You're right, and I worded that poorly. I don't think they intended this to be the result. No one sets out to ruin something, but it can happen (it's not like bad business decisions are never made). I do think it's obvious they intended to create a new audience through the JJ films (and again with these soft-reboot shows), and they clearly cared more about that than maintaining their existing fanbase. As you point out, you can see that they've been attempting to repair that mistake, too, with some of the changes in the last year or so of material. But at this point they have a split fanbase, and I don't just mean those YouTubers who want everything to go down in flames (those guys aren't helping anyone).Link8909 wrote: ↑Sun Oct 04, 2020 12:17 pm I don't think CBS or anyone working on Star Trek is deliberately trying to divide the fandom, in-fact going by Lower Decks and green lighting a Captain Pike series, as well as trying new things like with Discovery going into the future, they want to broaden the audience of the franchise, if anything I'd say those that spread misinformation like those that make click-bait videos or Reddit posted about rumours do more harm to the fandom, its ok if you don't like something, its another to get everyone else worked up because you didn't like something.
The problem as I see it was that they didn't broaden the audience, they made works that were thematically incompatible, giving themselves a fanbase that is largely separate circles on the Venn diagram (but not entirely; there are fans who enjoy all of it). Instead of broadening and branching out, they struck out into a completely different tone and setting and are now trying to soften the space between and make a bridge. That's a decision they made, intentional or not, and now they're working to repair it. What I'm seeing with Picard and Lower Decks is a group of folks attempting to make that bridge but still not quite understanding the material they're bridging to. They get the form, but not the function.
But hey, there are a lot of people enjoying the new stuff anyway. Is it more or less than it might have been? I have no idea, we don't have the numbers. It just seems like a costlier mistake, to me, than growing the existing property from the inside out. Hopefully it'll all come together again and make sense at some point.