What helps Marvel out is each of the series within the MCU are geared differently. Iron Man is standard action hero stuff, Thor is fantasy, Captain America is sort of political thriller, Guardians of the Galaxy is science fiction, The Avengers is where everyone meets up. The variety keeps plenty of storytelling options open. Star Trek is basically the adventures of a ship and crew, regardless the iteration. The differences are subtle to non-existent. The sequel set 100 years later, the prequel set 100 years earlier, the one where the ship is stranded away from home, the one on a space station instead. There are more limited options, and Trek fans don't tend to respond well to having their recipe messed with.
Season 1 of TNG was underwhelming, they didn't actually hit their stride until BOBW. I watched the pilot, and barely watched until midway through season 2. After that the writers finally had defined the characters enough for it to be watchable.Anything is possible but given the extremely low quaility of TV over the past decade and the fact that season 1 of TNG was so good, I wouldn't count on it.
Well, this is a non-starter of an opinion. We're in the television Renaissance, man. I'm not saying you're totally alone in your opinion, but there's probably a lot of tumbleweeds rolling by and crickets chirping around you.Anything is possible but given the extremely low quaility of TV over the past decade...
I don't care if anybody agrees with me on that point or not, but I can tell you my opinion on the subject was formed when I took a look at the shows I was following and realized that every single one was a remake of a show I enjoyed as a kid. Not an original show in the bunch. And, the "original" shows I attempted to watch just didn't appeal to me for whatever reason.Well, this is a non-starter of an opinion. We're in the television Renaissance, man. I'm not saying you're totally alone in your opinion, but there's probably a lot of tumbleweeds rolling by and crickets chirping around you.
Really expected to scroll through this thread and find you only posted a simple, "Yes," and that's all -- to which I agree one hundred percent. But I guess you were in a chatty mood.Yes.
Of course, Paramount spent a couple of decades making oldTrek movies that were only moderately profitable.
Game of ThronesI don't care if anybody agrees with me on that point or not, but I can tell you my opinion on the subject was formed when I took a look at the shows I was following and realized that every single one was a remake of a show I enjoyed as a kid. Not an original show in the bunch. And, the "original" shows I attempted to watch just didn't appeal to me for whatever reason.
Why do you think we're in a television renaissance? I don't see it.
I can't speak for him but there has never been a time before the last decade where there was so much high quality programming on television (though this includes paid cable and online streaming--not just broadcast networks)--production values, acting talent, sophisticated writing, intriguing stories and topics. Of course, not all current TV is excellent, or even good. Much of it is mediocre or downright bad. It's not so much that there was nothing of quality in the past (of course there was--back to the early days of television, as well as not so far back--I consider the Wonder Years one of the best TV shows ever made, across all genres, for example, and while it ain't from the Eisenhower era, it ain't last week's brand new thing either). What I would argue is while the worst TV of today may well be poorer than the worst of previous eras, the best of today is better than just about anything in earlier eras--and there is a lot more of it (The Wonder Years had few peers for excellence, IMO, while the number of excellent shows today is far greater--so much so that I can't keep up with all of it, something I had little trouble doing some decades ago).I don't care if anybody agrees with me on that point or not, but I can tell you my opinion on the subject was formed when I took a look at the shows I was following and realized that every single one was a remake of a show I enjoyed as a kid. Not an original show in the bunch. And, the "original" shows I attempted to watch just didn't appeal to me for whatever reason.
Why do you think we're in a television renaissance? I don't see it.
That reminds me, I saw something on Youtube where Adam Savage was comparing the TOS captain's chair (he made a replica) with the NuTrek chair (he sat in it at the Beyond fan event). He talked about how the chair really affects your physical performance: all Shatner's famous chair poses were sort of based on what the chair shape made comfortable to do, while the Nu chair is wider but shallower, meaning the captain tends to be leaning forward (or hanging a leg over one of the chair-arms).i'm hoping in ST4, we get a scene akin to TFF where Kirk is uphappy with his chair and McCoy is like "what's the matter Jim" and Kirk is like "i miss my old chair."
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