Whenever you think it's hit bottom, the whinging strain in Trek fandom finds a way to sink lower.
I'm damned glad the show likely won't be released all at once. Damned glad.
Looking forward here to years of hearing people announce repeatedly that they aren't buying the service, then dropping in to complain about last night's episode with a long explanation of how they managed to happen to see it for free at someone else's house.
I don't care.
CBS is willing to make a Star Trek TV series, charging roughly six bucks an episode (assuming a ten or twelve episode season).
Take it or leave it. If you don't think a Trek show's worth six bucks a pop, go buy a couple of comic books or lunch at McDonalds instead.
Go throw money at a fan film, and then when they jack up their goals so that they can hire the guy who sat next to Data in episode 43 to play James Kirk's grandfather's uncle Admiral Puffenblow, throw some more money at them.
But must you all carry on as if you've been slighted by someone, somehow, some way? Jesus Christ.
And that sounds exactly like a studied grievance to me.
Trekkies have discovered a new grievance, and it tastes just like Mama Roddenberry's Homemade Mac'N'Cheese.
And that sounds exactly like a studied grievance to me.
Trekkies have discovered a new grievance, and it tastes just like Mama Roddenberry's Homemade Mac'N'Cheese.
Whatever, I think just I think am being a smart consumer who is familiar with how the media landscape is today, rather then trying to compare it to how it was in the 90s. If you disagree, frankly I don't care.
If you want to support CBS trying to graft the old media methods on today's different media landscape, you can go ahead, I think its a bad idea and I don't think it will work unless CBS works really hard to make their service competitive and guess what, Star Trek on its own will not do that. Again, do think people would be complaining if this show was Netflix or Hulu or any service with a huge and diverse library? This is like MacDonalds trying to charge almost as much as a high end sit down restaurant and I am supposed to be happy about it. I guess I shouldn't complain just because I think someone is over charging for their product, just because they got away with it in the past. That is not great logic, IMO. I think saying being a ''true fan'' means I have spend money on a service I don't think is good, just because CBS decides to put something Star Trek related. Frankly I don't think its a good idea to allow your hobbies to lead you into blind consumerism. I find this a rather cynical movie on CBS' part, so 6 bucks by itself is more then fair compensation.
Its not the 90s anymore, the idea of that consumers should be happy with any old Star Trek delivered any way the company feels like is a throw back to the past, not a look to the future. The media landscape has changed and frankly no one can afford to take their fans for granted.
So, when traditional TV dies, you would rather the major networks die with it instead of attempting to stay alive by getting into the streaming game themselves? I don't see how this is anything but smart on the part of CBS, but time will tell. And who knows - you might actually like CBS All Access by the time you subscribe. A lot can change between now and 2017. Why complain about a show, an app and a streaming line-up you haven't yet seen much less paid for?
Simply broadcasting it on any old regular network would be the old fashioned way. Like it or not ( and, heck, I can tell you don't like it), services like CBS All Access are the way of the future.
And point two, as others have said umpteen billion times in this thread, there's very little difference between paying a subscription for CBS All Access, and paying for a movie ticket to 'Star Trek: Another Interminable Sequel', or buying said movie or TV show on Blu Ray or DVD.
Whichever way you cut the sandwich, whether you pay to watch it on CBS All Access, or you pay for the inevitable home media releases, one way or another you'll have your hand in your pocket for the opportunity of seeing the new Star Trek. If you're inclined towards doing so legally, at least. So why complain about that?![]()
And point three, to pick up on one of your quotes, it isn't just any old ''Star Trek related'' content that they're selling... it *is* Star Trek itself. Actual new TV episodes, officially made by the copyright holders. We're not talking about a couple of retrospective behind-the-scenes featurettes crapped out by two men and a camera guy sitting in a small room in one afternoon here. It seems to me that you're deliberately downplaying the significance of the product they are selling.....![]()
I highly doubt that CBS is banking on Star Trek alone to make All Access competitive. From my reading of the press releases, and only my opinion, they are working to make the service better and tied in to more than just their current line up.
Whether it is successful or not, remains to be seen. From the sounds of it, All Access in 2017 will not be the same as now, good, bad or indifferent.
Also, seeing as how I don't have cable or an antennae, the option to stream live CBS affiliates is appealing to me.
I've not read up thoroughly on the matter, but how will it work for those of us not in the States?
I don't care.
CBS is willing to make a Star Trek TV series, charging roughly six bucks an episode (assuming a ten or twelve episode season).
Take it or leave it. If you don't think a Trek show's worth six bucks a pop, go buy a couple of comic books or lunch at McDonalds instead.
Go throw money at a fan film, and then when they jack up their goals so that they can hire the guy who sat next to Data in episode 43 to play James Kirk's grandfather's uncle Admiral Puffenblow, throw some more money at them.
But must you all carry on as if you've been slighted by someone, somehow, some way? Jesus Christ.
I've not read up thoroughly on the matter, but how will it work for those of us not in the States?
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