TNG - Justice.
Oh why oh why oh why... Just... why... By now the cast clearly has a rapport as well as knowing the ins and outs of their roles. As a reward they're subjected with... such (ahem, can't say it here) so-called "scripts" that are just so (bzzt, can't say it here) on every last conceivable level. You know it won't be good when they say "No rules we know of, looks like a great place for kids... oh they all fornicate at the drop of a hat. Any hat..." Then they get down to the planet and even shows like "Three's Company" would blush in embarrassment over some of that dialogue. The cavalier handling of the Prime Directive at the end managed to be even more clunky than the planet of the blonde wigs boinking... TNG's storylines would soon improve, but this one is such barrel scrapings it's a phenomenon in of itself that the show didn't get canceled by this point.
And Wesley didn't even get the most cringey material, and who wouldn't have trouble trying to recite clunky laughfests such as "I'm with Starfleet. We don't lie."
0/10
Check that: 1/10 -- See, people jogging around a sewage treatment plant and there's clearly water on all the tiles yet none of the joggers slips and breaks x number of bones... that's a phenomenon too.
Maybe 1.25/10 - At least the episode wasn't ageist. There's at least one 50-something gray-haired Edo jogging around, or they ran out of blonde wigs and couldn't afford blonde #53 hair dye for a mop. Maybe all the other icky old Edo slipped on the wet tiles when they were in an off-limits zone that was being mediated, which made the mediators' lives easier upon hearing chorus after chorus of "I've fallen and I can't get up!"...
Maybe 1.5/10 - the episode is sorta trying to show an idyllic place where nobody commits a crime and any crime has one penalty - enough to scare anyone preemptively - but it's all so superficial and handled poorly. Then they do the impossible and outdo all that by showing something so insignificant to demonstrate the binary nature of the law that any attempt to induce a positive audience reaction is only met with laughter that's no less unintentional.