http://www.theverge.com/2015/11/2/8325241/star-trek-series-2016-alex-kurtzman-cbs-television-studios I figured you nerds would care about this.
This was the most imaginative of the articles I read. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...t-in-the-2150s/?tid=hybrid_collaborative_1_na
Here's the trick. You can see the first episode but all others will require a $ 6.00 per month subscription. I'll watch one episode but to show my distaste for this plan, I would not see more. That plan deserves a Fulton torpedo.
Star Trek should team up with writers from a different show and take the series in a bold new direction. I'm thinking The Flying Dead Trek, the new Enterprise becomes full of zombies.
Not a bad idea. I'd do Star Trek and McHale's Navy. Ensign Parker has some hilarious foul-ups with the transporter. Seven of Nine skis behind the Enterprise in an escape pod.
Trekking Bad. Besides from being a great power source it turns out that dilithium crystals also makes the galaxy's best meth.
So I watched and liked the original series on Netflix, then tried to watch the one with Patrick Stewart and stalled out after the first season and haven't tried it again in a couple of years, is there something wrong with me?
https://recode.net/2015/11/03/can-the-tv-guys-put-the-netflix-genie-back-in-the-bottle/ Can the TV Guys Put the Netflix Genie Back in the Bottle? Another way to pull video back from Netflix is to hold it back from all of the digital subscription services. Some programmers are talking about keeping their shows tied to their networks — and only making them available to pay TV subscribers as part of “TV Everywhere” programs — for a longer stretch of time, so more of the value (theoretically) goes to the networks that paid for them. Yet another strategy: Create shows that only live on your own streaming services. That’s what CBS announced it would do yesterday: The network said it would produce new episodes of “Star Trek,” and air all of the new shows, with the exception of a pilot episode, on its $6-a-month “CBS All Access” streaming service.
I grew up on next-gen reruns but I've gone through the original, next-gen, enterprise, and voyager on netflix and am currently on season 3 of deep space 9. It's kind of fun going back to watch cause you can remember what political and ethical agendas the writers were trying to push.
Star Trek depicts humankind 300 years into the future. The world is one. The Earth is a utopia and there is no such thing as money. They have tho give back story on how all that came about.