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SIDE BY SIDE Two graphs compare historical daily viewership for Star Trek–Horizon (top) and Prelude to Axanar. The large spike at the beginning of each is attributed to their premieres. Prelude‘s large spikes typically coincide with news events surrounding the controversial Axanar project.
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Axanar Accuses Horizon of Buying Views
Axanar accused the producers of Star Trek–Horizon of having bought YouTube views of its trailer, and suggested the count for the film itself was inflated.
In a tweet August 20, 2016, Axanar’s Twitter account posted:
Axanar @axanar You would have to compare real stats not views that Horizon bought, like its 3m views for its trailer.
The tweet came a few days after AxaMonitor observed dozens of duplicate tweets from dummy accounts pointing people to Axanar’s short film, Prelude to Axanar, and after AxaMonitor published an article by editor Carlos Pedraza, “Why Horizon's Success Matters.”
The article noted that Horizon was due to surpass Prelude‘s 2.5 million views by August 24, challenging Axanar producer Alec Peters’ characterization of Prelude as “the most successful Trek film ever”1) — “by any metric,” added director Robert Meyer Burnett.2)
Provides No Evidence
It took Prelude two years to accumulate its views; Horizon took five months. Asked to provide evidence for its accusation against Horizon, the Axanar Twitter account instead wrote:
Axanar @startrekaxanar Simply compare stats - Views/likes/comments. You can’t have same # of views & 1/2 the comments & likes.3)
Misty Mills @mistymills Not really a good metric. Last stat I heard was only ~52% of YouTube users even use commenting.
When another Twitter user asked Axanar for more evidence:
Clenard @ClenardCmolder Hey @StarTrekAxanar Can you inform us as to how one goes about buying YouTube views? Enquiring minds want to know.
Axanar @startrekaxanar Just Google it or ask Tommy Kraft at Horizon. We have never bought You Tube views.
Clenard @ClenardCmolder I am also pretty sure that unless you can prove the alleged purchase, it qualifies as slander or libel.4)
Axanar didn’t tweet further on the topic of evidence at the time this article was posted.
Axanar Director: ‘Nobody Cares’
For his part, Burnett refused to identify which metrics justified his claim of most successful: “Nobody cares how many views Prelude to Axanar has on YouTube … except you,” Burnett told AxaMonitor.5)
@AxaMonitor: “Seriously though, I’m interested in the metrics you used in claiming Prelude to Axanar is the most successful fan film.”
@BurnettRM: I leave that up to you.
@AxaMonitor: So. Just boast, and then … “We do not discuss it with outsiders…”?
@BurnettRM: C’mon now…you’re the expert…again…I ask..what do YOU think?6)
When asked why he made the boast if he wasn’t going to substantiate it, Burnett tweeted, “So people who might not watch the film will tune in and see for themselves. That’s showmanship. That’s Hollywood.”7) [emphasis added]
Reaction
Asked on Twitter if he believed Axanar’s accusation against Horizon8), Burnett remained silent. AxaMonitor was unable to reach Horizon producer Tommy Kraft for his reaction.
Watch
As of this posting9), Prelude to Axanar had logged 2,557,472 views; Star Trek–Horizon had 2,518,020. Both Star Trek–Horizon and Prelude to Axanar are available on YouTube.
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