There are indeed times that TREK has been, to varying degrees, Paramount's only real profit-maker. It is, in essence, a license to print money. Put the ST symbol on something, and it sells.
Which is, fundamentally, the reason behind DS9 in the first place. One thing I've kind of avoided was talking much lately about DS9, even though I've been hearing a *lot* from people inside Paramount lately. But the one overwhelming fact is this: TREK is what's called in this business a "franchise," like McDonald's or Burger King. (In more general terms, a franchise is a cop show, or a doctor show...you get the idea. Every studio or network looks for a certain number of "franchise shows" before then setting out to look for New Stuff.)
Anyway...and I know some people are going to yell at me, but this really is the truth...DS9 is basically a fiscal repackaging of TNG. For the following reasons:
1) Stations don't like to get one show that runs too long, over the six- seven year mark. It becomes unweildy for them, and the cost of buying a big show package is just a lot larger.
2) A series only begins to make money for the studio when it goes into full-syndication (meaning they stop making new episodes and just rake in the cash). This is particularly true when a show has been on the air for a long time. See, each year, programmed increases in salaries and other areas go up and up and up. By year six, you're paying a HELL of a lot more than you paid for year one.
So how are they saving money by doing a NEW series?
3) Pay scales for production staff and cast are always lower for a new series. It's sort of the studio Going Rate. Apparently a number of TNG production people have been told that if they want to stick around after TNG is finished, and go onto DS9, they're going to have to take cuts in salary. Actors fees will be lower overall. So you're starting at a lower baseline, and the really expensive show (TNG) is now over, and in full syndication, earning back some money.
When you take all of that into consideration, and factor in the fact that the series takes place in the same universe, with the same basic scenario, same races, same Federation, even some of the same characters, what you come down to is essentially this: that DS9 is a repackaging of the same thing, under a different name, for basically economic reasons. There is no sudden new vision behind it, it's just a less costly extension of the old show.
Which is not to say it ain't gonna be a good show. It might be a very good show. If it is, that's terrific, the more good SF around, the better. It's important for anyone reading this to make that distinction: this issue is completely apart from quality, it's strictly economics. This is the reason there IS a DS9. Where they go from that point _ good, bad, or indifferent _ is another discussion entirely.
There's nothing wrong with re-selling the same show to somebody under a different name if you liked the original show in the first place.
Which is really all I can say, or have to say, about DS9 at this juncture. I already heard that they're going to push for January. I also know that it's going to be just about impossible for them to do that (plus the marketing folks at Paramount would much prefer the show debut in February, during Sweeps). This is in some degree an effort to beat B5 onto the airwaves.
And from what I hear, that's going to be next to impossible. They only got a good, workable draft in about a week or so ago (and, to be fair, I hear from my sources there that it's "pretty good," and that's fine), and it just takes *time* from that script to sets to casting to the shoot itself. One concession to time, apparently, is that there's going to be a LOT of time spent on the Enterprise, since those sets are already finished and available, so it'll be more like an expanded TNG episode than a real pilot. It's what they already do there: the Enterprise encounters a new situation, a new location, deals with it, and moves on. The difference is, we will now have characters who remain on that place and follow them.
The only way they can beat B5 to the air is if they really go toward making it an extended TNG episode, and make the EFX as minimal as possible. Which is, after all, their purview. It's their show, and their right. If they want to do it with hand-puppets, that's their prerogative.
I was going to go on originally and talk a little about a small shoot tomorrow (a film for the marketing guys on B5, which with luck I'll be able to bring to cons), and some casting stuff, but this has already gone on longer than I'd anticipated. Next time.
jms |
|