I could get all the Star Trek series but some of the syndicated shows that were emerging from the 1990s world of independent owned TV stations just didn't make it on to the Winnipeg dial. Wasn't the first time the struggle of having to find shows I had heard about and not being able to find them occurred.
Doctor Who was something I didn't get to see until PBS aired it and it was only one doctor! Not anything before and not anything after. I didn't get to see Blake's 7 from Britain until the 1990s until a friend who had recorded in Los Angeles sent them to me. She died this year along with her husband. Quite sad as she was such a fan of Servalan.
The explosion of independent stations or small groupings of stations sharing content in the last 1980s and early 1990s made it possible for a syndicated Star Trek and for Babylon 5 to emerge on the sci-fi front. Baywatch was one of the other popular series of the syndicated drama period. Alas, today the advent of streaming has pretty much been eliminated original drama syndication.
Syndication was a good format for guaranteeing a full season order of 22 episodes. And with the story based at one location and with visual effects using CGI, it had a budget less that Star Trek Next Generation's which was tens of thousands higher. Next Generation was episodic with a general narrative whereas Babylon 5 was seeded with developing storylines that could take the entire series of five years to pay off.
The creator of the series J. Michael Straczynski had gotten his start on animated series that appeared on Saturday morning cartoons but by the 1980s was writing on Murder, She Wrote. As an experienced writer and producer, he was able to convince Warner Bros about the merit of a sci-fi series and the studio was looking to follow in the successful path of Paramount with their Star Trek revival in film and TV.
Straczynski had shopped the idea to Paramount before Warner and shockingly, Paramount created Deep Space 9 which they pushed quickly to get on air before Babylon 5. I personally liked both series but there was no doubt that they both followed long story arcs, had politics, religion and space battles galore. I was not much for the Internet sniping between the two series. There was even a bit of that among the performers on both series. I guess there is no such thing as bad publicity only no publicity.
The considerable changes in actors from first season to second season in Babylon 5 might have tripped up many series but the writing was adjusted and seemed seamless in the "novel" that was the intent of the show. In fact, the loss of some of those characters for a time allowed for an even more layered series.In 2023, an animated re-visit to Babylon 5 was made and it was nice to see after all these years. Warner Brothers hasn't said whether they intend to make more. They were late to the streaming party with Max (formerly HBO Max) but original content that the company owns has been part of their objective. Babylon 5 is a property that could be Warner's Star Trek in terms of the future. Set aside the rumour that Paramount and Warner might merge because then the combined companies would own Star Trek and might not see a need for a Babylon 5.
The rumour has cooled recently. Warner is still adjusting to its merger with Discovery so Paramount might just not be on. In fact all the studios are trying to figure out the future of their assets. The thing about Star Trek is that they began a movie re-boot only a dozen years after the original TV series. And that TV series had been a consistent performer in syndication. Many (and I do mean many) of the original actors on Babylon 5 have passed away.
As for the 30 year old series, it still holds up well when you can find it. It never seems to last long on any TV station or on sale on DVD. It seems to sit in a library and doesn't even get put on a streamer anywhere. The talk of a renewed series on CW went no where.
In terms of seeing where the future of mankind is going, the series seemed more point on with the politics of earth than Star Trek. The slide to authoritarianism, the continued role of religion, the military aspect of space exploration were more accurate than anyone might have guessed. However, the communications device attached to the hand is likely not going to supplant Star Trek's communicator. But I feel the pockets on the uniforms of Babylon 5 are more likely to be in the future than Star Treks's onesies.
Looking at 2024, there are very few series that would qualify as space opera. It seems to go in cycles. Star Trek continues to produce series. Foundation has a bit of that element. Dune would likely make a good series but will continue on the film route a while longer. Star Wars has done some really good stuff for TV series and there are more to come. I hope one day that Warner will dust off the series for one more round across the galaxy.
No comments:
Post a Comment