There is a difference between the state of Trek for the fans and the state of Trek for the general public.
Trek experienced something very rare for a sci-fi franchise during the late 80's and early 90's. It broke through and achieved mainstream popularity. People who were not sci-fi fans, let alone Star Trek fans, were into Star Trek.
That started in 1986 with the phenomenal success of The Voyage Home and continued through 1994 with the equally phenomenal success of The Next Generation. I think people today forget just how popular TNG was. Hell, at one point it was beating mainstream network shows, including Monday Night Football, in the ratings, which is quite an achievement for a syndicated sci-fi Star Trek show.
But, for whatever reason, that mainstream interest did not carry on past TNG. Deep Space Nine, Voyager, Enterprise, the TNG movies. None of them received the reception from the audience that TNG did. You can discuss and debate all the reasons you want. For me, it's just that elusive "magic" that some shows have and others don't. Why is one a hit and another is a flop? Something about TNG clicked with the general public. The other shows did not.
So, in that sense, the Star Trek high died in 1994.
That, of course, does not necessarily speak to when the quality of the shows began to decline, when fan interest waned, etc. I personally would argue that really didn't happen until Voyager. And I don't think it's due to oversaturation, per se, but rather having the same creative team doing the same franchise for way too long. Anyone will suffer burn out after 20+ years of doing the same thing. And I'm not just talking about the writers. The producers, the directors, the art department, the visual effects people, the composers. Everyone was basically the same. And that was too much.
Trek experienced something very rare for a sci-fi franchise during the late 80's and early 90's. It broke through and achieved mainstream popularity. People who were not sci-fi fans, let alone Star Trek fans, were into Star Trek.
That started in 1986 with the phenomenal success of The Voyage Home and continued through 1994 with the equally phenomenal success of The Next Generation. I think people today forget just how popular TNG was. Hell, at one point it was beating mainstream network shows, including Monday Night Football, in the ratings, which is quite an achievement for a syndicated sci-fi Star Trek show.
But, for whatever reason, that mainstream interest did not carry on past TNG. Deep Space Nine, Voyager, Enterprise, the TNG movies. None of them received the reception from the audience that TNG did. You can discuss and debate all the reasons you want. For me, it's just that elusive "magic" that some shows have and others don't. Why is one a hit and another is a flop? Something about TNG clicked with the general public. The other shows did not.
So, in that sense, the Star Trek high died in 1994.
That, of course, does not necessarily speak to when the quality of the shows began to decline, when fan interest waned, etc. I personally would argue that really didn't happen until Voyager. And I don't think it's due to oversaturation, per se, but rather having the same creative team doing the same franchise for way too long. Anyone will suffer burn out after 20+ years of doing the same thing. And I'm not just talking about the writers. The producers, the directors, the art department, the visual effects people, the composers. Everyone was basically the same. And that was too much.