Star Trek is dead…(well, almost)
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MovieManCin2 — 1 week ago(March 27, 2026 04:06 AM)
Nah, you can have it
for free
since you're a proud conservative like me. Besides, I stole it from some other poster whose name I cannot remember.
MAGA! FAFO!
Schrodinger's Cat walks into a bar, and doesn't.
Dumbocraps: evil people who celebrate murder. 
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Krazy Joe — 2 days ago(April 01, 2026 04:03 PM)
Evidence…you said this:
I have watched all the ST series and the only ones that are woke are the new ones after 2020.
Comment proves you dont know Star Trek
You're from the future?Well that's brilliant!Do they still have sandwiches there? -
Owensboro — 1 week ago(March 26, 2026 05:25 PM)
I have a friend who works in the industry and he told me flat out a year ago that Academy was already dead and would not get a third season. It was internally cancelled shortly after the Skydance merger was completed.
That's interesting. Did he give any information on any other shows or any more about the politics going on behind the scenes? -
Krazy Joe — 1 week ago(March 27, 2026 11:31 AM)
That's interesting. Did he give any information on any other shows or any more about the politics going on behind the scenes?
Yeah, he's really well connected. He seems to always know everything going on at DC Studios but I always have to ask him to stop telling me because I hate spoilers and it tends to spill the beans on too many plot points that I don't want to hear.
The Ellisons plan for Star Trek from the moment they gained control of Paramount was to end Star Trek on television and focus on the movie franchise with the emphasis on action/adventure sci-fi movies with little to know social commentary. (In other words, they want as little Star Trek in their Star Trek as possible
)
John Francis Daley and Jonathan Goldstein (directors of Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves) are developing a new Star Trek film for Paramount, set to write, produce, and direct. This project is planned as a fresh, standalone, and original story disconnected from previous TV series and the J.J. Abrams Kelvin timeline. Think JJ Abrams' Star Trek movies (although not set in that continuity). The Kelvin films were fun action movies, but didn't delve into to social commentary Star Trek is known for.
The truth is, that kind of social commentary works better on television anyway. If they can make some fun movies that keep the heart beeping until someone else takes control of the studio who actually understands the franchise, I'll be mostly happy.
You're from the future?Well that's brilliant!Do they still have sandwiches there?