ENT premiered to 12.5 million viewers on UPN. TNG premiered at 27 million viewers. Another data point is 9.5 million viewers which was the premiere for Big Bang Theory (I chose this because it is a popular geek show on CBS which references Star Trek all the time - and appears to have peaked at about 19 million...another story in and of itself).
I know there are all sorts of factors behind those numbers, you can trend TNG to ENT and there are reasons behind the decline in the raw numbers, etc. My point being there still probably millions of people out there who would watch a Star Trek series, and CBS had the tentacles to reach them.
CBS hopes DSC will help them achieve 4 million viewers on All Access. Help. That is a pretty low bar. It factors in a speedbump of $6-$10/month for a subscription, but having access to UPN in 2001 was also a speedbump: you had to pay for cable or satellite service on a system that had shitty UPN with little interesting content, at least for me, beyond Star Trek. In fact, coming to think about it, I wasn't paying for cable until ENT premiered, and I had to get Dish TV because nobody else had UPN.
How many people will show up for a well-marketed Star Trek premiere broadcast on CBS itself? That is their plan, to get a lot of eyeballs on Star Trek without any speedbumps.
Not trying to start a debate on who will spend $ on CBSAA, etc. That debate is for this thread.
Just want to talk about how many eyeballs will show up at the premiere. Keep in mind CBS can advertise to 19 million viewers on one of their top shows. And repeat that advertising on other top shows. 12.5 million showing up for DSC ep. 1 would be fantastic. I think it can be achieved if CBS does their job and creates a lot of fan buzz ahead of time, and does a good job marketing with ads on their own network leading to the premiere.
What do people think? What is achievable? Stretch goals? Obstacles? Success factors?
I know there are all sorts of factors behind those numbers, you can trend TNG to ENT and there are reasons behind the decline in the raw numbers, etc. My point being there still probably millions of people out there who would watch a Star Trek series, and CBS had the tentacles to reach them.
CBS hopes DSC will help them achieve 4 million viewers on All Access. Help. That is a pretty low bar. It factors in a speedbump of $6-$10/month for a subscription, but having access to UPN in 2001 was also a speedbump: you had to pay for cable or satellite service on a system that had shitty UPN with little interesting content, at least for me, beyond Star Trek. In fact, coming to think about it, I wasn't paying for cable until ENT premiered, and I had to get Dish TV because nobody else had UPN.
How many people will show up for a well-marketed Star Trek premiere broadcast on CBS itself? That is their plan, to get a lot of eyeballs on Star Trek without any speedbumps.
Not trying to start a debate on who will spend $ on CBSAA, etc. That debate is for this thread.
Just want to talk about how many eyeballs will show up at the premiere. Keep in mind CBS can advertise to 19 million viewers on one of their top shows. And repeat that advertising on other top shows. 12.5 million showing up for DSC ep. 1 would be fantastic. I think it can be achieved if CBS does their job and creates a lot of fan buzz ahead of time, and does a good job marketing with ads on their own network leading to the premiere.
What do people think? What is achievable? Stretch goals? Obstacles? Success factors?
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