It's an accusation, not unjustifiable, that was thrown at the first couple seasons of Next Gen. Certainly it sometimes felt like maybe the production team, assembled of people who'd worked on television predominantly throughout the sixties, hadn't quite got the hang of it being "twenty years later".
Certainly the 'accepted wisdom' is that TNG started to beat it's own drum in the second and third seasons, and particularly in the case of the third season it was when it started to really sizzle.
Just for fun, I wondered if we could list all the times we think TNG went too far, in being too much like TOS in the early seasons? The times when you were, like, "Can't they just get some new ideas?".
Here's what I've got:
Encounter At Farpoint: The Farpoint station idea is sort of novel, but the Q subplot is ripped directly from TOS (and the character himself might as well be Trelane).
The Naked Now: is a remake of sorts of "The Naked Time". It presents itself more as a sequel though.
Code Of Honor: The final 'battle to the death', for better or worse, has defintie shades of "Amok Time".
Lonely Among Us: The plot is mostly original, but the delegates stuff as presented is vaguely similar to the setup of "Journey To Babel". Dorothy Fontana wrote both episodes.
Hide & Q: Arguably comes across as even more like "The Squire of Gothos" than did Encounter At Farpoint. Riker being given God-like powers and becoming an arrogant dick as a result of that plays a lot like Gary Mitchell in TOS's "Where No Man Has Gone Before".
The Big Goodbye: Contentious I know, but the setting can't help but to have shades of "A Piece of the Action" to it. The broad comic overtones to Beverley's interactions with the cops etc could have been written straight into that earlier episode without breaking a sweat.
Datalore: Again, contentious. 'Evil twin' plots aren't unique to Trek, but it still invites comparisons to "The Enemy Within".
Too Short A Season: An interesting one this. Kind of a deconstruction of a generic TOS plot ('what happens when you go back to that planet of the week a few decades later, and find out your decisions back then have screwed everything?'). What we're told of the back story sounds a little like "A Private Little War".
Home Soil: It's "Devil in the Dark" all over again.
The Neutral Zone: Again it's only using a similar situation (cryogenic freezing), but it elicits comparisons with "Space Seed" for that reason only.
I actually think season two managed to be mostly wholely original (the writers having kinda figured out TNG's individual identity by that point), but I will mention that in Unnatural Selection, the 'aging disease' and in particular Pulaski being affected by it seems to be inspired by "The Deadly Years".
Are there any I've missed?
Certainly the 'accepted wisdom' is that TNG started to beat it's own drum in the second and third seasons, and particularly in the case of the third season it was when it started to really sizzle.

Just for fun, I wondered if we could list all the times we think TNG went too far, in being too much like TOS in the early seasons? The times when you were, like, "Can't they just get some new ideas?".

Here's what I've got:
Encounter At Farpoint: The Farpoint station idea is sort of novel, but the Q subplot is ripped directly from TOS (and the character himself might as well be Trelane).
The Naked Now: is a remake of sorts of "The Naked Time". It presents itself more as a sequel though.
Code Of Honor: The final 'battle to the death', for better or worse, has defintie shades of "Amok Time".
Lonely Among Us: The plot is mostly original, but the delegates stuff as presented is vaguely similar to the setup of "Journey To Babel". Dorothy Fontana wrote both episodes.
Hide & Q: Arguably comes across as even more like "The Squire of Gothos" than did Encounter At Farpoint. Riker being given God-like powers and becoming an arrogant dick as a result of that plays a lot like Gary Mitchell in TOS's "Where No Man Has Gone Before".
The Big Goodbye: Contentious I know, but the setting can't help but to have shades of "A Piece of the Action" to it. The broad comic overtones to Beverley's interactions with the cops etc could have been written straight into that earlier episode without breaking a sweat.
Datalore: Again, contentious. 'Evil twin' plots aren't unique to Trek, but it still invites comparisons to "The Enemy Within".
Too Short A Season: An interesting one this. Kind of a deconstruction of a generic TOS plot ('what happens when you go back to that planet of the week a few decades later, and find out your decisions back then have screwed everything?'). What we're told of the back story sounds a little like "A Private Little War".
Home Soil: It's "Devil in the Dark" all over again.
The Neutral Zone: Again it's only using a similar situation (cryogenic freezing), but it elicits comparisons with "Space Seed" for that reason only.
I actually think season two managed to be mostly wholely original (the writers having kinda figured out TNG's individual identity by that point), but I will mention that in Unnatural Selection, the 'aging disease' and in particular Pulaski being affected by it seems to be inspired by "The Deadly Years".
Are there any I've missed?
