The stakes have never been higher as Star Trek: Picard boldly goes into its third and final season. Jonathan Frakes, Brent Spiner, LeVar Burton, Gates McFadd...
It seems like they know why people liked TNG, and they're consciously, intentionally marketing it to people that hate TNG. Don't worry, it will have lots of dumb explosions and ships ramming each other. Oh well, it's my own fault for caring about an IP in late capitalism. They have to piss off the loyal audience to try to pick up new audiences, and repeat.
It's called "fan baiting". Yes, they do it deliberately. Typically chuds are the ones who get triggered, which is why they do it. Maybe reevaluate why you like the same things as them, and grow a thicker skin.
Well, that too, but I think they deliberately make something for a totally different audiences. If they lose some percentage of the loyal viewers but pick up a million new viewers, they're still growing the audience. But the more this is repeated, more and more of the audience wonders aloud why they still watch, but it's still a bigger and growing audience. I think this is happening more and faster than it used to because it's moved from natural evolution to a growth strategy.
It seems like they know why people liked TNG, and they're consciously, intentionally marketing it to people that hate TNG. Don't worry, it will have lots of dumb explosions and ships ramming each other. Oh well, it's my own fault for caring about an IP in late capitalism. They have to piss off the loyal audience to try to pick up new audiences, and repeat.
It's called "fan baiting". Yes, they do it deliberately. Typically chuds are the ones who get triggered, which is why they do it. Maybe reevaluate why you like the same things as them, and grow a thicker skin.
Well, that too, but I think they deliberately make something for a totally different audiences. If they lose some percentage of the loyal viewers but pick up a million new viewers, they're still growing the audience. But the more this is repeated, more and more of the audience wonders aloud why they still watch, but it's still a bigger and growing audience. I think this is happening more and faster than it used to because it's moved from natural evolution to a growth strategy.
Chuds who like Star Trek should re-evaluate why they like a blatantly leftist series.