offering TV Everywhere-based online services.
from this week's PR releaseSHOWTIME subscribers have grown 30 percent in the past five years and the significant growth trend continues in 2010, finishing 2Q10 with 18.2 million subscribers,
Spike Renews Auction Hunters, Touts Older ViewersAnd here's something you don't see every day. As part of the network's rather unusual push to get older viewers, executive vp Sharon Levy touted the show's higher median age:
“Auction Hunters is among the new crop of Spike original series aimed at broadening the network’s audience," she said. "The show’s current median age is 39, five years older than the network’s current average age in 2010 for original series.
Their goal of appealing to young female demographic has not been paying off
I doubt they think they "need" a space show at all. They might try one every now and then, but they're getting strong ratings off reality TV, wrestling and sf/f fluff.Second Choice is Syfy channel, they need a new space show now after messing up Stargate.
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