Ladies and gentlemen, I had my first Babylon 5 dream!

I was Garibaldi and I was tasked with babysitting a group of telepathic children who hated me because I killed one of them a few weeks ago. Then I started seeing glowing paintings and I had to convince the children to help me figure out what they meant. Then my real world ex showed up to help and things became uncomfortable for all involved.
This episode reminded me of TNG 1.19 " Coming of Age ".
I hadn't thought of that, I compared it in my head to
The Drumhead. I guess I preferred both of those episode because in
Coming of Age Remmick only seemed insane, at the end of the episode he was completely objective and respectful to Picard, whereas in
The Drumhead Norah Satie seemed friendly at the start and it was only towards the end that we realised she was insane. Zayn was always painted as a villain, there was no other side to his character beyond being a humongous prick.
By the way, any comments on Ivanova in this episode?
It was okay, but it felt forced. Why did Zayn want to mind probe them so much? Just what did he think he was going to find? In the finished episode it seems like he wants to mind probe her just because he knows that she doesn't want to be mind probed.
"Eyes" seemed to be intended to portray how tenuous Sinclair's position as governor of B5 was. How his appointment there was not exactly universally popular among EarthForce personnel
Which is fine, but they could have found a way to do that than this. As
Starbrow suggested, it could have been more like Coming of Age where the senate sends an unlikable lackey to investigate Sinclair in the hope that he can be ousted, but at the end of the episode he finds nothing and even treats Sinclair with respect. Having Zayn be a one-note villain was too easy.
Understand that the Motorcycle plot was purely a budgetary concern. Kawasaki paid them a shit-pot load of money to incorporate the Ninja ZX-11 into the show, and they couldn't think of a better way to do it and didn't really like trying.
Well that explains why the motorcycle was a crotch-rocket rather than a chopper, which would have been more fitting with the tone of the story.
Legacies (***½)
I must admit that after the last couple of episodes I began to doubt the show again, so when it came to the mystery of who stole the body I was all set to blame Neroon since he was acting hostile towards humans since the start of the episode. It made sense; he disagreed with the religious faction's decision to end the war against humanity so he hatched an elaborate plot to blame humans for the disappearance of an important Minbari's body as pretext to go to war with humanity once again. So once it was revealed that Delenn was behind the body snatching I was moderately surprised, I hadn't even considered her, and it did make a reasonable amount of sense. It's not a good thing that the quality of some of this show's villains has been laughably bad, but it did work in this episode's favour.
Then again, this episode is about somebody stealing a corpse, which I found so weird that I couldn't help but laugh at times. But it does provide us with a few extra hints about the Earth-Minbari war, I learned that the war began because of the death of Dukhat and that the religious faction overruled the military faction in order to end the war. I still don't understand who Dukhat is or the circumstances surrounding his death, I don't even know how humans were involved with it, but I'm sure that all these things will be explained to me in time. And in the end Neroon seems like he could be an interesting character, and I'm assuming he will show up again because it would be odd for someone to pick a username based off of a one-off character.
The b-story treads old ground as we once again have Ivanova angry at the PsiCorps for what happened to her mother, just one week after the last time we saw her do this. This plot is okay, Alisa is an interesting enough character, but the solution to the problem does seem a little too easy. At the end she does make reference to a chrysalis, which I assume is foreshadowing something that is going to happen in the season finale. My guess is that Sinclair is the cocoon being referred to, whatever the Minbari did to him at the battle of the line will trigger in that episode. I can just see it now, he begins having sharp pains throughout the episode, and at the end he'll have the biggest pain of all, he'll fall to the floor with a sci-fi glow around him, and when he stands up again... he's a Minbari!

Cue shocking music, cut to black, "TO BE CONTINUED..."
Scott Bakula: 13