How Star Trek prospers against Netflix and Disney+
The streaming wars have reached a new inflection, as Netflix and Disney+ jostle for position, and in the process disrupt post-strike Hollywood. Paramount+ invested heavily in blockbuster veteran Alex Kurtzman to turn Star Trek into a distinguishing franchise. Now Kurtzman talks with Rapid Response host Bob Safian about the future of streaming, the end of TV’s golden age, and how courting Trekkies offers lessons for all customer engagement. Plus, Kurtzman shares behind the scenes stories of Star Trek’s past, present and future.
The streaming wars have reached a new inflection, as Netflix and Disney+ jostle for position, and in the process disrupt post-strike Hollywood. Paramount+ invested heavily in blockbuster veteran Alex Kurtzman to turn Star Trek into a distinguishing franchise. Now Kurtzman talks with Rapid Response host Bob Safian about the future of streaming, the end of TV’s golden age, and how courting Trekkies offers lessons for all customer engagement. Plus, Kurtzman shares behind the scenes stories of Star Trek’s past, present and future.
Table of Contents:
- Making a movie for an established fanbase
- Exploring the number one factor to Star Trek’s endurance
- The benefit of making a television series compared to a film
- Balancing the business side with making the best possible show
- Inside the current state of the streaming wars
- The scale benefits to building a franchise
- “The only way for Star Trek to endure is to take massive swings”
- What’s changed from the Hollywood strikes
Transcript:
How Star Trek prospers against Netflix and Disney+
ALEX KURTZMAN: Hollywood in general markets itself and benefits from being a mirror that reflects the moment in which it’s making its content. So when you see something like the opening of Civil War this weekend, you realize that people are obviously in an election year really thinking about this. That it is highly, highly, highly there.
Look, we go to the movies or we watch television to have, to experience catharsis. We go and we sit in the dark and we eat our popcorn to experience a sense of catharsis that allows us a closer understanding of the very thing we’re experiencing in the world, which is why movies have always been so much a part of our popular culture.
BOB SAFIAN: That’s Alex Kurtzman, the executive producer behind Paramount’s ever-expanding collection of Star Trek TV shows. He’s also worked on franchises from Transformers to Spiderman to Mission Impossible. As we approach the one year anniversary of the Hollywood strikes, I wanted to talk to Alex about the state of the streaming wars. He’s someone Paramount+ tapped to help compete against Netflix, Disney+ and others. Even if you’re not a Trekkie, Alex shares insights for leaders everywhere about how to keep your brand feeling fresh, and when to risk upsetting your biggest fans. Let’s get into it.
[THEME MUSIC]
I’m Bob Safian, and I’m here with filmmaker and producer, Alex Kurtzman of Secret Hideout — who orchestrates the Star Trek TV franchise for CBS and Paramount+. Alex, thanks for joining us.
KURTZMAN: Thank you so much for having me, Bob.
SAFIAN: So your entrée into Star Trek came on the big screen, working with JJ Abrams on Star Trek feature films. And so in preparing for this chat, I started looking at some recent box office numbers for Civil War and Godzilla Kong and Dune 2, of course. Are you an avid moviegoer yourself? Like, have you seen this latest batch?
KURTZMAN: I try to get to the movies as much as possible. Anything Alex Garland makes, I will try and get to see. I have not yet seen Civil War. I’m very excited. I did see Dune last weekend. I saw it projected Digital 70, actually Digital IMAX, which was the way to watch that film.
Making a movie for an established fanbase
SAFIAN: The blockbuster movie genre is such a, sometimes I think it’s like a crapshoot. It’s like you never know who else is coming out when you are and sort of what’s going to differentiate you in that marketplace, right?
KURTZMAN: Oh, it’s, you know, you can call it a crapshoot, or you can call it Russian roulette. I mean, it depends on how you look at it. And it’s particularly competitive now, but it’s a strange thing, because people will spend literally years of their lives building a movie, and you know by three o’clock that Friday whether you’re dead or alive. It’s a very strange thing.
SAFIAN: Do you know beforehand though? Like, do you kind of know whether it’s working? I mean, you kind of do, right?
KURTZMAN: Yes, you mostly know when it’s working, you definitely know when it’s not working, and then every once in a while you get very surprised. We actually were very surprised on the first Star Trek movie. We thought it was going to do okay. And then it ended up doing, I think, close to 80 million, which was something like 20 million more than everybody thought it would do. So those things do happen.
SAFIAN: And that surprise with that film, was it because you weren’t sure the film was as good as it could be, or because you didn’t realize that the audience was going to respond, that you could activate such an audience?
KURTZMAN: No, no, it’s never, I would separate greatly what I think of the movie versus what the audience will, whether they’ll go see the movie. So I loved the first Star Trek movie. I just loved everything about it.
Star Trek was in a very strange place when we made that film. So, I think it launched a whole new interest in Star Trek. But that was the point because Star Trek was at a fairly low place, we just didn’t know how many people would come. We knew that people were really interested in the trailer because it looked so different than what Star Trek had done before but we just didn’t know, does that mean we’re gonna get only diehards and no new fans? Are we gonna get a whole new audience? And we ended up getting both. That was our golden ticket that weekend.
SAFIAN: Yeah. I mean, I guess that balance of sort of the diehards and the new one, like you’re still balancing that, right? Cause the folks who glommed onto that film, like now they’re diehards, but that’s a long time ago already.
KURTZMAN: It’s a long time ago, and yes, that is me every single day, thinking about fans. There’s actually a huge misnomer about Star Trek fandom, which is that there’s a one size fits all fan. There’s many different sects of Star Trek fandom.
One of the things that I think was really helpful was realizing that none of us own Star Trek. Star Trek is owned by Gene Roddenberry and the fans. Full stop. And the fans have been the ones who’ve saved Star Trek from the beginning. The fans have been the ones who keep evangelizing about Star Trek. And, if you do not please the core fans, Star Trek won’t continue. But the tricky part is, the core fans of today will not necessarily be the core fans of ten years from now. And so how do you build for that?
SAFIAN: Yeah. I had an early mentor in the magazine business, actually at Fortune Magazine, and he said to me, “you always need to deliver meat for the dog,” which was his way of saying, like, cover that base. But all your growth is going beyond that base. And so how much do you give the, and how much can you take them for granted because they’ll accept anything that is sort of close to that core?
KURTZMAN: You can never take them for granted. Ever. In fact, you have to listen to them religiously, and we do that. As part of our show is what we do is we scour everything that everybody’s writing on the internet about it. And we talk about it in the writer’s room. And I believe that the only way you can build new fans is to first please the core fans.
It’s everything because first of all, television gives you the benefit of being able to tack and change course along the way. So, if something’s working, you know very quickly, and if it’s not working, you know very quickly. And if you’re still building a season of television, or if you’re still thinking about what’s next season gonna be, you can say, “okay, what are the things that we learned from this season that worked for us? And what do we need to change? What feels resonant about what the fans are saying to us?”
SAFIAN: Were you a Trekkie as a kid?
KURTZMAN: I was a fan, actually when I saw The Wrath of Khan in the theater as a little kid. It was the first time a villain had ever rivaled Darth Vader. And that seemed impossible to me at the time. And then I started noticing that my friend, his father worked at JPL.
SAFIAN: And just so our audience knows, JPL refers to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Lab.
KURTZMAN: And his father would sit down and watch Star Trek with my friend every Saturday on reruns. And that was actually the first time that I began to understand what I have now come to see, full frame. Which is that Star Trek has influenced enormous amounts of people in the tech world to go build the things they saw on television. And that is an amazing thing because there’s not a lot of franchises that you can say have done that.
Exploring the number one factor to Star Trek’s endurance
SAFIAN: Yeah, I had a guest on the show recently, a futurist guy named Ari Wallach, who talked about how Hollywood’s depiction of the future is often dystopian, which he said can sort of be a disservice that discourages our dreams of a better of a better world. But Star Trek’s always tried to have somewhat of a different vibe. Although of course there are always bad guys, as you note with Khan, right?
KURTZMAN: Sure, so I think actually the thing that distinguishes Star Trek and that is the special sauce of Star Trek is Roddenberry’s very unique vision of optimism. I mean, what Star Trek posits is a world in which all of the things that divide us now are in the rear view mirror.
One of the greatest contributions that Roddenberry ever made to the conversation about race, gender, equality, was that no one ever talked about it on the bridge. But everybody was a different color and had different interests and different preferences, and no one talked about it. It was just an assumption that it was okay and understood and accepted. And that is a beautiful, beautiful thing.
And I think that I would say the number one ingredient to Star Trek’s endurance over all this time is that essential vision of optimism where our better angels have actually driven us to the best version of ourselves as humanity. And that is how we have continued to grow. So I think in a lot of ways it is a compass for so many people to imagine a better world.
SAFIAN: Why is it so hard in Hollywood for that kind of message to be more prevalent? Like, why is there such a fascination with dystopia? Is it just easier to tell that kind of a story?
KURTZMAN: Well, I think Hollywood in general markets itself and benefits from being a mirror that reflects the moment in which it’s making its content. So when you see something like the opening of Civil War this weekend, you realize that people are obviously in an election year really thinking about this. That it is highly, highly, highly there.
Look, we go to the movies or we watch television to have, to experience catharsis. And right now, the premise of Civil War is kind of on everybody’s mind in some form, right? It’s writ large and it’s taken to the extreme, but it’s on everybody’s mind. And so, we go and we sit in the dark and we eat our popcorn to experience a sense of catharsis that allows us a closer understanding of the very thing we’re experiencing in the world, which is why movies have always been so much a part of our popular culture.
The benefit of making a television series compared to a film
SAFIAN: As you’re operating Star Trek via television or streaming versus in the theaters. What’s different about that? Or is it not really different?
KURTZMAN: The benefit of having a season of television where you’re doing, let’s say, 10 to 13 episodes a year is that you have much more time to tell the stories and to live in the nuance of character.
We can do one show that’s an adult drama. We can do one show that’s a comedy. We can do one show that’s an action adventure. And that way, we will be able to speak to each segment of the Star Trek audience.
I’ll give you an example with Lower Decks. So Lower Decks is our animated show that Mike McMahon did. Mike McMahon came from Rick and Morty, which is, you know, another show steeped in a deep, deep understanding of science fiction. And he said, “The thing that I want to make sure of when we do this show is that we are never punching down on Star Trek. We’re never making fun of it. You can laugh with it. You can’t laugh at it.”
Now Mike comes from animation, right? So he wasn’t thinking of it as a live action show. So it organically made a lot of sense for us to do it as an animated show. Could Lower Decks be a live action show? Absolutely. In fact In Season 2 of Strange New Worlds, we crossed the Lower Decks characters over. They go through a portal and they come out as the real actors who play them, Tawny Newsome and Jack Quaid, and they join the crew of the Enterprise as live action characters. And it totally worked. It was, it was kind of proof of concept that if we ever did want to do a spin off of something like that, we could have done a live action.
Balancing the business side with making the best possible show
SAFIAN: So, obviously you’re deep into the details of the creative parts that make up the Star Trek universe. But at the same time, there’s these business challenges. And you’ve been labeled like “the future of Paramount+,” “how Paramount+ is going to compete with Netflix and Disney.” There’s a lot of pressure in all of that. How do you think about what’s happening in the streaming world and what your role is and how you compete?
KURTZMAN: It’s a question I think about every day. What happens to Paramount+, how it scales as a company, big picture. I don’t have any control over that. What I do have control over is quality. And my feeling is that part of building this franchise correctly is allowing each showrunner to bring their vision to the table, and I’m there at the beginning to help the boat get off the dock with some of the key decisions, some of the big, big decisions, and then I stay involved on the shows that I’m not show running. I stay involved but I’m not there to micromanage them. I think that is a huge mistake.
If my mission is, I want each show to be its own unique color in a rainbow then I cannot begin muddying each color with too much of my own perspective.
When it comes to the business side of things, what I try and shield them from as much as possible is the pressure that comes down from above about you know, what is the cadence of shows, how many, budgets. I know you’re not going to like it, Paramount, but you have to do it. And here’s why you have to do it. So that by the time the showrunner is hearing about it, the ground has been softened a little bit.
SAFIAN: How do you think about what an appropriate cost base is in a world where you’re competing with people who are at all different levels of the investment they’re making in it.
KURTZMAN: Part of my job is understanding how Star Trek monetizes for the company that I work for. So in this weird moment in streaming where It’s very hard to tell what metric anyone is using to really argue success. Is it viewership? Okay, well, but what kind of viewership? You’re not giving us numbers, so what is that actually translating to? Is it subscribers? Because, are you able to calculate that X number of subscribers are signing up for your service just to watch that one show? You know, we don’t know. They won’t tell us. The companies won’t tell us.
What I can tell you is that Star Trek is a waterfall that keeps rolling downstream for 30 years in terms of licensing. So it’s not just a matter of saying, okay, you have to decide in this quarter whether you’re successful financially. My argument is: you have to think: big picture.
You have to assume, based on the performance of all other Star Trek shows, that you’re still going to be selling the show in 30 years. And if you’re still selling the show in 30 years, then you can count on making a lot of money. You just may not get it this quarter, but you’re going to get it.
SAFIAN: Although that can sometimes be a hard argument because some leaders say,
“Well, I’m not going to be around 30 years from now. I need to, I need to show something now.” Right?
KURTZMAN: No doubt. There’s no doubt. And that’s why ultimately, despite all appearances, we’re actually not in the quantity business. You know, we’re actually in the quality business, which means you have to assume that from the minute we decide we’re going to make a Star Trek show, a live action Star Trek show, You’re two to three years out from it ever ending up on screen. Because you have to assume it’s going to be a year of writing, a year of production, and a year of post. Now obviously there’s a blend in terms of those timelines, but it is a massive undertaking. It’s like making three huge studio movies at a time.
So in order to lay it out for them and to say, I need you to, to accept the financial buy-in for just one season of television, let alone three or four. I’m going to tell you how we’re going to roll it out over the course of the next four to five years. To use a very frequently used Masters of Scale analogy, I’m not looking at the puck, I’m looking at where the puck is going. And part of my job is to tell Paramount, here’s where the puck is going to go.
SAFIAN: I think what Alex’s saying here is being felt throughout many industries, not just in Hollywood. Looking toward the future, to where the proverbial puck is headed, is smart business. But it requires bravery and risk. Because the pressures of the moment can fight against longer term opportunities. I also want to double-click on Alex’s comments about serving core customers first. This is a trickier choice than it can seem, because growth is all about your next customer. And sometimes you have to let go of the past to unlock what comes next.
After the break, we’ll dig into that tradeoff more deeply. Plus Alex explains why a Golden Age of TV might be over, and how last year’s Hollywood strikes have fundamentally redefined the entertainment industry. Stay with us.
[AD BREAK]
Before the break, Star Trek Executive Producer Alex Kurtzman shared his experience re-energizing a beloved brand. Now, Alex and I explore newer trends in streaming, competition from TikTok, and how Star Trek evolves to appeal to new audiences. Let’s jump back in.
SAFIAN: When you talk to Paramount+, where is that business model going? How do you think newer consumers, Gen Z, newer audiences are going to deal with it?
KURTZMAN: So I’m lucky because I have a 17 year old boy in my house, right? And so I see how he’s consuming media, and I see that there is no monogamy to any particular channel other than TikTok. TikTok is the one constant in our house, right? So he’ll watch something on Hulu or he’ll watch something on Netflix or he’ll watch something on Max. There’s no monogamy there.
SAFIAN: And does he have an affinity where he knows that’s a Paramount+ show or that that’s a Hulu show? Or is it just like, I’m just watching that show?
KURTZMAN: No.
SAFIAN: Nothing, right?
Inside the current state of the streaming wars
KURTZMAN: No, I think what you’re going to start seeing is that some of these companies are going to start merging because it’s very difficult to sustain them on their own.
We have watched over the last decade, the great streaming wars. And I think there was a window of time that happened to coincide with what everybody calls The Golden Age of Streaming where you had this unbelievable amount of quality television on, where you would get these amazing artistic shows that all cost 20 million an episode and made 0 for anybody, right?
But they were amazing pieces of art. It was an incredible time. I think we have now come out the other side of that where a lot of the streamers are saying that did not work for us. That was not a financially viable and sustainable way to run a business. We need shows. That are much lower cost. That are recognizable instantly. That have the ability to cut through the clutter.
I would say that the winner of the Streaming Wars was easily and hands down Netflix, but even they are saying, we’re not going to spend the kind of money that we spent before on shows.
SAFIAN: It’s like that investment was there to sort of change habits in a lot of ways to get us used to these, these streamers. But now that we’re there, it’s not worth continuing to spend that money on it because you lose money on what you’re creating.
KURTZMAN: Well, I think what they recognized was that Wall Street came along and said, “How much are you making?” And people, the minute they had to open up their books, Wall Street didn’t like it. And so then it becomes very difficult.
Which is why franchises like Star Trek have an advantage, because you’ve got 60 plus years of embedded institutional understanding and memory in the world. Not just domestically but internationally. So, in terms of something that will cut through the clutter, I am constantly amazed that we drop a small piece of information about Star Trek, and there are 45 articles within 24 hours. And that just doesn’t happen when you’re doing a normal cop show. It just doesn’t happen. You’re lucky if you get 1 or 2.
The scale benefits to building a franchise
SAFIAN: I mean, we’ve seen some of those franchises sort of run into the risk of exhausting themselves. You know, I think Marvel, a little bit, has kind of exhausted itself. So how do you gauge progress and success and protect from over-utilizing that very powerful asset?
KURTZMAN: We spend far less producing our shows than my understanding of other big franchises in terms of what they spend to make their shows. And therefore, I’m able to say to the company that I work for, it’s the right proposition for you financially.
And because we have created an ecosystem, we shoot most of our shows in Toronto, we now have all these assets that we can begin cross-pollinating between shows. And not just the assets that we physically build, because you have to remember, if we need a prop, we can’t go down to the store and buy it. We have to make it. If we need a costume, we can’t go to the local whatever and get a cop outfit. We have to make it. Everything is bespoke on our show. So once you’ve created all of those things, you now have a warehouse, many warehouses full of it. And if we’re really smart, we can begin to amortize the spend between the different shows.
The same thing goes for, let’s say, building visual effects assets. We build a whole library of visual effects assets. They’re very expensive but once you’ve built them, you can use them again and again and again. And you just have to be clever about how you do it. So the audience doesn’t feel that they’re seeing the same thing.
“The only way for Star Trek to endure is to take massive swings”
SAFIAN: From the point of view of someone who works in a brand that is not in the entertainment business, the line that you’re walking about sort of not being the same, but at the same time being familiar. That feels like that’s a walk that a lot of folks running businesses struggle with. Because part of what draws you to that brand is I know what I’m getting, but if you give me too much of what I know what I’m getting, I get tired of it.
KURTZMAN: I think the only way for Star Trek to endure is to take massive swings and ideas that at face value seem crazy. Nick Meyer, who directed The Wrath of Khan, which, I mean, I think if you pretty much ask any Star Trek fan which is the best Star Trek movie of all time, they will tell you The Wrath of Khan.
Nick said to me once, “If I had taken a poll and asked every Star Trek fan out there, should I kill Spock at the end of the film, they would have crucified me”. But because we did it the way we did it, It’s the scene everybody remembers and still talks about as one of the greatest scenes, if not the greatest scene ever in Star Trek. Right?
And we took that lesson to heart when we did the 2009 movie. And we had the benefit of actually having Leonard in the movie by saying we’re going to blow up Vulcan. We’re going to blow up the planet that everybody loves the most. You know, if you took a poll and you asked Star Trek fans, what do you think about us blowing up Vulcan? They would have said, get these guys out of here. But because we did it and we tied it into the DNA of the story itself. And then we had Mr. Spock himself come on screen and tell you why it was necessary that that had had to happen. We actually paced and led the fans to accept it. And that’s I think what you have to do is you, you say, “Look, you’re going to get your Star Trek comfort food, and that it’s going to feel like Star Trek.”
And once you have gotten people to buy into that, and they know they’re watching real Star Trek, then you take big swings and you start changing it up. And hopefully your audience follows.
SAFIAN: I mean, it’s interesting because there’s something a little circular about the way you think about this, because you started by talking about how you have to listen to the fans, but you’re also giving them things sometimes that if you ask them, they wouldn’t want.
KURTZMAN: It’s true. You actually have to hold both things in balance. You really do. And this is where a system of checks and balances within the structure of each staff itself is so critical. Because I like to populate our staff with a really nice cross section of writers. When a writer says to me, “yeah I’m not really a Star Trek person,” I will go hard at bringing them onto that staff because I need that objectivity. I need someone to be like, “that’s just not holding my interest.” If I can get somebody who’s not a Star Trek fan to start liking it, then we’ve got something.
And then we have diehard policemen in the room who say, “You absolutely cannot do that to canon. You cannot do that in Star Trek.”
And then you have a Talmudic debate about what it means to make a choice like that. And then once you’ve really, really run it through everyone’s perspective. You kind of know, I think we have a really legitimate reason for taking this risk. But if we don’t have a legitimate reason for taking the risk, we don’t take the risk.
SAFIAN: So I want to ask you, we’re about nine months since Hollywood was disrupted by strikes.
KURTZMAN: Yeah.
What’s changed from the Hollywood strikes
SAFIAN: How did you think about that at the time? And now, as we’re approaching a year later, what’s really different? Or is it not really that different?
KURTZMAN: Oh, no, it’s, I mean, it changed everything. There’s nobody who went unscathed during the strike. Obviously we all went on strike because we felt it was necessary to make the stand, but we also knew that there would be a price for everybody
The thing I noticed most immediately was that when work came back, anybody who had something that they were looking to sell, nobody was buying anything. Nobody. It was like there was a freeze on spending for new things. And so you quickly go, “Okay, let’s not take anything out right now. Let’s just work with what we have and keep going and wait until actually the doors start to open again because no’s and what’s the point of that?”
SAFIAN: It sounds like a supply chain almost, like there’s a supply glut, and once it’s worked through, you’ll be able to sort of get back to business as usual. Or is there something that’s been fundamentally altered?
KURTZMAN: No, I think there’s something that’s been fundamentally altered. I don’t think it’s going to be business as usual. I think that there’s going to be something new. There’s going to be something totally different. And as the streamers sort of grow and as you start to see companies consolidate, it is absolutely going to change the agenda about how many things get made and what kind of things get made and for whom.
And so our goal is to stay nimble. Our goal is to try and predict where it’s going, but also to follow what we’re seeing. And then there’s that weird X factor, which is just, what inspires me as an artist to tell a story, and I want to spend the next year or two of my life on it.
You know, sometimes what I have found is that when I’m not listening to the market at all, and I’m just following my own instincts about something that I want to see and experience, the market will catch up to that. Not the other way around.
SAFIAN: Well, Alex, this has been great. Thank you for doing it.
KURTZMAN: Thank you for having me. Part of building the Star Trek universe started with listening to Masters of Scale. I’m very grateful for what you guys have created cause it really helped me see what was possible.
SAFIAN: Since my conversation with Alex, I’ve been thinking about his emphasis on taking big swings, but also on creating a process and team that debates each of those risks. There’s a lot of talk in business about being intentional, but in the rush of day to day pressures, and in the passion to pursue an idea we’ve fallen in love with, we can overlook what’s at stake. A cost-benefit analysis shouldn’t prevent us from taking risks — every business needs to take leaps, now more than ever. But going in wide-eyed and prepared for wherever that risk takes you, that’s the final frontier, as we go where no one has gone before.
I’m Bob Safian, thanks for listening.