I'm awaiting an official announcement from Paramount/CBS r.e. dropping the lawsuit, but I do hope that Abrams and Lin's disclosure at the beyond event is in fact happening. Directors and Studios aren't on the same page sometimes. And many fan film productions are watching this closely. Paramount/CBS REALLY should publish official 'fan film' guidelines on these if they want to allow these to continue, the verbal vagaraties up to this point ('just don't make any money' comes immediately to mind) aren't all that helpful. Some of the other sci fi franchises which have large fan ecosystems do a better job with this than Paramount/CBS have up to this point.
In somewhat related news, I am glad that Supergirl lives on for Season 2 on the CW. I wish that they had done the same for Enterprise waaaay back then (retool the production to lower costs), so it's nice to know that CBS isn't as afraid of moving productions from the USA to Canada to control costs as they were back in the Enterprise days (there was a proposal to move the Enterprise production team to Canada when they cancelled the series, so that it wouldn't cost as much per episode to produce, but they chose to kill the series instead, just as it was starting to get more interesting...).
Anyways, I did warn you guys it was only 50 seconds of 'teasing'. The New Crews thing is probably the biggest disclosure that the very vague mini trailer reveals, but that doesn't tell us much by itself. I haven't been following the 'deep' news on the new series all that much. I do want to see the entire season on broadcast TV, not just the pilot... Some of us pay for our internet by the gig. Again, maybe they should take a page from the Supergirl experiment and move the rest of the Star Trek season to the CW, if they don't think that Star Trek can hang in the ratings on their flagship network.
To be fair, Supergirl was in the top 10 of the CBS ratings, on par or better than several other of their shows which they have renewed for next season - it was a cost/benefit analysis (production cost per episode, plus more importantly the licensing fee from DC which they managed to negotiate downwards for season 2 apparently) that brought that show's future into question. By comparison sitcom shows/sets are usually much cheaper to produce, actor salaries aside, so they can 'better afford' to live on with lower ratings, TV advertising budgets aside.
http://tvseriesfinale.com/tv-show/cbs-2015-16-season-ratings-38085/The Big Bang Theory apparently scores about double the ratings or more than just about any other scripted CBS show, which partially explains why it is their 'go to' filler for when other shows aren't airing.