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Star Trek: Discovery Is Returning For a Second Season (engadget.com)

Engaget reports that CBS' Star Trek: Discovery series is being renewed for a second season. The show has reportedly been enough of a success to justify a second season of episodes. From the report: The move comes as a vote of confidence for both the show and its platform, since it has recently aired the sixth of its fifteen-episode first season. Now, a second run of Discovery will air, presumably at some point toward the back-half of 2018. Discovery has certainly benefited from plenty of hype, since it's the first Trek show to air as a TV show since 2005. The pull of the Star Trek name was always going to be a draw, but it wasn't clear how much of a draw given the saga's lackluster popularity at the box office. CBS refused to offer numbers, but did boast that Discovery's debut lead to the highest number of sign-ups in the history of its All Access service.

25 of 478 comments (clear)

  1. whatever by ourlovecanlastforeve · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I don't give a shit I'm not signing up for their stupid pointless streaming service just to watch one show. 0% chance the show will remain exclusive forever. I can wait.

    1. Re:whatever by cyberzephyr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's a solid show but this pay channel crap screws everything up. paying for one show is dumb since folks pay a ton of money for channels they DON'T watch.

      I'm surprised that there are folks that would pay for another channel for what, a single show?

      I see the Production value and it is very good but. That is not the Trek way.

      I feel that the only folks getting this show are wealthy fans and Pirates.

      --
      I'm here for the experience, not the Hyperbole.
    2. Re:whatever by tlhIngan · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yeah, you might as well wait. Everyone outside the US gets a better deal.

      Canadians get it through the Space channel with surround sound.
      Everyone else gets it through Netflix, presumably with surround sound.

      Americans get it through a streaming service with crappy stereo sound.

      I'm presuming there's actually a lot of viewers outside the US that's causing a lot of the interest, though I know of a few people who really did sign up for just one show.

    3. Re:whatever by TheCarp · · Score: 5, Interesting

      A solid show maybe but, there was less Star Trek in the free episode I saw than in the first five minutes of the average Orville episode.

      I can't say anything redeemable about the free episode other than "nice graphics" but, Star Trek used to be the show that proved special effects were not all Sci Fi had to offer; so that was kind of a step backwards.

      Then I can't even really complement the special effects because of all the lens flare someone shat all over perfectly good video.

      They failed to sell me, and up to this point, I watched every single live action Trek show in existence.

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    4. Re:whatever by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's a solid show but this pay channel crap screws everything up. paying for one show is dumb since folks pay a ton of money for channels they DON'T watch.

      I'm surprised that there are folks that would pay for another channel for what, a single show?

      They really don't have to make much money from AllAccess to pay for Discovery. From what I understand, they made a profit on Discovery just by selling the rights to Netflix to show overseas. They could get 20 people sign up for their crappy streaming site and still the show has already made a profit.

      Of course they're going to sign the show for a second season. The fact that they haven't released numbers probably means that All Access didn't do nearly as well as they had hoped.

      --
      "That's the way to do it" - Punch
    5. Re:whatever by TheCarp · · Score: 4, Interesting

      > Everyone outside the US gets a better deal.

      Not true; all people in the US have to do is tune in when its broadcast at 9/8 central on Fox thursdays.

      The spirit of Trek is alive and well, and CBS has nothing to do with it.

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    6. Re:whatever by thomst · · Score: 5, Interesting

      TheCarp opined:

      A solid show maybe but, there was less Star Trek in the free episode I saw than in the first five minutes of the average Orville episode.

      Agreed. And you're far from alone in that assessment ...

      --
      Check out my novel.
    7. Re:whatever by msauve · · Score: 3, Funny

      The name alone - STD - tells you it's something best avoided.

      --
      "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
  2. ARRRK BLAAARKK GARRRRK! by Mats+Svensson · · Score: 5, Funny

    As overrated as it is overexposed and oversaturated.

  3. It kinda sucks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I can't imagine many of those subscriptions will be around for season 2.

    The show itself kinda sucks. A lot of the technology bullshit is so far out there it's not even something you can remotely imagine as being real. There was a certain charm to the older series because you'd see stuff on the show and think "well, OK, maybe we'll see that in 50-100 years if we're lucky". Discovery is packed full of so much random crap you kinda look at it and go "uhhhh no, not gonna happen". It's like they decided to transition from futuristic-but-almost-plausible to outright space magic because that was easier to write.

    Everything else feels like a bog standard Hollywood action movie with tons of CG. It's almost well done enough that it's generally watchable, but again, it isn't Star Trek. I don't find myself thinking about the implications of what's going in the show, in fact, I don't find myself thinking very much at all when I'm watching it. It's just kinda senseless action with the Star Trek name bolted on because OMG recognizable franchise.

    I'm pretty sure it's going to get really old really fast (I'm already starting to get bored with it). Once they run out of inertia from the hype and name alone, the show is doomed.

    1. Re:It kinda sucks. by Rockoon · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I 100% agree with the science issue.

      All of a sudden 20 years before Kirk and the Enterprise (reboot or not) they have a drive that teleports the ship to any known sector, and the technology is based on a network of mushroom spores that permeates the entire universe, and they first were using a GIANT TARDIGRADE as a supercomputer to control the drive, and the main character is SPOCKS ADOPTED SISTER THAT YOU NEVER HEARD OF BEFORE? AND SHE HAS A BOYS NAME?

      On top of that... its another SOAP OPERA. Instead of producing stand-alone shows every show is a continuation of a long assed story?

      The only "good" thing about the show seems to be that its not as overwhelmingly SJW as we were led to believe (we were led to believe it was like that one "fan" produced show with gratuitous 5 minute homosexual make-out scenes in half the episodes!)

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    2. Re:It kinda sucks. by MrKaos · · Score: 4, Funny

      that teleports the ship to any known sector, and the technology is based on a network of mushroom spores that permeates the entire universe, and they first were using a GIANT TARDIGRADE as a supercomputer to control the drive

      Dilithium crystals are no longer a rare source of plot devices in Starfleet.

      --
      My ism, it's full of beliefs.
    3. Re:It kinda sucks. by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Interesting

      With the difference being that TNG is set way, way after TOS. Discovery is supposedly set before.

      TOS is set in 2200. 200 years ago, in 1800, we were still busy exploring our planet, but we had most of it mapped out. The steam engines are a new technology that boosted our progress considerably and we were progressing technologically at a speed never experienced before. People from that time would probably consider ours an utopia, mostly concerning our social achievements and the fact that we basically eliminated hunger at least in our "civilized" areas of the planet, a problem that was really huge back then, with worker famines being a constant problem. They would probably also be amazed at the way greater equality (note: We're talking about a world where a royal could still beat peasants with impunity in many "civilized" areas of the planet, and where owning people was maybe no longer considered decent and normal by some, but definitely legal in many areas). I think that would astound them more than our technical advances, like I said, they live in the age of the steam engine which was propelling advances forward faster than ever before, things were changing rapidly in that time.

      So they would probably accept that we mastered flight, even though it seems impossible to them, much like FTL-travel seems to us now. But we can consider it possible. Likewise, traveling to the moon has been though about in that time, too, with the first sci-fi novels being written, and of course traveling beyond the confines of our planets is a topic. They would be amazed that it's possible and that we did it, but they wouldn't deem it impossible or completely outlandish.

      Scroll back another 200 years to 1600 and it becomes impossible. Not only our technology, but our social advances. To a person from the 1600s, the idea of social equality of races, genders and especially religions is an alien concept they would reject on principle, as impossible. Likewise, travelling beyond the speed of wind is a concept that is absolutely alien, we are talking about a world where the fastest form of locomotion is riding on horseback, and crossing oceans is still a huge endeavor, with most of the planet still being unknown to "civilized" countries, and the idea of simply occupying and owning places you "discover", including the people on it, is considered the norm.

      TNG is what we are to the guy from the 1600s. TOS is what we are to the one from the 1800s.

      This is the difference.

      So yes, TNG gets away with space magic, because they should actually have concepts that we don't even remotely grasp. Actually, they are way, way too "mundane" in many areas.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  4. Highest in history... Trust me. by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 5, Funny

    CBS refused to offer numbers, but did boast that Discovery's debut lead to the highest number of sign-ups in the history of its All Access service.

    Said CBS spokesman Donald Trump.

    --
    It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
  5. It’s a matter of perspective by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ”CBS refused to offer numbers, but did boast that Discovery's debut lead to the highest number of sign-ups in the history of its All Access service.”

    So that means at least 10 people signed up because of Discovery, I’m guessing?

    --
    #DeleteChrome
  6. The Orville by Jezral · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They should fire the writers of Discovery and hire the Orville team instead. Marry the solid writing of a real Star Trek show (The Orville) with the high production values of the knock-off (Discovery).

    The Orville is a true to form Star Trek show disguised as generic sci-fi.
    Discovery is generic sci-fi disguised as Star Trek.

    1. Re:The Orville by Rockoon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Just think about the SJW-Trek bullshit that The Orville has been putting out:

      Ok lets see your examples of SJW stuff...

      Away teams consisting of three women, one man and one robot, and the women spend many minutes of screen time talking about their feelings

      No, thats not SJW stuff. SJW stuff is not "stuff that old people may not like" ... SJW is making it gratuitous. For instance your next point fits the bill, because the homosexual scenes were gratuitous, they were the plot.

      Multiple domestic conflict situations, including an overtly gay couple and an episode where the captain and first officer spent most of the time together in an apartment talking about their relationship

      Star Trek didnt make Kirk kissing Uhura the plot. Star Trek in fact *downplayed* its significance. Meanwhile the homosexual scenes in that other show *were* the plot. It was gratuitous. Instead of just being there to show how normal it was in the future, instead it consumes the episodes to show how abnormal it is today. Its needlessly gratuitous bullshit. Full blown SJW crap.

      An entire episode about a society that thinks women are inferior and forces gender transitions on infants

      Nothing SJW about that.

      The old "religious zealots" plot line, an obvious dig at religious conservatives

      Sure, not a dig at the religious liberals. Your true intolerant colors are showing.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
  7. Positive here by cerberusss · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm seeing some negativity here, but I very much enjoy this season. It's Star Trek, but for once its crew is not infallible and almost-perfect. Nope, these people are damaged goods. Captain Lorca has been trapped, tortured, had to abandon his crew, etc. So he is VERY focused, to the point where you not only think "wow, this is a tough S.O.B." and then continues into the territory of eye-for-an-eye.

    I don't much like their Spore Drive, but the dark and serious atmosphere makes it worth it, IMHO.

    --
    8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
    1. Re:Positive here by AntiSol · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's precisely why this is not Star Trek. The crew are supposed to be "infallible and near-perfect". The whole point is to show an optimistic future where humanity has overcome its petty differences and started actually working for the betterment of all. This is the core principle of Star Trek. Everything else is a side-effect of that. If you want to watch people squabble over inconsequential things and torture animals for their benefit, go watch something that isn't Star Trek. There's tons of it, and lots of it is great if that's what you're looking for.

      This isn't Star Trek, this is "Generic action sci-fi show #48911" with a Star Trek sticker slapped on it so that people will buy it.

  8. Re:I don't care. Me neither by petes_PoV · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I didn't really like the new show. Not sure why

    Here's my reasons - see if any strike a chord.

    First of all, none of the characters are likeable. I wouldn't care if any or all of them got eaten by their monster-cum-computer.
    Second, the show lacks the "lightness" and humanity of previous incarnations. (Although Voyager comes close, in terms of grinding tedium and unnecessary earnestness).
    Finally, the Klingons. Really? The show simply doesn't need all that pseudo-religious claptrap. In TOS and others, they were a bit-part, just another baddie. I have no desire to bond with them and don't need any of their back story, culture or infighting. Just shoot the suckers!

    --
    politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
  9. 7.3 on iMDB by hcs_$reboot · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Uh... 7.3 on iMDB for a TV show, that's not good. No need to wait.

    --
    Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
  10. Spore Drive is a one season story at most by iTrawl · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Given that the show is supposedly set about a decade before TOS, and that nobody in the whole Star Trek universe heard of Spore Drive until Discovery, should mean that Spore Drive technology will fail so spectacularly that nobody ever mentions it again and they just settle for "slow" Warp Drive for the rest of the future. Even the Borg have only Trans-Warp conduits to help them move faster.

    If they still have Spore Drive in season 2 they're mad - otherwise they'll have to declare it an "alternate universe" story, and then watch how everybody suddenly understands why the Klingons look like a totally different species.

    --
    "Everybody's naked underneath" -- The Doctor
  11. Alcubierre drives and relativity physics) by DrYak · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The problem with deflector dishes is that the ship is travelling at (say, warp 2, which is four times the speed of light) and the deflector dish puts out a beam which travels faster than that forward of the ship to sweep away all that pesky interstellar dust.

    Two things :
    - Alcubierre drives, the theoretical physics concept around which the fictional warp drives are based do not actually move the ship.
    At all. The ship stays completely immobile in its own frame of reference. (There wouldn't be a way to move it past speed of light anyway).
    What you move it the frame of reference it self. You bend the space time it self. You contract it in front of the ship, and expand it behind.
    And unlike speed of things which is limited (at C, the speed of light), space-time bending isn't limited
    (How the hell to you think our real-world astronomers can observe the distant past by looking at far away points in the space ? if our solar system was just a moving object, it would obligatory move slower than speed of light, and the light emitted in the distant past would have "over-taken" us and would not be observable anymore. The trick is that the space time of our actual universe did expand it self. More space was "created" between the objects, so that now they are further apart, and we can still catch "glimpse" of the beginning of the universe - some of these past images haven't reach us yet, because these image suddenly have way more space to travel to reach us because of that space-time expansion)
    The only difference is that Alcubiere drive is a completely theoretical concept. It might not even be doable in the real world : it might happen that distorting the space time this way could require more energy than contain in the universe that you're trying to distort (it took a whole bigbang to expand our universe).
    Whereas in Star Trek they just use dilithium crystals or some other fictional stuff in their warp core and can warp around freely.

    - Speed of light.
    You're reasoning "the deflector dish puts out a beam which travels faster than that forward of the ship" is based on old classical physics (the speed of some launched from a moving something is the sum of both speeds : a photon launched from a ship travelling near the light speed would it self be launched at nearly twice the lights speed). Classical physics at that speed don't work and give wrong results (there's no such thing as an object moving at twice the light speed).
    You're entering the realm of relativist physics :
    No matter what, the light speed (in vacuum) is constant and the same same every where in all referential. When an object is moving, from the point of view of the object the radiation it's shining forward will travel at exactly 1 C. From your point of view as an observer, the radiation of the deflector will travel at exactly 1 C *too*.
    The thing that will change is the time and space. The scales will seems squished and time will seem running slow, so at the end, both the ship and observer will see the same distance/time = speed of light for the radion. The speed of light doesn't change, is the distance and time which end up being different.

    There's a bunch of math to compute all this, but then ... (appropriate citation, in Bone's voice) I'm a doctor, Jim ! Not an astrophysicist)

    ---

    (Also not mentioned in your post, but also relevant to the discussion of Star Trek technology : artificial gravity and inertial dampeners.
    General relativity.
    Which basically states that gravity actually works by playing around with space time too. Except this time, it isn't by expanding or contracting space, but by curving it. Objects aren't actually "attracted" to each other. They simply travel on straight lines (imagine a point travelling on grid on a sheet of paper), but the "straight lines" them selves are curved by the presence of mass (if you draw a sun in the middle of your sheet of paper, the grid suddenly isn't squares anymore but spirals that head towa

    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
  12. They have retconned massive amounts of technology. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Holodeck Pre-TOS: It was supposed to be new in the Era of TNG.
    Holographic Displays everywhere: Was there *EVER* any in Trek?
    Transporters like they're safe!: McCoy was still concerned about transporters in TOS, and the tech was still known for mishaps in the TOS era. Yet they use them in EVERY POSSIBLE SITUATION they could be dangerous. I mean beaming them off a small fast moving fightcraft being fired on by the Klingons? That sure seems like the sort of situation a 'new' technology would have mishaps with.

    The biggest issues so far were believing Michael had ever passed for Vulcan, that the commander woman who was sleeping with the Captain and died on Discovery was that stupid, and that Tilly/the Admiral were that touchy feely emotional as a recruit on a Black Ops ship, and an Admiral in the Federation. The Admiral sleeping with the Captain just felt like something out of The Orville, which makes wonder if the fraternizing in that show was a jab at ST:D (even more apt giving all the sleeping around.)

    Here is hoping at 2 seasons, it will also be notable for being the shortest Trek series ever and not get a third...

    Having said that, the Captain, the gay scientist, the doctor, and a few other characters have all been top notch, if not what you'd expect of Trek figures. Honestly if they had spun it as an original show and omitted the Trek aspects I might like it, but too much of it feels JJ Abrams inspired, rather than post-Enterprise or strictly pre-TOS. Personally I think it would have been a lot better if they had done it in retro motif with TOS style sets and uniforms and kept the budgets small. Oh and make an intro that seemed like a Trek instead of an evolution of the crappy intro in Enterprise. Trek is about *SPACE*, show a starscape, show a ship. Don't show a crappy montage on a sepia colored screen.

  13. Oh, I signed up, all right by fyngyrz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    CBS refused to offer numbers, but did boast that Discovery's debut lead to the highest number of sign-ups in the history of its All Access service.

    I signed up. I watched the premiere. It was terrible. That was the end of my signup.

    I don't know WTF is wrong with having a damned science advisor on the production team, and listening to them. But apparently there is something wrong with it. Because they either didn't have one, or they didn't listen to them, either of which is deadly for producing something that purports to be SF.

    I'll grant you that trek has always been some kind of broken, science-wise, but this version, the premiere anyway, was near maximum suck.

    And then there were the long angsty conversations in the captain's ready room when there was a bloody emergency going on.

    What a load of CGI-shiny poop.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.