I enjoyed this episode. Granted it was late 80s TNG, so a couple of things were a bit over-the-top than later seasons...
I recall thinking it was cool to see a planet full of black individuals (something we didn't get to see in the original series). Of course, I thought it was pretty cool to have an episode focused on Tasha Yar...one of my favorite characters.
I do find it interesting that Brent Spiner believes this episode to be 'racist' and a 1940s portrayal of black individuals.
Hmmm, 1940s portrayal had bug-eyed black people like Stepin Fetchit, Manta Mooreland, and...uh...stereotypical views of black women....i.e Butterfly McQueen, and 'that actress I forget: What's-her-name-from-Gone with the Wind'...
What did LeVar Burton or Michael Dorn--two black actors-- think of the episode?
I thought Yareena was cool...and tough...(and yes, sexy). I would have liked to have seen some follow-up on the Ligon II inhabitants. (I do like Yareena making Lutan her 'second'...basically taking away his status).
However, for those who didn't care for the episode, what would you have done differently?
I recall thinking it was cool to see a planet full of black individuals (something we didn't get to see in the original series). Of course, I thought it was pretty cool to have an episode focused on Tasha Yar...one of my favorite characters.
I do find it interesting that Brent Spiner believes this episode to be 'racist' and a 1940s portrayal of black individuals.
Hmmm, 1940s portrayal had bug-eyed black people like Stepin Fetchit, Manta Mooreland, and...uh...stereotypical views of black women....i.e Butterfly McQueen, and 'that actress I forget: What's-her-name-from-Gone with the Wind'...
What did LeVar Burton or Michael Dorn--two black actors-- think of the episode?
I thought Yareena was cool...and tough...(and yes, sexy). I would have liked to have seen some follow-up on the Ligon II inhabitants. (I do like Yareena making Lutan her 'second'...basically taking away his status).
However, for those who didn't care for the episode, what would you have done differently?

{I need to stop typing so fast! lol}
The Ba'ku had a good reason for acting the way they did. They even explained it clearly. They weren't inferior - they had a great deal of knowledge and expertise, and even technology - they simply chose not to use it. 

In terms of nuke yields, if those torpedoes have any firepower at all, that volley should've caused a global disaster. It's called an airburst. Airbursting photon torpedoes of any yield 1,000 meters above a planet surface is nothing if not an act of war.