Alternately, “Deep Space” sounds pretty snazzy, and slightly less generic than “Next Generation” (which could fit any franchise title just as well) or “New Frontier” (the word frontier in Star Trek, imagine that…).Hear me out, but I actually think that the title “Deep Space Nine” hobbled the series and restricted its audience appeal. It just sounds offputtingly dorky. “Deep Space” and a number, I mean seriously; it sounds like a 1950s B-movie. And Deep Space, seriously, what a snoozer. Needed something like, I don’t know “Star Trek: New Frontier”, which is admittedly not amazing either, but at least isn’t as nerdy. Words suggesting a narrative, not cosmology and integers, basically.
Yes, I’m serious. As someone whose favourite Trek series is DS9, I genuinely believe it’d have been successful with a better, snappier title.
(I also think “Starbase 362” is at least as bad a title, FWIW.)
Alternately, “Deep Space” sounds pretty snazzy, and slightly less generic than “Next Generation” (which could fit any franchise title just as well) or “New Frontier” (the word frontier in Star Trek, imagine that…).
"Next Generation" has a double meaning - it can just as easily refer to technology as people.
True. Though I guess you could rationalize that early TNG seemed to indicate much longer average lifespans — I seem to remember early promotional magazine-article copy about Starfleet officers often still being active in their nineties — in which case people could be having children decades later in life, effectively lengthening the average generation if this were common. But later Trek didn’t seem to continue that.Yeah, if you want to talk about weak titles, they don't get much more generic than "The Next Generation." It isn't even accurate, since it's a whole century later, which is three or four generations.
True. Though I guess you could rationalize that early TNG seemed to indicate much longer average lifespans — I seem to remember early promotional magazine-article copy about Starfleet officers often still being active in their nineties — in which case people could be having children decades later in life, effectively lengthening the average generation if this were common. But later Trek didn’t seem to continue that.
I agree to an extent. After all, "Babylon 5" isn't a terribly exciting title, but it does contain a word familiar to just about everyone and also has a bit of mystery to it. I think "Deep Space Nine" does, too, but it doesn't have the universality of the former.Hear me out, but I actually think that the title “Deep Space Nine” hobbled the series and restricted its audience appeal. It just sounds offputtingly dorky. “Deep Space” and a number, I mean seriously; it sounds like a 1950s B-movie. And Deep Space, seriously, what a snoozer. Needed something like, I don’t know “Star Trek: New Frontier”, which is admittedly not amazing either, but at least isn’t as nerdy. Words suggesting a narrative, not cosmology and integers, basically.
Yes, I’m serious. As someone whose favourite Trek series is DS9, I genuinely believe it’d have been successful with a better, snappier title.
(I also think “Starbase 362” is at least as bad a title, FWIW.)
Interesting, I have a cutaway poster of the station that spells it that way, but it's from at least Season 4, because the Defiant and Worf is on it, but the characters are still in the first uniforms.Which was originally spelled Terek Nor, but Marc Alaimo mispronounced it, so they officially changed it to Terok Nor to match how he said it.
"Strange New Worlds" is distinctive: it screams, "We're out of ideas, we're remixing the old stuff."Maybe "Star Trek: Strange New Worlds" would have worked in terms of brand recognition and the theme of exploring a new part of the galaxy.
"Strange New Worlds" is distinctive: it screams, "We're out of ideas, we're remixing the old stuff."
Or as a Comedy: Deep Space 9-9:Now I'm imagining a Cops-style show, Deep Space 911.
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