• Starfleet Academy Viewership Reportedly Collapses to Under 40,000 Per E

    From Ubiquitous@3:633/10 to All on Sat Apr 11 04:30:48 2026
    Subject: Starfleet Academy Viewership Reportedly Collapses to Under 40,000 Per Episode

    If this report is even remotely accurate, Starfleet Academy may go down
    as one of the most shocking flops in modern streaming history.
    According to YouTuber Mike Stoklasa, the viewership numbers behind
    Starfleet Academy aren't just bad?they?re downright cataclysmic.

    ?I heard from my source? The entire first season of Star Trek:
    Starfleet Academy, not individual episodes, the entire season total
    views, about 400,000," he said. "Not per episode. Cumulatively, the
    entire series. About 400,000 views. Which is an average of maybe 40,000
    views per episode.?

    WHAT!?

    Not 400,000 per episode. Not even close. That?s 400,000 total views
    across the entire season. Divide that across 10 episodes, and you?re
    looking at fewer than 40,000 viewers per episode.

    For a franchise as massive as Star Trek, those numbers are downright catastrophic.

    A Franchise in Freefall?
    If these Starfleet Academy viewership numbers are even remotely
    accurate, they paint a brutal picture of where the franchise currently
    stands.

    This isn?t some unknown indie series buried on a niche platform. This
    is Star Trek?a brand that once dominated television, inspired
    generations, and built a global fanbase over decades.

    Now? We?re talking about numbers that many small YouTube channels hit
    without breaking a sweat.

    That?s not hyperbole either. Even modest online creators regularly
    surpass 40,000 views on a single video within hours. Meanwhile, a
    full-scale studio production backed by a major streaming service is
    struggling to reach that number per episode.

    That would constitute a total collapse of the entire Star Trek IP under
    the direction and guidance of Alex Kurtzman, whose contract is set to
    expire in 2026.

    The Bigger Problem: Where Did the Audience Go?

    If fewer than 40,000 people are watching each episode, it raises some
    serious questions?not just about the show itself, but about the broader ecosystem around it.

    For example:

    * How was this show being positioned as viable internally?

    * What metrics were being used to justify its continuation?

    * And perhaps most importantly? who exactly was watching?

    Because when engagement numbers are that low, it becomes increasingly difficult to reconcile the online discourse that often suggests these
    shows have strong support.

    Even the idea of fan-driven campaigns or petitions starts to look
    questionable when the total audience pool is so small.

    A Reality Check for Streaming
    The Starfleet Academy viewership situation also highlights a larger
    issue across the streaming landscape.

    Studios have spent years chasing subscriber growth, pumping out content
    at an unsustainable pace, and assuming that recognizable IP alone would guarantee success.

    A woman in a futuristic light blue uniform smiles and holds a tablet to
    her chest. She stands in a busy room with other people in similar
    uniforms in the background. The setting appears to be a sci-fi
    environment.
    But audiences are becoming more selective.

    They?re not just showing up because a logo says Star Trek anymore. They
    want something worth their time.

    And if they don?t get it, they simply don?t watch. At a certain point
    fans stop clinging to the past. They lose hope that this thing they
    loved is ever coming back as it was and they accept life without it.
    Just ask Marvel and Star Wars fans how that feels.

    Where Does Star Trek Go From Here?
    If these numbers hold up, it?s hard to see how Kurtzman Trek continues
    in any meaningful way. Starfleet Academy has been canceled with one
    season left in the can that, apparently, is still going to air.

    But beyond Starfleet Academy and even Kurtzman, this kind of mass
    rejection forces a broader reckoning for the franchise.

    A woman with long wavy blonde hair, dressed in a red uniform, stands
    with arms outstretched in a futuristic room, looking serious. Several
    people stand in the background.
    Because this isn?t just about one show underperforming. It?s about a pattern?one that suggests the current direction isn?t connecting with
    viewers the way it once did.

    And at some point, studios have to decide: Do they double down, or do
    they finally start asking why the audience walked away? And for Star
    Trek, that answer comes down to whether Paramount decides to renew Alex Kurtzman's contract or show him the door.



    --- PyGate Linux v1.5.13
    * Origin: Dragon's Lair, PyGate NNTP<>Fido Gate (3:633/10)
  • From john@3:633/10 to All on Sun Apr 12 10:25:00 2026
    Subject: Re: Starfleet Academy Viewership Reportedly Collapses to Under 40,000 Per Episode

    Ubiquitoius wrote:

    If this report is even remotely accurate, Starfleet Academy may go down
    as one of the most shocking flops in modern streaming history.
    According to YouTuber Mike Stoklasa, the viewership numbers behind
    Starfleet Academy aren't just bad?they?re downright cataclysmic.

    ?I heard from my source? The entire first season of Star Trek:
    Starfleet Academy, not individual episodes, the entire season total
    views, about 400,000," he said. "Not per episode. Cumulatively, the
    entire series. About 400,000 views. Which is an average of maybe 40,000 >views per episode.?

    WHAT!?

    Not 400,000 per episode. Not even close. That?s 400,000 total views
    across the entire season. Divide that across 10 episodes, and you?re
    looking at fewer than 40,000 viewers per episode.

    For a franchise as massive as Star Trek, those numbers are downright >catastrophic.

    A Franchise in Freefall?
    If these Starfleet Academy viewership numbers are even remotely
    accurate, they paint a brutal picture of where the franchise currently >stands.

    This isn?t some unknown indie series buried on a niche platform. This
    is Star Trek?a brand that once dominated television, inspired
    generations, and built a global fanbase over decades.

    Now? We?re talking about numbers that many small YouTube channels hit >without breaking a sweat.

    That?s not hyperbole either. Even modest online creators regularly
    surpass 40,000 views on a single video within hours. Meanwhile, a
    full-scale studio production backed by a major streaming service is >struggling to reach that number per episode.

    That would constitute a total collapse of the entire Star Trek IP under
    the direction and guidance of Alex Kurtzman, whose contract is set to
    expire in 2026.

    The Bigger Problem: Where Did the Audience Go?

    If fewer than 40,000 people are watching each episode, it raises some >serious questions?not just about the show itself, but about the broader >ecosystem around it.

    For example:

    * How was this show being positioned as viable internally?

    * What metrics were being used to justify its continuation?

    * And perhaps most importantly? who exactly was watching?

    Because when engagement numbers are that low, it becomes increasingly >difficult to reconcile the online discourse that often suggests these
    shows have strong support.

    Even the idea of fan-driven campaigns or petitions starts to look >questionable when the total audience pool is so small.

    A Reality Check for Streaming
    The Starfleet Academy viewership situation also highlights a larger
    issue across the streaming landscape.

    Studios have spent years chasing subscriber growth, pumping out content
    at an unsustainable pace, and assuming that recognizable IP alone would >guarantee success.

    A woman in a futuristic light blue uniform smiles and holds a tablet to
    her chest. She stands in a busy room with other people in similar
    uniforms in the background. The setting appears to be a sci-fi
    environment.
    But audiences are becoming more selective.

    They?re not just showing up because a logo says Star Trek anymore. They
    want something worth their time.

    And if they don?t get it, they simply don?t watch. At a certain point
    fans stop clinging to the past. They lose hope that this thing they
    loved is ever coming back as it was and they accept life without it.
    Just ask Marvel and Star Wars fans how that feels.

    Where Does Star Trek Go From Here?
    If these numbers hold up, it?s hard to see how Kurtzman Trek continues
    in any meaningful way. Starfleet Academy has been canceled with one
    season left in the can that, apparently, is still going to air.

    But beyond Starfleet Academy and even Kurtzman, this kind of mass
    rejection forces a broader reckoning for the franchise.

    A woman with long wavy blonde hair, dressed in a red uniform, stands
    with arms outstretched in a futuristic room, looking serious. Several
    people stand in the background.
    Because this isn?t just about one show underperforming. It?s about a >pattern?one that suggests the current direction isn?t connecting with >viewers the way it once did.

    And at some point, studios have to decide: Do they double down, or do
    they finally start asking why the audience walked away? And for Star
    Trek, that answer comes down to whether Paramount decides to renew Alex >Kurtzman's contract or show him the door.

    In the old network days, 400k would have gotten the show canceled by the
    first commercial break, everyone associated w/ creating the show would
    be fired and unhireable and a bloodbath house cleaning of executives at
    the network


    --- PyGate Linux v1.5.13
    * Origin: Dragon's Lair, PyGate NNTP<>Fido Gate (3:633/10)