Copy. Personalize.
Send.
Short, factual, and easy to count. Paste these into Prime Video feedback, social posts, petition comments, or emails. Or let the helper write you a personal one.
Personalize Your Message In Seconds
Tell it a little about you, and a reserved AI writes you a respectful, on-message post or letter: the right talking points, one hashtag, in your own voice. Always read it over and make it yours before sending.
Make it personal. Tell them how many friends and family you have brought to Stargate, the adventures it gave you, and the things it taught you. Your story is the most persuasive thing you can send.
Your details are sent to an AI to draft your message and aren't stored. Please don't enter sensitive personal information.
AI-generated with a reserved model (Opus 4.8). Read it over and edit before posting. One hashtag only: #SaveStargate.
Social Message
Post or feedback boxDrop it into a post, a comment, or a feedback box. Keep one hashtag, extra tags get your post deranked on X. Make it yours first: open with how many friends you have brought to Stargate, or one thing it taught you.
Please revive Martin Gero's new Stargate series! Amazon already HAS the audience, a huge, loyal fanbase ready to subscribe and watch on day one, who spread the word for free. That's the audience most new shows spend millions just trying to find. We're here, we're ready, and we'll show up. Don't let it walk out the gate. #savestargate Share and go to https://savestargate.com to help save Stargate.
Mail Template
Email or letterAdd a clear, respectful subject and send to [email protected]. Fill in the bracketed line with your own story, then sign your name at the bottom.
Dear Mr. Friedlander, I am writing as a longtime Stargate fan and as someone who respects Amazon MGM Studios' responsibility to steward valuable intellectual property with care, discipline, and long-term vision. I was disappointed to learn that Amazon MGM Studios may not be moving forward with the new Stargate series led by Martin Gero, with Brad Wright and Joseph Mallozzi involved as consulting producers. I respectfully ask Amazon MGM Studios to reconsider that decision and give the project another serious review for greenlight approval. [Make this yours: in a sentence or two, tell them how many friends and family you have introduced to Stargate, an adventure or memory the show gave you, and something it taught you. A real, personal story is what people remember.] Stargate is not dormant IP. It is underutilized IP. Fans are still watching, discussing, recommending, and advocating for the franchise years later. That kind of loyalty is rare, difficult to manufacture, and commercially valuable when handled correctly. There is also a cost to waiting that does not show up on a balance sheet until it is too late. Fans have already waited roughly fifteen years, since the last Stargate series went off the air in 2011, and a franchise is only as valuable as the audience that still cares about it after a wait that long. Every year the property sits idle, the goodwill that took decades to build is spent on false starts, the original creative voices age out of the window in which they can still do this work, and an audience that keeps being told to wait eventually stops waiting. We have waited fifteen years already. We should not have to wait possibly a decade more for a franchise we have never stopped supporting. The value of this IP is genuinely in jeopardy here, not from making the show, but from leaving it unmade while the one thing that gives it worth, a loyal and engaged audience, is allowed to quietly drain away. A successful revival would do more than launch a new series. It could reactivate the existing catalog, strengthen Prime Video engagement, expand international distribution, and introduce the franchise to a new generation of viewers. The involvement of Martin Gero, Brad Wright, and Joseph Mallozzi matters: they bring franchise fluency and a clear understanding of what made Stargate work: mythology, humor, optimism, team dynamics, continuity, discovery, and the balance between character, science fiction, and adventure. The existing fanbase should not be viewed as a limitation. It should be viewed as the launch platform: the first audience, the first advocates, the first source of organic credibility. Viewed strictly as return on investment, that fanbase is the asset, not the obstacle. These are established, longtime viewers with real disposable income who are ready to subscribe and spend today, and who promote the franchise organically, at no marketing cost to the studio. Chasing a hypothetical younger demographic the property does not yet reach is the speculative, expensive bet. Activating a proven, high-intent audience now is the disciplined one. The "broad appeal" rationale inverts the math: Stargate already has the engaged, paying audience most new titles spend heavily trying to manufacture. Stargate is a franchise about exploration, courage, teamwork, and hope. I respectfully ask Amazon MGM Studios to reconsider this decision, re-engage with the creative leadership already trusted by the fan community, and give Stargate the thoughtful revival it deserves. Thank you for your time and consideration. Respectfully, [Your name · Your city or country]
Personal Letter
Print & mailA heartfelt letter about what Stargate means to you. Fill in the bracketed paragraph with your own story, sign it, and post it to Amazon MGM Studios. It is a letter, so nothing says you can only send it once.
Dear Mr. Friedlander, I am writing as one of the people who make up the Stargate audience, to tell you what this franchise actually means to us, and why cancelling the new series is a mistake worth reversing. [In your own words: what Stargate means to you. How you found it, who you watch it with, what it got you through, and why it is unlike any other series to you.] Here is what I would ask you to weigh. The original shows are still being watched and rewatched years, and even decades, later, by people who pass them on to the next generation. That kind of staying power is rare, and it is exactly what Martin Gero, Brad Wright and Joseph Mallozzi know how to make. They understood why fans like me cared so much back then, and they understand how to make a new audience care the same way now. A different team is a gamble: there is no guarantee anyone else makes something that gets rewatched for decades the way the original work has been. And please weigh how long we have already waited. The last Stargate series went off the air in 2011. Fifteen years later we are still here, still watching, still asking, which almost never happens for a show that has been gone that long. We should not have to wait another decade for someone to notice that this audience never left. Every year it sits, more of that rare, loyal following drifts away, and a franchise is only ever worth as much as the people who still care about it. And the biggest risk here is not making the show. It is doing nothing. Non-action is the choice that quietly loses everything: the audience that is already here, the goodwill, and the franchise's future. Please reconsider, and bring the series back with the people who built this world. Respectfully, [Your name, your city or country]