Chevron Seven is Still Locked: The Fans and Cast Fight Back Against Amazon's Stargate Cancellation
Amazon MGM Studios may have pulled the plug on the new Stargate series, but the community isn't going quietly. From cast pleas to a rapidly growing petition, the fight to reopen the Gate is just beginning.
"Chevron seven encoded!"
For any true fan of the franchise, those words are the heartbeat of Stargate. They represent the moment of transition, the leap into the unknown, and the thrill of discovery. But right now, for the Stargate community, it feels like someone just slammed the iris shut right as we were about to step through.
As many of you know, the news broke on June 3rd that Amazon MGM Studios has officially canceled the new Stargate series from Martin Gero. The reason? Amazon cited concerns that the show would "only appeal to existing fans."

Let's be clear: calling a fanbase "too narrow" is a bold strategy for a company that built an empire on niche interests. We're talking about a franchise that spanned SG-1, Atlantis, and Universe—a universe that taught us about everything from Goa'uld politics to the loneliness of a distant galaxy. To suggest that the existing devotion of the Gate-nerds isn't a sufficient foundation for a series is, quite frankly, an insult to the legacy of the franchise. Indeed.
But here is where the story gets interesting. While the corporate suits at Amazon are playing it safe, the people who actually built this universe are fighting back.
Michael Shanks, the man who gave us the incomparable Dr. Daniel Jackson, has been vocal in urging fans to make their voices heard. He's not just reminiscing about the good old days; he's actively encouraging the community to push back against this decision. Alongside him, veteran producer Joseph Mallozzi—who was actually in the writers' room for Gero's project—has expressed deep concern over the cancellation. When the people who know the lore best are telling you that the project was worth saving, you have to wonder who is actually making the decisions at MGM.

And the fans? We're doing what we do best: organizing. The "Revive the Stargate Franchise" petition has already surged past 42,000 signatures. It's a digital rally that proves Amazon's "narrow appeal" theory wrong in real-time. We aren't just a legacy act; we are a community that is still hungry for more stories, more worlds, and more malfunctioning technology that requires a frantic search for a capacitor.
We've been here before. The franchise has survived cancellations, studio shifts, and the general chaos of the entertainment industry. We survived the transition from the movie to SG-1, and we survived the daring (if controversial) leap into the depths of space with Universe. The Stargate franchise has always been about resilience and the refusal to accept "impossible" as an answer.

Amazon might have pulled the plug for now, but the Gate isn't closed. Not as long as there are fans willing to sign a petition and cast members willing to stand up for the lore. We'll keep dialing, we'll keep pushing, and we'll keep reminding the world that the Stargate universe is far too big to be contained by a corporate spreadsheet.
Stay tuned, keep your eyes on the horizon, and for the love of the Ancients, keep signing that petition. We'll get that seventh chevron locked if it's the last thing we do.
Related title: Clerks
Comments (0)
Log in to leave a comment.