Well, I found it nice to hear them so clearly articulate all the problems with this episode. I agree with almost all of it. Today, anyway. I liked "The Ship" back in the day, but it has
not aged well.
Everything they criticized this for is exactly what I thought of it in my rewatch a few days prior. The tension between the crew isn't well-played or effectively justified, and there are so many lines I just don't buy from the characters. The O'Brien/Munoz relationship doesn't land and they don't have chemistry. Multiple scenes in a row fail to build tension, just keep it running at a plateau. There are all sorts of logical problems with the behavior of the Jem'Hadar and how their tech operates.
I liked it in the 90's because of how refreshing it was to have an episode that recognized the humanity of the redshirts, and dwelled on the significance of their deaths instead of moving right along. All the other episode problems were less of an issue because of how new and powerful the punch of the final scenes were. (in isolation, those scenes do still hold up, and they all praised them, and then Robbie & Terry gave surprisingly high ratings basically on the strength of just this).
But nowadays, it's not fresh and new to have TV that understands all life has value, even extras and guest stars. It does take the overall impact down quite a lot, coming to this episode today.
But, I don't argue that the rest of you will probably be happier moving on. Since you mostly so intensely loathe the experience of hearing episodes dissected from an entertainment industry perspective, dropping a podcast whose purpose is to dissect the episodes from an entertainment industry perspective seems like the right call!
