This post has been a long time in the making. It all started years ago when I read a post by NKemp3 that ranked every episode of DS9 from worst to best. It made for great reading and inspired me to work on my own ranking for TNG.
To rank the episodes, I used the same system as NKemp3. I started with "Encounter at Farpoint", and compared that to the next episode, "The Naked Now," and decided which I liked better (the former). Then I decided where to add the third episode, "Code of Honor," to the list, and so on, until all 176 episodes were ranked. Basically, in comparing each episode to another, I tried to answer which one I would rather watch on the spur of the moment if I had a choice between the two.
Ranking the episodes turned out to be the easy part, though (even though I can't resist tweaking the order as I look over my list)-- the reason I've taken forever to finish this thing is that I'm a perfectionist, and it's taken a long time to get my thoughts about each episode clear enough to get them down in writing. First I was going to get it done for my 1000th post, then it was going to be for the 20th anniversary of TNG-- well, forget all that! I'm going to get it finished, no matter how long it takes!
So, here goes... I hope this is an enjoyable read for all of you TNG fans out there. Star Trek: The Next Generation was one of my favorite shows growing up, and it remains so today. This list ought to give you a good idea why.
"Make it so!"
========================
PART 1 of 7: The Worst of TNG
176. Sub Rosa
There were times in the seventh season of TNG when it seemed like the writers were running short on ideas, settling for unoriginal stories that could have been used by pretty much any show looking for filler. As far as I'm concerned, "Sub Rosa" is the worst offender in this category, being a total waste of time. I'm sure part of the reason for my dislike for this episode is that I don't care at all for the supernatural/gothic romance/horror genre (whatever it it's called), but I think that's only the beginning of the problem.
The story is too cheesy and simplistic to create any true suspense. (Will Beverly leave the Enterprise to live happily ever after with her creepy stalker, or does he have some ulterior motive? Gee, what do you think?) On top of that, the writers unwisely chose to play this ridiculous story straight instead of having fun with it, which of course means that we get a generous helping of technobabble, because calling Ronin an "anaphasic energy being" instead of a ghost automatically makes this a sci-fi story. Strike three: the characters are paper-thin. That goes both for the walking cliches known as the guest stars and for the pod people who replace the Enterprise regulars. Worst off is the good doctor herself-- she's either willing to drop her entire career in Starfleet at a moment's notice to follow her hormones, or she's just under mind control to the point that her character is totally lost in the service of this stupid plot.
175. Cost of Living
Trying to do comedy has its perils too, of course. It has a greater potential to backfire. You can at least laugh at a failed drama, but a failed comedy can be one of the most excruciating viewing experiences possible. To my shame, I have to admit that I did find the wacky holodeck sequences in "Cost of Living" amusing... when I was twelve. Now I just shudder at the bad acting and wonder what the writers were thinking when they decided to make a comedic episode centered on the characters of Lwaxana Troi and Alexander Rozhenko. I mean, if you're going to shoot yourself in the foot, why not throw in the Ferengi while you're at it?
Almost nothing in this episode works. Lwaxana's humor comes from her being an exasperating person in general, but the problem is that she ends up annoying me at least as much as she irritates the people around her! Alexander's humor comes from making Worf the butt of every joke, something that TNG did far too often in its later years. It's never a good idea to turn one of your most interesting characters into a laughingstock. And the B-plot about the Enterprise's mission being delayed by corrosive asteroid dust is every bit as exciting as it sounds. There are just a few moments that feel genuine, when for one scene the episode stops trying to be funny and Lwaxana confides to Alexander that she feels lonely.
174. Man of the People
There's just a trace of an interesting idea somewhere inside "Man of the People," about a man who is able to preserve the illusion that he is pure and virtuous by channeling all of the rottenness inside himself into others and letting it destroy them. Unfortunately, it's overwhelmed by the fact that this episode alternates between predictably boring (yet another "alien disease" that is instantly reversable) and exceedingly unpleasant to watch (Sirtis's shrill "emotional waste dump" acting). It's tough to get through this one.
173. Eye of the Beholder
Remember that "running out of ideas" thing with the seventh season? In "Eye of the Beholder," we delve into the exciting world of the lower-level officers who work inside the Enterprise's warp nacelles. Actually, I guess it's the people who used to work there while the ship was still being built. Well, really, it's all inside Troi's mind. Because of an "empathic imprint" in that wall that-- Never mind! To be fair, it's not really the convoluted premise of the episode that kills it, but the fact that it feels like all the characters are sleepwalking. "I know what I have to do." Change the channel before I slip into a coma!
172. The Naked Now
TNG's two weakest seasons by far were its first and its last, which explains why so many episodes from those two years show up early in my list. The interesting thing to me is that they were weak for opposite reasons. Season 1 erred on the side of laughable overexuberance; season 7 tended more toward formulaic tedium. I don't think any other Star Trek series changed as much from beginning to end as TNG. I've already gotten into a couple of my least favorite season 7 entries (all other things being equal, I prefer a ridiculous story to a boring one); time now to explore the other extreme.
I think it was a really bad idea to make the second episode of TNG ever a remake of an original Star Trek episode. If I had been watching the series back then, I would have found it very discouraging that the TNG writing staff seemed not to have enough original ideas to avoid name-dropping Kirk's Enterprise and following a classic episode's script almost scene by scene just two episodes into the show's run. Also, anyone who had seen "The Naked Time" could tell what was going on long before Picard and his crew did, so it wasn't very interesting to watch them blunder around trying to figure it out.
All that aside, "The Naked Now" pales badly in comparison to "The Naked Time." Picard and his crew come off as poorly-defined caricatures compared to Kirk, Spock, and company. I don't know why it took TNG so much longer than the original Star Trek to create identifiable characters you could sympathize with ("The Naked Time" was an early first-season episode too, after all), but it did. The writers and actors should have waited until they knew who Picard and his crew were on a normal day before they tried to show how they would act if stripped of their inhibitions.
171. Angel One
First-season "message Trek." *shudder*
The plot of "Angel One" is horribly clunky. The biggest thing going on on this entire planet is dealing with this one ship of Federation citizens? I have a hard time caring much about it, myself. Some subtlety in the portrayal of a female-led society would go a long way-- there was an episode of Sliders that handled this idea about ten times better. As it is, "Angel One" actually ends up being sexist-- it seems to imply that what the women of Angel One really needed was some manly men like Riker and the marooned Federation crew to help them make their decisions. The episode is so ridiculous that it's hard to see it as insulting, though-- or relevant, or thought-provoking.
Also, the B-plot about everyone on the Enterprise getting sick is one of the lamer attempts to adhere to Gene Roddenberry's early requirement that the ship be placed in danger every week.
170. Justice
This episode starts to develop Picard a little as a deep thinker and skilled debater on issues like the Prime Directive, and as a leader willing to take responsibility for his crew's actions. That's nice. What's messed up is the entire premise of the episode-- if the Prime Directive is so important, then why is the Enterprise just showing up on a primitive planet's doorstep looking for shore leave and a romp with the natives? And how could Lt. Yar be given the task of studying this culture's laws but miss the fact that the penalty for every infraction is death? And no one gives her a hard time about this? And come on-- death for accidentally damaging a cheap flower bed cover? How did the Edo ever survive this long with a justice system so easy to abuse?
169. The Outcast
In the spirit of the original Star Trek, "The Outcast" sets out to use a sci-fi setting to get a message of acceptance across to today's culture, but unfortunately, it does so quite clumsily. Though it's not as bad as in "Angel One," lack of subtlety is again a problem; the message overwrites the characters. We have Worf saying things like "That is a woman's game," which is uncharacteristically sexist for him; indeed, everyone suddenly seems preoccupied with generalizations about male and female behavior. There's also the problem that the episode doesn't end up communicating its intended point very effectively. The J'naii, an androgynous species that condemns attraction to beings with a specific gender, are intended to mirror the condemnation of homosexuality in our society. But at the same time, in all of Riker's discussion with Soren about male and female roles, there isn't any indication that anyone in the Federation is anything but heterosexual. Maybe the writers didn't feel they could go that far, but it undercuts the message all the same.
And looking at the episode apart from its message, it's just bland, between a random technobabble anomaly of the week and a romantic interest of the week.
168. Aquiel
Ladies and gentlemen, I present the most boring episode of TNG ever made. We get to watch Geordi LaForge watching the logs of a dead generic alien woman with a boring job as she blandly recounts what she dreamed about last night. Then it turns out she's not really dead, but she's still boring in person. And then the technobabble about the killer blob mimicking her generic alien dog reaches near-toxic levels. There's not really anything obnoxious about this episode; it's just a chore to sit through because so little happens.
167. Too Short a Season
There's a really interesting story buried inside "Too Short a Season," about a Starfleet admiral trying to find some way to atone for a choice he made decades ago. Jameson did what we've seen many Starfleet officers do-- break the Prime Directive with good intentions. He supplied weapons to a pre-warp society because it was the only way he could see to save the lives of the hostages he was sent to recover. But the result was a forty-year war that claimed countless lives.
Unfortunately, this very interesting idea is hidden by layer upon layer of bad old-age makeup, as the episode instead focuses on a "fountain of youth drug" gimmick that is not anywhere near as thought-provoking.
166. Devil's Due
It helps to know that this episode was a re-worked script from the abandoned Star Trek: Phase II series, because then you can imagine this story with Kirk in Picard's place, Spock (or, if you must, Xon) in Data's, Scott in LaForge's, and Ilia in Troi's. Try it some time; I think it actually works pretty well that way-- I can see Ardra trying to seduce Kirk, and Spock volunteering to serve as judge because, of course, he'll be completely impartial (insert snide remark from McCoy here), and Kirk absolutely relishing the chance to demonstrate in dramatic fashion that Ardra's show is nothing but a scam. This story feels all wrong for Picard's crew, though-- they just aren't themselves in this one.
165. The Host
This episode combines a couple of Trek cliches-- the love interest who sweeps one of the regulars off their feet, but who we know will be gone somehow at the episode's end, plus the critical diplomatic crisis involving bickering aliens that only one person can solve. As a result, most of the episode feels tired. There is some interesting stuff in "The Host" about the nature of love, though-- do we as humans love the physical person we can see, or the mind and soul that make them who they are? And if the answer is "both," how would we decide what to do if the two were separated? Jonathan Frakes also turns in a good performance as Odan after the transplant.
164. Up the Long Ladder
Goofiness abounds in what I can only assume is another TNG attempt at comedy. "Up the Long Ladder" is pretty funny, but only in an MST3K "laughing at you, not with you" way. You have the ridiculously over-the-top stereotypes that populate the colony of Irish farmers, and that priceless bit of dialogue on the genetically engineered colony: "So, is your entire population made up of clones?" "Clones?" "Clones?" "CLONES." (My goodness. I just looked up the script to make sure I got the line right, and I learned that apparently the original title of this episode was "Send in the Clones." *facepalm*)
If there's a point to all this, I can't see it, unless it's what the normally stone-serious Picard tells his first officer when Riker finds him doubled over in laughter: "Sometimes, Number One, you just have to bow to the absurd."
163. Genesis
"Genesis" is basically the TNG version of a SciFi Channel original movie. It's all one "big idea"-- Picard and Data return from a mission to find that the crew has turned into dangerous prehistoric creatures! The episode manages some nice moments of creepy atmosphere as Picard and Data explore the darkened ship trying to figure out what has happened. Of course, there's nothing more to the episode than its "big idea," and the writers really hope you don't notice or care that it doesn't make an ounce of sense. Sorry, but neither evolution nor DNA can possibly work that way. Also, "de-evolve" isn't a word; it's "devolve"!
As nonsensical as the attempted explanation for the disease is, the hardest part of the episode to buy is the ending, where somehow everything goes back to normal in a single scene change. Riker's brain was shrunk to half its former size, but he somehow didn't lose anything important permanently. And even though the crew were all wild animals and presumably mating with and killing and eating each other (like poor Ensign What's-His-Name at the helm), apparently no one's traumatized by the experience except poor Reg Barclay. Oh, well. At least he was entertaining as a spider.
Note: You know your writing is too wordy when you have to split "Part 1" of your post into two parts to get under the maximum post length limit. Sorry!
To rank the episodes, I used the same system as NKemp3. I started with "Encounter at Farpoint", and compared that to the next episode, "The Naked Now," and decided which I liked better (the former). Then I decided where to add the third episode, "Code of Honor," to the list, and so on, until all 176 episodes were ranked. Basically, in comparing each episode to another, I tried to answer which one I would rather watch on the spur of the moment if I had a choice between the two.
Ranking the episodes turned out to be the easy part, though (even though I can't resist tweaking the order as I look over my list)-- the reason I've taken forever to finish this thing is that I'm a perfectionist, and it's taken a long time to get my thoughts about each episode clear enough to get them down in writing. First I was going to get it done for my 1000th post, then it was going to be for the 20th anniversary of TNG-- well, forget all that! I'm going to get it finished, no matter how long it takes!
So, here goes... I hope this is an enjoyable read for all of you TNG fans out there. Star Trek: The Next Generation was one of my favorite shows growing up, and it remains so today. This list ought to give you a good idea why.
"Make it so!"
========================
PART 1 of 7: The Worst of TNG
176. Sub Rosa
There were times in the seventh season of TNG when it seemed like the writers were running short on ideas, settling for unoriginal stories that could have been used by pretty much any show looking for filler. As far as I'm concerned, "Sub Rosa" is the worst offender in this category, being a total waste of time. I'm sure part of the reason for my dislike for this episode is that I don't care at all for the supernatural/gothic romance/horror genre (whatever it it's called), but I think that's only the beginning of the problem.
The story is too cheesy and simplistic to create any true suspense. (Will Beverly leave the Enterprise to live happily ever after with her creepy stalker, or does he have some ulterior motive? Gee, what do you think?) On top of that, the writers unwisely chose to play this ridiculous story straight instead of having fun with it, which of course means that we get a generous helping of technobabble, because calling Ronin an "anaphasic energy being" instead of a ghost automatically makes this a sci-fi story. Strike three: the characters are paper-thin. That goes both for the walking cliches known as the guest stars and for the pod people who replace the Enterprise regulars. Worst off is the good doctor herself-- she's either willing to drop her entire career in Starfleet at a moment's notice to follow her hormones, or she's just under mind control to the point that her character is totally lost in the service of this stupid plot.
175. Cost of Living
Trying to do comedy has its perils too, of course. It has a greater potential to backfire. You can at least laugh at a failed drama, but a failed comedy can be one of the most excruciating viewing experiences possible. To my shame, I have to admit that I did find the wacky holodeck sequences in "Cost of Living" amusing... when I was twelve. Now I just shudder at the bad acting and wonder what the writers were thinking when they decided to make a comedic episode centered on the characters of Lwaxana Troi and Alexander Rozhenko. I mean, if you're going to shoot yourself in the foot, why not throw in the Ferengi while you're at it?
Almost nothing in this episode works. Lwaxana's humor comes from her being an exasperating person in general, but the problem is that she ends up annoying me at least as much as she irritates the people around her! Alexander's humor comes from making Worf the butt of every joke, something that TNG did far too often in its later years. It's never a good idea to turn one of your most interesting characters into a laughingstock. And the B-plot about the Enterprise's mission being delayed by corrosive asteroid dust is every bit as exciting as it sounds. There are just a few moments that feel genuine, when for one scene the episode stops trying to be funny and Lwaxana confides to Alexander that she feels lonely.
174. Man of the People
There's just a trace of an interesting idea somewhere inside "Man of the People," about a man who is able to preserve the illusion that he is pure and virtuous by channeling all of the rottenness inside himself into others and letting it destroy them. Unfortunately, it's overwhelmed by the fact that this episode alternates between predictably boring (yet another "alien disease" that is instantly reversable) and exceedingly unpleasant to watch (Sirtis's shrill "emotional waste dump" acting). It's tough to get through this one.
173. Eye of the Beholder
Remember that "running out of ideas" thing with the seventh season? In "Eye of the Beholder," we delve into the exciting world of the lower-level officers who work inside the Enterprise's warp nacelles. Actually, I guess it's the people who used to work there while the ship was still being built. Well, really, it's all inside Troi's mind. Because of an "empathic imprint" in that wall that-- Never mind! To be fair, it's not really the convoluted premise of the episode that kills it, but the fact that it feels like all the characters are sleepwalking. "I know what I have to do." Change the channel before I slip into a coma!
172. The Naked Now
TNG's two weakest seasons by far were its first and its last, which explains why so many episodes from those two years show up early in my list. The interesting thing to me is that they were weak for opposite reasons. Season 1 erred on the side of laughable overexuberance; season 7 tended more toward formulaic tedium. I don't think any other Star Trek series changed as much from beginning to end as TNG. I've already gotten into a couple of my least favorite season 7 entries (all other things being equal, I prefer a ridiculous story to a boring one); time now to explore the other extreme.
I think it was a really bad idea to make the second episode of TNG ever a remake of an original Star Trek episode. If I had been watching the series back then, I would have found it very discouraging that the TNG writing staff seemed not to have enough original ideas to avoid name-dropping Kirk's Enterprise and following a classic episode's script almost scene by scene just two episodes into the show's run. Also, anyone who had seen "The Naked Time" could tell what was going on long before Picard and his crew did, so it wasn't very interesting to watch them blunder around trying to figure it out.
All that aside, "The Naked Now" pales badly in comparison to "The Naked Time." Picard and his crew come off as poorly-defined caricatures compared to Kirk, Spock, and company. I don't know why it took TNG so much longer than the original Star Trek to create identifiable characters you could sympathize with ("The Naked Time" was an early first-season episode too, after all), but it did. The writers and actors should have waited until they knew who Picard and his crew were on a normal day before they tried to show how they would act if stripped of their inhibitions.
171. Angel One
First-season "message Trek." *shudder*
The plot of "Angel One" is horribly clunky. The biggest thing going on on this entire planet is dealing with this one ship of Federation citizens? I have a hard time caring much about it, myself. Some subtlety in the portrayal of a female-led society would go a long way-- there was an episode of Sliders that handled this idea about ten times better. As it is, "Angel One" actually ends up being sexist-- it seems to imply that what the women of Angel One really needed was some manly men like Riker and the marooned Federation crew to help them make their decisions. The episode is so ridiculous that it's hard to see it as insulting, though-- or relevant, or thought-provoking.
Also, the B-plot about everyone on the Enterprise getting sick is one of the lamer attempts to adhere to Gene Roddenberry's early requirement that the ship be placed in danger every week.
170. Justice
This episode starts to develop Picard a little as a deep thinker and skilled debater on issues like the Prime Directive, and as a leader willing to take responsibility for his crew's actions. That's nice. What's messed up is the entire premise of the episode-- if the Prime Directive is so important, then why is the Enterprise just showing up on a primitive planet's doorstep looking for shore leave and a romp with the natives? And how could Lt. Yar be given the task of studying this culture's laws but miss the fact that the penalty for every infraction is death? And no one gives her a hard time about this? And come on-- death for accidentally damaging a cheap flower bed cover? How did the Edo ever survive this long with a justice system so easy to abuse?
169. The Outcast
In the spirit of the original Star Trek, "The Outcast" sets out to use a sci-fi setting to get a message of acceptance across to today's culture, but unfortunately, it does so quite clumsily. Though it's not as bad as in "Angel One," lack of subtlety is again a problem; the message overwrites the characters. We have Worf saying things like "That is a woman's game," which is uncharacteristically sexist for him; indeed, everyone suddenly seems preoccupied with generalizations about male and female behavior. There's also the problem that the episode doesn't end up communicating its intended point very effectively. The J'naii, an androgynous species that condemns attraction to beings with a specific gender, are intended to mirror the condemnation of homosexuality in our society. But at the same time, in all of Riker's discussion with Soren about male and female roles, there isn't any indication that anyone in the Federation is anything but heterosexual. Maybe the writers didn't feel they could go that far, but it undercuts the message all the same.
And looking at the episode apart from its message, it's just bland, between a random technobabble anomaly of the week and a romantic interest of the week.
168. Aquiel
Ladies and gentlemen, I present the most boring episode of TNG ever made. We get to watch Geordi LaForge watching the logs of a dead generic alien woman with a boring job as she blandly recounts what she dreamed about last night. Then it turns out she's not really dead, but she's still boring in person. And then the technobabble about the killer blob mimicking her generic alien dog reaches near-toxic levels. There's not really anything obnoxious about this episode; it's just a chore to sit through because so little happens.
167. Too Short a Season
There's a really interesting story buried inside "Too Short a Season," about a Starfleet admiral trying to find some way to atone for a choice he made decades ago. Jameson did what we've seen many Starfleet officers do-- break the Prime Directive with good intentions. He supplied weapons to a pre-warp society because it was the only way he could see to save the lives of the hostages he was sent to recover. But the result was a forty-year war that claimed countless lives.
Unfortunately, this very interesting idea is hidden by layer upon layer of bad old-age makeup, as the episode instead focuses on a "fountain of youth drug" gimmick that is not anywhere near as thought-provoking.
166. Devil's Due
It helps to know that this episode was a re-worked script from the abandoned Star Trek: Phase II series, because then you can imagine this story with Kirk in Picard's place, Spock (or, if you must, Xon) in Data's, Scott in LaForge's, and Ilia in Troi's. Try it some time; I think it actually works pretty well that way-- I can see Ardra trying to seduce Kirk, and Spock volunteering to serve as judge because, of course, he'll be completely impartial (insert snide remark from McCoy here), and Kirk absolutely relishing the chance to demonstrate in dramatic fashion that Ardra's show is nothing but a scam. This story feels all wrong for Picard's crew, though-- they just aren't themselves in this one.
165. The Host
This episode combines a couple of Trek cliches-- the love interest who sweeps one of the regulars off their feet, but who we know will be gone somehow at the episode's end, plus the critical diplomatic crisis involving bickering aliens that only one person can solve. As a result, most of the episode feels tired. There is some interesting stuff in "The Host" about the nature of love, though-- do we as humans love the physical person we can see, or the mind and soul that make them who they are? And if the answer is "both," how would we decide what to do if the two were separated? Jonathan Frakes also turns in a good performance as Odan after the transplant.
164. Up the Long Ladder
Goofiness abounds in what I can only assume is another TNG attempt at comedy. "Up the Long Ladder" is pretty funny, but only in an MST3K "laughing at you, not with you" way. You have the ridiculously over-the-top stereotypes that populate the colony of Irish farmers, and that priceless bit of dialogue on the genetically engineered colony: "So, is your entire population made up of clones?" "Clones?" "Clones?" "CLONES." (My goodness. I just looked up the script to make sure I got the line right, and I learned that apparently the original title of this episode was "Send in the Clones." *facepalm*)
If there's a point to all this, I can't see it, unless it's what the normally stone-serious Picard tells his first officer when Riker finds him doubled over in laughter: "Sometimes, Number One, you just have to bow to the absurd."
163. Genesis
"Genesis" is basically the TNG version of a SciFi Channel original movie. It's all one "big idea"-- Picard and Data return from a mission to find that the crew has turned into dangerous prehistoric creatures! The episode manages some nice moments of creepy atmosphere as Picard and Data explore the darkened ship trying to figure out what has happened. Of course, there's nothing more to the episode than its "big idea," and the writers really hope you don't notice or care that it doesn't make an ounce of sense. Sorry, but neither evolution nor DNA can possibly work that way. Also, "de-evolve" isn't a word; it's "devolve"!

As nonsensical as the attempted explanation for the disease is, the hardest part of the episode to buy is the ending, where somehow everything goes back to normal in a single scene change. Riker's brain was shrunk to half its former size, but he somehow didn't lose anything important permanently. And even though the crew were all wild animals and presumably mating with and killing and eating each other (like poor Ensign What's-His-Name at the helm), apparently no one's traumatized by the experience except poor Reg Barclay. Oh, well. At least he was entertaining as a spider.
Note: You know your writing is too wordy when you have to split "Part 1" of your post into two parts to get under the maximum post length limit. Sorry!