Fans Attempting to Pay for Enterprise 847
An anonymous reader writes "What started of as a suggestion to pay for season 5 of Enterprise has actully snowballed into a project that no one has ever attempted before, that of getting fans to pay for the production costs of a tv series. It has brought on board a raft of people including lawyers. I wonder if the quoted $50 to $80 million is reachable." I gotta say that Enterprise has been better this season, but I feel like it's still only mediocre. Battlestar Galactica might be the best SciFi airing right now. And I woulda chipped in for more Firefly in a heartbeat.
Misapproriated Funds (Score:2, Insightful)
Wow, talk about fanaticism! I mean, I like Star Trek too, but when was the last time you saw a bunch of desperate couch potatos try to put $80 mil together for medical research, space exploration, or charitable distribution? Seriously, luxuries beyond beer seem like a major drain on mankind sometimes...
Let's see... about 6 weeks ago? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Let's see... about 6 weeks ago? (Score:3, Insightful)
The top level post said:
"but when was the last time you saw a bunch of desperate couch potatos try to put $80 mil together for medical research, space exploration, or charitable distribution?" (emphasis mine).
The anon coward pointed out the tsunami disaster for this.
RTFP (Score:3, Insightful)
"[...] compare [...] a natural disaster with [...] a failing television show?"
You popped off on a misunderstanding of the post, which replied to the original question asking about the "last time [...] couch potatos [...] $80 mil together for [..] or charitable distribution?" You're still harping about people putting money into a failing TV show, as has every other post you're bashing. You got it wrong when you flew off the handle - suck it up already, and show some integrity.
Obviously Gene Rodenberry's message got to you (Score:5, Funny)
I think your comment neatly summarizes the Star Trek ethos pretty well.
Or not.
Re:Misapproriated Funds (Score:3, Insightful)
No one (except maybe your wife/gf, but this is slashdot) tells you what you can and can't do with your money... it's not one person donating millions, each person is asked for a small amount.
Re:Misapproriated Funds (Score:5, Insightful)
You've got to be kidding. Everyone tells me what I should do with my money. The governement is the worst. They have guns and prisons for me if I don't spend my money in ways they accept.
Re:Misapproriated Funds (Score:3, Insightful)
If I wanted to make a a single hamburger for lunch, it costs me much more to buy the meat, the bun, the ketchup, the cheese, etc, not to mention my time in gathering the ingredients and making it.
By paying somebody else to make one for me, I can devote my skills to something which is more economically rewarding for me. Since I now have more productivity AND more money, I can spend more time and money donating to worthy causes that can help people.
Not really a true argument (Score:3, Insightful)
Such an argument has merit on it's face, but when you say this you are making a assumptive judgement on the part of the donors. Who's to say that the donors didn't already donate to tsunami relief? And who's to say what they already donated wasn't enough? And who's to say exactly how much per each person per amount of income is "the right amou
Re:Not really a true argument (Score:5, Insightful)
If I can't spend any of my money on myself, and on things that I like, WHAT'S THE POINT?
Every good person has their own way of giving back to society and the planet. I volunteer at an animal sanctuary; others donate lots of money to charity, and so on.
But I still feel we should have the right to spend money on ourselves without being called "selfish". Sheesh.
-Z
Re:Not really a true argument (Score:3, Interesting)
Except that there will always be needy people, no matter how much you individually give. So, if you really feel that your money needs to go to the people who need it most, you'll be broke and living in a cardboard box, even with $100k+/year of income, because there's always somebody who needs it more.
And what's so special about the tsunami anyways? People are starving every day, dying from easily cured diseases. The tsu
Re:Not really a true argument (Score:3, Interesting)
Except that there will always be needy people, no matter how much you individually give.
Right. I guess the question has morphed into: "Are these fans setting up a charity for out of work Star Trek cast members, or are they trying to pay for something they enjoy?" I think it's a little of both. The show has already failed in the market, and they are attempting to revive it using their own money. Is that paying for a good that they want, or is it needless selfishness?
The more I think about it the more I th
Re:Not really a true argument (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, using traditional advertising revenue models the show is unsuccessful. But that model doens't necessarily accurately reflect the demand of the viewers, in that it doesn't reflect how much value the viewers place on the program. The traditional model reflects a market between the studio and advertisers with not a market between the studio and viewers.
Let's say advertisers are willing to pay $.50 per episode per viewer. To each viewer, however, each epi
Re:Misapproriated Funds (Score:4, Insightful)
Money doesn't work like that.
You remind me of the guy who said the Penny Arcade Christmas fund money should have gone to a more deserving cause. It's just a totally bizarre statement. Go out and raise money for whatever good cause you want; it's got absolutely nothing to do with this. (Money doesn't disappear when it's spent).
"luxuries beyond beer" (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Misapproriated Funds (Score:3, Informative)
Furthermore, some of the individual X-Prize teams operated off money gained from ordinary commercial ventures. An example of this is Armadillo Aerospace of Texas, which used funds gaine
Re:Misapproriated Funds (Score:3, Funny)
I wonder how much money could have been raised from a bunch of "save your favorite show" websites scamming money from various rabid fans? Scamming money for a good cause is legal right???
Re:Misapproriated Funds (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Well then (Score:3, Insightful)
Even if your premises were true, what the hell makes the oligopoly of TV station owners the only valid
We can save money (Score:3, Funny)
Re:We can save money (Score:5, Funny)
You mean your Mom's Basement.
Re:We can save money (Score:3, Interesting)
You mean, like this [mac.com]?
Proposal doesn't go far enough (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes, they really do run that many commercials in a "one hour" show.
Re:Proposal doesn't go far enough (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Proposal doesn't go far enough (Score:3, Insightful)
The link of course, is dead so I can't RTFA, but the organization should be chartered so that if they don't get enough dough to extend the series, they could use it to do other things in the interest of the fan base, like
Re:Proposal doesn't go far enough (Score:5, Funny)
Out of a cannon? At $5/ticket it'd be PURE PROFIT, BABY!!
heyyy... maybe we've finally discovered what the "???" part of "The Plan" might actually be!!
Re:Proposal doesn't go far enough (Score:5, Funny)
Hm, I'd better get started propagating.
Re:Proposal doesn't go far enough (Score:3, Funny)
1) Incorporate '???' profit into running gag on Slashdot similar to 'all your base' and 'in soviet Russia'
2) Bitch about Microsoft
3) Promote Linux
4) Fire Berman from a cannon for $5
6) Profit!
Holy shit, it works!
Re:Proposal doesn't go far enough (Score:3, Insightful)
James T aside, are you at all familiar with the 60's? Have you seen any other TV shows that came out at that time? This is a show that had to come up with the transporter, because they didn't have the budget to do the shuttlecraft models yet!
Don't take it too seriously, just enjoy the cheese!
Standard Setting (Score:3, Insightful)
I hope this never happens for a show just because of the standard it would set.
Re:Standard Setting (Score:2)
Re:Standard Setting (Score:3, Interesting)
I hope this never happens for a show just because of the standard it would set.
You're missing out on the big picture. Right now the studios are servants of their advertisers and their networks. Fan owned syndication would mean the fans themselves are the ones with the money and they'll be the ones setting the rules
Re:Proposal doesn't go far enough (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Proposal doesn't go far enough (Score:3, Insightful)
If they owned the right to it, maybe they would be allowed to ditribute it themselves independantly of the studio
I'm thinking legaly on bittorrent would be really cool
Re:Proposal doesn't go far enough (Score:3, Insightful)
Which isn't a bad idea. Why assume that the broadcast medium is the proper mechanism. If enough fans sign on for a subscription service to be able to 1) produce the show, 2) master the DVDs, and 3) distribute the DVDs to subscribers, especially if it could be done at a reasonable profit, then why not try a subscription-based model rather than old-fashioned broadcast TV?
Bullshit (Score:3, Informative)
I've seen some describe this as a potential future for TV where the content providers are smart enough to embrace new technologies. Instead of BT being used to pirate episodes, fans pay a modest fee to subscribe to the tracker that provides their favorite episodes.
The fee covers production costs, the fans themselves do the distribution.
Re:Proposal doesn't go far enough (Score:3, Funny)
Who owns it? Who approves scripts? (Score:5, Interesting)
Who owns those episodes?
Who gets the money from DVD rights? Broadcast rights? Commercials?
More importantly -- who approves the scripts? If I was paying for an entire run of a TV series, I'd at least want to read the scripts. Get a bunch of Star Trek fans involved with a script approval process and you'll have a riot.
Paramount would be wise to just let it die a respectable death.
Re:Who owns it? Who approves scripts? (Score:4, Funny)
No, *I* get the cameo walk on role...
You'd get what you pay for... (Score:3, Insightful)
Farscape
BG
Stargate
Programs that advertising alone struggles to pay for.
Let it die... (Score:2, Insightful)
oh come on (Score:2)
Unless you've given away everything you have you cant really talk. I hope you dont own that computer you typed on, cause heck, the money spent on that could've probably fed a hungry family for a month.
Re:oh come on (Score:2)
That's the kind of money that could make a real difference. And they're going to spend it on a TV show.
I mean, WTF???
Re:oh come on (Score:2)
it's their money (Score:3, Insightful)
that 80 million dollars isnt gonna come in $20,000 donations, I'd bet. Just lots of fans donating what they can. They think this cause is worthy. If there are enough of them who think so to make it happen, who says they are wrong?
Re:it's their money (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Let it die... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Let it die... (Score:3, Interesting)
charity should be voluntary. and those who are charitable should not use that to make snide comments about those who are not.
Re:Let it die... (Score:4, Insightful)
Seriously, do you accost people queueing at the office box and ask them to give their movie money to tsunami aid? If it is ok to pay $10 for a movie, why can't I donate $10 towards the next startrek without being attacked by do-gooders such as yourself?
So I guess people should abandon all entertainment (Score:3, Insightful)
So should all theater season ticket holders destroy theaters everywhere by not supporting the theater or ever buying passes?
And why should anyone ever go to a movie, or a concert? That money obvisouly is better spent on food for the poor.
I'm sure the dissolution of all entertainment everywhere so that you could provde a larger band-aid to problems that are primarily political in nature would
Currency (Score:5, Funny)
yeah, i believe it (Score:2, Insightful)
the only tv shows that ever have or ever will make me surrender money are on PBS.
Re:yeah, i believe it (Score:5, Insightful)
But in fact, science fiction and other forms of speculation DO have an important role to play. If you watch PBS a lot (as do I) you know that they will frequently run documentaries on subjects such as the Apollo lunar program. While the documentaries will focus on the 'how it was done' aspect and interview scientists and researchers and other individuals who worked on those projects, they will also sometimes mention the inspiration for them. And it's important to pay attention to those things.
Take the case of Jules Verne, for instance. Verne was a prodigious science fiction writer who imagined Project Apollo to an amazing degree of accuracy -- his ship looked roughly like Apollo's command and service modules, was roughly the same size, carried a three-person crew, was named Columbia, and was launched from the coast of Florida. This is almost exactly how the Apollo program operated by the time the first actual manned lunar mission was launched in 1968 (Apollo 8; no landing actually occurred until 1969.)
Now, while it is true that many people did not believe such a thing was possible (Robert Goddard was laughed at for believing that a rocket would function in a vacuum, for instance) and Verne's stories were dismissed as fantasy (nuclear-powered submarines!? Are you crazy!?) they came true, in time.
Going back to Project Apollo, you may or may not remember that the first few crews to visit the Moon were quarantined upon their return to make sure that there were no dangerous organisms on them or their clothing or in their spacecraft. The fear of a possible contamination of Earth was raised, in part, by Michael Crichton's novel The Andromeda Strain, as well as by points raised by the scientific community. As a result, quarantines continued until we had enough experience with returning Apollo crews to believe that they were no longer necessary. (Apollo 12's recovery of Surveyor hardware, and the subsequent discovery of terrestrial bacteria surviving on some of that equipment, proved that organisms could survive for long periods of time in space.)
We have also been influenced by other major works of science fiction (War of the Worlds' radio broadcast, for instance, has long been held as an example of how we might react to the idea of hostile alien life, and ET is an example of how we could react to more friendly aliens.)
For something to happen, it has to be imagined first. Sometimes, that takes the form of science fiction stories. Not worth it? Far from it. We'll be forever stuck in the present and never stop to imagine what might come in the future without the ideas that come from those who dare to say "Hey, what if this was possible?"
Re:yeah, i believe it (Score:4, Interesting)
I won't give money to PBS.
The local station only shows the shows I want to watch when they're doing a beg-a-thon. And they interrupt those shows every 15 minutes to beg some more.
If they showed them outside of the beg-a-thon, I might consider it, but they don't. So screw 'em.
If they want to pay for it... (Score:2)
I look at it this way... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I look at it this way... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I look at it this way... (Score:3)
If the shows ratings are a good indicator of how many people are watching the commercials and buying the products adverstised, then the "charity" effort will fail.
However, if the ratings samples are NOT representative for some reason (e.g. bitorrent), AND enough people understand that it may not be a lost cause, and someone organizes it properly, it might work. My guess is that it won't, because grassroots support takes a while to filter up to the
BitTorrent - Enterprise's downfall (Score:5, Interesting)
As a result, supposed two shows air at the same time. Given the choice of downloading one and watching/recording the other, I chose to download Enterprise. Why?
1) Enterprise is popular. It typically has the largest BT swarms, and often the best S/L ratio (another testament to the types of users who watch Enterprise - geek types are more likely to leave the torrent running after completion.)
2) Given a choice between recording CBS and recording UPN, I choose recording CBS. UPN needs to petition the FCC for a transmitter power increase in the NYC area. Sad when your flagship station's transmitter is a piece of shit and your signal crashes people's MPEG encoders.
3) Higher quality from the Torrent. A combination of signal issues and the fact that UPN's HD signal in the NYC area is shit.
Re:I look at it this way... (Score:3, Insightful)
Aren't you saying the same thing in just slightly different ways? Come on when has Star Trek ever had that much quaility? Mythos yes, quaility, No.
I just had to do it:
Linux has been kept running on the popularity of the mythos, of the franchise. I
Re:I look at it this way... (Score:3, Insightful)
Funny, I was thinking the exact opposite. Clearly, if fans are willing to toss large sums of money at Paramount to have the show continued, I think it clearly demonstrates that people think it's worth keeping, to the tune of 80 million bucks.
Put another way, do you *really* trust the television industry to understand what is and isn't worth keeping? Why is Paramount to be trusted to mak
already paying for cable... (Score:5, Interesting)
Hmmm (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
Mod poster insightful, please.
I know for sure if I were fronting the money for something, I sure as hell would want some voice in how it was used. Firing Berman would be a good start. Maybe the fan-contributed money could be used to pay the salary of someone with a better handle on science fiction.
And yes, Battlestar Galactica is the best sci-fi on TV today.
Re:Hmmm (Score:3, Insightful)
gotta quote Shatner here... (Score:3, Funny)
PBS? (Score:2, Insightful)
Paying for Enterprise (Score:2, Funny)
*ducks*
Never? (Score:5, Interesting)
Didn't somebody try the same for Farscape?
RE: FARSCAPE (Score:3, Informative)
www.savefarscape.com
Never going to happen (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Never going to happen (Score:3, Funny)
They expect to raise 50-80 Million? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:They expect to raise 50-80 Million? (Score:3, Funny)
This assumes that they had any money budgetted for soap and shampoo in the first place.
IPO or Bonds to take it to syndication (Score:5, Interesting)
On the operational side, a good comparison might be that show with McGiever going into the portal to fight minorities on other planets (can't recall the name). It started as a movie, then it was on one of those extra-pay pr0n channels, then it got to sci-fi channel. And somewhere along the way it might have also been showing new episodes through syndication.
Investors, ownership and a legal bunfight? (Score:3, Insightful)
Model for Post Bittorrent world..... (Score:5, Interesting)
If Paramount would provide a Bittorrent of the Show WITH the commercials on the site AND make sure the quality of the video is as good or better than what can be gotten off of bittorrent web sites, they might be able to get people to watch.
Here is how it would work. You make it freely available but make users go through a page that informs them that by getting the video from an offical Paramount site they (Paramount) can prove to their advertizers that people are watching the show with ads (arguably...how do you know if people are ACTUALLY watching them...but then they don't know if nielson watchers actually watch the ads either).
By publicly advertizing that if people want to support the show they can download it from the their torrent (or web link) would provide an incen tive for people to get it from them instead of off of some offshore web torrent site.
They could update the commercials evey now and then if they wanted.
The KEY though is that the video HAS to be better than what is being distributed right now! If what is on tvtorrent or tvswarm is XVID HDTV 5.1 surround then they need to match or exceed it.
Fans of the show could then DIRECTLY support the show. People who get the non-advertzing version off of some peer to peer network are people who don't give a rats ass about the show making it anyhow.....but give people a way to pay (without money) and they'll take it (My theory of course!)
Why isn't more TV like this? (Score:5, Interesting)
Screw ads, screw broadcast, screw the networks/middlemen/etc... let me buy my shows directly from the people who make them! Even just releasing everything to DVD immediately after it airs would be good enough for me-- if I wasn't paying for DirecTV, I'd have a nice monthly budget for buying just the shows I like on DVD or via download.
As it is, I'm paying for a lot of channels I never watch, PLUS watching ads, just to get the handful of shows I enjoy. The system could be a thousand times better if "broadcasters" and "channels" went the way of the dodo and left us buying our shows directly from the people who make them.
Re:Why isn't more TV like this? (Score:4, Insightful)
David Lynch and a few others not withstandaing, it's very unviable to run a production company on a download or subscription model.
Take for instance, thousands and thousands of hours of decent content which is produced regardless if anybody watches it or not. Yes, I'm talking about independant film. Hundreds of films get made around the world every year, some end up at film festivals, some stay highly regional, some make it to Sundance in the USA and other prestigious film fests for indy films.
Very few of these films are torrent-able. A tiny, tiny margin - maybe 1%, probably less. There isn't enough bandwidth or storage space to encode them all, even though the filmmakers are looking at nothing but profit if they participate in the process instead of letting the canisters rot in their attic. Still, it doesn't happen.
Now, cut out the distribution methods in your model. These networks greenlight projects, review them for quality, and decide if they will bankroll them. Take that away, and you have anarchy.
Seriously, what would happen over time is an insane S/N ratio. Hundreds of small production companies would vie for your dollars. Here! Bankroll this, we'll sign Shatner! Seriously, we'll put his fat ass in a rubber suit and make him recite King Lear! Pay here!
A few companies would eventually emerge, just as in the game industry, where the barriers to entry used to be low, and an EA or Microsoft would try and step in as the content "management" provider, and you'd just substitute the bogeyman you hate, with a new and more manevolent one.
It all seems very democratic or populist, but it doesn't play out that way. The market abhors a vacuum.
Re:Why isn't more TV like this? (Score:3, Interesting)
And yet, these other forms of entertainment seem to do just fine in allocating resources (or, at least, no worse than TV).
Television networks are obsolete.
Why would they ever go for it? (Score:5, Insightful)
In other words, in order to get them to go for this, you'd have to cover the lost advertisement revenue AS WELL AS the production costs. That's probably going to be over $150 million at least.
Re:Why would they ever go for it? (Score:3, Insightful)
Fans pay for Enterprise (Score:3, Funny)
1. Use a prosumer type videocams to record shows instead of network grade production equipment.
2. Don't use the studio sets to produce the show; build a set on somebody's property elsewhere.
3. Don't use the actors; go to a theatre school and find some actors. You don't need Mr. Quantum Leap to be the captain. In the theatre business, plays are produced over and over with different actors all the time.
4. I'm sure a bunch of slashdotters could scrounge up some CRT's and write some graphics to simulate the computer technology shown on the ship.
5. Use scripts written by fans instead of the schlock that Berman et al have been putting out.
Of course none of this will happen because of the hammerlock on the copyrights that Roddenberry's estate has. I think that is part of the problem with the franchise; Roddenberry's will constrains the types of plots that can be used in these shows.
Just my two cents...
The Romulan Wars & Birth of the Federation (Score:3, Interesting)
Nice in theory, but it won't work (Score:3, Interesting)
But then again, if they could actually generate a million dollars in that short a short time, the sucess of the effort alone may clearly indicate to Paramount that the show is worth saving, and the money could then be donated to a charity of Paramount's choosing.
So who knows?
lessons from MMORPG (Score:3, Interesting)
I think the near future of Star Trek lies with the MMORPG that's supposedly in development. You can see from http://www.nickyee.com/daedalus/archives/000891.ph p [nickyee.com] that gamers spend less time watching TV than other people and honestly if I wasn't playing an MMO game so much I would probably still make some attempt to watch star trek.
So they (Paramount) have an opportunity here to capture a lot of their old star trek audience and maybe make more money off us. If they (game developers) can find a way to make the game (or a portion of the game) episodic and involve actors in it, that would be extremely compelling for me. Personally I have no faith in star trek games, but you know. Prove me wrong, developers.
Battlestar: Galactica comment (Score:4, Insightful)
I will however be the first to admit I was completely wrong about BS:G.
So far it has been nothing short of brilliant. What has especially impressed me is the overall tone of it. I think it was Ron Moore who said (paraphrasing) that the original series wasn't true to it's own premise... in the original, within a week or so of Caprica being devastated, they were in bars on other planets with other humans, having a blast, generally not acting like the future of the human species hung in the balance. I never thought of it before, but damn it if he wasn't right! I still love the original series, but I do view it in a different light now. The remake has really gotten this right, in the extreme. There is a truly palpabale sense of dread throughout it, and that is fantastic as far as I'm concerned.
But...
This is NOT the best sci-fi show on the air today. It's third, near as I can tell, behind Stargate SG1 and SG:Atlantis. SG1 has been the best for some years now, ever since Babylon 5 went off the air actually. Atlantis has come on unbelievably strong this first season, and I predict here and now we're going to be hailing it's greatness 10 years down the road when it's still chugging along. And it wouldn't surprise me it SG1 was still producing new episodes then too!
And if B5 is still airing in your market, than IT is the best show on TV today.
None of this takes away from how good BS:G has been though. It has completely proved me wrong. Hell, I'm even getting used to the new Starbuck, I think the actress playing her is doing an excellent job in the role. If they can keep this up, it's going to be a fantastic and long ride!
Consumer-owned TV (Score:3, Interesting)
Ah good idea, no wait, erm (Score:3, Interesting)
I do think this is an interesting way of funding films, although I reckon it could be done on a far lower budget - actors, once they get their face in it know that the fans want them and they are essentially well paid hookers who eat out most of the money (COUGH Friends COUGH) and unfortunately that's going to happen to absolutely every actor so there's really no way around it. production work however, certainly for something like star trek would draw massive interest from people willing to donate their time - both professionals and amateurs who want to get into the industry (deep down everyone wants to get into tv). I see a big future for films paid for this way if you can get the right mix of donated budget, good, focused volunteers and people who can act without getting up themselves - guess who is absolutely missing from this loop? ill give you a clue, they do allot of coke and get allot of head.
Unfortunately there are some big downsides to this: Things with big fan bases - star trek, star wars etc are owned by the crack addicts and they're not gonna let fan episodes start getting made. It needs good film ideas/scripts etc that people can really get into and most people are going to want to sell their good scripts/ideas to movie studios for shit loads of cash (i certainly would) thats capitalism for you, its a bitch until you're actually making the shit loads of cash and then you don't give a shit about stupid volunteer films. Ok i need to make some millions..
Subscription, Trek and Firefly (Score:3, Interesting)
There's little more than crap on TV. If I can subscribe to shows I'd like to see then who cares if Fox executives don't like it or it ticks off some group of bluehairs? Subscription will mean better quality - shows won't have to cater to the lowest common denominator. Even 1 million subscribers is probably enough to cover the production costs for a good scifi show. TV syndication will probably be where you get the profit.
As for Trek, I gave up. Compared to FireFly, Enterprise just doesn't cut it. There was something interesting now and then and lots of eye candy, but overall I consider the quality of Enterprise to be poor.
Your mileage may vary, batteries not included, etc.
Here's how they can finance the new season. (Score:5, Funny)
What about an indiependent show (Score:3, Informative)
Im talking about a completly orginal show. Not one you would have to waste money on licencing rights for.
Why not GPL the thing? (Score:4, Insightful)
You start with a plot outline, create a shooting schedule, line up some actors, start filming, put the thing out there.
The quality of the visuals will NOT be up to Star Trek vehicles to date but the writing could be much better, the acting could be better.
Even the set could be a digital one to allow 'transportation' at no cost (think of the techniques used for the "Polar Express".)
but the facts are... (Score:3, Interesting)
Secondly, what they mean by saying that the show is cost prohibitive is that there aren't advertisers willing to back it. You'd probably have better luck buying advertising time than paying for the production of the show. I'm sure some advertisers would stick it out and the rest of the commercial time would be filled with Trekkies screaming for other Terkkies to send more money because the next season is coming fast. It'll look like PBS with freaks instead of Lawrence Welk.
And I know I sound trollish. Sorry. The fact is that there is tons of sci-fi works that have merit and a fanbase that have no chance in hell of ever getting network time. I'm not saying it's a bad idea but it still won't work, good intentions aside.
Lastly, it must have been a slow news day to post this up.
Escrow account would do it - and a modest proposal (Score:3, Insightful)
They key would be to set up an escrow account with, say, Paypal? that would accumulate real money. If they can achieve the target amount, they have some real POWER. If they cannot achieve target, then the money should be paid back from escrow.
Here's a cute thought: how much interest can 88 million earn in a couple of months? I don't think escrow accounts can be invested, but... jeez. At the end of the money raising period, if the project went bust, everyone would get their cash back, minus admin fees for the escrow holder, plus interest earned. Yipes.
Why didn't anyone think of this for Whedon's Buffyverse? I hearby propose sending someone to JW's house with a proposal.
The power of this kind of project is unlimited, if you think about it. Building Rutan's SpaceShipOne cost about 20-30 million. An escrow fund could build spaceships. Space stations. How much to go to the moon, if you wanted to do it cheap and practical? A billion? That's a few hundred dollars for each star trek fan. A small investment in a club, and you not only could finance SF, you could finance instead the reality.
Re:Sad! Man this is Sad! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Sad! Man this is Sad! (Score:5, Interesting)
I didn't know "The Man" was after the bottom of our feet...I will be sure to keep my socks on at night.
Seriously though, what gives you the right to tell people how to spend their money. Gone to or rented a movie lately? Why don't you donate that money to cancer research? Going out to dinner? You should eat in and send the savings to cancer research. Posting on Slashdot? Why waste time when you could be earning more money for cancer research. Do you see what I am saying? Just because you think that how these people spend their money is stupid, you ought to look at your own life and look at all the crap you buy that you could donate to charity.
While I defend people's right to waste money as they choose, I do think this is pretty crazy. I watched the show a few times and it was just plain bad. The Captain is just a female version of Kirk. I say that because she just isn't a very good actress. The one think Kirk did have was charisma. A bad actress with no charisma as the main character? eh, I'll pass. I love sci fi as much as the next dork, but I would be surprised if this show would garner that much support.
Re:Sad! Man this is Sad! (Score:3, Funny)
I can't tell if you're confusing Enterprise with Voyager, or if you're making a subtle comment about Archer. :)
Re:Sad! Man this is Sad! (Score:3, Funny)
The original series had KIRK. Kirk cannot be compared to any other captain in the ST universe because Kirk's Prime Directive was to seek and and find new alien civilizations and determine if "all the parts fit", if you know what I mean.
Kirk was THE MAN. Kirk GOT LAID. Kirk had his priorities straight. Kirk was the pimp-daddy of all pimp daddies.
The rest are just pussies by comparison.
Re:Production Costs Only The Tip Of The Iceberg (Score:3, Funny)
OH oh! and we should have a secret word to call scott by so when we need another fan we'll know ... say "Broktune"?
(10 points if you get it)