- Joined
- Jan 1, 2025
I liked Nechayev. Someone has to look out for the Federation's best interests i.e. genociding the Borg.
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Nechayev does a thankless job as a middleman between the Council and the Captains in the field. Which is why being a good admiral sucks in Star Trek, they aren't allowed to act on their own judgment really like Captains are allowed to do and have to follow policy more strictly.I liked Nechayev. Someone has to look out for the Federation's best interests i.e. genociding the Borg.
honestly no one under 40 watches Star Trek, the franchise peaked in the 90s, so if you weren't a teenager back then you missed it entirely. the same way so few people under 21 care about the MCU anymore. they missed the hype train, the forum discussions, and the fan films. And the culture changed so much that its a near impossible task to convince someone to give a fuck about that franchise nowadays. even RLM admits you basically have to skip the first half of TNG and don't really care for any trek that was made before 1990.Gen Z doesn’t watch Star Trek
That unspoken “three seasons” barometer hurt the Star Trek brand in the long run. No matter how terrible shows started, there was always that hope they would get better—eventually.even RLM admits you basically have to skip the first half of TNG
The people writing for this stopped being bratty teenagers more than 20 years ago, though. They're extending their adolescence doing this, heh.Most of Nu-Trek's dialogue has been written for bratty teenagers, so they're probably ecstatic to have some actual bratty teenagers to write for.
i think the tv market changed as well, those 22 episode seasons of cheap bullshit have died out completely in the tv landscape. no streaming site wants to make those, despite them usually being the best ROI. USA network thrived on those shitty cheap shows.No matter how terrible shows started, there was always that hope they would get better—eventually.
Makes you wonder how much KG was involved on the producer side of things. My guess? Not much.Kelsey begged them to make more episodes of that shit, but the production said it could only guarantee 10 episodes at a time. you'd think with the way people clearly
at least the premise is there in the original. but overall unless you near completely reboot it like with 90210 or continue the original like dallas it fails. doing this weird spin off thats somewhat like the original won't work. Murphy Brown is a great example. Roseanne was just like the original was when it came back, and thats why the conners is still doing really well years later. obviously you can't really do that with the father dead but if fredrick came back because he fell on hard times it might have worked.It was obvious the show was gonna be a disaster; it gave me flashbacks to that Murphy Brown reboot where "Murph" moves in with her nepo-baby son. Not exactly the kind of comparison you want people making.
Ah, Roseanne, always in my heart. Though, it’s a bit frustrating how they’re always teetering on the edge of financial collapse.Roseanne was just like the original was when it came back, and thats why the conners is still doing really well years later.
I think it's less the market and more how it's consumed. doubt many want to binge 22 episodes, while 6-10 is more like an extended movie when movies already are 2+ hours.i think the tv market changed as well, those 22 episode seasons of cheap bullshit have died out completely in the tv landscape. no streaming site wants to make those, despite them usually being the best ROI. USA network thrived on those shitty cheap shows.
Bingo. But it's also an investment paradox.I think it's less the market and more how it's consumed. doubt many want to binge 22 episodes, while 6-10 is more like an extended movie when movies already are 2+ hours.
there's also much more to watch, and on the internet as well. back then watching the one episode per week was a happening, which was already hard if it wasn't one of the top shows of the season. these days the same cadence probably would make people forget to come back quite fast unless it's really good or popular enough everyone's talking about it.
Orville would be a test of that concept.I think a trek series in the old format can still work to some degree. it won't be the mega-seller or killer series to sell a whole service, but there should still be some demand for that type of content. but platform holders rather pull a nu-sony and put all their eggs into 1-2 expensive baskets instead of offering a buffet where almost everyone gets something out of it.
Orville's problem is that it's only on Hulu. I mean, yeah, pirating is a choice, but I'd rather not do that for new shows. I actually do want to have my money/metrics within reason and getting another subscription service isn't it.Orville would be a test of that concept.
I need to get back to it too...
Like I said, it's not what she said, it's how she said it.It's more like Picard saying the Federation should help the Romulans--whom are a hostile government that didn't ask for help in the first place*--and criticizing the Federation for not helping despite the Feds' android slaves committing 9/11 on Utopia Planitia. Then he wants to come out of retirement to pursue his own agenda for personal reasons--which Shaw also chatisized him and Riker for until the plot cucks him out of his chair. So, while I wouldn't have told him to fuck off, I also would have said no.
*And then some senator got so pissy at Picard he challenged him to a sword fight. Bad Robot Romulans are dumb as fuck. Nero spent 20 years floating in space wanting revenge instead of going straight to Romulus to warn them of the impending supernova. The Romulan government not using its vast interstellar navy to save what can be saved of their civilization.
yeah the knack for "weekly standalone A plot, b and c plot develop the long-term story while something else too" style writing got lost with... the rest of writingOrville's problem is that it's only on Hulu. I mean, yeah, pirating is a choice, but I'd rather not do that for new shows. I actually do want to have my money/metrics within reason and getting another subscription service isn't it.
DS9 is like a missing link between longform streaming shows and episodic TV where there was that overarching plot that spans multiple seasons, but then there's a bunch of filler episodes like Move Along Home. So the time investment isn't as bad. Game of Thrones or Breaking Bad are full season blocks of content and that makes them impenetrable. I saw Breaking Bad, but I have no desire to see it again because of that time sink.
Orville's problem is that it's only on Hulu. I mean, yeah, pirating is a choice, but I'd rather not do that for new shows. I actually do want to have my money/metrics within reason and getting another subscription service isn't it.
DS9 is like a missing link between longform streaming shows and episodic TV where there was that overarching plot that spans multiple seasons, but then there's a bunch of filler episodes like Move Along Home. So the time investment isn't as bad. Game of Thrones or Breaking Bad are full season blocks of content and that makes them impenetrable. I saw Breaking Bad, but I have no desire to see it again because of that time sink.
Eh, Picard as a whole is very much a memberberries reference show by its very nature and leverages Berman Trek for Cinematic Universe purposes. As is Lower Decks.But I think one of the biggest issues, which I think Star Trek has done a decent job (relatively speaking) of avoiding, is becoming a Cinematic Universe. Star Wars and the Marvel franchise suffer heavily from this and I think that this is a huge contribution for why their streaming numbers have been going down. You can't just watch Ahsoka, you have to watch the entire Clone Wars and Rebels television shows to even have the context for why any of this matters. And if you don't? Then all the memberberries of Ahsoka (Anakin, that stupid sandnigger, etc) are totally irrelevant and the show is just a mess of references that you don't understand, with the show concluding without any kind of resolution to any of the problems. Marvel is particularly egregious with this, so much so that there's nerds who have come up with website-long spreadsheets on how to watch this shit. Who has that kind of time? That kind of investment for what is, really, just slop TV? But I fear that the last card that Kurtzman and Paramount have left to play is the Cinematic Universe angle. Remember this random fucking side character from thirty years ago? They're getting their own fucking television show. Who wants to watch Star Trek: Captain Sulu? Star Trek can avoid these pitfalls easier by the nature of its storytelling, since it can pretty much carry itself on that, but at a certain point the "impetus" begins to lean too far on "remember this? Remember this guy? Remember when...?" and the people who DON'T know this don't tune in, and the people who DO know are already burnt out from 15 years of straight garbage.
But my point was that, while Star Trek does have this, it isn't reliant upon it in the same way that the Star Wars and MCU productions have been.Eh, Picard as a whole is very much a memberberries reference show by its very nature and leverages Berman Trek for Cinematic Universe purposes. As is Lower Decks.