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Ron Moore: 'next fifty years of Star Trek' as a corporate priority

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wyldwolf Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Feb-08-05 07:27 PM
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Ron Moore: 'next fifty years of Star Trek' as a corporate priority
Former Star Trek writer and producer Ron Moore, currently the executive producer of Sci-Fi's Battlestar Galactica revival, said that he has personally heard Viacom executives "refer to the 'next fifty years of Star Trek' as a corporate priority and stated his belief that "Star Trek isn't dead and it isn't dying" in his blog.

Writing at SciFi.com's Battlestar Galactica Blog, Moore labeled the current state of the Trek franchise "an interregnum, a pause in the treadmill of overlapping productions that have become the norm for the series that was once considered 'too cerebral for television.'" He mentioned the names of several staff members who have been with Star Trek since the early days of The Next Generation, also the era in which he joined the franchise, but said that he believes it to be a cause for celebration that Star Trek has been returned to the care of its fans.

"I say returned because there was a time when the fans were the exclusive owners and operators of what would later become the Franchise," he noted, citing the grassroots movement that produced early fan fiction, zines and conventions -- all of which now have commercial equivalents. "I was one of those fans; I was a kid growing up in the 1970's who found Star Trek in strip syndication and bought every book and magazine I could lay my hands on and every piece of fan merchandise I could con my parents into buying." Moore named several fans turned Bantam novelists and said that "we, the fans, embroidered the Trek tapestry while the powers that be at Paramount dawdled."

Moore seemed to suggest that Enterprise viewers would do better to abandon the trappings of the Franchise and return to the imaginative roots of Star Trek, stating that fans "can consume the seemingly endless licensed products available to them from the Franchise, everything from barware to shower curtains, and read only the mainstream, officially licensed and sanctioned books, or they can go their own way. Some of the most daring and creatively challenging Star Trek material has been created not by Paramount, but by amateurs, who simply had an idea for an interesting twist on the Trek universe." He even gave a plug to slash fan fiction, in which Kirk and Spock are reimagined as secret lovers.

http://www.trektoday.com/news/080205_02.shtml
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Enraged_Ape Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Feb-09-05 12:24 AM
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1. Well, what can you say? He's right.
Just like he's been on target with the revived Battlestar Galactica. This guy knows what makes for compelling television, unlike the smegheads who have had the reigns of the Star Trek franchise for the last 15 years.

I look forward to the day when Star Trek can be resurrected by people who love Star Trek as much as Moore loved Galactica.
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coloradodem2005 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-10-05 02:58 AM
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2. He had a huge hand in TNG and DS9.
And those shows were great. But it goes back to what I was saying about the people running things need to have passion for Trek. They need to be fans and that is why TNG and DS9 worked. THis is why this season of Enterprise has been heads and shoulders above the other three seasons. That is the key.
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Enraged_Ape Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-10-05 07:21 AM
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3. I totally agree
I have to admit that I still haven't been able to stomach an episode of Enterprise this season, but word on the street is that Manny Coto has done wonders with it, and of course Manny is a huge fan. Ron Moore, as you stated, was also a huge fan of the show.

In my opinion, Star Trek went downhill when it became a massive multinational corporation instead of a TV show. That seems to ALWAYS be the problem.
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